UK’s new Brexit man makes his mark with Northern
Ireland row
Commission leaders shocked by David Frost’s push to
extend grace periods in Northern Ireland.
BY CRISTINA
GALLARDO
March 4,
2021 7:46 pm
https://www.politico.eu/article/boris-johnson-brexit-super-minister-david-frost-makes-mark/
LONDON —
Boris Johnson's combative new Brexit minister is already ruffling feathers in
Brussels.
David Frost
managed to annoy both the Irish and the European Commission’s top brass with a
unilateral U.K. decision to exempt British firms from some bureaucracy when
shipping food to Northern Ireland, a move the EU says breaches the Brexit
divorce deal.
The policy,
announced by the U.K. in a written statement, marks Frost’s opening gambit as
Johnson’s new Brexit “super minister,” a role he only just inherited from
Michael Gove. As Britain’s former chief Brexit negotiator, Frost had been
expected to take on a more behind-the-scenes policy job, but was given the
expanded remit in a shake-up announced last month.
The
decision Wednesday caused consternation in Brussels, where officials had been
expected to resolve ongoing trade disruption in Northern Ireland later this
month through a fresh meeting of the EU-U.K. Joint Committee, which oversees
the Brexit Withdrawal Agreement and its protocol on the sensitive Northern
Ireland border.
Brussels is
now considering legal action after Britain said it would unilaterally extend
grace periods on post-Brexit customs checks at Northern Ireland’s ports for at
least six months, and the general mood at the Commission is that the U.K. has
ignored successive attempts at engagement.
Commission
President Ursula von der Leyen and Vice President Maroš Šefčovič, responsible
for talks with London on the implementation of the Brexit divorce deal, are
“angry and deeply worried” at what they see as a provocation and breach of
trust by the Brits, an EU official said.
Šefčovič
was left perplexed by the absence of a phone call or a message from Frost in
advance of the government’s statement. The two did not speak until Wednesday
evening, hours after the announcement, although the U.K. said the plan was
raised at official level and with the Irish government before it was announced.
Frost, who
took over his new role on Tuesday, “didn’t have time before Wednesday to speak
to Šefčovič but had time to call [French Europe Minister] Clément Beaune,” the
official complained.
“The
Commission is very concerned since yesterday,” the same official added. “The
first thing Frost has done is unilaterally taking the freedom to do whatever
they want.”
First move
It is not
the first time the EU has felt snubbed by Britain since it left the bloc. At the
last Joint Committee meeting in February, Šefčovič offered to meet again in
late March, days before some of the controversial Northern Ireland grace
periods are set to expire.
He also
offered technical discussions or a meeting of the deal’s specialized committee
on Northern Ireland, the official said, but the British government has yet to
reply.
At that
meeting, Šefčovič did not rule out extending the grace periods, the same
official added. But he is said to have told Gove, his counterpart at the time, that
the Commission needed the British government to offer an “operational plan”
including “solid arguments” for extension in order to persuade EU member states
to agree.
Johnson’s
official spokesman said Thursday that the U.K. government needed to take action
“to address the disproportionate impact that some aspects of the protocol are
having on the citizens of Northern Ireland contrary to its intended purpose”
and that it gave due notice to the EU.
“We
notified the European Commission at official level earlier this week,” the
spokesman said. “We also informed the Irish government earlier this week and
then Lord Frost last night in his call to Šefčovič obviously discussed this at
length and set out the rationale and the reasons for it.”
The
Commission remains open to further discussions, but a second EU official said
it is up to the U.K. to take the initiative. “I would be very surprised if
Šefčovič makes the first move now,” they said.
In
parallel, the EU is considering legal action under Article 12 of the Northern
Ireland protocol. The Commission could launch an infringement procedure against
the U.K., as it did with the incendiary Internal Market Bill last year, taking
its case to the Court of Justice of the EU. Infringement procedures tend to
drag out, but Brussels could ask the court for interim measures or an
accelerated process.
Another
option would be to trigger the dispute settlement mechanism in the Brexit divorce
deal. The Commission is consulting on whether this could run in parallel to the
infringement procedure, the first official said.
As a last
resort, the link between the Withdrawal Agreement, which agreed Britain’s exit,
and the Trade and Cooperation Agreement, which agreed the two sides’ future
trade ties, could allow the EU to impose tariffs on certain U.K. goods.
However, this option may be too politically sensitive and could have long-term
repercussions on, for instance, Northern Ireland’s 2024 vote on whether to keep
the protocol in place, they added.
Ireland’s
Foreign Affairs Minister Simon Coveney said Thursday he does not favor legal
action against the British government, but argued London’s unilateral move had
damaged trust just when both sides were making progress. It would, he told
RTÉ’s Morning Ireland, create “a much more formalized and rigid negotiation
process as opposed to a process of partnership where you try to solve the
problems together.”
Downing
Street rejected Coveney’s characterization. “We continue to work closely with
them [the EU] through the Joint Committee process and remain committed to the
Northern Ireland protocol, but we want to address those areas where there are
issues that have arisen,” Johnson’s spokesman said.
Frost’s
move has already angered MEPs. Leaders of the European Parliament’s political
groups on Thursday postponed a decision on when to vote to ratify the
post-Brexit trade deal, which has still not been formally approved there.
Defending
Frost’s opening play on Thursday night, his cabinet colleague Liz Truss told
Times Radio: “What we want to do, what Lord Frost wants to do, is sit around
the table with the EU, have a proper discussion and make sure that we keep
trade flowing between the EU in the U.K.”


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