telegraph.co.uk/politics/2018/…
Frankly, who knows? It's sure not impossible - recall Obama's NSA bugged Merkel - but EU concerns speak to the lack of trust/2
If that's what happened, it raises several interesting questions. /3
Did they maybe think the Commission econ assessments were unhelpful/overblown?
And.... /4
Mmmmm.... /5
If there's a 'no deal' the EU does not want to be seen as responsible. The decision not to prevail on Barnier not to publish was likely more tactical than ideological. /6
We know Mr Barnier's misgivings about allowing the UK to diverge on services while align on goods.
These assessments appeared to try to quantify that risk in alarming terms. /7
Well, says the Commission. This is what's not to like - you crack the vessel of the Single Market. /8
Give the Brits free access for goods, and freedom to cut corners on service components of goods would be very short-sighted.
It could cost 8-9% GDP over 15 years, or 0.5% a year - the same as a 'no deal' for UK /9
To warn them not be hoodwinked by clever British negotiators into a deal which gives them '3.5' freedoms - essentially what Cameron wanted all along.
Don't do it. Don't do it. /10
John Springford @JohnSpringford of the @CER_EU reckons the numbers are a stretch - IF the UK agreed to keep aligned on future rules. /11
Perhaps that's Barnier's game? To force the Brits to move? /12
Is that, even if the Brits could be chained to future rules, the EU just does not want to create a structure that could prove a template for others? Like Hungary. Or even a populist Italy, if the eurozone crunch comes? /13
Viewed this way, Chequers starts to look like a reheat of the old cake and eat it. It cannot fly. /14
esharp.eu/debates/the-uk…
thetimes.co.uk/article/the-eu…
Because even if some MS are flexible, whose version of flexibility wins out? In whose interests?
Politically, easier for EU to hold C'ion line. /18
It would be to accept that flexibility is, long term, the road to salvation for the EU, not perdition.
The ancien regime will fall if it doesn’t flex; but if it flexes, it fears it will fall. /19
The 'flexibility' cd be in making the UK CETA much more ambitious than Canada or Japan. /20
Maybe the crucible of a mounting crisis October-March brings a hybrid deal.
But the Commission assessments, and not just the assessments, show how hard that will be. /ENDS