John Peet Profile picture
19 Nov, 14 tweets, 2 min read
As so often, the consensus today is that we will get a Brexit trade deal, probably during next week. But I have my doubts.(Thread) 1/
The consensus is based on assumption that both sides are logical and rational. A deal benefits both, no deal harms both. Biden wants a deal too. Hence there will surely be one. 2/
Yet I don’t think the talks are governed by logic or rationality. If they were (a) there would have been an extension of transition and (b) the principles of a deal would have been agreed by now. 3/
Instead, both sides want to argue that they won and the other backed down. Latest tweets from Barnier and Frost essentially say there is progress, but a deal is possible only if the other moves. 4/
Moreover, though both sides would clearly suffer economically from no trade deal (the UK more than the EU), it is less clear they would suffer politically.5/
Consider the small differences between a thin trade deal and no deal. Both will mean disruption, queues, customs, RoO and other niggling problems for which neither side is fully prepared.6/
But if all this follows a deal, the blame will surely fall on those who sold out by agreeing to it, and not on the other side.7/
Whereas if it follows no deal, it will be easy for Johnson to say it was all the EU’s fault (they negotiated in bad faith, we just wanted CETA, this is exactly why we had to leave etc). 8/
But if all this follows a deal, the blame will surely fall on those who sold out by agreeing to it, and not on the other side.7 /
Whereas if it follows no deal, it will be easy for Johnson to say it was all the EU’s fault (they negotiated in bad faith, we just wanted CETA, this is exactly why we had to leave etc). 8/
While Macron et al can say it was all Johnson’s fault (he rowed back from the agreed political declaration, made unilateral and illegal changes to NI protocol, lost trust etc).9/
And that, plus desperate shortage of time, is why it may be wrong to believe that, just because a trade deal is manifestly in everyone’s interest, it is bound to happen.10/
I hope to goodness I am wrong to harbour such doubts. 11ends/
I hope to goodness I am wrong to harbour such doubts. 11ends/

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More from @JohnGPeet

12 Sep
Even by his own low standards, Boris Johnson’s Telegraph article plumbs new depths of shoddiness and dishonesty (short thread) 1/
It was obvious to anyone who thought for 5 minutes that Northern Ireland and specifically the border with Ireland would be a massive problem if the UK voted for Brexit 2/
When it did, Britain agreed to an EU demand that NI should be part of the Withdrawal Agreement, not the future relationship. It could have said no. Johnson was foreign secretary at the time. 3/
Read 19 tweets
12 Jun
Why is Boris Johnson’s government refusing to extend transition for a year, when case for is clear, and treaty allows it to be agreed before end-June? A short thread based round my comment in this week’s issue. 1/
Transition of 11 months was always extremely short to get a complex deal agreed and ratified. But covid-19 distraction, problems of negotiating remotely and two extreme mandates have made much worse by producing deadlock in UK/ EU talks. 2/
UK firms on their knees thanks to covid-19 are just not ready for sharp break in January , even if there is a deal in place. Customs agents? Licences? SPS checks? Rules of origin? 3/
Read 15 tweets
6 Feb
Trouble ahead on EU/UK negotiations, a short thread after a few days in Brussels based on my article this week. 1/
The gap between Barnier’s draft guidelines and Johnson’s speech/statement is wide, and because Johnson refuses even to consider an extension time is exceptionally short. 2/
The EU is taking an extreme position on level playing-field. UK has a point when arguing that no other FTA requires a partner to follow EU rules so rigorously. 3/
Read 13 tweets
10 Jan
What we have learnt about Brexit’s next stage, short thread based on my Economist piece this week. 1/
First, Parliament no longer matters. The sight of MPs rejecting all amendments to the WAB, however reasonable, and passing all its new provisions, however undesirable, confirms that the Johnson government can do what it likes now. A far cry from the days of Theresa May. 2/
This means Brexit will happen on January 31st. But it will not be “done” and nor can the word Brexit be dropped as the news shifts to business pages. We will be in an 11-month transition during which a highly complex deal on the future must be both completed and ratified. 3/
Read 14 tweets
5 Dec 19
Why I am worried about Johnson getting Brexit done, short thread based on my piece in this week’s Economist./1
With a Tory majority, Parliament seems sure to ratify the Article 50 withdrawal agreement Johnson renegotiated in October in time for Brexit on January 31st./2
The psychological importance of Brexit formally happening will be profound, not least because it will kill the argument for holding a second referendum./3
Read 17 tweets
14 Feb 19
Listening to another Commons Brexit debate just after spending two days in Brussels I am struck yet again by how little Tory Brexiteers (even ministers) understand the EU or how it works (thread)
They do not grasp how little trust there is in Theresa May’s government, after it whipped for the Brady amendment to vote against the deal she negotiated and said was the only one available
They cannot see that this makes the EU (and Dublin) even more determined to preserve backstop with no time limit or unilateral exit right, though ready to make promises on temporary nature
Read 12 tweets

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