Irish Independent

Reality for UK may be a choice between no deal and no Brexit

- Peter Foster

THE crushing defeat of Theresa May’s Brexit deal in the Commons last night now begs pressing questions for both London and Brussels.

For all its collective bravado on the subject, the EU is not prepared for no deal and wiser heads in Europe know that this is a divorce where both parties are condemned to be next-door neighbours in perpetuity.

And so, after this vote we enter a new and perilous phase. Privately, senior officials on both sides have, in recent weeks, started to recognise this reality. For a long time, the mantra was “May’s deal or no deal”, partly as a strategy to help Mrs May shoo the deal across the line in Westminste­r, but it is clear that that has now failed.

The margin of defeat – 230 votes – leaves no doubt that something will need to change for both the EU and the UK to agree an orderly exit in the next few months.

But it would be a huge mistake to assume – as is so often assumed in Westminste­r – that it is now for the EU to reach into its negotiator’s hat and pull out a rabbit that will save the British Brexit project.

Andrea Leadsom is one among many who believes this defeat sends a clear message to the EU that they must budge (presumably on the Irish backstop), but that is not where the thinking is on the EU side. On the contrary.

When reports appear in British newspapers that Angela Merkel is about to offer “new concession­s” on the backstop, blood boils in Brussels because the underlying presumptio­n is that Brexit is a conundrum for the EU to solve. As one exasperate­d EU official says, “It’s the same old ‘Germans to the rescue’ storyline.”

The truth of that Sunday night conversati­on between Mrs May and Ms Merkel was rather different. Indeed, it was almost the exact opposite, according to a Whitehall source. The German leader focused on MPs needing to take responsibi­lity and not just push everything back to the EU.

Because from an EU perspectiv­e, Brexit is not first and foremost a collective responsibi­lity but a UK decision – or more accurately, a “non-decision decision”. For the last two years, the UK side has been incapable of internal agreement on what it wants. It is from this that all of the woes in this negotiatio­n derive.

MPs who dislike the deal demand the EU must budge or give more concession­s or that Mrs May should go back into bat. But, the EU asks, bat for what?

That is the question the EU wants answered. And after polite expression­s of regret at last night’s defeat, they can be expected to sit and wait to see what shakes out of the wreckage. They will not want to be seen to be intransige­nt in Brussels. Indeed, Heiko Maas, the German foreign minister, said there was no reason there could not be further talks, but this offer should not be misconstru­ed.

It is true that EU officials have started to talk about a willingnes­s to extend Article 50 (at least until July) and even to reset negotiatio­ns entirely, including (it is whispered) even reopening the Withdrawal Agreement if that is what it takes to get a deal. But that “if ” is all-important.

To make a new negotiatio­n meaningful, the UK side must turn up in Brussels with a cogent position that convinces the 27 other EU leaders that it is worth reopening talks to get Brexit over the line. Failure to do this – both in Salzburg last September, then again in December at the European Council – have ended disastrous­ly for Mrs May.

In December, Mrs May

After this vote, we enter a new and perilous phase

The EU can’t just wait and see what shakes out of the debris

demanded the EU guarantee her a trade deal by the end of 2021 to avoid the Irish backstop kicking in, but when asked how that would work, she was unable to answer. She was, to quote Jean-Claude Juncker, “nebulous”.

As a result EU leaders, already irritated at her decision to postpone the vote, shut up shop, slamming the door on any possible tweaks to the deal because they could not see how they would deliver Brexit.

Well now, in EU eyes at least, the time for nebulosity is over. British MPs need to make decisions based on reality. No one (including UK officials) wants to go back to the table to go through the motions of a negotiatio­n to further indulge the delusions of some UK politician­s. And as Mr Maas intimated, the fundamenta­l parameters of the discussion have not changed.

“The agreement stands as it is,” he said. “I doubt very much that the agreement can be fundamenta­lly reopened. If there were a better solution, it would already have been put forward.”

Both the EU and the UK remain committed to avoiding a return to a hard Border in Northern Ireland while forging a strong new trading relationsh­ip. The Border issue can be solved – MPs could go back to the “October” deal and accept a “de-dramatised” regulatory and customs border in the Irish Sea in order to repatriate full trade independen­ce.

It could tack the other way and opt for a permanent customs union and high alignment with Europe, seriously cutting down hurdles that technology would need to solve, both north-south and east-west.

It could opt for an ultra-close single market and customs union deal, or even think again and decide that Mrs May’s deal isn’t so bad after all, since it leaves the door open to the very technologi­cal fixes championed by Brexiteers.

But, as EU officials say, the answers lie in Westminste­r, not in Brussels. And if the UK can come up with half-decent answers, they may yet be surprised at how much flexibilit­y the EU will show to get the deal over the line.

We are a long way from there at the moment. But the alternativ­e is that, without a plan, EU leaders may sit on their hands and simply refuse to extend Article 50 beyond a certain point.

That would present a stark choice indeed.

Since last year’s European Court of Justice ruling, the UK has the power to unilateral­ly revoke Article 50, meaning the choice would be in British hands – between a very hard landing or revoking that letter and having no Brexit at all. (© Daily Telegraph London)

Both the UK and EU remain committed to avoiding hard Border

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ?? PHOTO: OLI SCARFF/GETTY ?? Protest:A woman stands in front of an EU flag outside the Houses of Parliament in central London yesterday.
PHOTO: OLI SCARFF/GETTY Protest:A woman stands in front of an EU flag outside the Houses of Parliament in central London yesterday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Ireland