The Guardian (USA)

Flagship post-Brexit Australia trade deal ‘not actually very good’, MPs hear

- Rowena Mason Whitehall editor

The UK’s flagship post-Brexit trade deal with Australia is “not actually a very good deal”, former environmen­t secretary George Eustice has said.

In highly critical comments, Eustice called for the resignatio­n of Crawford Falconer, the interim permanent secretary for the Department for Internatio­nal Trade, telling the Commons Falconer “resented” people who understood technical trade issues better than him.

Eustice, a supporter of Brexit, said since leaving his job in September he no longer had to put “a positive gloss” on the deal.

“The first step is to recognise that the Australia trade deal is not actually a very good deal for the UK,” he told MPs. “It wasn’t for lack of trying on my part. Indeed, there were things that we achieved: a special agricultur­al safeguard for years 10 to 15, staged liberalisa­tion across the first decade, the protection of British sovereignt­y in SPS [sanitary and phytosanit­ary] issues.

“It’s no surprise that many of these areas were areas negotiated either exclusivel­y or predominan­tly by Defra on behalf of the UK team.

“But it has to be said that, overall the truth of the matter is that the UK gave away far too much for far too little in return.”

Eustice insisted on having always been a “huge fan” of the British civil service, but added: “Crawford Falconer, who is currently the interim permanent secretary, is not fit for that position, in my experience.

“His approach always was to internalis­e Australian demands, often when they were against UK interests, his advice was invariably to retreat and make fresh concession­s and all the while he resented people who understood technical issues greater than he did.

“He has now done that job for several years. I think it would be a good opportunit­y for him to move on and to get a different type of negotiator in place, somebody who understand­s British interests better than I think he’s been able to.”

Eustice said that “unless we recognise the failures that the Department for Internatio­nal Trade made during the Australia negotiatio­ns, we won’t be able to learn the lessons for future negotiatio­ns”.

He also pointed the finger of blame at Liz Truss, then trade secretary, for having set “arbitrary targets” for the conclusion of a deal.

At the time in 2021, Boris Johnson, then prime minister, hailed the deal as “global Britain at its best” but environmen­tal groups warned it would be catastroph­ic for the environmen­t.

Responding to Eustice, a source at the Department for Internatio­nal Trade, which is now overseen by Kemi Badenoch, said: “George Eustice was a member of the cabinet which collective­ly agreed this trade deal. If the deal was as bad as he claims, he would never have approved it.”

 ?? Dominic Lipinski/PA ?? Then Australian prime minister Scott Morrison and Boris Johnson in the garden at Downing Street in 2021 after agreeing the broad terms of a free trade deal. Photograph:
Dominic Lipinski/PA Then Australian prime minister Scott Morrison and Boris Johnson in the garden at Downing Street in 2021 after agreeing the broad terms of a free trade deal. Photograph:
 ?? ?? George Eustice in the Commons.
George Eustice in the Commons.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States