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Brexit negotiators meet in Brussels | Haller Kreisblatt

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on December 6th, 2020 at 9:21 pm

British Brexit negotiator David Frost (l) and EU chief negotiator Michel Barnier resume their deliberations (archive). (© Photo: Olivier Hoslet / EPA Pool / dpa)

Brussels / London – The negotiators from Great Britain and the EU have returned to the negotiating table to try, under massive time pressure, to finally achieve a Brexit trade pact.

The talks in Brussels had started, said a spokesman for the EU Commission on Sunday afternoon for the German press agency. After a phone call on Saturday evening, British Prime Minister Johnson and Commissioner Ursula von der Leyen had further identified “significant differences” between the two sides and asked their negotiators, David Frost and Michel Barnier, to try again for an agreement.

Brexit negotiators meet in Brussels

Brexit negotiators meet in Brussels

Brexit negotiators meet in Brussels


A trade pact is intended to prevent dramatic economic upheavals on both sides after the end of the Brexit transition phase at the turn of the year. Should the talks fail, there will be tariffs and other trade hurdles at the turn of the year. Then the Brexit transition period will expire, during which everything remained the same despite the UK’s exit from the EU on January 31.

According to a report by the Observer, the British government is even planning to fly in the corona vaccine recently approved in the country by the Mainz company Biontech and its US partner Pfizer with military aircraft. This should prevent delays in the delivery of the product caused by Brexit. Traffic jams are expected even in the case of a deal, because additional formalities will arise even without customs duties.

The chairman of the Christian Democrats in the European Parliament, Manfred Weber, warned Johnson not to let the negotiations break. “He would sin against the future of his country if he failed an agreement,” Weber told the newspapers of the Funke media group and added: “A solution is possible.” But it is also clear that there is no agreement at any price. The integrity of the EU internal market should not be jeopardized.

There are three main issues at stake: a level playing field, fisheries and the instruments for penalizing violations of the planned agreement.

The competitive conditions – the keyword is level playing field – are, among other things, about environmental, social and aid standards. Great Britain would like to have as few guidelines as possible from the EU – for Johnson this is a question of sovereignty. However, the EU wants to prevent competitive advantages for British companies through regular dumping, especially since the desired trade agreement would allow British goods to enter the EU market unpaid and without quantity restrictions.

The second major issue, fisheries, is the amount that EU fishermen are allowed to catch in British waters. According to insiders, quotas and a clause to review the regulation after a certain period (revision clause) are under discussion.

For France in particular, the subject of fisheries is of great political importance. French President Emmanuel Macron once again insisted this week on French fishermen’s access to British waters. He said he would only agree to a contract if the long-term interests of his country were safeguarded. This was understood as a threat of veto.

Another major obstacle in the negotiations is the planned British Internal Market Act, which would undermine parts of the EU withdrawal treaty that is already in force. The British government announced that it would reintroduce the controversial clauses into the bill on Monday. They had previously been removed from the House of Lords. The EU is outraged by the planned breach of contract. Another bill is to follow on Tuesday. The so-called finance law should also run counter to the exit agreement.

Copyright © Haller Kreisblatt 2020
Copyright © dpa – German Press Agency 2020

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