What is the anticipated timetable?
Almost a year after British voters asked to leave the EU, official exit talks started on Monday. British Secretary of State for Exiting the EU David Davis sat opposite Michel Barnier, the EU’s chief negotiator, at the European Commission headquarters in Brussels. With a handshake for the cameras, the two men began a technically arduous journey that is to seal Britain’s fate for decades to come.
The purpose of these talks is to unwind Britain’s 44-year-old relationship with the EU and map out future ties. Negotiators will be working against the clock. Deal or no deal, the UK will leave the EU on March 29, 2019.
However, the time for serious negotiations is actually shorter: Barnier hopes to conclude talks in October next year to allow time for the European Parliament to ratify a deal.
What happens first?
For Brussels, Brexit is like a marital breakdown: First comes the divorce, then the new relationship.
The EU has long said that Britain will not be allowed to start trade talks until it agrees on an outline deal on citizens’ rights, money and the Irish border.
Davis had threatened “the row of the summer” over this timetable, but on Monday it became clear that he had conceded the point.
“It is not when it starts, it is how it finishes,” he said. “Nothing is agreed until everything is agreed.”
The British quickly discovered they had no leverage against an EU that had united on this point. The EU’s two-step sequence crystallized when Barnier visited the capitals of all the other 27 EU member states in winter last year. On this Brexit grand tour, the Irish pressed the case for prioritizing the border; Spain put Gibraltar on the table; and everyone wanted citizens’ rights and money sorted out quickly.
Barnier has his orders, agreed unanimously, after eight months of work. He cannot start trade talks without a fresh mandate from EU leaders. EU diplomats have never discussed a new mandate and had no intention of doing so.
Despite the loss of face, the UK might find that the EU sequence turns out to be convenient. British Prime Minister Theresa May did not win a mandate for her hard Brexit.
The political fight for a softer exit is expected to intensify. With so many unanswered questions about what Brexit means, getting started on formal negotiations and talking about citizens’ rights now suits the UK well.
When can Britain talk about trade?
Some Brussels observers think the EU is being too rigid and making unreasonable demands that trade is off the table. However, there is some flexibility: Trade talks can begin after “sufficient progress” on the divorce, a judgement EU leaders will make, in October or December, depending on how things are going.
If the UK passes the — deliberately ambiguous — “sufficient progress” test, talks can move on to trade and other areas, such as foreign policy, financial services, and police and judicial cooperation.
What are the sticking points?
Both sides on Monday repeated that they were prioritizing a rapid agreement on citizens’ rights to bring certainty for 3.5 million EU nationals in Britain and 1.2 million Britons on the continent.
However, the apparent consensus is deceptive: The EU is insisting that the European Court of Justice be the ultimate arbiter in resolving disputes on citizens’ rights, in theory extending the writ of the European court over Britain for a century. This role for the court would prove toxic for hardline Brexiters and is even controversial for some European jurists.
Failure to resolve this point will be a bad sign.
The EU also wants detailed guarantees on citizens’ rights, allowing people to live their lives as if Brexit never happened. However, that could mean in a few areas EU nationals have more rights than Britons, such as the right to bring a non-EU spouse into Britain regardless of income.
Davis has promised to set out the UK’s detailed position on Monday next week, while May is to explain her thinking to fellow EU leaders at a summit today.
Inevitably, there will be sound and fury over the Brexit bill. Various numbers have been mooted: 40 billion euros (US$44.5 billion), 60 billion euros net total, with 100 billion euros gross total grabbing the most headlines.
For now, the EU does not have a final number, but rather a range of scenarios, depending on the smoothness of Britain’s transition away from the EU.
While the EU is looking for detailed guarantees on citizens’ rights, the Brexit bill could be fudged until next year. The UK could even keep EU payments, such as farm subsidies, for two years, if it agreed to pay into the budget during that time.
Negotiators hope that by concentrating on the technicalities first and naming a number later, the final bill will be an easier sell for the British prime minister, because it can be presented as the price of a new deal.
