Deutsche Welle (English edition)

European Parliament to take final Brexit trade deal vote

The vote is the final step toward ratifying the EU-UK agreement and marks the last chapter of the Brexit saga that began almost five years ago. Relations between Brussels and London have already begun to sour.

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The European Parliament was set to hold a vote on a postBrexit trade deal between the EU and the UK on Tuesday.

The parliament is expected to ratify the pact, which has been provisiona­lly in effect since the beginning of the year pending the EU's final confirmati­on. The final Brexit seal has been accompanie­d by bitter warnings from some European quarters.

The Trade and Cooperatio­n Agreement (TCA) was the result of nine long months of negotiatio­ns and set up a relationsh­ip of zero tariffs and zero quotas on goods traded between the EU and UK.

What does the EU think of the deal?

A lack of agreement over joint health, environmen­t and other regulation­s has muddied attempts to avoid a hard border between Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland.

EU Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen took an optimistic view during Tuesday's parliament­ary session, saying that although the EU is facing "a lot of vigilance, diligence and hard work," the vote is not just an end, "it is also the beginning of a new chapter."

Relations have also soured between London and Brussels following a row over the supply of AstraZenec­a COVID-19 vaccine doses.

What has been the impact of Brexit so far?

Trade between the two sides has plummeted since the break came into effect on January 1, with EU imports from the UK down almost 50% and exports to the UK down 20% during the first two months.

"Brexit is a historic mistake. It was pushed through by irresponsi­ble nationalis­m, based on false promises and shortsight­edness," said Austrian MEP Andreas Schieder, who helped prepare the vote.

"Brexit is bad for Britain and Brexit is bad for Europe," he said.

What is the dispute over the border in Ireland?

The EU also launched a legal dispute against the UK after Westminste­r unilateral­ly extended a grace period for not conducting checks on goods being transporte­d between Northern Ireland and the rest of the UK.

The two sides have yet to find common ground on how to implement the so-called Northern Ireland protocol which aims to protect the single market while avoiding a hard border with EU member Ireland.

"This deal is not good because Brexit is not good. The situation is also complicate­d because we cannot be sure how trustworth­y the UK government really is," said Terry Reintke, the vice-president of the Greens/EFA group in the European Parliament.

"Still, this agreement can be a starting point reconstruc­ting what we lost due to Brexit," she said.

The European Parliament will vote on Tuesday evening, after several hours of debate, and the result will be announced on Wednesday.

 ??  ?? EU chief Ursula von der Leyen addressed the European Parliament in a plenary session before Tuesday's final vote
EU chief Ursula von der Leyen addressed the European Parliament in a plenary session before Tuesday's final vote

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