The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Hogan will be firm but fair over Brexit

- Richard Wright

A few weeks into power, Boris Johnson finds himself a lame duck prime minister over Brexit

The nomination process for new EU commission­ers is going smoothly, although the appointmen­ts have to be ratified by the European Parliament.

One of the key briefs is trade, and that has gone to the retiring farm commission­er, Phil Hogan. This reflects the work he’s done to secure trade deals for the EU, not least with Japan. It is also a reward for Ireland for sticking with EU policy over Brexit.

Hogan, a caustic critic of Brexit and its supporters, will be responsibl­e for concluding any new trade deal between the UK and EU-27.

He will be firm but fair, and his aim will be a deal that protects Irish and EU interests. This adds to Boris Johnson’s many woes over Brexit.

What was promised to be the easiest and speediest trade deal ever will be a lot more challengin­g with Hogan on the other side of the table.

The EU has agreed the nomination of a new farm commission­er.

Janusz Wojciechow­ski is a Polish MEP and was an influentia­l member of the parliament’s agricultur­e committee. He is a former judge and part of the political group that were allies of the Conservati­ves.

He has little direct experience of agricultur­e and is known for his uncompromi­sing views, writing acerbic poems about his political enemies and commentati­ng for a right-wing Polish radio station. His key challenge will be to secure a final deal on CAP reform.

One of his early decisions will be whether to seek an extension of the current policy. For the farming lobby the easy-going days of the Hogan era will soon be a distant, if fond, memory.

The European Commission has secured approval for its new food chain transparen­cy plans.

These will go down as one of the big achievemen­ts of Phil Hogan’s term as farm commission­er. Transparen­cy is the third element in his food chain plan, along with outlawing many anticompet­itive practices by retailers and improving farmer cooperatio­n.

Hogan said the new transparen­cy regulation would make more informatio­n available, more often, to ensure all players had as much knowledge as possible of the food chain and pricing. These new regulation­s go beyond the powers of the UK grocery adjudicato­r, not least in that individual­s can raise a complaint.

Member states will be responsibl­e for supplying price informatio­n to Brussels, which will analyse and publish it.

Meanwhile, a few weeks into power, Boris Johnson finds himself a lame duck prime minister over Brexit.

He is unable to legally go for a no-deal Brexit and has been blocked from calling an election. This should ease concerns in agricultur­e about the consequenc­es of a no-deal outcome, but the threat remains. The European parliament has been talking tough, but the decision is down to the 27 EU heads of state and the odds have to favour a deal when they meet on October 17.

This is likely to be the existing withdrawal deal, used by Johnson to bring down Theresa May, with a few cosmetic tweaks to the Irish backstop.

Agricultur­e and food are a key part of the backstop problem, but there is no engagement at Westminste­r over future support, markets or post-Brexit regulation.

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