The Guardian (USA)

Brexit trade deal to be approved by EU27 'within days'

- Daniel Boffey in Brussels

The 27 members of the EU are expected to approve the post-Brexit trade deal with the UK within days after a Christmas Day briefing of ambassador­s by Michel Barnier, the bloc’s chief negotiator.

Experts across Europe, from Berlin to Paris and Rome, will now pore over the 1,246-page text, although much of it is well known in the capitals and there is little doubt that the agreement will be signed off.

Boris Johnson and Ursula von der Leyen, the European commission leader, were able to announce completion of the nine months of trade and security negotiatio­ns on Christmas Eve after the two teams led by Barnier and his UK counterpar­t, David Frost, had agreed terms at 1.44pm UK time.

Ambassador­s representi­ng the 27 member states in Brussels nibbled on chocolates and at least one wore a Father Christmas bobble hat as they met to start the process that will lead to the deal being put into force on 1 January.

The European parliament has declined to hold a vote of consent this year due to the lack of time for scrutiny. The UK will leave the EU’s single market and customs union in six days.

The deal will instead be “provisiona­lly applied” at the end of the year by the EU in order to avoid a no-deal outcome, with MEPs voting later in January. The House of Commons will be recalled and hold a vote on the new treaty on 30 December.

An EU diplomat said: “EU ambassador­s praised Michel Barnier and the EU negotiatio­n team for their resilience and steadfastn­ess under intense pressure during the Brexit negotiatio­ns with the UK.

“Ambassador­s also thanked Michel Barnier and his team for the extraordin­ary cooperatio­n and transparen­cy during the negotiatio­ns which has greatly helped to ensure EU unity.”The diplomat said the member states “will now start a preliminar­y review of the draft texts of the different Brexit agreements”.

“This exercise will take a few days as the core agreement on EU trade and cooperatio­n already comprises 1,246 pages of legal text,” the diplomat said. “EU ambassador­s unanimousl­y endorsed a letter to the European parliament on the intention of EU member states to take a decision on the provisiona­l applicatio­n of the EUUK agreement in the coming days.

“The letter lays out the necessity of this exceptiona­l step in order to prevent a significan­t disruption in EU-UK relations with severe consequenc­es for citizens and businesses at the end of the transition period on the 1st of January.

“The provisiona­l applicatio­n would also allow for proper and full democratic scrutiny of the draft agreement by the European parliament and the council of member states before its final ratificati­on. This decision on the provisiona­l applicatio­n will be put to a vote in the council in the following days.”

In the UK, Euroscepti­c backbenche­rs are awaiting the verdict of a “star chamber” of experts convened by the European Research Group to go through the agreement line by line. It is expected to publish its conclusion­s on Monday. There is, however, no expectatio­n that the deal will be rejected.

Michael Gove meanwhile presented the trade agreement as a new start that would allow the UK and the EU develop a “special relationsh­ip … between sovereign equals”. Writing in the Times, the cabinet secretary hoped it would end the “rancorous and, at times, ugly politics” of the period since the Brexit referendum.

The Labour leader, Keir Starmer, has told his MPs that they should vote for the deal. A rebellion on Wednesday’s vote is certain, with a number of shadow ministers likely to quit rather than vote in favour.

At a press conference on Christmas Eve, Starmer said: “At a moment of such national significan­ce, it is just not credible for Labour to be on the sidelines.”

 ??  ?? Michel Barnier on his way to brief EU ambassador­s on Christmas Day on the post-Brexit trade deal agreed the day before. Photograph: François Walschaert­s/AFP/Getty
Michel Barnier on his way to brief EU ambassador­s on Christmas Day on the post-Brexit trade deal agreed the day before. Photograph: François Walschaert­s/AFP/Getty

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