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UK Foreign Secretary Liz Truss announced
plans to bring forward legislation that would allow the UK government
to unilaterally disapply elements of the Protocol on Ireland/Northern
Ireland to the EU–UK Withdrawal Agreement. The legislation will restate
many of the UK’s asks from its July 2021 Command Paper,
including a dual regulatory regime, new customs procedures, and a new
governance structure. Such demands would require that elements of the
Protocol be rewritten, or a wholly new agreement reached.
This
announcement follows the election in Northern Ireland that saw Sinn
Féin, an Irish republican party, win the largest share of the vote and
the Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) relegated to second place. The DUP
views the Protocol as a threat to their place in the Union and has
refused to re-enter the North’s power-sharing structures, meaning that
there will be no functioning government in Northern Ireland until its
grievances are resolved.
The proposed legislation will be
brought forward in the coming weeks and could take up to a year to pass
through the UK legislative process. It appears that the UK’s aim is to
inject an element of ‘crisis’ into the debate and push EU member states
to broaden the European Commission’s negotiating mandate while at the
same time scoring points with Eurosceptics within the Conservative
party.
The EU position remains that the Protocol is not open for re-negotiation. In October 2021, the Commission put forward solutions
to practical implementation issues within the structures of the
agreement. But discussions on these proposals have made little headway.
Given the current impasse, should member states reconsider the
Commission’s mandate?
The case for change
There
is an argument for finding new arrangements for post-Brexit trading
rules in Northern Ireland. The Protocol has become so politically toxic
in the DUP’s eyes that it is difficult to envisage in what form any
consensus reached between the EU and UK could be sold to the party.
Indeed, even Northern Irish politicians that want the Protocol to work –
54 of the 90 politicians elected – acknowledge that changes are needed in its implementation.
Additionally,
the EU finds itself at an impasse regarding the Protocol’s enforcement.
As grace periods are prolonged, partial implementation becomes the
status quo, making full implementation in the future extremely
unpopular. And now, with no government in Northern Ireland, we could be
entering a period of prolonged non-implementation. Ensuring the
protection of the European Single Market would mean either moving the
customs border to the land border on the island of Ireland, which is
geographically impossible to police and politically unfeasible to
implement, or between Ireland and the rest of the EU, which would
undermine Ireland’s place in the Single Market. With no way to implement
the Protocol fully and a partner unwilling to move, going back to the
drawing board could allow the EU to break this deadlock.
The UK is not a reliable partner
The
problem is, following six years of negotiating its withdrawal from the
Union, the credibility of the current UK government in the eyes of both
the EU institutions and member states is at an all-time low. The EU is
quick to underline that it was Prime Minister Johnson himself who signed
and negotiated the Protocol, in full knowledge of the consequences it would have for Northern Ireland’s economy and society.
The
Commission has already moved substantially within its current mandate
to grant flexibilities on the Protocol’s implementation. Yet, there
remains a sense that any concessions granted by the EU, for example, on medicines,
are not acknowledged by the UK but simply pocketed while further
demands are made. Last week, Irish Foreign Minister Simon Coveney
commented that the EU is negotiating with a partner it “simply cannot trust”.
Whether the UK wants to reach a deal at all is doubtful. Even if member
states were to grant the Commission a new mandate, there is no
guarantee that the UK government would stick to what is agreed.
What should the EU do next?
If
member states do not trust the UK government to act in good faith, and
there are no politically feasible avenues for the EU to implement the
Protocol, then what options are left?
The European Commission has stated
that should the UK move forward with this bill, the EU will respond
with all measures at its disposal. A political question for the EU is
when and how harshly it should respond. Should the Commission react as
soon as the legislation is published, claiming that the UK has
demonstrated an intention to breach international law? Or wait to see in
what form the bill passes through the legislative process? The
Commission has adopted a strict approach internally to Hungary breaching
the rule of law
– the same standards should be applied to the UK. Conversely, acting
too soon or too harshly could escalate the situation further, undermine
the possibility of reaching a negotiated solution, and threaten
stability in Northern Ireland.
Previously, the EU has threatened
retaliation through the EU–UK Trade and Cooperation Agreement (TCA) to
deter the UK from triggering the Protocol’s Article 16 safeguard
measures. This time around, the UK is banking on the possibility that
concerns relating to the war in Ukraine will inhibit the EU from acting
in a way that could escalate to a trade war. ..
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