Brexit weekly briefing: a tale of two referendums

http://www.theguardian.com/politics/2017/mar/14/brexit-weekly-briefing-a-tale-of-two-referendums

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The big picture

The joke used to go, said one presenter on BBC radio this week, that the British were so unfamiliar with a referendum that most people weren’t very sure which version of the plural they should use (the Guardian is firmly on the side of referendums, rather than the slightly fussy referenda).

Now, yet another referendum seems set to dominate the headlines at the precise moment ministers in London press the symbolic button to enact the result of the last one. Yes, as article 50 looms, it’s time also for indyref 2.

To turn first to the latter of these pieces of political jargon, the SNP’s Nicola Sturgeon chose the midst of the Brexit debate to announce her intention to hold a referendum on Scottish independence, having lost one on the same issue in 2014.

Scotland’s first minister does not have the official power to enact a referendum, but Theresa May did not indicate she would obstruct one, while still saying Sturgeon was “playing politics with the future of our country”.

Sturgeon’s pitch to a nation still split over the issue will be that Scotland could hold on to some sort of EU status and avoid a cliff-edge Brexit forced on the whole UK by an intransigent cabal of English ministers. May in turn will argue that Scotland will suffer even more economically alone, and should remain in the union.

Much will hinge on timing. Sturgeon wants a vote between autumn 2018 and spring 2019 – that is, before Brexit is completed. May is likely to want to delay this.

Speaking of timing, numerous predictions had it that May would invoke article 50 – the process that formally begins EU exit – on Tuesday, in the wake of the expected (at time of writing) passage of the bill allowing her to do this. This has now been pushed back to the end of the month, officials have briefed. Why? In part it is to avoid potentially influencing Wednesday’s Dutch election, where the far-right populist Geert Wilders hopes to capitalise on anti-EU sentiment.

There is also the matter of the 60th anniversary of the Treaty of Rome, which set up the European Economic Community, forerunner of the EU, on 25 March. With May about to seek the goodwill of the 27 remaining leaders, she does not wish to poop their party by triggering article 50 until it’s over.

And why not Tuesday? In the main, it seems that Sturgeon’s announcement of another referendum has got in the way. These things are becoming a habit.

The view from Europe

Whether or not article 50 has been triggered by then, the EU plans to use its 60th anniversary celebrations in Rome on 25 March to warn that anyone who follows the UK’s lead will risk being “sidelined by global dynamics”.

According to a leaked draft declaration, the 27 will say they are “determined to make the EU stronger and more resilient ... Unity is a necessity, not an option. Standing together is our best chance to defend our common interests and values.”

Be that as it may, though, the European commission president, Jean-Claude Juncker, reckons Britain will one day rejoin the EU, telling reporters that while he regretted Britain’s decision to leave, he held out hope it would return:

I don’t like Brexit. I would like to be in the same boat as the British. The day will come when the British re-enter the boat. I hope.

But all is not sweetness and light on the continent. Poland reacted furiously after the 27 voted by an overwhelming majority to re-appoint Donald Tusk as European council president, despite his home country’s fierce opposition.

The decision, which means Tusk will play a key role in Brexit talks, left Poland isolated – but promising to fight back. “We know now that the EU is a union under Berlin’s diktat,” said Poland’s foreign minister, Witold Waszczykowski.

Meanwhile, back in Westminster

The government saw its two-line article 50 bill passed unamended, with MPs in the Commons expunging two additions made by the Lords, and peers backing down in the face of the lower house’s constitutional primacy. This toing and froing between the chambers is known, even in the official guidelines, as “ping pong”. If the government is not minded to back down, MPs invariably end up on the winning side.

Why the fuss over the two additions, one to guarantee the rights of overseas EU citizens in the UK; the other to oblige a “meaningful” final vote in parliament on an eventual deal? It’s hard to be certain, but amid talk of “not tying the prime minister’s hands” and keeping the bill straightforward, it does seem a way to give ministers as much executive leeway over the process as possible.

Another Brexit subject also surfaced during the weekend: what might happen if no deal proved possible, and the UK walked away to default to World Trade Organisation commerce terms? All three of May’s Brexit-facing ministers, Boris Johnson, David Davis and Liam Fox, were on the weekend political talkshows, and all discussed what might happen in an event they insisted was unlikely.

Johnson, the foreign secretary, even opted to argue that the UK’s economy “would be perfectly OK” if it left without a deal. Ten minutes later, the head of the Confederation of British Industry was there to give a differing view. No agreement with the EU, Carolyn Fairbairn warned, would be “a recipe for chaos on a number of fronts”.

You should also know

London mayor Sadiq Khan said the lack of an interim trade deal could cause “colossal damage” and called hopes of a trade deal in two years “unrealistic”.

Pro-European Tories urged ministers to drop the hostile approach of “Brexit zealots”, saying it risked harming EU relations and damaging the UK economy.

More civil servants will be needed to cope with the Brexit workload, analysis by the Institute for Government and UK in a Changing Europe suggested.

The shortage of British workers in UK hospitality sector is so severe that chains such as Pret a Manger will need 10 years to replace EU staff after Brexit.

A hard Brexit could cost Spain €1bn, a leaked Spanish government report said.

Foreign secretary Boris Johnson urged Theresa May to resist the rumoured £50bn bill the EU is expected to ask the UK to pay before it leaves.

Brexit risks turning British scientists into bit-part players, a report by the union Prospect warned.

Veteran Tory Michael Heseltine, who led the Lords article 50 bill rebellion, was sacked from the government but promised to continue to fight Brexit.

US businesses have warned that Brexit could put at risk nearly £500bn of corporate investment in the UK, an American Chamber of Commerce report suggests.

Britain’s economy will grow by 2% this year but slow in 2018, the Office for Budget Responsibility predicted.

UK children with cancer could miss out on Europe-wide drug trials after Brexit, doctors warned.

Read these

In the Guardian, Jonathan Freedland warned that Brexit was “about to get real”, but we were nowhere near ready for it. The triggering of article 50 will kickstart negotiations of mindbending complexity, and Brexiters need to step up:

Leavers should be approaching this gargantuan task with a special humility, because it was they who needlessly inflicted it upon us … From this moment on, the focus must be intensely practical. No more baggy rhetoric about sovereignty and ‘taking back control’. From now on, those who got us into this situation have to show they can get us out intact by March 2019. That will require a major shift among the Brexiteer ministers and in Downing Street.

In the New Statesman, Stephen Bush also argues forcefully that “no deal” with the EU is most definitely not better than a bad deal, but the more we say we’re prepared to walk away, the more likely it is that we will:

The counterargument from most of those pushing the “no deal is better than a bad deal” line is that signalling the United Kingdom’s willingness to walk away from the table increases our leverage … The difficulty is that the message that we are hoping to send is, ‘We’re crazy enough to walk away’, but what is being heard in most European capitals is, ‘It would be crazy to walk away.’

The Guardian editorial ahead of the triggering of article 50 was equally forthright, arguing that no deal was not an option and that while the prime minister may pretend she is ready to crash out of the EU, such an outcome would be a catastrophe – and parliament must be allowed to prevent it:

Last June’s Brexit vote was a lesson in what happens when governments fail to address voters’ concerns. A hard Brexit would leave the UK at the bottom of the G20. Many Brexit voters would be the first to feel the consequences. Mrs May should not pretend it is an acceptable outcome. If MPs demand a vote whatever the outcome of the negotiations, they can insist that it is not.

Tweet of the week

Veteran EU blogger Jon Worth pretty much sums it up:

Obviously.#Brexit #Indyref2 pic.twitter.com/jVOnIs6Cqz