With Merkel gone, Germany gets tough on Brexit
New German Chancellor Olaf Scholz has Boris Johnson
firmly in his sights.
Boris Johnson faces a new German leader who broke
ranks with the discreet style of his predecessor Angela Merkel |
BY CRISTINA
GALLARDO AND HANS VON DER BURCHARD
June 25,
2022 2:18 pm
https://www.politico.eu/article/germany-uk-tough-brexit-johnson-scholz-merkel/
LONDON and
BERLIN — Is Britain missing Angela Merkel yet?
Boris
Johnson arrives in Bavaria on Sunday for the annual G7 summit of world leaders,
hosted this year by the new German Chancellor Olaf Scholz. It will be all
smiles when the two men greet at the beautiful Schloss Elmau hotel, a luxury
spa high in the Bavarian Alps.
But beyond
the handshake diplomacy, Johnson finds himself facing a center-left leader who
has decided to break ranks with the discreet style of his predecessor Angela
Merkel and deliver clear, public rebukes to London over its Brexit maneuvering.
Five senior
politicians and officials within Scholz’s administration confirmed the new
German chancellor has chosen to adopt a more robust public stance than his
predecessor's sometimes-opaque utterings over Brexit.
This has
played out in speeches, public comments and across the airwaves since Britain
published the Northern Ireland Protocol bill earlier this month.
The bill
would grant British ministers powers to disapply parts of the protocol, a
central part of the Brexit divorce deal designed to prevent a land border
between Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland. The protocol keeps
Northern Ireland inside the EU single market, but means the region must
administer checks on goods arriving from the rest of the U.K. — stipulations
hated by Northern Irish unionists and the British government.
In their
public remarks following the bill’s publication, both Scholz and his hawkish
foreign minister, Annalena Baerbock, a Green Party member of the German
coalition government, made their displeasure crystal clear.
“It is a
very regrettable decision that the British government has taken,” Scholz said.
“It is a departure from all the agreements we have made.”
“London is
unilaterally breaking agreements,” Baerbock added. “And it is doing so for
predictable motives of its own. We in the EU cannot accept that.”
In private,
Scholz is said to be highly critical of Johnson’s handling of the issue, and
fears the protocol bill may lead to a trade war between the EU and Britain.
With exquisite timing, the bill will receive its second reading in the House of
Commons Monday, just as the second day of the leaders’ summit in Bavaria is
getting underway.
Change of
style
German
officials say there is cross-party consensus in Germany on the need to protect
the EU single market — the destination of about 70 percent of German exports —
but acknowledged Berlin has dialled up the rhetoric in recent weeks, almost
rivalling that of the Brexit-bashing French president, Emmanuel Macron.
It is not
just that Scholz is more “direct” than Merkel — who felt frustrated by Johnson
on many occasions, but, with some rare exceptions, chose to express her views
privately — a German diplomat said.
Berlin has
also judged this is the appropriate time to send a “blunter” message that the
U.K. must abandon any ambitions to rewrite the protocol, they added. Germany
also wants to dispel any suggestion that the row is merely an issue between the
U.K. and Ireland only.
In Berlin,
the German government has published a detailed explainer on its official
website explaining the importance of the protocol to German voters. In London,
Miguel Berger, the new German ambassador to the U.K. who previously served as
state secretary of the Federal Foreign Office in Berlin, has been given license
to tour broadcast studios to make Germany’s case direct to the British public.
“I can tell
you there is a lot of disappointment with this bill, especially because we
thought with the whole Ukraine crisis this was not the moment to have this
debate,” he told LBC Radio Thursday, adding that many European capitals feel
“there is space to find a negotiated solution” to the Northern Ireland row
after the summer.
Berger was
due to travel to Northern Ireland in person Sunday for talks with senior
politicians on all sides of the debate.
Another
German official warned the protocol “was a prerequisite” for the conclusion of
the 2019 Brexit trade deal, and said Berlin “regards efforts to unilaterally
suspend the Northern Ireland protocol as a breach of law and a breach of
trust.”
“In the
event that the United Kingdom persists with this legislative project, the EU
will consider all options,” the official added. “This explicitly includes
measures under the Trade and Cooperation Agreement” — a reference to sanctions
options built into the agreement, such as imposing new tariffs within a month,
or suspending the entire trade deal with nine months' notice.
From words
to action
Resorting
to such public threats is not easy for Germany, where there is growing
frustration at the post-Brexit deterioration of its bilateral relationship with
the U.K. on almost everything bar defense cooperation against Russia.
German-U.K.
trade has now fallen for five consecutive years, and Berlin is worried about
growing industrial decoupling — companies in each country reducing their
interdependency — following Britain’s EU departure. Britain is on course to
drop out of the list of Germany’s top 10 trading partners for the first time
since 1950.
A senior EU
official said the change in the tone of Germany’s warnings has not yet
translated into a tougher stance inside the room where EU member countries
discuss the bloc’s response to Britain’s actions.
But Malcolm
Chalmers, deputy director at the RUSI think tank and an expert in British
security and foreign policy, said the dynamics between the U.K. and the EU
capitals “have changed significantly” as a result of Johnson’s bill. He
cautioned London should not bank too much on Germany’s obvious interest in
maintaining exports to Britain.
“There’s a
risk that the U.K. will underestimate the willingness of the European Union to
retaliate with economic measures to further restrict the U.K.’s access to
European markets, including potential tariffs,” he said.
Many in
Berlin wonder how far Boris Johnson is planning to actually go with the bill,
and say the answer will determine the intensity of the EU’s retaliation.
Thomas
Hacker, a trade policy lawmaker from the Free Democratic Party — one of
Scholz’s two coalition partners — believes the prospect of economic turmoil
means Johnson will ultimately be forced to back down.
“Boris
Johnson will look at the overall economic situation, post-COVID, with
inflation, the economic impact of the Ukraine war,” Hacker said.
“I don’t
think he can afford a trade war. In my view, the current moves are more
domestically motivated. If things come to a head, the EU can suspend the trade
agreement — Johnson won’t let that happen.”
Keep calm
and carry on
In London,
Germany’s message has thus far been received with little more than a resigned
shrug.
A U.K.
official described the international response to the bill as "mixed ...
but basically what you would expect.”
The prime
minister’s spokesman claimed he hadn’t seen the specific German remarks about
the protocol bill, but said the U.K. government remains “confident” it has
found “the right approach to fix the long-standing problems with the protocol
as it has been enacted.”
“We believe
it is legal, it abides by international law,” he added. “We also want to keep
negotiating with the EU to find a negotiated solution.”
James
Cleverly, the U.K. minister for Europe, said British officials have been
careful to explain their issues with the protocol to their EU counterparts, and
stressed that cordial relationships with member countries have been maintained.
“They do
listen,” he told a parliamentary committee Tuesday. "They listen intently,
and genuinely seek to understand."
Quite how much
that listening exercise helps Boris Johnson in Bavaria this week, surrounded by
unimpressed EU leaders just as his protocol bill returns to Parliament, remains
to be seen.
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