Kirsty Hughes Profile picture
Jan 23, 2020 14 tweets 3 min read Read on X
EU views on upcoming UK-EU relationships talks from my Brussels visit this week:
Core mantra: deal to be done is 'level-playing field for free trade agreement'. No tariffs/quotas is big offer & not given for nothing back. Governance is key.
UK now weaker partner.

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1.
Much concern on level-playing field as v brief commitment in political declaration to 'uphold the common high standards' at end of transition on state aid, competition, social/labour standards, environment, climate change & 'relevant tax matters'.
2.
Concerns too at UK's regulatory divergence goal. What does this mean in principle? Lack of understanding in some quarters of even the basic point that goods coming into EU mkt must meet its regulations.
Aim at dynamic alignment on state aids, prob also tax will be v tough
3.
EU had this sewn up in the 2018 deal with May - annex 4 of the 2018 N Ireland protocol covers in great detail areas & laws for level playing field, no regression, dynamic alignment for some & almost EU running UK competition policy. Won't be easy now.
4.
EU shd finish assessing financial services equivalence by July, agree praps by autumn, will UK get all areas it wants?
Fisheries tough but poss landing zone: UK as indep coastal state, joint mgt of stocks, similar but lower access to waters than now, EU states not there yet
5.
Other services: Talks will have to wait til 2021 (also on intell property rights, poss public procurement), so there'll be a real services cliff edge - services will be under WTO/GATS (General Agreement on Trade in Services), then talks will aim to slowly improve on that.
6.
Governance central across all areas - monitoring, enforcement, dispute settlement. Concerns on this too.
Again it had been set out fully in Annex 4 of Theresa May deal. But where Johnson's govt may go quite unclear.
Key internal security issues for 2020: data, extradition etc
7.
Climate change: the European Green Deal, is now at heart of European Commission strategy for next five years. So climate change being given more emphasis in level-playing field. Big systemic change coming, big demands on business, not going to tolerate climate dumping from UK
8.
So far, Johnson's comments on climate seen as positive. UK has been progressive, relatively, on climate change - Scotland noted positively in particular here. But what will Johnson really do? No one knows, can't be trusted etc.
Concerns as well as hopes around COP26 in Glasgow
9.
High political hopes for COP26. Concerns at how the UK-EU talks - which cd be bad-tempered or even break down, cd impact on hoped-for close, continuing cooperation w UK into COP26.
Hope UK & Scottish govt frictions won't impact negatively on COP26, fears it might.
10.
See UK politics unpredictable, hope wider public opinion & pressure from progressive Scottish govt on climate cd impact on UK govt (unlikely). Interested if Scottish environmental legislation stayed closer to EU, wd Scotland then too face potential climate dumping from rUK?
11.
If UK doesn't play ball on climate, it cd even face a carbon border tax itself - one more big friction. Some potential gains here too if UK, as non-EU country signed up to EU emissions trading system, cd provide a model/path for other non-EU countries.
12.
EU doesn't want talks breakdown but cd happen - UK wd have to come back to table. No deal now easier for EU as got the 3 main elements of withdrawal agreement. Will need contingencies eg for aviation but any contingency measures mustn't reduce leverage for next stage of talks
13.
In summary, there's a deal to be done, EU will play hard ball, v concerned if they can get level-playing field & governance commitments needed. See Johnson needs some divergence gloss on it all but deal needs to be pinned down w great precision, so real limits on that.
14.

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More from @KirstyS_Hughes

Mar 3, 2023
Ten questions on independence in the EU for the SNP/FM candidates.

(1) How quickly after independence day will you submit an application to join the EU?

(2) How long do you expect it to take to join the European Union?
(3) What do you see as the top 3 challenges facing the EU and how would Scotland as an EU member state help face up to those challenges?

(4) What are the three biggest benefits for Scotland to being an EU member state?
(5) How quickly after independence day do you envisage an independent Scotland could agree an association agreement with the EU, to cover trade and wider relations while accession is being negotiated?
Read 7 tweets
Dec 6, 2022
Gordon Brown's report doesn't seem to be going down well in Scotland, Wales or Northern Ireland. So what's it for? Is it genuinely trying to do something for English regions or is it mainly about soundbites on change, at least in case of Scotland?
On independence, Labour's refusal to countenance a referendum, & its rejection of any mandate coming from another general election win by the SNP, yet insisting a Labour win mandates its constitutional proposals, is hypocritical, plus implies future stonewalling on indy
Much confusion in the report's desired 'decentralisation' goals between the status of local councils, English regions, & the nations of Scotland, Wales & N. Ireland. The joint ministerial committee of UK govt, & Scotland, Wales, NI, becomes a broader one with english regions too.
Read 9 tweets
Oct 18, 2022
Must an independent Scotland have its own currency to join EU? Many commenting on Scottish govt's economy paper yesterday said it did.
EU treaty, article 142, says member states not in euro must treat exchange rate with euro as a 'matter of common interest'.
Member states not in euro must also aim at price stability. Impossible to meet these conditions if using pound sterling.
But accession talks can certainly start before meeting these conditions.
And there may be an alternative route.
My views on this evolved on talking to Brussels sources who underlined a candidate using currency of a 3rd country while in the EU is unprecedented. One possibility suggested was a transition period - i.e. iScotland cd join EU while using sterling but not indefinitely.
Read 6 tweets
Oct 17, 2022
Scottish government new economy paper sets out strong picture of how an independent Scotland cd develop a new economic & social model within EU, rather than stay part of low growth, unstable, unequal UK. What it's rather weaker on is the transition path.
gov.scot/publications/b…
The paper recognises aim of staying within EU stability & growth pact (to be reformed) rules & to establish an EU external border with rUK.
There is little or nothing though on timing of establishing border, setting up Scottish pound & rejoining EU.
Scot govt paper does not address how it will join EU if using sterling as a currency though plausible that Scottish pound wd exist before it did join EU. It's optimistic, & not clear, on where fiscal deficit may be before EU membership. (A further EU paper is due)
Read 7 tweets
Oct 16, 2022
Lots of belated waking up to Tories Brexit damage of last 6 years. It so damaged UK politics that Starmer still pretends there's a good Brexit.
And there's no way EU would have UK back. It might need 20 years of complete political repair for UK to look like a real democracy again
If Labour ends up with a massive majority at Westminster, with a tiny splintered Tory opposition, there won't be a functioning Britain-wide opposition - and so UK wouldn't meet EU Copenhagen criteria. EU wd want to know UK is stable, fully committed to membership, maybe in 2040?
Starmer, even in this crisis, says he won't rejoin EU single market. Anyway it's a real problem if UK is a rule-taker across the board.
Starting a serious conversation on what EU-UK can best look like would be a start, with honesty on Brexit, & a v long run goal of rejoining EU.
Read 4 tweets
Jan 9, 2022
Thoughts on #devomax debate from international & EU perspective.

Hard to separate foreign/external policy from domestic policy, yet more so for EU policy. States will deal with UK when making treaties whatever its constitutional set-up.

1/
There are federal states that give sub-states some power over trade or migration (notably Belgium, Canada) but requires clear federal interactive structures. Prof Michael Keating @CCC_Research leading expert on this
2/
archive.scottish.parliament.uk/s3/committees/…
Despite SNP rebuffs to devomax this week, Scottish govt has produced several papers on strong devomax in Brexit context, notably its first Scotland’s Place in Europe paper in 2016 and subsequent papers on migration & other topics
3/

gov.scot/publications/s…
Read 10 tweets

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