The Peterborough Examiner

Quiet New Year gives breathing room after Brexit

- JILL LAWLESS

LONDON — A steady trickle of trucks rolled off ferries and trains on either side of the English Channel on Friday, a quiet New Year’s Day after a seismic overnight shift in relations between the European Union and Britain.

The busy goods route between southeast England and northwest France is on the front line of changes now that the U.K. has fully left the economic embrace of the 27-nation bloc, the final stage of Brexit.

“For the majority of trucks they won’t even notice the difference,” said John Keefe, spokesman for Eurotunnel, the railway tunnel that carries vehicles under the Channel. “There was always the risk that if this happened at a busy time then we could run into some difficulti­es, but it’s happening overnight on a bank holiday and a long weekend.”

Britain left the European bloc’s vast single market for people, goods and services at 11 p.m. London time, midnight in Brussels, on Thursday, in the biggest single economic change the country has experience­d since World War II. A new U.K.EU trade deal will bring new restrictio­ns and red tape, but for British Brexit supporters, it means reclaiming national independen­ce from the EU and its web of rules.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson, whose support for Brexit helped push the country out of the EU, called it “an amazing moment for this country.”

“We have our freedom in our hands, and it is up to us to make the most of it,” he said in a New Year’s video message.

The break comes 11 months after a political Brexit that left the two sides in the limbo of a “transition period” in which EU rights and rules continued to apply to Britain.

The trade agreement sealed on Christmas Eve after months of tense negotiatio­ns ensures that Britain and the EU can continue to buy and sell goods without tariffs or quotas. But companies face sheaves of new costs and paperwork, including customs declaratio­ns and border checks.

The English Channel port of Dover and the Eurotunnel braced for delays as the new measures were introduced.

The vital supply route was snarled for days after France closed its border to U.K. truckers for 48 hours last week in response to a fast-spreading variant of the virus identified in England.

The pandemic and a holiday weekend meant cross-Channel traffic was light on Friday. Britain has also delayed imposing full customs checks for several months so that companies can adjust.

The British government insisted that “the border systems and infrastruc­ture we need are in place, and we are ready for the U.K.’s new start.”

New checks were also in place across the Irish Sea. A dozen trucks rolled off the first ferry to arrive at Dublin Port from Wales before dawn, clearing the new customs inspection­s without delays.

“We have avoided the kind of dramatic disruption of a no trade deal Brexit, but that doesn’t mean that things aren’t changing very fundamenta­lly, because they are,” said Irish Foreign Minister Simon Coveney.

“We’re now going to see the 80 billion euros ($97 billion) worth of trade across the Irish Sea between Britain and Ireland disrupted by an awful lot more checks and declaratio­ns, and bureaucrac­y and paperwork, and cost and delay.”

Brexit could also have major constituti­onal repercussi­ons for the United Kingdom. Northern Ireland, which shares a border with EU member Ireland, remains more closely tied to the bloc’s economy under the divorce terms. So while goods will continue to flow freely across the Irish land border, there will be new procedures for trade between Northern Ireland and the rest of the U.K. In the long run that could pull Northern Ireland away from the rest of the U.K. and toward its southern neighbour.

Reports that Stanley Johnson, the father of British Prime Minister Boris Johnson, is seeking to keep a foot in Europe by taking up French citizenshi­p made headlines just as his son lead Britain’s split Thursday from the EU. Britain left the European bloc’s vast single market for people, goods and services at 11 p.m. London time on New Year’s Eve.

Visiting Calais on Friday to inspect how the French port is adjusting post-Brexit, France’s minister for European Affairs, Clément Beaune, described the citizenshi­p applicatio­n as emblematic of enduring British sentiment for Europe.

“If Mr. Johnson’s father has a right to French nationalit­y, wants to remain a European citizen and become a French citizen, then we will examine that,” he said.

“To me, this is a wink, or a sign, that lots of British people, in different ways, still love Europe.”

 ?? THIBAULT CAMUS THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Passengers arrive with the first train arriving from Britain after Brexit on Friday at the Gare du Nord railway station, in Paris.
THIBAULT CAMUS THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Passengers arrive with the first train arriving from Britain after Brexit on Friday at the Gare du Nord railway station, in Paris.

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