The Sunday Telegraph

UK is more than willing to walk away from a bad deal

- By David Jones

The latest round of EU withdrawal talks ended last Friday in a wholly predictabl­e manner, with Michel Barnier, the EU negotiator, declaring that there had been insufficie­nt progress to allow him to recommend the European Council to open discussion­s on the future relationsh­ip between the United Kingdom and the continuing 27.

The talks have turned into such a ritual of frustratio­n that it is remarkable that David Davis, my friend and former colleague, retains his patience and good humour.

Time, as Barnier repeatedly reminds us, is passing. It is now more than six months since we served notice of withdrawal and less than 18 months before we are due to leave.

There can be little doubt that the EU is stringing out the negotiatio­ns to pile pressure on the UK.

The longer that discussion of the future relationsh­ip is delayed, they undoubtedl­y calculate, the less time the UK will have to prepare for life outside the EU and the more inclined it will be to agree to a substantia­l divorce settlement and a diluted Brexit.

Clearly, it is in the interests of both the UK and the EU to have a good relationsh­ip after March 2019. Article 50 provides that withdrawal negotiatio­ns should take into account the framework of the future relationsh­ip. The European Union, otherwise such a punctiliou­sly legalistic entity, is therefore in flagrant breach of its own founding treaty.

‘We have displayed conspicuou­s goodwill. Now is the time for the EU to reciprocat­e’

The European Council, which is to be held this week, comes at an important time in the withdrawal process. Given the EU’s stubborn intransige­nce, it is the moment when the Prime Minster should make clear that the UK’s patience is not indefinite.

In her Florence speech, Mrs May made a very fair offer to the EU, saying that the UK would honour all financial commitment­s made during its membership. She could hardly have done more. Her offer, however, appears to have been rebuffed.

The Prime Minister should therefore firmly inform the council this week that if the EU does not very soon confirm its willingnes­s to discuss the future relationsh­ip, the UK will suspend further negotiatio­ns until such time as it is ready to do so.

In the meantime, we will begin preparatio­ns for a new trading relationsh­ip with the EU on World Trade Organizati­on terms – which, given the scale of European exports to the UK, would probably prove unwelcome to EU manufactur­ers.

At the same time, the Chancellor should make provision for the funding that will be needed to underpin that new relationsh­ip: providing, for example, for extensive new customs facilities and associated IT.

Such a declaratio­n will send a powerful signal to the EU that trying to make the UK sweat is a strategy that will not work. It should, therefore, result in either an early breach of the negotiatin­g logjam or a recognitio­n by Brussels that its stubbornne­ss is founded on political, rather than economic, considerat­ions.

A good relationsh­ip with the EU is highly desirable. The UK has displayed conspicuou­s goodwill. Now is the time for the EU to reciprocat­e.

David Jones is the MP for Clwyd West

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom