Britain, European Union, Government, Politics, Society

UK Government announces plans for Brexit negotiations

UNITED KINGDOM

David Davis MP, the Brexit Secretary, has set out the UK Government’s negotiating strategy in a Government White Paper.

David Davis MP, the Brexit Secretary, has set out the UK Government’s negotiating strategy in a Government White Paper.

BREXIT SECRETARY David Davis has set out the Government’s negotiating strategy for the UK’s withdrawal from the EU in a keenly-awaited white paper.

Launching the 77-page document in a statement to the House of Commons, Mr Davis said the paper confirmed Prime Minister Theresa May’s vision of ‘an independent and truly global United Kingdom’.

Confirming the UK’s strategy would be guided by the 12 principles set out by Mrs May in her Lancaster House speech last month (see article), Mr Davis said the Government was aiming for ‘a new, positive and constructive partnership between Britain and the European Union that works in our mutual interest’.

The white paper, entitled The United Kingdom’s Exit From And New Partnership With The European Union, was published a day after MPs voted overwhelmingly to permit Mrs May to press ahead with starting withdrawal negotiations under Article 50 of the EU treaties.

Mrs May’s foreword to the white paper was made up of extracts from her Lancaster House speech, in which she said that forging a new partnership with Europe and a ‘stronger, fairer, more global’ Britain would be ‘the legacy of our time, the prize towards which we work, the destination at which we arrive once the negotiation is done’.

In a preface to the document, Mr Davis said that Britain entered the negotiations which the Government intends to trigger by the end of March in ‘a position of strength’.

Stressing that the UK ‘wants the EU to succeed’, he urged the remaining 27 member states and European institutions to be guided in the upcoming negotiations by ‘the principles set out in the EU Treaties concerning a high degree of international co-operation and good neighbourliness’.

Mr Davis said the Government would not publish details of its plans that would undermine Britain’s negotiating position, but promised ‘extensive engagement with Parliament’ and a ‘high degree of public engagement’ as the process went forward.

‘This document sets out our plan for the strong new partnership we want to build with the EU,’ he said.

‘Whatever the outcome of our negotiations, we will seek a more open, outward-looking, confident and fairer UK, which works for all.’

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Britain, Economic, European Union, Government, Politics, Society

Britain’s exit from the EU. Getting down to it.

BRITAIN & THE EUROPEAN UNION

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On June 23, 2016, Britons voted to leave the European Union. The two-year process for negotiating Britain’s departure will soon begin.

Intro: It has been six months since the referendum vote on Brexit. Thus far, the debate has been more about process and procedure than substance. In 2017, as negotiating talks get underway, the going will get much tougher. As we edge closer to Article 50 being triggered, where does Britain stand?

SOME THINGS have already changed since Britons decided to withdraw from the European Union following the Brexit vote on June 23rd. The country has a new government led by Theresa May. Two new government departments have been set up For Exiting The EU (under David Davis) and for International Trade (under Liam Fox). After several years of austerity cuts, the civil service is beginning to grow again. It is being geared up in tackling the numerous challenges of disentangling Britain from the bureaucracy of Brussels. In the Government’s most recent Autumn Statement, Philip Hammond, the Chancellor, softened previous plans to cut the budget deficit by 2020.

But on another level, and on Brexit itself, however, Mrs May has done little beyond repeating her mantra that ‘Brexit means Brexit’ and ‘We’re going to make a success of it’. The prime minister has promised a Great Repeal Bill to enshrine most exiting EU rules into UK law for continuity. And she has said she will invoke Article 50 of the Lisbon Treaty, the legal clause that sets a two-year time limit for Brexit, by the end of March (2017).

Indeed, most public discussion and debate on Brexit has been procedural, not substantive. Discourse in Parliament has revolved around how much information MPs will be given. The courts have become involved: this month the Supreme Court will decide whether triggering Article 50 requires prior authority through an act of Parliament, as the High Court has already ruled. There have been disputes over just how much Mrs May should reveal over her negotiating objectives. Yet, all of this has taken place even before there is an internal agreement within the government over what form of Brexit to aim for when negotiations begin.

For some MPs, such as Neil Carmichael and Mr Davis himself, there is hope that a government white paper on Brexit will be published before Article 50 is triggered. Mr Davis has recently said, though, that the government would not publish anything until February. Protagonists say that would still leave time for a white paper and a short parliamentary act before Article 50 is sanctioned.

The substance of Brexit is likely to prove far more difficult than the procedure. One reason is that it will involve trade-offs the government has so far avoided debating. The most obvious is that in which maximising barrier-free access to the EU’s single market will make it hard to take back full control of migration and laws relating to freedom of movement. That’s because it is invariably and directly linked to the free movement of capital and services. There is also the issue of ceasing contributions to the EU’s budget.  Several more difficult dilemmas await: for instance, the desire to maintain security and intelligence cooperation with the EU may be almost impossible to achieve if Mrs May continues to insist on escaping completely from the jurisdiction of the European Court of Justice.

The substance of a Brexit deal will also be more difficult than procedure because Britain’s 27 EU partners are likely to put a premium on unity. It is possible Britain will need to pay an exit fee of some $63bn, as well as negotiating separately any future trade relations which would not run in parallel with the strict terms of exit. Other EU leaders face political pressure at home: France, Germany, the Netherlands, and possibly even Italy, will all have elections in 2017.

The ominous and gloomy signs are that a harder version of Brexit will prevail, but there are some flickers of hope that also point in the other direction. Mr Davis and Mr Hammond appear to be working as one in minimising the shock of departure. Mr Davis has not completely ruled out making payments into the EU budget after Brexit. Several other government ministers have floated the possibility of continuing partial membership of the single market, the customs union or both. The Scottish government, too, has said it wants to stay in the single market regardless of what happens elsewhere in Britain. Negotiating a final deal for Brexit with so many added complexities will become more divisive and problematic as the clock starts ticking.

