Throughout the month of December commentators and politicians speculated tirelessly on the likelihood of a negotiated trade arrangement between the UK and EU before the end of the year. Many expected that the personal convictions of Boris Johnson and the intransigence of the Conservative Party would prevent the conclusion of any such agreement. On 24rd December, those who took this view were apparently proved wrong.
Ursula von der Leyen and Boris Johnson announced the signing of a Trade and Cooperation Agreement (TCA)
which would ensure that trade between the UK and EU could continue
without quotas or tariffs. The Agreement was hailed as a triumph by the
British Prime Minister, but described in distinctly more muted tones by
the President of the European Commission. Of the two reactions, the
President’s was the more realistic. The TCA will reduce but cannot
abolish the reciprocal (although asymmetrical) damage done to the EU and
UK by Brexit.
Closer inspection of the text signed on 24th
December shows that those who expected “no deal” were not entirely
wrong. Many aspects of the future relationship between the UK and EU
remain to be negotiated. Negotiations will continue for instance on such
central questions as financial services, data adequacy, fisheries, the
return of non-EU citizens and recognition of professional
qualifications. The first of these two topics, financial services and
data adequacy, are of particular importance to the United Kingdom’s
economic well-being. Neither of them however will be easily resolved in
the coming months. The implementation of the Irish Protocol moreover is
far from finally agreed, with all the risks that this poses for
political and constitutional instability in Northern Ireland. An
elaborate structure of UK/EU committees has been set in place to
consider the sectoral workings of an Agreement put together in such
haste that anomalies and lacunae will inevitably emerge over the coming
years. An overall review of the Agreement’s workings is envisaged every
five years. The Agreement itself moreover can be renounced by either
side with only twelve months of notice. This Agreement can certainly not
be regarded as the final word on long term relations between the EU and
UK.
The level playing field
Perhaps even
more demonstrative of the Agreement’s provisional nature is the
philosophy underlying its provisions on the “level playing field.” A
recurrent element throughout the whole Agreement is that it envisages a
range of retaliatory actions if one partner attempts to achieve what the
other partner regards as an illegitimate trading advantage by the
lowering of its standards. This retaliatory action will typically take
the form of tariffs or suspension of rights granted to the offending
party by the agreement. The prominence of possibilities for retaliatory
action in the Agreement is at least in part a consequence of the
Internal Market Bill proposed by the British government in the autumn of
2019. Its blatant contradiction of the Withdrawal Agreement signed by
Boris Johnson in 2018 still fuels suspicion within the EU about the
reliability and good faith of the British government in its
international dealings. The provisions relating to the “level playing
field” are theoretically capable of invocation by both the EU and the
UK. But few analysts are in any doubt that the provisions reflect
concerns of the EU about the UK rather than the reverse.
It will
obviously be an important touchstone for future relations between the UK
and the EU how often the UK is willing to risk retaliatory action from
the EU by adopting environmental, social or competitive standards that
vary substantially from EU norms. It may be that such controversies
frequently occur as the UK seeks to reassert its regained sovereignty in
face of the supposedly dictatorial European Union; or it may be that
the UK concludes that most of the EU standards with which it has lived
for so long are at worst acceptable to British business and public
opinion, without the need of expending scarce political and economic
resources upon avoidable polemic with Brussels. This uncertainty is the
latest and perhaps culminating demonstration of the intellectual and
political ambiguity which lies at the heart of Brexit, an ambiguity
which was central to the Leave victory in 2016.
The ambiguity of Brexit
Among
those Leave voters who had in 2016 a coherent view of the UK’s future
place in the world, at least two contradictory tendencies were
represented; those who sought Brexit as a radical and decisive break
with European political and social values; and those who were content
for the UK to continue as a member of the European political and social
family, while only rejecting the institutional and integrative processes
of the European Union. This dichotomy was deliberately left unresolved
by those campaigning for a Leave vote in 2016. They rightly calculated
that it served their campaign’s purposes better for every voter to be
allowed to harbour his or her own vision of Brexit. The implementation
of the TCA will over the coming years finally provide some sort of a
resolution of these conflicting visions.
As ever, central to this
resolution will be the continuing problems of Party management within
the Conservative Party. The European Research Group showed itself
surprisingly tractable in accepting the TCA, but its acceptance of the
Agreement was dependent upon the future willingness of a “robust”
government to limit the sovereignty-pooling implications of the level
playing field. In its statement endorsing the Agreement,
the ERG also meaningfully recalled that the treaty could be renounced
with twelve months’ notice. There will certainly be continued pressure
from within the Conservative Party for ostentatious demonstrations of
“regained” sovereignty that may provoke controversy. It would be
surprising if Boris Johnson were able to remain entirely immune to such
pressures from within his own Party. Perhaps the most likely outcome is
that until 2024 the Conservative government will oscillate between
confrontation and co-operation with the EU in the application of the
TCA. The day to day reality of economic co-operation and political
dialogue will point towards the avoidance of unnecessary confrontation.
The need to persuade the ERG and its supportive press of governmental
“robustness” towards the EU will point in the opposite direction. These
conflicting pressures make it almost inevitable that in the continuing
negotiations to define Brexit more precisely the EU will be for the
foreseeable future a more consistent and coherent advocate of its
perceived interests than the UK can hope to become.
Rejoiners and Labour
Those
who wish as rapid a return as possible of the UK into the European
Union will naturally have every interest in hoping that friction and
polemic can be avoided as far as possible in the Agreement’s development
over the next four years. Their interest must lie in encouraging a
constructive and realistic evolution of all the avenues for rational
co-operation that the Agreement contains. Such an attitude is entirely
compatible with a commitment to full British reintegration within the EU
at the earliest possible moment. It is surely a vain hope of Sir Keir Starmer’s
that the European issue will remain dormant over the next four years
until, and even during the next General Election. Hostility to the EU is
now deeply embedded in the political identity of the Conservative
Party. It would be extraordinary if there were not regular issues of
divisive controversy thrown up by the workings of the Agreement in the
coming years. The present Conservative government has shown that it sees
the nationalistic exploitation of such issues as being in its political
interest. It will make the Leader of the Opposition appear weak and
ineffectual if he is incapable of responding to such controversies. Many
of his natural supporters were made uneasy by Sir Keir’s decision to
whip his MPs in support of the TCA. He would be ill-advised to reinforce
such doubts by too resolute a silence on European issues over the next
four years.
It has naturally been in the Prime Minister’s interest
to exaggerate the significance of the Agreement he has negotiated. Its
limitations will become apparent over the coming weeks as British
exporters find themselves confronted with the barrage of new and
time-consuming formalities consequent upon British self-exclusion from
the Single Market and Customs Union. But it is entirely fitting that his
Trade and Co-operation Agreement should also be a document that even
within its own limited terms becomes ever less precise and informative
the more it is examined. The Agreement is not “no deal,” but little more
can be said in its favour than that. It is perhaps best regarded as a
Cheshire Cat of a deal, in which the details fade and only the grin
remains. That would not be an inappropriate epitaph for the entire
Premiership of Boris Johnson.
By
Brendan Donnelly|January 4th, 2021|Categories:
Brexit,
Europe,
Europe,
Trade|Tags: Boris Johnson Brexit, Boris Johnson Brexit deal, Brendan Donnelly brexit, Brexit, Brexit Conservative Party, Brexit deal, Brexit trade deal, featured, landing page, TCA, trade dealFederal Trust
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