The Scotsman

The need to keep on going the extra mile

There is surely no longer any room at the negotiatin­g table for bluff, bluster and brinkmansh­ip

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After nine months of stalemate, missed deadlines and false dawns, both sides in the long-running saga of post-brexit trade talks at last arrived at some sort of rapprochem­ent yesterday: they agreed to keep talking (again).

With the latest final deadline of 13 December about to pass, Prime Minister Boris Johnson and European Commission President Ursula van der Leyen found common cause by agreeing that the responsibl­e course of action was to “go the extra mile” and keep trying to break the deadlock this week.

Perhaps the unedifying prospect over the weekend of the Royal Navy being deployed to patrol coastal waters helped focus minds on both sides of the Channel. Fisheries are one of the three sticking points between the two sides, with the EU wanting to continue to maximise access to UK waters and the British arguing that as an independen­t coastal state its fleet should be prioritise­d.

Negotiatio­ns are also stalled on socalled "level playing field" rules. The EU seeks a high degree of alignment on workers' rights, the environmen­t and state aid, while Mr Johnson is wary of the UK being treated as the bloc's "twin".

The third stumbling block, governance, is over who is ultimately in charge, with the UK adamant that as an independen­t sovereign state it cannot accept the jurisdicti­on of the European Court of Justice.

That the two sides appear as far apart as ever on reaching a consensus in these areas at such a late stage is cause for major concern. The impact of a no-deal Brexit would be profound, with an end to free trade and punitive tariffs on imports and exports just as the economy is trying to find its feet after an unpreceden­ted battering caused by the coronaviru­s pandemic.

As the clock ticks relentless­ly towards 31 December, and with yet more time needing set aside for MPS and MEPS to vote on any deal, there is surely no longer any room at the negotiatin­g table for bluff, bluster and brinkmansh­ip.

At the end of a year in which the world seems almost to have been knocked off its axis, perhaps the best outcome this week might be an acknowledg­ement on both sides that the “extra mile” for a deal to be struck could be extended as far into 2021 as necessary.

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