Khaleej Times

May’s desperate Brexit gamble might just work

European Union should think twice before rejecting UK’s latest proposal

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UK Prime Minister Theresa May’s plan for Britain’s post-Brexit relationsh­ip with the European Union comes at least 18 months too late. With only a few months of real negotiatin­g time before the UK leaves, it has triggered the worst political turmoil yet faced by May, calling into question her future as prime minister. On top of all that, it’s a plan that the EU is quite likely to reject.

Believe it or not, that’s progress. The plan May has outlined “a fuller version is promised in a text to be published on Thursday” is at least a plan. That’s something Britain has so far lacked. And it’s a plan for a softer, hence less disruptive, Brexit than many Tories want. That’s good too.

The idea is for a deal centered on a UK-EU free-trade agreement for goods. Britain would have to keep its regulatory system for goods in line with Europe’s and would give the European Court of Justice at least some role (though not, May insists, “jurisdicti­on” in the UK) in interpreti­ng and enforcing the rules. British companies would be pleased with this, but militant Brexiters see red lines being crossed. Services wouldn’t be covered, though, and the UK would not agree to the principle of free movement of people between Britain and the EU, so this would not be “Brexit In Name Only.”

The proposal also includes a customs arrangemen­t that would see the UK collecting tariffs on the EU’s behalf for goods entering Britain bound for Europe. This prospect is complicate­d, and some say unworkable, but together with regulatory alignment on goods, it could avoid the need for a customs border between Northern Ireland and Ireland, or between Northern Ireland and the rest of the UK. And it would also allow the UK to negotiate, albeit with added difficulty, new trade deals with third parties, something that a full customs union with the EU would rule out.

So the plan lies in the middle of the range of possibilit­ies between a hard Brexit (meaning at best a limited freetrade deal like the one the EU has negotiated with Canada) and full single-market membership (meaning almost all EU rights and obligation­s, including free movement, but no voice in EU policy-making: the so-called Norway option).

To be sure, this is nobody’s first choice, and the EU may well reject it as unacceptab­le “cherry-picking.” It might nonetheles­s be the best and most plausible alternativ­e to the hardest Brexit of all, which would see Britain exit the union with no deal of any kind.

The resignatio­ns of David Davis, the

minister who’d nominally been in charge of the Brexit talks, and Boris Johnson, the foreign secretary, aren’t a bad thing. Both favour a cleaner separation from Europe. Johnson was a leader of the Leave campaign, and neither was willing to support a hybrid of the kind May is finally advocating. Davis had already been largely cut out of the process, and Johnson, perpetuall­y plotting his bid for the leadership, had nothing constructi­ve to offer. It’s much better for May to be rid of them.

Do these resignatio­ns, with others perhaps to follow, mean a leadership contest that will bring down May and her government? Possibly, but most likely not. There might be enough support for Tories to be called to a vote of confidence in their leader (48 Tory MPs would have to demand it), but it’s doubtful there’d be enough votes to defeat her (requires a majority of the 316). Another factor: Johnson and others maneuverin­g to bring her down couldn’t be confident of winning a general election, if that’s where this ends up.

At the moment, the party and the country mainly want to be led, and if May, despite the evidence of the past 18 months, begins showing she’s up to it, she will likely prevail. Settling on a plan and defending it with seeming conviction, which she did for the first time in the Commons yesterday, was a belated step in the right direction.

The bigger risk to her leadership, and to Britain’s economic prospects, comes not from her party but from the EU. Everything Europe’s negotiator­s have said up to now suggests that they will deem the hybrid she’s proposing to be unacceptab­le. The logic of that position is very questionab­le. There’s no reason why the space between a Canada-style deal and the Norway option should be a void. It’s in the interests of Europe as well as Britain to build the closest partnershi­p that politics will allow. But a marked softening of the EU’s position will be necessary even for Europe to call May’s plan a basis for negotiatio­n.

If Europe rejects it out of hand, then May’s position might indeed be hopeless. Europe’s leaders ought to reflect on the consequenc­es. In the UK, May is now seen as having staked everything on an unpopular compromise. If the EU throws this back and demands that the UK accept whatever terms it dictates, it might secure a short-term victory. But in the longer term this is the prospect that would most assist Johnson and the other anti-EU coup-plotters. Maybe the EU should think twice before it binds itself closely to a seething resentful enemy, and see whether a hybrid deal might be done after all. — Bloomberg

The resignatio­ns of David Davis, the minister who’d nominally been in charge of the Brexit talks, and Boris Johnson, the foreign secretary, aren’t a bad thing.

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