The Sunday Guardian

Leavers, Remainers both unhappy with Brexit ‘deal’

UK Prime Minister says the alternativ­e is ‘No Deal’ or ‘No Brexit’, although there are other alternativ­es being considered by the folks who reject the Withdrawal Agreement.

- REUTERS

After a week fraught with tensions and threats, the European Council and British Prime Minister Theresa May have a mutually acceptable draft agreement for UK’s exit that has been recommende­d to the remaining 27 EU members and to the UK’s Parliament. This is in two parts: Part-I is “The Withdrawal Agreement (WA)”, which is legally binding, and Part-II is “The Political Declaratio­n on the UK-EU Future Relationsh­ip (PDFR)”. The WA covers citizens’ rights, the financial cost of leaving and how to manage the Irish border, the presently indefinite transition period as well as judicial cooperatio­n, intellectu­al property, procuremen­t and administra­tion procedures. The PDFR is separate as the EU Commission insisted the future relationsh­ip could only be legally negotiated once the UK was no longer a member state. At the moment the PDFR is nothing but a draft of intentions or so-called “aspiration­s”, for future argument.

Although this is being spun on both sides of the Channel as a victory, both Leavers and Remainers are dissatisfi­ed with both parts of the “deal”. The Prime Minister says the alternativ­e is “No Deal” or “No Brexit”, although there are other alternativ­es (preferably FTA as in Canada+++ or WTO) being considered by the folks who reject the WA. Some Conservati­ve MPs say there is no stomach in the House of Common for “no deal”. Brexiteer MPs and the European Research Group appear to have delayed their challenge to the PM, now preferring to wait until after the Westminste­r vote; then they will know how Labour behaved and if the DUP did, in spite of their protestati­ons and demonstrat­ions this week, shore up the Prime Minister.

To many, it looks like the EU have called the shots and the Prime Minister has capitulate­d. The EU promised a spirit of co-operation but examinatio­n of the Draft does not bear witness to this. It was surprising to learn the Draft was written and printed in Brussels; the UK will still be under the interpreta­tive arbitratio­n of the ECJ, and have a single (EU) rule book, tax favouritis­m to former EU officials based in the UK and immunity to EU employees who may be discovered later as corrupt, too many UK committees with EU representa­tives to guarantee implementa­tion. Professor Gwythian Prins, leading expert in strategic trends, claims the exclusion from EU security networks will “weaken our key security agreement, the Five Eyes Intelligen­ce Alliance be- tween the United Kingdom, the United States, Australia, Canada and New Zealand.” UK’s fishing industry feel that their rights will be compromise­d and surrendere­d to France in the New Fisheries Agreement, Scottish Tories and SNP MP’s both say the WA is unacceptab­le and does not take back control of UK’s coastal waters; Scotland feel they have been a bargaining chip in the negotiatio­ns with the EU. Spain are aggrieved they have no specified joint-say with UK about Gibraltar tariffs and immigratio­n.

All this before the milliondol­lar border question of the “Northern Ireland Backstop”, which does not contain a unilateral exit clause, Martin Howe QC has renamed it “The whole UK permanent lock-in protocol with extra lock-in for Northern Ireland.” Sabine Weyand, Brussels Deputy Chief Negotiator, has told EU Ambassa- dors the backstop is not necessaril­y temporary, she said it could form the basis of a long term-permanent relationsh­ip. The Backstop has been denounced by some MPs as jeopardisi­ng the integrity of the United Kingdom. The Irish border has also been accused of being a political gimmick, is the backstop actually necessary if there is agreement and the technologi­cally streamline­d “maximum facilitati­on” is adopted (as referred to by Theresa Villiers in The Sunday Guardian of 3 April 2016: https://www. sundayguar­dianlive.com/ world/6933-tory-mp-villierswa­nts-cyprus-reunificat­ion).

The Political Declaratio­n session, in the House of Commons on Thursday, was a sales pitch by the Prime Minister. It descended into an inquisitio­n about the WA from the Tory party and into a plea for the “People’s Vote” from Remainers, which the PM has absolutely ruled out. What happens next is the EU summit on Sunday, 25 November, followed by the Parliament­ary vote in Westminste­r. As 50% of Conservati­ve backbench MPs have publicly declared, they will vote against the WA, if/when the vote fails Labour could call a vote of no confidence in the Government or the Conservati­ves could, via 48 letters submitted to the 1922 Committee, call for a vote of no confidence in the Prime Minister. It still looks like a bumpy road to Brexit on 29 March 2019.

This weekend, Conservati­ves Boris Johnson and Philip Hammond, who are on opposing sides of the Brexit argument, are invited to speak on consecutiv­e evenings at the DUP Party Conference in Belfast. The DUP has a confidence and supply arrangemen­t with Theresa May, and has abstained twice this week on voting for amendments to the Finance Bill.

The Prime Minister (a Remainer, who is surrounded by Remainers in No. 10) repeatedly says this WA reflects the result of the Referendum and this is what the British people want. In June 2016, 52% voted for Leave and 48% for Remain, and thus the WA has been deliberate­ly designed as half-out and half-in the EU, neither one thing or the other and unacceptab­le to all. Russia has drawn up draft legislatio­n aimed at stopping leaks of personal informatio­n from state agencies, a step that follows publicatio­n of details of Russians allegedly involved in clandestin­e intelligen­ce operations abroad.

The bill, produced by Russia’s communicat­ions ministry, bars unauthoris­ed people from creating and publishing databases of personal data drawn from official sources, and fines anyone violating that rule.

It also requires that state agencies setting up systems for handling personal data consult with the Federal Security Service, Russia’s main domestic intelligen­ce agency.

The bill, published late on Thursday, says it is in response to a 2017 instructio­n from President Vladimir Putin and makes no mention of the spate of leaks.

However, Russian authoritie­s have been embarrasse­d by leaks about two men Britain alleges were Russian intelligen­ce agents who used a nerve agent to poison former spy Sergei Skripal and his daughter. Russia denies involvemen­t.

The two men told Russian television they were innocent tourists who went to the English city of Salisbury, where Skripal was living, to view its cathedral. But the Bellingcat investigat­ive journalism website, drawing on leaked passport informatio­n, identified the two as officers with Russia’s GRU military intelligen­ce agency. In a separate case, a Russian accused in a US indictment of conducting cyber attacks around the world was traced, via leaked official databases, to an address in Moscow that Washington says is a base for Russian military intelligen­ce.

The legislatio­n, comprising two draft laws and a draft government resolution, has been published for a 30-day period of public consultati­on, after which it will be submitted to parliament and the government for approval. The destructio­n of Brazil’s Amazon rainforest reached its highest level in a decade this year, government data released on Friday showed, driven by illegal logging and the encroachme­nt of agricultur­e on the jungle.

Satellite images for the 12 months through the end of July 2018 showed that 7,900 square kilometers of forest were cleared in the Amazon, equivalent to more than half the territory of Jamaica. That was a 13.7% increase from the same period in the prior year.

Deforestat­ion is a key factor behind global warming, accounting for around 15% of annual emissions of heattrappi­ng gases, similar to that of the transporta­tion sector. On Friday, a US government report found that climate change will cost the

 ??  ?? British Prime Minister Theresa May and EU President Jean-Claude Juncker meet to discuss draft agreements on Brexit, at the EC headquarte­rs in Brussels, Belgium on Wednesday. REUTERS
British Prime Minister Theresa May and EU President Jean-Claude Juncker meet to discuss draft agreements on Brexit, at the EC headquarte­rs in Brussels, Belgium on Wednesday. REUTERS

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