National Post

TO THE VICTORS GO

PARIS, AMSTERDAM WIN ROUND ONE IN FIGHT OVER BREXIT SPOILS FROM EU.

- JONATHAN STEARNS

BRUSSELS • France and the Netherland­s won the contests to host two Londonbase­d European Union agencies in the first concrete political victories in the battle for Brexit spoils.

The EU’s banking authority will move to Paris and the medicines regulator will relocate to Amsterdam by the time Britain departs from the 28-nation bloc in March, 2019. The two cities emerged victorious against a slew of other candidates after a series of secret ballots by EU government­s on Monday. In each case, a drawing of lots after a tie in the third and last round was needed to reach a final result.

“It was a tight competitio­n,” Matti Maasikas, deputy minister for European affairs of Estonia, which holds the EU’s rotating presidency, told reporters after the voting. “It fell to me to draw the lot.”

The decisions cap months of lobbying over applicatio­ns by 19 cities ranging from Stockholm to Bucharest that sought to lure the European Medicines Agency and of eight offers — including by Dublin, Frankfurt and Vienna — for the European Banking Authority. The losers in the drawing of lots were the Irish capital for the EBA and Milan for the EMA.

The campaign to woo the EMA and EBA funnelled a side effect of Brexit into a long EU tradition of manoeuvrin­g by member nations for the political and economic rewards that come with hosting pieces of Europe’s extensive regulatory machinery.

The EMA, which evaluates applicatio­ns for new drugs and oversees the safety of medicines, employs about 900 people and attracts 36,000 visitors a year to London from government, science and industry. The EBA works to align banking rules in the EU and has fewer than 200 employees.

Amsterdam l ured t he EMA by promising to build a new office in the Zuidas area of the city, already home to companies including paint maker Akzo Nobel NV and bank ABN Amro Group NV. Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte called the result “good news” for the Netherland­s on his Facebook page.

French President Emmanuel Macron, who this year became the country’s leader after he ran a pro-EU campaign against anti-euro, anti-immigratio­n challenger Marine Le Pen, hailed the victory of Paris. “Paris will welcome the EBA!” Macron said in a Twitter posting. “This is the acknowledg­ment of the attractive­ness and European commitment of France.”

While highly political, the process for picking the new homes of the two agencies was given a veneer of objectivit­y through criteria that included accessibil­ity, availabili­ty of schools and health care for staff families, and an assurance of operationa­l readiness when Brexit happens.

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