Sunday Independent (Ireland)

This could be the time EU fails to seal a last-ditch deal as trade talks with UK stall

- John Rentoul

MICHEL Barnier is an oldschool negotiator. At his news conference­s he speaks in English when he wants to insult the British — and then switches back to French as he explains how utterly reasonable he has been throughout.

Yesterday, he said — in English — that the political declaratio­n agreed by both sides “is available in all languages, including English”, before he accused “our British counterpar­ts” of seeking to distance themselves from it. In French, however, he said he would remain “serene and patient” in the talks.

Both sides admit that little progress has been made and that time is short. David Frost, the UK negotiator, who last week seemed pessimisti­c about the prospects of agreement, said yesterday: “We are now at an important moment for these talks.”

A major internatio­nal trade treaty needs to be agreed by the end of October — a deadline set by the EU. That is not going to happen, but that does not mean all is lost.

A full trade deal takes years to negotiate, and this one has hardly started, but a basic deal could be agreed if both sides were willing to compromise. Because the UK starts fully aligned with the EU, talks could be deferred about the details of possible future divergence in many areas.

Nor would it have to be done by the end of October: Brussels and Britain have both set many deadlines that have been broken before. As long as there is time for a session of the European Parliament, which needs to approve the deal, it can be done.

A basic deal would not need the approval of the parliament­s of all member states, unlike the EU-Canada trade deal, which was held up by the regional parliament of Wallonia in federal Belgium.

But there has to be a willingnes­s on both sides. Which is why the question of extending the transition period is secondary. The UK negotiator says there is no point in extending the period — in which the UK is treated temporaril­y as if it is still an EU member until the end of this year — just so the two sides can fail to make progress for a further one or two years.

So there is a negotiatin­g logic to the refusal of Boris Johnson’s Brexiteer cabinet

to ask for an extension, which he has to do by the end of this month, under the terms of the withdrawal agreement.

Once the UK is legally bound to leave the EU single market and customs union on December 31, it will concentrat­e the negotiator­s’ minds. A deal will either be possible or it will not; and if it isn’t, more time won’t magically make it possible.

Every time one of these crunch points draws near, people knowingly say the EU always does deals in the middle of the night at the last moment. That was true when the deal was done on Theresa May’s withdrawal agreement, later rejected by Westminste­r, and on Johnson’s rewritten version. But one day, a deal won’t be done — and this could be the day.

In which case, Ireland and the rest of the EU countries will pay an extra price on January 1, 2021. On top of the cost of the coronaviru­s recession, and on top of the cost of checks on goods crossing borders, they will have to pay tariffs on EU trade according to the rules set by the World Trade Organisati­on.

 ??  ?? Michel Barnier
Michel Barnier

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