Vocable (Anglais)

HOPES OF A BETTER POSTBREXIT RELATIONSH­IP WITH THE EU ARE FADING

Des tensions entre l’Union Européenne et le Royaume-Uni.

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Hopes of a better post-Brexit relationsh­ip with the EU are fading

Malgré les aléas du Brexit, il n'a jamais été question pour le Royaume-Uni de voir l'Union Européenne autrement que comme une alliée. Mais les difficiles négociatio­ns de l’accord, le durcisseme­nt des frontières, le problème de l'Irlande du Nord et les conflits diplomatiq­ues liés à la campagne de vaccinatio­n altèrent peu à peu la bonne entente des deux partis. Après un divorce à l'amiable, une alliance est-elle réellement possible ?

Since becoming prime minister in July 2019, Boris Johnson has often referred to EU countries as “our friends and partners”. Many of his fans believed that, once Brexit was done, a more co-operative relationsh­ip between the two would be possible. Even those who criticised Mr Johnson’s December trade deal for its thinness hoped closer collaborat­ion on issues ranging from the environmen­t to foreign policy would allow Britain and the EU to build on it. Yet three months on, the relationsh­ip seems scratchier than ever.

2. The year began badly with bigger barriers to trade than many exporters had expected. Covid-19 and stockpilin­g in the run-up to Brexit make the figures harder to analyse. But in January goods exports to the EU were down by over 40% from December, whereas they rose marginally to non-EU markets. For fish and shellfish, exports fell by a massive 83%; for food and drink, by 75%. Services exports are also likely to have dived.

3. Covid-19 vaccine wars now cast another shadow. For much of 2020 the story was of Britain’s slower response than the EU‘s to the pandemic. This year it has turned into one of British nimbleness in rolling out vaccines, against the EU’s woeful sluggishne­ss. Indeed, many Brexiteers trumpet this as proof that they were right to want to leave the bloc.

4. The government has been careful not to crow over its success with vaccines, and has shown restraint in the face of the EU’s vaccine nationalis­m. France’s Emmanuel Macron cast doubt on the effectiven­ess of the vaccine produced by AstraZenec­a, an AngloSwedi­sh firm, and a groundless scare over blood clots, which encouraged vaccine resistance, led many European countries briefly to suspend its use. At the same time EU leaders complained about AstraZenec­a’s failure to deliver contracted doses. The European Commission is now taking powers to control vaccine exports, including to Britain; though on March 24th, in an attempt to defuse the row, the two sides issued a joint statement saying they were working together to create a “win-win situation”.

ARGUMENTS TO SETTLE

5. Difference­s over vaccines may be resolved more easily than those over Northern Ireland. Under the Northern Ireland protocol that is included in Britain’s withdrawal treaty with the EU, the province remains in effect part of the European single market and customs union. The resulting obstacles have hindered trade between the two, notably of anything that falls under the regulation­s covering food, drink and plants, and are threatenin­g the Good Friday Agreement that brought peace to Northern Ireland. One possible solution to the Northern Ireland conundrum would be for Britain to align formally with the EU’s veterinary and food-safety standards, thus minimising checks on food, drink and plants travelling between Great Britain and Northern Ireland while helping British exports to the EU.

6. Simon Hoare, Tory chairman of the Commons Northern Ireland committee, claims it would solve 80% of the regulatory problems associated with the protocol, but the government is reluctant, partly because of its instinctiv­e aversion to red tape and partly because it thinks that accepting EU food standards would scupper the chances of a free-trade deal with America. Yet if it does not come up with a solution, a US trade deal is scuppered anyway: President Joe Biden and Congress are clear that any breach of the Northern Ireland protocol would kill it.

7. Inevitably, in the wake of Brexit, there are other niggles. The European Parliament is deferring its ratificati­on of the December trade deal. Britain is refusing to accord full diplomatic status to the EU’s ambassador in London. Still, most Britons want to get on with their big neighbour. A poll this week by Ipsos mori for the Brussels-based EU-UK forum found 78% of respondent­s in favour of close relations. However, only 41% expect them. The attitudes of both sides do not give much ground for hope.

8. The EU’s vaccine mess has made it pricklier. That will pass, but one of its main concerns will not: it believes that, if Brexit were seen as a success, it might encourage others to follow suit. That is a reasonable fear; but in Britain, its failure to take into account Northern Ireland’s particular characteri­stics looks insensitiv­e.

9. Mr Johnson takes the view that, in the long term, loosening ties with a chronicall­y slowgrowin­g continent and looking instead across the Atlantic and to Asia is the best way of ensuring Britain’s future prosperity. In the meantime, keeping a greater distance also makes it easier to blame problems arising from Brexit on European red tape and protection­ism. Those wanting a closer relationsh­ip across the Channel are likely to be disappoint­ed.

 ?? (SIPA) ?? Boris Johnson signs the EU-UK Trade and Cooperatio­n Agreement, London, 30 December 2020.
(SIPA) Boris Johnson signs the EU-UK Trade and Cooperatio­n Agreement, London, 30 December 2020.
 ??  ?? Health Secretary Matt Hancock visits a NHS vaccinatio­n center, England, January 2021.
Health Secretary Matt Hancock visits a NHS vaccinatio­n center, England, January 2021.
 ?? (SIPA) ?? Irish loyalists protest against the current Anglo-Irish border in Northern Ireland, April 2021.
(SIPA) Irish loyalists protest against the current Anglo-Irish border in Northern Ireland, April 2021.
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(SIPA)

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