However, the clearer the methodology, the easier it will be to do the math and the bigger the potential political storm. Diplomats worry that May has made no attempt to prepare public opinion for the Brexit bill or other inevitable compromises.
The fraught issue of the Irish border received the most attention on the first day of Brexit talks and is to be managed by leading officials on both sides.
British Permanent Secretary of the Department for Exiting the EU Oliver Robbins is to work with Sabine Weyand, Barnier’s deputy, on avoiding a hard border within Ireland.
However, the question will be difficult to resolve without knowing the UK’s intentions on remaining in the EU customs union, or what can be agreed with Brussels on tariffs.
What about a transition deal?
The EU expects to discuss a transition deal at a late stage in Brexit talks, possibly August next year.
Barnier has said a transitional agreement makes sense only when the UK knows where it is going.
Could anything interrupt or delay the talks?
Over the next 21 months there are to be elections, political accidents and a relentless swirl of events. When May still commanded a majority in the House of Commons, it was assumed that the talks would get serious after the German elections in autumn this year. Now the biggest uncertainty is an unstable British government led by a weak prime minister without a mandate for Brexit.
Since the Conservatives’ election debacle, EU diplomats do not know what kind of Brexit the British want. Nor are they certain about May’s political future and what her early departure could mean.
The Brexit clock will not stop for another snap election, even if formal talks are suspended. The best British negotiators could hope for would be a few weeks’ extension in March 2019. However, the EU will insist that the UK is gone ahead of European elections in May and June 2019.
Throughout the Brexit talks, the door remains open for the UK to change its mind and revoke its divorce letter. However, once Britain walks out, the door slams shut. The only way back in after summer 2019 would be for the UK to apply for EU membership.
A British minister would be back in Brussels to start talks all over again.
Saudi Arabian largesse is flooding Egypt’s cultural scene, but the reception is mixed. Some welcome new “cooperation” between two regional powerhouses, while others fear a hostile takeover by Riyadh. In Cairo, historically the cultural capital of the Arab world, Egyptian Minister of Culture Nevine al-Kilany recently hosted Saudi Arabian General Entertainment Authority chairman Turki al-Sheikh. The deep-pocketed al-Sheikh has emerged as a Medici-like patron for Egypt’s cultural elite, courted by Cairo’s top talent to produce a slew of forthcoming films. A new three-way agreement between al-Sheikh, Kilany and United Media Services — a multi-media conglomerate linked to state intelligence that owns much of
The US and other countries should take concrete steps to confront the threats from Beijing to avoid war, US Representative Mario Diaz-Balart said in an interview with Voice of America on March 13. The US should use “every diplomatic economic tool at our disposal to treat China as what it is... to avoid war,” Diaz-Balart said. Giving an example of what the US could do, he said that it has to be more aggressive in its military sales to Taiwan. Actions by cross-party US lawmakers in the past few years such as meeting with Taiwanese officials in Washington and Taipei, and
The Republic of China (ROC) on Taiwan has no official diplomatic allies in the EU. With the exception of the Vatican, it has no official allies in Europe at all. This does not prevent the ROC — Taiwan — from having close relations with EU member states and other European countries. The exact nature of the relationship does bear revisiting, if only to clarify what is a very complicated and sensitive idea, the details of which leave considerable room for misunderstanding, misrepresentation and disagreement. Only this week, President Tsai Ing-wen (蔡英文) received members of the European Parliament’s Delegation for Relations
Denmark’s “one China” policy more and more resembles Beijing’s “one China” principle. At least, this is how things appear. In recent interactions with the Danish state, such as applying for residency permits, a Taiwanese’s nationality would be listed as “China.” That designation occurs for a Taiwanese student coming to Denmark or a Danish citizen arriving in Denmark with, for example, their Taiwanese partner. Details of this were published on Sunday in an article in the Danish daily Berlingske written by Alexander Sjoberg and Tobias Reinwald. The pretext for this new practice is that Denmark does not recognize Taiwan as a state under