There’s been a lot of speculation about the impact of the Biden presidency on Brexit and for the island of Ireland. But the key issue for Northern Ireland remains whether there’s a deal on the future relationship between the UK and the EU in the coming days.
I’ve had the privilege of serving as British Ambassador in Dublin,
head of the Northern Ireland Office, and the last British Commissioner
in Brussels. A unique set of roles.
I profoundly believe that we need to find a deal on the future
relationship for the good of Northern Ireland, and the UK’s relations
with our most intertwined neighbour, Ireland. The Withdrawal Agreement
on its own will struggle to do the job. The Internal Market Bill and the promised Finance Bill on their own certainly won’t.
I won’t rehearse here all the twists and turns that brought us to
where we are today in the negotiations on Northern Ireland. There’s a
book in there if someone’s brave enough.
But seen from inside the Commission, where I sat in the College of
Commissioners for the first three years of this saga, there were in
particular three problems that bedevilled the discussions.
First, the Commission was torn. It was negotiating on behalf of the
EU and the member states with the UK; that’s its job. Which meant, in
this context, in particular, negotiating on behalf of Ireland, as the
most concerned member state.
At the same time, the Commission saw, indeed sees, itself as
protecting the Good Friday/Belfast Agreement, as the cornerstone of the
peace process in Northern Ireland. It sought to be both player and
referee. I don’t think it ever fully internalised that tension.
Second, the Commission, as the guardian of the EU Treaties and legal
order, thinks naturally in terms of EU law. So when the Commission
thought about how to avoid barriers between Ireland and Northern
Ireland, it didn’t really see any alternative to EU rules continuing to
apply to both.
This has, of course, caused a good deal of tension. It isn’t always
an easy fit with the flexibility and ‘jointness’ of the Good Friday
Agreement and the various institutions and practices that flow from it.
Third, for a long period as the EU and UK grappled with these problems, there was no shared Northern Irish voice. In the absence of a Northern Ireland Executive, the Commission reached out to the various NI parties.
But that’s not the same as hearing from a voice representative of NI
as a whole, and it’s fair to say the Commission’s relations with the
Unionist parties were, at times, bumpy.
The Withdrawal Agreement sought to deal with some of the tensions.
Notably providing for the Stormont lock on the arrangements continuing
in the future. But it clearly hasn’t resolved them all.
The Joint Committee structure set up to manage the agreement stands
whether there’s a deal on the future UK-EU relationship or not. But in
the absence of a deal, it will struggle to resolve the remaining
tensions around the future governance of Northern Ireland.
The UK Government’s attempt to take out ‘insurance’ against what it
sees as a potential risk of over restrictive or one sided interpretation
of parts of the Withdrawal Agreement is widely seen to have backfired.
But in the absence of a deal, there will inevitably be pressure to
double down on the Internal Market Bill and planned Finance Bill.
Further undermining the trust and cooperation needed to make the Joint
Committee structure work.
It doesn’t need to be like this. A deal on the future relationship
would significantly strengthen the Joint Committee structure and its
work. It would reinforce the political and practical cooperation needed
to manage any outstanding difficulties.
The Commission would represent the interests of the EU, but within a clearly established shared legal framework.
A deal would make it much easier to manage sensitive issues, like
exit summary declarations. The Commission has repeatedly said that any
checks should be ‘dedramatised’: where better to start than these
formalities for goods going from NI into the rest of the U.K.
There would be a basis for addressing concerns around any eventual
subsidies and state aid. And the question of defining ‘at risk’ goods
would be both less salient if tariffs are no longer on the table, and
something to be managed together, rather than a flashpoint with the UK
and EU both claiming they can decide.
There would also be a framework for Northern Ireland’s voice to be heard, and given the weight it deserves.
When the NI Executive speaks about issues that directly affect the
people of Northern Ireland we should all listen. Starting with the
recent letter
from the First and Deputy First Ministers setting out concerns on
supplies to NI supermarkets. They are best placed to assess the
realities on the ground.
And it’s the role of the guarantors of the Good Friday Agreement, and
all the friends and supporters of the peace process to find ways to
respond to these urgent concerns.
All those who support Northern Ireland should work hard to get a deal
on the future relationship over the line in the coming days.
By Sir Julian King GCMG, KCVO, Oxford Internet Institute and RUSI fellow and ex-European Commissioner for the Security Union.
© The UK in a changing Europe
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