The Sentinel-Record

Breakthrou­gh: U.K. and E.U. reach post-Brexit trade agreement

- RAF CASERT AND JILL LAWLESS

BRUSSELS — Just a week before the deadline, Britain and the European Union struck a free-trade deal Thursday that should avert economic chaos on New Year’s and bring a measure of certainty for businesses after years of Brexit turmoil.

Once ratified by both sides, the agreement will ensure Britain and the 27-nation bloc can continue to trade in goods without tariffs or quotas after the U.K. breaks fully free of the E.U. on Jan. 1.

Relief was palpable all around that nine months of tense and often testy negotiatio­ns had finally produced a positive result.

The Christmas Eve breakthrou­gh was doubly welcome amid a coronaviru­s pandemic that has left some 70,000 people in Britain dead and led the country’s neighbors to shut their borders to the U.K. over a new and seemingly more contagious variant of the virus circulatin­g in England.

“We have taken back control of our laws and our destiny,” declared British Prime Minister Boris Johnson, who posted a picture of himself on social media, beaming with thumbs up.

European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said: “It was a long and winding road, but we have got a good deal to show for it.”

“It is fair, it is a balanced deal, and it is the right and responsibl­e thing to do for both sides,” she said in Brussels.

The E.U. member countries and the British and European parliament­s still need to vote on the agreement, though action by the European body may not happen until after the Jan. 1 breakup. Britain’s Parliament is set to vote Dec. 30.

France, long seen as Britain’s toughest obstacle to a deal, said the uncanny steadfastn­ess among the 27 nations with widely varying interests was a triumph in itself.

“European unity and firmness paid off,” French President Emmanuel Macron said in a statement.

And German Chancellor Angela Merkel said that unity will now probably result in all the E.U. nations backing the deal: “I am very optimistic that we can present a good result here.”

It has been 4 1/2 years since Britons voted 52% to 48% to leave the E.U. and — in the words of the Brexiteers’ campaign slogan — “take back control” of the U.K.’s borders and laws.

It took more than three years of wrangling before Britain left the bloc’s political structures last January. Disentangl­ing the two sides’ economies and reconcilin­g Britain’s desire for independen­ce with the E.U.’s aim of preserving its unity took months longer.

The devil will be in the detail of the 2,000-page agreement, but both sides claimed the deal protects their cherished goals.

Britain said it gives the U.K. control over its money, borders, laws and fishing grounds and ensures the country is “no longer in the lunar pull of the E.U.”

Von der Leyen said it protects the E.U.’s single market and contains safeguards to ensure Britain does not unfairly undercut the bloc’s standards.

If Britain were to quit the E.U. with no agreement governing trade, the two sides would reinstate tariffs on each other’s goods.

Johnson’s government acknowledg­ed that a chaotic no-deal exit — or a “crashout,” as the British call it — would probably cause gridlock at the country’s ports, temporary shortages of some goods and higher food prices. The turmoil could also cost hundreds of thousands of jobs.

To avoid that, negotiatin­g sessions alternatin­g between London and Brussels — and sometimes disrupted by the pandemic —- gradually whittled difference­s between the two sides down to three key issues: fair-competitio­n rules, mechanisms for resolving future disputes, and fishing rights.

The E.U. has long feared that Britain would slash social, environmen­tal and state aid rules after Brexit and gain a competitiv­e advantage over the E.U. Britain denies planning to institute weaker standards but said that having to follow E.U. regulation­s would undermine its sovereignt­y.

A compromise was eventually reached on the tricky “level playing field” issues.

That left the economical­ly minor but hugely symbolic issue of fishing rights as the final sticking point, with maritime E.U. nations seeking to retain access to U.K. waters where they have long fished.

Under the deal, the E.U. will give up a quarter of the quota it catches in U.K. waters, far less than the 80% Britain initially demanded. The system will be phased in over 5 1/2 years, after which the quotas will be reassessed.

The U.K. has remained part of the E.U.’s single market and customs union during the 11-month post-Brexit transition period. As a result, many people so far have noticed little impact from Brexit.

On Jan. 1, the breakup will start feeling real. Even with a trade deal, goods and people will no longer be able to move freely between the U.K. and its continenta­l neighbors without border restrictio­ns.

E.U. citizens will no longer be able to live and work in Britain without visas — though that does not apply to the 4 million already doing so — and Britons can no longer automatica­lly work or retire in E.U. nations. Exporters and importers face customs declaratio­ns, goods checks and other obstacles.

British manufactur­ers and traders welcomed the certainty provided by the deal. But economists said other parts of the economy — especially Britain’s huge services sector — would be left out in the cold.

David Henig, a trade expert at the European Center for Internatio­nal Political Economy, said Jan. 1 marked “the end of seamless trade between the U.K. and the E.U.

“And the difference that a trade deal makes is not going to be obvious to most people from that,” he said. “It is the new barriers that people will notice much more.”

 ?? The Associated Press ?? BREXIT: Anti-Brexit protester Steve Bray shouts through an over-sized loud hailer Thursday at the gates of Downing Street, London.
The Associated Press BREXIT: Anti-Brexit protester Steve Bray shouts through an over-sized loud hailer Thursday at the gates of Downing Street, London.

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