Brexit is proving to be even more troublesome than expected, giving rise to a gradual softening of British public opinion towards the EU. Any future UK government is likely to want to renegotiate parts of the separation deal that Boris Johnson struck with the EU.
Reconciliation
between Britain and Europe will take time and need careful calibration,
however. The EU should prepare for this constructively and use the
opportunity of a British renegotiation to review all its other
association agreements - none of which are without defect.
The
question of governance lies at the heart of the problems which impair
the EU’s relations with its neighbours. The EEA and Swiss arrangements
are in any case due for overhaul and upgrading. The EU’s traditional
enlargement policy to the east and south has foundered, and it would be
better if this were admitted openly. Not only are candidate countries
unable to meet the demands of membership, but the EU itself is too weak
to take on the burden of new members. Instead, a new category of
affiliate membership should be written into the EU treaties. Affiliation
should allow the EU to develop close economic and cultural partnerships
with its neighbours in a democratic fashion. Affiliate states would
enjoy greater access to the EU institutions than is permitted under any
of the current association agreements. Affiliate membership would also
be available as an option for any current EU member state which, like
the UK, chose not to adhere to the goal of an ever closer union.
Such
differentiated integration of the wider Europe will require the EU to
build stronger federal government at the centre. The new structure
should also be underpinned by the establishment of a European Security
Council combining EU member and affiliate states with NATO — including
Canada and the US — in regular strategic and operational decisions to
protect Western security. The French presidency in the first half of
2022 should take the necessary first steps. The Conference on the Future
of Europe might consider these proposals.
Read the full paper here.
© European Policy Centre EPC
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