Yesterday I spent time (&far too many tweets) trying to defend @Keir_Starmer 's position in a Guardian article which angered & disappointed many who, like me, are passionate pro-Europeans. I will try to explain why (thread)
Starmer is like me a lawyer, not a trade specialist but he obviously took advice. He is also a committed pro-European. As a lawyer when looking at the TCA, I saw all the predicted negatives but also enormous potential for a pro-EU government which results from the
institutional structure of the deal. The TCA sets up 19 specialised committees (including on Customs Cooperation, SPS, Technical Barriers to Trade) dominated by an all powerful 50/50 Partnership Council (PC) which takes binding decisions with immediate direct effect by agreement.
These decisions do not have to be published or not in full. This is undemocratic but typical of FTAs and efficient. In my view there is huge potential to take big decisions, far from the emotional tone of the Brexit drama, decisions which will be crouched in technocratic language
"Removing the red tape" " Customs Simplifications Procedure" (a lesser form of CU), "mobility", "improving access for services (a lesser form of FoM): little by little, step by step, the most negative effects of the TCA will be undone out of the glare of the tabloid press until
we get very close to BRINO. This may not lead to rejoining -see Switzerland, Norway- but under the TCA Britain -which was respected as probably THE most influential member state at the stage of draft legislation -can still exert influence if it judiciously places its best people
-think people like Ivan Rogers, Charles Grant, David Henig, Sam Lowe - in the committees. I believe (but I am an optimist), that at some stage, rejoining -or something very close to it- will become an evidence unless the EU has changed in ways unamicable to the UK.
@keirstarmer is not saying anything in the Guardian article which contradicts this. Yes he says he could not envisage Europe or Brexit playing any part in the election campaign of 2024 – or featuring on any Labour MPs’ election leaflets but he also says that Labour would make
"a case over the coming months and years about ways to improve the UK’s relationship with the EU, including access to security data and the ability of artists and musicians to operate across Europe. “But there will not be an appetite for renegotiating the entire treaty.”
This sound right to me. Proposing to renegotiate the entire Treaty first would really, really annoy the EU but also restart the Brexit drama & make it far more difficult to achieve meaningful changes. What is more appealing:
telling people you will pull your sleeves up to improve their lives/businesses or telling them you will restart all over again the war about our relationship with Europe? This is a wise and clever approach through which much can be achieved, including winning the next GE.
It will throw Johnson into a panic: Starmer will fight him not on the ideological grounds in which Johnson excels but on the dry terrain of competence, results, impacts. Starmer will set the terms of the debate. Johnson's hopes are that Starmer's divided party will do his job.
Ultimately (apologies for such a long thread) it is a question of TRUST: do we trust that Starmer is firmly pro-European or not? Does he need to be absolutely clear & transparent about his intentions? Just ask yourself: were the Leave camp?
An excellent thread from an expert of the ecosystem for the UK car industry. I have been doing many cotporate deals in the automotive & engineering sectors of the Midlands
Every word in the thread is true. Note: it was analysed & predicted by excellent reports notably from the UK Trade Observatory. Yet many of those prosperous aging mid size companies owners of the Midlands voted Leave. I emailed the reports to clients to try to warn them.
They shrugged. I hope the ecosystem can withstand the impact of this deal until a Labour government wins power. Many issues can be improved on in this deal without dramas or Parliamentary votes.
“I thought it was a bit harsh to try to cut the rest of Europe off from our fish completely,” he said. “To be honest we don’t have the fleet to catch all the fish. If they suddenly said: ‘All the fish is yours’, actually we don’t have anything to catch it with.”
There’s never been much help for the fishing industry in the UK compared to other countries where their governments back them, give them grants for new boats,” he said. “That’s why our fleet is second-hand Dutch and Belgian boats."
I am so fed up with this repeated Brexiters' lie that "the EU sent Cameron packing" that I did this thread to bookmark for future reference This is what Cameron secured:
1. Sovereignty:
- commitment to exempt Britain from "ever closer union" to be written into the treaties, a very big deal for the EU
-inclusion of a new "red-card" mechanism. If 55% of national parliaments agreed, they could effectively block or veto a commission proposal.
2. Migrants & Welfare
-four-year "emergency brake" on in-work benefits
- child benefit amount linked to the cost of living in the countries where the children live.
-EU migrants are banned from claiming jobseeker's allowance for three months.
FGS @UKLabour stop the childish quarrels Behave like responsible adults. @labourlewis@BenBradshaw, @RichardGCorbett If is hardly a surprise that the TCA is sub-standard. It was know it was taking us out of FoM, the SL & CU. Why act surprised? (thread)
2/This meant necessarily only basic provisions for services& minimal facilitation for trade in goods. Within those constraints, there is a lot to build upon in this deal. The EU had tied the UK into multiple processes which will force collaboration (as on the NI Committee)
1/Brexit is a romantic fiction. It is this romance of the High Seas which appealed to many intelligent Leavers. In a world of interdependence it was always a colosssly stupid idea.
2/The romance will be buried under a ton of red tape & administrative processes. Romantic Leavers never understood that Brexit had to be a long ADMINISTRATIVE process as well as a political endeavour. This is the reason it will fail. "Breaking the shackles" in a big leap to "
3/"freedom" was appealing. It was also false.We were free & powerful. As shown by what is now happening for financial services, we are now considerably less powerful & less free. And at the end of the process we will be back in the SM in fact if not in name
In fact the real number is above 7000.The difference is explained by how "pre- existing condition" is defined for the purpose of the statistics. And here it is.
A broken arm, psoriasis, migraine, depressive episode, are all treated as "pre-existing conditions . This is a shocking perversion of statistics which should be trustworthy