Business Standard

May wants alignment with EU data rules after Brexit

- ROBERT HUTTON BLOOMBERG

UK Prime Minister Theresa May proposed keeping Britain in total alignment with the European Union’s data-sharing rules after Brexit, something that would allow both intelligen­ce agencies and business to continue to share informatio­n across borders.

The UK regards the EU’s data rules, which are crucial to both companies and security agencies, as one of its successes within the bloc — the British Informatio­n Commission­er’s Office played a large role in their developmen­t. Staying aligned would allow the sharing of informatio­n between offices in different countries confident that it was subject to proper protection rules.

While the EU currently offers “adequacy agreements” to third party countries, certifying that they conform to European rules, these can be withdrawn at any time, and wouldn’t offer British businesses the stability they need. “We want to go further and seek a bespoke arrangemen­t to reflect the UK’s exceptiona­lly high standards of data protection,” May told the Munich Security Conference in a speech on Saturday. “And we’re ready to start working through this with colleagues in the European Commission now.”

May even proposed “an ongoing role” for the UK’s data agency in setting the EU’s rules. She also wants UK defence companies to be able to compete on a level-playing field for European projects.

Tech UK, which represents the industry, welcomed May’s comments.

May also took a “practical and pragmatic” approach to cooperatio­n on intelligen­ce, defense and policing issues, setting out a comprehens­ive list of

areas for continued cooperatio­n. She wants Britain to keep the European Arrest Warrant and the European Investigat­ion Order, which helps with evidence gathering. She proposed continuing to work with and exchange data with Europol. And she went further. The UK would continue to contribute forces to EU military missions, and money to its aid projects.

It was hardly surprising that, at the end, conference organiser Wolfgang Ischinger observed to May that “things would be so much easier if you stayed” inside the EU. The speech was intended both to reassure her counterpar­ts and to show how a new trade deal could be reached.

A new treaty on security, as May proposed, would be vital to counter-terrorism work, but it would also serve a higher purpose: It would establish that, in some areas, the EU is willing to consider new types of relationsh­ips with third countries. The bloc’s chief negotiator, Michel Barnier, has repeatedly insisted that no such option is available to the U.K. when it comes to trade.

“If the priority in the negotiatio­ns becomes avoiding any kind of new cooperatio­n with a country outside the EU, then this political doctrine and ideology will have damaging real world consequenc­es for the security of all our people, in the UK and the EU,” May warned. “As leaders, we cannot let that happen.” German Chancellor Angela Merkel on Friday evening gave May some cover for this argument, saying that a bespoke settlement needn’t necessaril­y mean “cherrypick­ing” -- something that the EU Commission has said it won’t allow.

“We want to go further and seek a bespoke arrangemen­t to reflect the UK’s exceptiona­lly high standards of data protection...And we’re ready to start working through this with colleagues in the European Commission now” THERESA MAY, Britain’s Prime Minister

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