Britain's Brexit plan revealed: experts react


(MENAFN- The Conversation) After a summit with her cabinet that sparked several ministerial resignations, British prime minister Theresa May has published a controversial white paper setting out her government's vision for Brexit. This will now be sent to the European Union for further negotiations. Experts assess the proposals in key areas.

An appeal to party unity

Nicholas Allen, Reader in Politics, Royal Holloway, University of London

The publication of the Brexit white paper is the latest step in Theresa May's effort to broker a common position for negotiating future UK-EU relations. It is also the latest step in what might be called the Cabinet 'peace process'.

Senior ministers have been sniping at each other for months and two cabinet ministers – David Davis and Boris Johnson – have resigned. Tory MPs have been engaging in open civil war. With the clock ticking on the Article 50 negotiations, the prime minister had to reimpose some semblance of collective responsibility .

In many ways, the details in the white paper are less significant than the softer-Brexit direction of travel established at the crunch summit at Chequers that preceded it. Britain is leaving the EU. A sizeable minority of zealot Tory MPs will object to any watering down of their vision of being wholly outside the ambit of EU regulations. Yet, some element of compromise is almost certainly necessary.

It is simply too soon to know whether or not the white paper will bolster or diminish May's position . Negotiating Brexit and keeping the Tories united was always going to be extraordinarily challenging. In that sense, at least, nothing has changed.

Dominic Raab: under pressure for not giving MPs advance sight of the Brexit white paper. Parliamentlive.tv Free movement

Erica Consterdine, Research Fellow in the Sussex Centre for Migration Research, University of Sussex

Now to the big bad wolf of Brexit – free movement of people. The key issues of the Brexit debate on immigration have been the rights of EU citizens residing in the UK and vice versa, and the looming labour market crisis following the end of free movement. The white paper reinforces earlier agreements for the rights of EU citizens up until 2020, but makes no attempt to address the impending labour issue.

May has been consistent in the last 18 months that free movement is ending. The government proposes a 'mobility framework' but this seems to be little more than a buzzword of which the substance is lacking. The government is rightly waiting for a report from the Migration Advisory Committee due in September to fill in the details.

The framework is effectively just an extension of current policies for nationals of countries outside the European Economic Area. It suggests extending intra-corporate transfer to EU citizens, policies to attract international students and allowing visa free travel for tourists.

The most novel proposal is to establish a UK-EU Youth Mobility Scheme, presumably on a quota basis. Surprisingly, there was no proposal to reestablish a seasonal agricultural workers scheme – a move that seemed likely in light of recent conclusions from the Environment, Food and Rural Affairs Committee. Key in the paper for wider policy is that reducing net migration remains an ambition, but the explicit target of reducing it to less than 100,000 a year is curiously absent, suggesting the target itself may well finally be abandoned.

Northern Ireland

Feargal Cochrane, Professor of International Conflict Analysis, University of Kent

July 12 was an ironically poignant day to bring this document out. 'The Twelfth' is a key date in Northern Ireland, with one section of the community celebrating their Britishness through the commemoration of the Battle of the Boyne in 1690, when Protestant King William defeated Catholic King James, and the other section (and not just Irish nationalists) going on holiday to escape it. It's a time of heightened tensions between unionists and nationalists .

The white paper is essentially an attempt to supersede the backstop option on the Irish border, agreed by the British government in December 2017, then disavowed shortly after, and now essentially reframed. There is barely a mention of a UK government alternative to the EU backstop option, or contingency planning if agreements cannot be reached, with most of the focus being on an innovative bespoke approach to future agreements. The Irish government and the EU are likely to push this much more forcefully in their responses to the document.

The current 'border'. Paul McErlane/EPA

The main proposal is for a 'free trade area' for goods that would establish 'continued frictionless access' across the EU and UK for goods. There is much in the white paper that is aspirational (like previous iterations of the UK position). That includes the hope for a deal where 'close arrangements on goods should sit alongside new ones for services and digital'.

If the EU wears this (it's far from certain that it will and certainly not in this form) it would avoid the need for a hard border in Ireland over some – but not all – issues. It's not clear, for example, how this would relate to the free movement of people. But so much here will depend on how hard the EU returns the serve on the text. Its immediate holding response is that it will consult its EU partners and negotiate.

One problem beyond the substance of the text for the EU, the Irish government and everyone in Northern Ireland, is that who knows what the future will bring. Signing a treaty today does not mean that it will be adhered to tomorrow. So one of the key issues for the Irish government will be the extent to which these commitments on a continued and agreed rule book with a frictionless border in Ireland can be made as watertight as possible.

This will not be regarded by Ireland or the EU as a take-it-or-leave-it option. It is the start of the negotiation, not the end, and the best the UK government can now hope for is an outcome that is Brexit in name only with alignment (albeit bespoke) in key areas of customs and trade. If the UK government can't deliver this (and the odds on failure would be high at the moment) Northern Ireland faces a No Deal abyss that will represent the biggest political and economic crisis since Ireland was partitioned by Britain in 1921.

    Immigration Trade UK politics Northern Ireland Theresa May Brexit European Court of Justice Single Market Brexit negotiations Freedom of movement EU customs union Dominic Raab

The Conversation

MENAFN1207201801990000ID1097154246


Legal Disclaimer:
MENAFN provides the information “as is” without warranty of any kind. We do not accept any responsibility or liability for the accuracy, content, images, videos, licenses, completeness, legality, or reliability of the information contained in this article. If you have any complaints or copyright issues related to this article, kindly contact the provider above.