Of late, a growing recognition has emerged of the economic risks of Brexit. Leave campaigners have long claimed that economic forecasts and predictions by Mr Hammond’s predecessor, George Osborne, were too pessimistic and overly cautious. But the Autumn Statement made clear that Brexit has a cost. Public and private consumption has held up reasonably well but investment continues to be cut. Banks and others in financial services are talking of major job losses as institutions restructure and positions are transferred to continental Europe.

Prodding ministers towards a softer Brexit must be on the table because the economy matters. A recent poll for Open Britain, a pro-EU lobby group, found that half of Leave voters are not ready to be made worse off as a result of Brexit.

More realism over immigration should also be a factor. To date, this has only been presented in terms of the relationship between the single market and the four freedoms of movement of capital, goods, services and people. The implication has been that to keep the first may require concessions on the second. Several companies, however, in industries ranging from financial services to agriculture, have made clear that migration is crucial in its own right. Indeed, some are more concerned about migration controls than they are about barrier-free access to the EU’s single market because of the effect such controls will have on the availability of labour for their industries.

A view is also emerging among politicians who see the need for a transitional deal with the EU – to avert a hard landing in March 2019. Transition is being talked up, as a string of recent reports from the House of Lords EU committee highlight. They say this is particularly important for financial services. The fact that transition was ever controversial is, in the words of Nick Clegg, the former deputy prime minister, “symptomatic of a strategy-less approach to Brexit”. That it is now widely accepted as a sign of common sense.

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Britain, European Union, Government, Legal, Society

The Brexit vote and the Supreme Court

BREXIT

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The government is to appeal against the High Court’s ruling that Article 50 cannot be invoked without Parliament’s support, so that means the case will now be heard in the Supreme Court. The Court comprises 11 senior judges.

Intro: Increasingly, it is not so much Brexit that divides the country as the bitter struggle to prevent it

ON Monday, 5 December, 2016, one of the most important questions of British constitutional history will be examined.

Eleven judges of the Supreme Court will hear the Government appeal against a High Court decision that 17.4 million votes in the EU referendum had no force in law. The High Court ruled that Parliament must be consulted before Article 50 can be triggered and negotiations with the EU begin; the Government believes that the referendum rendered that unnecessary. The Supreme Court will begin four days of hearings and a judgment is expected in January.

The 11 Supreme Court judges are faced with a highly political decision. With no written constitution to guide them, this is not a mere question of law, to be solved like a mathematical equation, with a definite correct or incorrect answer. Yet, this was precisely the spirit in which the High Court tried to approach the case, citing centuries-old precedents and ignoring the fact that the June referendum was an unprecedented historic act.

The free press should make no apology for shining a light on the Supreme Court. It is their job to scrutinise the powerful, and most voters have become aware just how powerful these 11 judges really are. With so little to help them in the law books, the clear risk is that the judges may be influenced by their personal opinions, no matter how assiduously they try to set them aside.

It is not a question of attacking the integrity and intelligence of our judges. But, on political matters, it is no more possible for judges than for anyone else to be perfectly neutral, uninfluenced by their own views or those of the people with whom they share their lives.

With only a simple majority needed for a ruling, it will be disturbing for Brexiteers to note that no fewer than five Supreme Court judges have publicly expressed their views which appear to be sympathetic to the EU, while six have close links with people who have publicly attacked the Leave campaign.

This matter should have been dismissed by the High Court. The last government held an in/out referendum on membership of the EU with the explicit promise that the result would be binding. While it is true that Britain is a representative (as opposed to direct) democracy, the EU vote was a rare exception to our political norms, an exception in which the people were asked to instruct the government what to do. Remainers cannot be motivated by concern for parliamentary sovereignty, because, if they were, they would have opposed the transfer of its powers to Europe since the Seventies. Militants see Parliament as an impediment to Brexit, a way of talking it out or watering it down. The application that has led to the current impasse was based on disgruntled mischief.

It is no fault of the Supreme Court justices that they find themselves in such a position of responsibility. They are only doing their job. And their job is a critical part of our constitution – testing laws and ensuring government actions adhere to them. However, there is no escaping the political nature of this case. The judges are being asked to rule on whether the Brexit-backing voters or Remain-backing MPs should have greater authority.

On numerous issues, the courts have defied Parliament and ministers; amending the ‘bedroom tax’, for example, or by outlawing extended solitary confinement for jihadists on grounds of human rights law. In such instances, they have become judicial activists. Which is all very well, but they cannot then complain when their decisions are questioned and their backgrounds and views analysed publicly.

The Government’s case is a good one and the Supreme Court may well agree. We should hope that the judges will remember the legitimacy of the referendum and its verdict, and not as the Government’s senior legal officer, Attorney General Jeremy Wright, has said that the vote be relegated ‘almost to a footnote’ as the Remain camp would hope for.

Increasingly, it is not so much Brexit that divides the country as the bitter struggle to prevent it. Most Remainers have probably accepted defeat and want to get on with their lives. Businesses need to know what is going to happen next. The world is waiting for EU negotiations to begin. It is in the national, even global, interest to proceed.

If the Supreme Court disagrees and says that Parliament must become involved, so be it. In that instance, it seems likely that Theresa May will smooth a Bill through Parliament to trigger Article 50 and limit any unnecessary delay. Of course, such developments would then attract dissenters who would attempt to dilute and frustrate any bill proceeding.

When governments ask the people what to do, they must follow their instructions. They are duty bound to follow through the mandate that has been raised. That’s the nature of how a democratic society operates.

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