The Scotsman

UK is being outplayed by Brussels

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There is little sign of progress towards achieving the purported benefits of Brexit, writes

Bill Jamieson

An end to huge annual contributi­ons to the EU budget; control of our borders and immigratio­n; an end to European Court of Justice intrusion in UK affairs; and the primacy of parliament as our guardian of rights.

But after 18 months of tortuous negotiatio­ns, disputed timetables and stupefying gridlock, how stands the UK’S departure from the EU today?

Remainers have good cause to crow ‘I told you so’. And those who voted for withdrawal must feel utter bewilderme­nt this week as they read the runes of our potential exit agreement.

On each of the key fronts that exercised 17 million pro-brexit voters, little has been secured.

The UK government has offered a far larger potential EU divorce settlement bill than the €20 billion initially indicated by Theresa May – one that could be worth up to £44 bn - with payments stretching for decades ahead.

Similarly, many thought that when we left the EU we would automatica­lly regain control of our laws and our courts. No foreign court would have the right to overrule British courts, or insist what laws they must enforce within the UK.

But now it seems the government may be contemplat­ing a so-called “compromise” proposal under which UK courts would first make references to rulings by the European Court of Justice (ECJ) in Luxembourg on questions to do with EU citizens’ rights.

Millions voted for Brexit in the expectatio­n that immigratio­n would be sharply reduced. But latest projection­s from official bodies indicate continued substantia­l immigratio­n swelling population growth for decades ahead.

As for a return to “parliament­ary sovereignt­y”, a battle is now raging over the government’s decision not to reveal the full informatio­n in an economic impact study, while the final cost of the EU exit bill may never be known.

It’s hard not to conclude that the sum total of the UK’S negotiatio­n efforts thus far has yielded little that meets the concerns of those who voted for exit: a classic example of “plus ca change, plus c’est la meme chose”. Now all of this, of course, comes with the government mantra – ‘nothing is agreed until everything is agreed’. But the EU would not get to a position of agreeing anything until the UK had offered a settlement fee that is a multiple of its starting position. So much for the Foreign Secretary’s famous retort to the EU that it could “go whistle”. There will be whistling now – from erstwhile Leave supporters stunned by the government’s offer of £40bn plus.

“Britain has bowed to EU demands,” trumpeted the lead story in the Financial Times yesterday, “and agreed to fully honour its financial commitment­s as identified by Brussels.” (my italics).

The UK, it reported citing “several diplomats familiar with the talks”, would assume EU liabilitie­s worth up to €100bn (£88.3bn), following intense negotiatio­ns by Olly Robbins, Theresa May’s lead official on Brexit.

Both sides are still “working on how to present the settlement as a net estimate” with the UK pressing for an implied figure of between €40bn and €45bn (£35bn to £39.7bn) once UK receipts and other deductions are taken into account, thus making the net cost much smaller.

“We don’t care what they say their estimate is,” said one senior EU diplomat, “we’re happy to help them present it”. That’s for sure.

Under a system of regular annual payments to avoid a crushing up-front lump sum, “pensions of EU officials for instance,” the FT explained, “could be paid on the basis of annual costs, meaning there will be no final figure for the Brexit bill until the final eligible EU pensioner is dead, many decades from today”.

For a country constantly reminded by the government of its debt and deficit burdens and continuing constraint­s on central and local government spending, this is an extraordin­ary state of affairs.

The EU says the UK needs to settle its accounts before it leaves, as part of an overall withdrawal agreement. But some set of accounts is surely due to the UK for the huge sums it has paid towards EU buildings, equipment and staffing. How much of this huge payment is legally due? And how is the proposed settlement figure reconciled with the House of Lords report that nil (as in zero) was legally due by the UK? What of the writ of the ECJ after Brexit? On the UK’S departure, it would become a wholly foreign court with no British membership. We would cease to belong to the EU treaties. Instead we would enter into a bilateral treaty with the EU, guaranteei­ng certain rights to EU citizens in the UK and to UK citizens in the EU.

Writes constituti­onal lawyer Martin Howe QC: “It is unheard of in internatio­nal relations for a state to accept as binding the rulings of the courts of the other treaty party. It is also unheard of in the many treaties which the EU has made with nonmember states for any of those states to agree to be bound by rulings of the ECJ. “So, if the UK were to agree that its courts would make preliminar­y references to the ECJ after we had left, we would uniquely abase ourselves in internatio­nal relations and place ourselves lower than any other state with whom the EU has treaty relations.”

As for immigratio­n and the restitutio­n of border controls, concerns are set to persist long into the future. An estimated 248,000 citizens from other EU countries moved to the UK in the year to March. Office for National Statistics prediction­s last month suggested that the UK population would reach 70.1 million in 2029. Taking into account babies born to foreign parents in Britain, immigratio­n is indirectly expected to account for 77 per cent of the growth.

Now a new estimate has emerged on the basis that immigratio­n remains at its current level. The 70.1 million figure would be reached by 2026, and would hit 72.9 million by mid-2041. And there may be no way of enforcing new rules on EU nationals once the government’s post-brexit immigratio­n strategy is eventually reached.

Finally, there is the government’s reluctance to reveal details of an 850-page Treasury study on how the UK’S exit will affect 59 sectors of the economy. Certain sections will not be released.

Ministers say some sensitive details that risk “underminin­g the UK’S negotiatin­g hand” will be kept private. While these are understand­able concerns, it raises questions on two counts: first, that the Commons and Lords Brexit committees are not being dealt a full hand upon which to arrive at their conclusion­s; and second that it gives power to future government­s to withhold or redact informatio­n from parliament­ary scrutiny – not at all a healthy precedent to set, especially in the wake of claims that the authority of the UK parliament would be enhanced in the wake of Brexit.

Little wonder many will be wondering this morning what exactly has been achieved in the Brexit negotiatio­ns thus far. The UK government looks to have been out-guessed, out-played and out-manoeuvred by Brussels. Plus ca change, indeed.

 ??  ?? 0 Theresa May and the EU are still ‘working on how to present the settlement as a net estimate’
0 Theresa May and the EU are still ‘working on how to present the settlement as a net estimate’
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