Yorkshire Post

No deal will be better than May’s bad Brexit deal

- Tim Dewey Tim Dewey is chief executive of Yorkshire brewery Timothy Taylor’s. He is writing in a personal capacity.

WHETHER YOU voted ‘remain’ or ‘leave’ in the referendum on EU membership in 2016, I think there is a general recognitio­n that the ‘project fear’ projection­s by the Treasury, Bank of England and other members of the establishm­ent ahead of the vote were just that – projection­s designed to strike fear into the populace so that we would vote ‘the right way’.

Two-and-a-half years later and it seems that history is repeating itself, with our politician­s having negotiated an extremely poor deal on the back of their own fear of a ‘no deal’ and business organisati­ons, such as the CBI, vociferous­ly proclaimin­g what they ‘must get’ from a deal and how a ‘no deal’ will be a disaster (talk about pulling the rug out from under your negotiatin­g team).

Anyone that I speak to who has any experience of negotiatio­n, and these are people from both sides of the Leave/Remain spectrum, find it incredible that politician­s, business people and profession­al organisati­ons fail to recognise that the only way to ensure a good deal is to be prepared for, and willing to accept, a ‘no deal’ and that the UK could still thrive under it. That is why Theresa May was right back in 2017 to declare that ‘no deal was better than a bad deal’.

It is a shame that the hysteria surroundin­g a ‘no deal’ exit, together with the challengin­g political environmen­t, have cornered us into a bad deal as the Government uses defensive and simplistic claims that ‘nothing else is available’ or ‘this is the best deal available’ to try to force their deal through (personally I get angry that the term ‘deal’ is even used, what we have at the moment is anything but a deal… more a capitulati­on).

The reality is that we have been placed in a situation where we are being asked to surrender our £39bn negotiatin­g advantage in return for remaining subject to EU courts and EU laws for an unspecifie­d amount of time, with no unilateral right to escape the backstop.

Not only that, but we will be doing so with no promise or robust legal framework to support our negotiatio­ns for a future trading relationsh­ip with the EU.

This challenge will be compounded by the fact that our trade agreement will need to be agreed by unanimity (each individual EU country), hence a scenario where French issues over fishing or even the Belgian Walloonian­s concerns on labour safeguards, could block our deal unless their demands are met.

Fanciful? Perhaps you don’t remember how the Canada free trade agreement with the EU was blocked for a time because of Walloonian objections. For the Canada deal to pass, in Belgium alone, its federal, regional and community bodies – seven in total – all had to give their approval.

That is what we are up against in the next phase of negotiatio­ns which have been merely kicked down the road by our politician­s as they work to a limited vision and timeframe (the next election).

I have spent most of my career in internatio­nal marketing in the drinks industry, exporting British goods to markets across the globe, including to our biggest export destinatio­n, the United States. As a result of this, I have seen the vast potential of dynamic markets outside of the EU.

In fact, the beverage industry has a lot to gain from Brexit given that whisky, beer, wine and gin are all in the country’s top 10 exported products. But we will only be able to seize these opportunit­ies if we serve up a real Brexit, either by leaving the EU with a ‘good deal’ or by leaving on World Trade Organisati­on terms. Otherwise we will not only find ourselves negotiatin­g our future trading relationsh­ip with Europe from an extremely weak position, but will also be unable to strike trade deals with other parts of the world.

I would encourage our politician­s, from both sides of the Remain/Leave divide, to

The real nightmare will come when we find ourselves in permanent purgatory.

vote down Theresa May’s socalled deal and begin serious preparatio­n for a ‘no deal’ under world trade terms.

Meanwhile, let us find an able team to re-open our negotiatio­ns with the EU, but against a background where they genuinely understand that if a good deal isn’t struck, we will leave with ‘no deal’. You only have to look at the perilous state of the German and other European economies to realise how fearful the EU is of us leaving without a deal in place. If this means suspending Article 50 for a period, to do the genuine ‘no deal’ preparatio­ns that the Government should have already undertaken, then so be it.

Better that than to be effectivel­y blackmaile­d into Theresa May’s bad deal which might create momentary relief for some, but which will quickly come back to haunt us all. For anyone who feels that ‘no deal’ is a nightmare; the real nightmare will come when we find ourselves in permanent purgatory, a rule taker and with little negotiatio­n leverage on the most crucial question of all – our future trading relationsh­ip with Europe.

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