EU to start Brexit ‘plan B’ in case of December flop

epa06271122 Pro-EU campaigners protest outside the Houses of Parliament in London, Britain, 17 October 2017. Media reports state that British Labour Party, Shadow Brexit secretary Sir Keir Starmer said that the party would oppose a no-deal exit if such a vote was brought before the British House of Commons in 2019.  EPA-EFE/NEIL HALL

Bloomberg

The European Union agreed to start internal preparations for the possibility of Brexit negotiations failing to reach a breakthrough
at a crunch December summit,
as the former British envoy to the EU said the UK’s trade goals were unrealistic.
At a meeting in Brussels, the EU’s 27 governments without Britain approved work to start on their response to the prospect of the UK and the EU not making enough progress over the next two months to allow trade talks to begin at the end of the year, four people familiar with the discussions said. At the same time, preparations will begin in case of a more positive outcome.
The next seven weeks are critical to the entire Brexit process as time ticks down to the UK’s departure in March 2019. The EU needs to agree there has been “sufficient progress” on the main issues of the UK’s departure before negotiations can begin on a transition period and a future trading arrangement.
A gathering of EU leaders last week was initially scheduled to be the moment when talks would advance. Instead the heads of state and government told Prime Minister Theresa May that she first must specify exactly what the UK sees as its financial commitments. The EU wants a divorce settlement of about 60 billion euros ($71 billion), and the UK’s offer so far is about a third of that.

SEPARATION ISSUES
The EU’s priority is still to have plans in place so that negotiations with the UK on the future can
begin immediately in December
as long as agreement has been reached on the separation issues of the financial settlement, the protection of citizens’ rights and the Northern Ireland border, one of the people said. The plans include drafting an updated mandate for the bloc’s negotiator, Michel Barnier, to discuss trade and transitional arrangements with the UK after it leaves the bloc.
The go-ahead is for preparations on a response only for a lack of progress by December rather than for contingencies in case of a wider breakdown in the talks, the people said, asking not to be named because the discussions were private. They consist of drafting EU summit conclusions in response to continuing deadlock.
In London, Brexit Secretary David Davis said that UK lawmakers would get a “meaningful vote” on the final Brexit deal, as well as on the future trade agreement with the EU. He said he expects the withdrawal agreement to be struck in good time to allow a vote before the UK leaves the bloc.
He was forced to backtrack after suggesting that lawmakers may not be able to vote on the final terms of the country’s divorce from the EU before the split happens in March 2019. Lawmakers had raised concerns that ministers could sideline Parliament after promising both houses a say on the final deal.
‘HYPOTHETICAL SCENARIOS’
Davis had predicted negotiations will go to the wire in a high-pressure game of brinkmanship that could deny Parliament the chance to vote on a final deal before it is too late. In the clarification issued in the afternoon, Davis’s office said he had been asked about “hypothetical scenarios.”
During a busy day in Parliament, Ivan Rogers, the man who quit May’s negotiating team over her strategy, outlined a pessimistic scenario for the December summit, saying that the outcome isn’t a foregone conclusion. He envisaged a situation in which talks collapse at the end of 2017, or early in the new year, if May refuses to pay the amount of money the EU demands in return for an offer of a transition period. An acrimonious collapse in the negotiations could, in the worst-case scenario, “be so bloody by then that both sides are looking to knock chunks out of each other and start a trade war,” said Rogers, Britain’s former envoy to the EU. He also offered a reality check to British lawmakers expecting to have far better access to EU markets after Brexit than Canada does.

MORE GENEROUS
Rogers said many European officials think the UK will end up with a relationship akin to Canada’s free-trade pact after Britain leaves. But he said it won’t get anything more generous than that. May has said the Canada deal, which is considered the closest accord the EU has ever struck, isn’t ambitious enough for the UK.
“The jargon in Brussels is Canada or Canada dry; the jargon in London is Canada plus plus plus,” Rogers told Parliament’s Treasury Committee in London. “If you talk to people I know well in Brussels and other capitals about Canada plus plus plus, they regard this as British fantasy land and they say that’s not on offer.”

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