If negotiations had gone to plan, it would have worked thus:
&
agree a Deal, politically
That is then turned into a legally ratifiable text
Both sides then ratify - on
side Member States and the EP,
side the Houses of Parliament
Deal in force 1.1.2021
2/25
-
-
Deze collectie tonen
-
The problem: we do not have
yet.
And with just over 16 days to go - including
- we do not have time for
and
and hence no
.
We *might* have time for
- and that could prove to be significant (see tweet 7 below), but definitely not
on
side.
3/25Deze collectie tonen -
*Essential* problem: by having spent so long talking (I think
tactic has been to run down the clock - https://jonworth.eu/brexit-negotiation-delay-is-it-due-to-indecision-or-is-it-by-design/ … ) the path to a normal ratification is now
.
Now ratification becomes harder - legally, politically, practically - with every passing hour.
4/25Deze collectie tonen -
The most obvious stumbling block is...


... the European Parliament!
Parliamentary sovereignty, eh? A topic for another time.
Anyway, the EP has said it will not vote on a Brexit Deal this year.
https://twitter.com/ShonaMurray_/status/1338822198899970052 …
5/25Deze collectie tonen -
So even if
&
agree, politically in the next few days, you cannot achieve
that both sides ratify.
But what about
- that there even is a text to ratify?
Here is where it gets interesting.
6/25Deze collectie tonen -
If there *is* a legal text available to ratify,
Member States can approve by written procedure (i.e. swift), &
Lords and Commons can pass primary legislation in a day if they need to.
But the EP says it won't be bounced into doing that. It takes scrutiny seriously.
7/25Deze collectie tonen -
So what's the solution? PROVISIONAL APPLICATION of the Treaty is an option - i.e. meaning that the approval of the European Parliament would come after 1 January. The Council (i.e. the Member States) can decide whether to take that route. https://twitter.com/tconnellyRTE/status/1338427056405811205 … 8/25
Deze collectie tonen -
But of course the European Parliament refuses that - as it would just have to rubber stamp a Deal under duress and after the fact. The EP might, after some howling, do it, but its MEPs are not happy. https://twitter.com/berndlange/status/1338106636142080000 … 9/25
Deze collectie tonen -
Also were EP to decide after the fact... what about other players? This aspect has been a bit murky - it looks like Member States have OKed the idea a Deal would be an EU-only agreement, not a Mixed Agreement needing 27+ national ratifications. https://twitter.com/adamparsons/status/1328406391879503873 … 10/25
Deze collectie tonen -
But if the EP can decide after the fact, and time is then not so important, why shouldn't everyone *else* have their say then too? Count yourself lucky,
, that Wallonia has no coastline!
https://www.lesoir.be/342698/article/2020-12-09/brexit-elio-di-rupo-nexclut-pas-de-bloquer-les-accords-commerciaux …
Basically: PROVISIONAL APPLICATION is a headache.
11/25Deze collectie tonen -
And there is another
PROVISIONAL APPLICATION only works if you have a text ready to ratify. And currently we do not... and we know that the Deal will be 600+ pages long.
12/25Deze collectie tonen -
I presume the non-controversial bits of the text have been translated already, but from agreement to ratifiable text... needs some time. If there is no agreement by end of this week, perhaps start of next week at the *very latest*, forget this route as well. 13/25
Deze collectie tonen -
Then we get to some even more
options.
Steve Peers has mused whether RETROACTIVE APPLICATION could work - essentially a Deal after 1 Jan, but the costs incurred (e.g. tariffs) in the interim reimbursed.
https://twitter.com/StevePeers/status/1338485602724032512 …
14/25Deze collectie tonen -
This one would be a practical nightmare - especially if it were not known how long that period would last. And businesses would have to make all their tariff calculations *anyway*. 15/25
Deze collectie tonen -
And you could combine RETROACTIVE APPLICATION with PROVISIONAL APPLICATION to shorten the interim period. Confused yet? Or, perhaps more importantly, do you think Boris Johnson understands this? 16/25
Deze collectie tonen -
Also RETROACTIVE APPLICATION essentially means a period of No Deal, although if it were known that a Deal were forthcoming that might limit the likely panic. But...


... trade nerds to the rescue!
17/25Deze collectie tonen -
Another way to bridge the period of No Deal could be to use GATT Article XXIV 5(c) - to not apply tariffs in this interim period. https://twitter.com/SamuelMarcLowe/status/1338494123372933121 … 18/25
Deze collectie tonen -
And you would probably not need an agreed legal text for that - both sides agreeing they would be OK with this would probably be OK. https://twitter.com/SamuelMarcLowe/status/1338499881120522241 … But both sides would still have to want to do it... 19/25
Deze collectie tonen -
Using GATT Article XXIV 5(c) could also be complemented by the CONTINGENCY MEASURES proposed by the European Commission (these need to be approved by the European Parliament as well - vote 18 Dec) They cover


&
https://ec.europa.eu/commission/presscorner/detail/en/ip_20_2368 …
20/25Deze collectie tonen -
Another solution would be a sort of STANDSTILL ARRANGEMENT - i.e. a couple of paragraphs Treaty (that, yes, would have to be provisionally applied - FTW!) that would essentially buy all the institutions some more time. Detail scarce on this so far https://twitter.com/ShonaMurray_/status/1338822201101967360 … 21/25
Deze collectie tonen -
So what do we conclude here? FIRST, time still matters - getting an agreement ASAP would keep the PROVISIONAL APPLICATION route open. Waiting until
to agree closes that route.
22/25Deze collectie tonen -
SECOND, any of these options is fraught with complexity and difficulty, and some combination of the 5 of them (PROVISIONAL APPLICATION, RETROACTIVE APPLICATION, GATT Article XXIV 5(c), CONTINGENCY MEASURES and STANDSTILL ARRANGEMENT) could be needed. 23/25
Deze collectie tonen -
There might, just might, be a way through all of this yet... 24/25
Deze collectie tonen -
... and all of this is because the man in 10 Downing Street is too scared to take a decision. Thanks, Johnson. 25/25
Deze collectie tonen
Einde van gesprek
Nieuw gesprek -
Het laden lijkt wat langer te duren.
Twitter is mogelijk overbelast of ondervindt een tijdelijke onderbreking. Probeer het opnieuw of bekijk de Twitter-status voor meer informatie.
resident. Teaches
on