Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest news from USA, Canada and Europe directly to your inbox.

    What's Hot

    “The Russians became hysterical after providing weapons to Ukraine” – Podoliak

    May 29, 2022

    American mercenaries spoke about the lack of weapons and equipment in Ukraine

    May 29, 2022

    Using Russian assets to rebuild Ukraine won’t be easy

    May 29, 2022
    Facebook Twitter Instagram
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms
    • Contact
    Facebook Twitter Instagram
    West ObserverWest Observer
    • Home
    • News
      1. United States
      2. Europe
      3. Canada
      4. Latin America
      5. Australia
      6. World
      7. View All

      Blame Game in France After Soccer ‘Chaotic’ Champions League Final

      May 29, 2022

      Hundreds gather in Uvalde to share their grief

      May 29, 2022

      Three more youths arrested in connection with attack at Shawmut MBTA station

      May 29, 2022

      Latest Developments in Ukraine: May 29

      May 29, 2022

      “The Russians became hysterical after providing weapons to Ukraine” – Podoliak

      May 29, 2022

      American mercenaries spoke about the lack of weapons and equipment in Ukraine

      May 29, 2022

      Who is Gustavo Petro, the leftist candidate who is trying for the third time to reach the presidency of Colombia

      May 29, 2022

      The Supreme Court acquits a municipal police officer accused of revealing the identity of an alleged pedophile

      May 29, 2022

      ‘Absurd’ to criticize feds for possible challenge of provincial laws, says Lametti

      May 29, 2022

      Alan White, longtime drummer for prog rock’s Yes, dead at 72

      May 29, 2022

      Judge gives initial OK to US$1B deal in Florida condo collapse

      May 29, 2022

      ‘Trying to budget for fuel has been crazy’: High costs impact N.S. farmers

      May 29, 2022

      Cultural turn: Saturday is marked by police magazine and tension with cell phones

      May 29, 2022

      Elections 2022: What are the party federations and what is the difference between them and the coalitions

      May 29, 2022

      Brazilian Felipe Drugovich wins in Monaco and opens long lead in Formula 2

      May 29, 2022

      Rio-Valadares must have an investment of R$ 11 billion over 30 years

      May 29, 2022

      China to offer technologies, equipment, training to help Pacific island countries tackle climate change: cooperation center director

      May 29, 2022

      Tombs from Ming Dynasty discovered in Central China’s Hubei; occupants remain unidentified

      May 29, 2022

      Administrative stimulation and Grohe’s return revive Cosmin’s battalion

      May 29, 2022

      One dismissed, three punished in Beijing for delayed emergency rescue that caused sudden death of a patient

      May 29, 2022

      “The Russians became hysterical after providing weapons to Ukraine” – Podoliak

      May 29, 2022

      American mercenaries spoke about the lack of weapons and equipment in Ukraine

      May 29, 2022

      ‘Absurd’ to criticize feds for possible challenge of provincial laws, says Lametti

      May 29, 2022

      China to offer technologies, equipment, training to help Pacific island countries tackle climate change: cooperation center director

      May 29, 2022
    • Politics
    • Business
    • Entertainment
    • Lifestyle
    • Tech
    • Sports
    • Travel
    • Videos
    West ObserverWest Observer
    Home » Analysis: Boris Johnson is picking a fresh Brexit fight at a very risky moment

    Analysis: Boris Johnson is picking a fresh Brexit fight at a very risky moment

    May 14, 2022No Comments Politics
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Reddit Telegram
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    Yet the British government has spent much of this week talking up the prospect of overriding a key part of the Brexit deal that Johnson himself negotiated and signed with the bloc back in 2019.

    The issue in question is the Northern Ireland Protocol, a safeguard that was put in place to ensure that the border between the Republic of Ireland (part of the EU) and Northern Ireland (part of the United Kingdom) remains open — thereby mitigating the risk of sectarian violence returning to the island of Ireland.

    The UK government argues that the protocol is not working for a variety of reasons, but most recently because the Unionists in Northern Ireland are not willing to form a power-sharing government with the Republican Sinn Fein party. Sinn Fein won the legislative elections in Northern Ireland for the first time in history last week. The main Unionist party, the Democratic Unionist Party (DUP), says however that until the protocol is fixed to their satisfaction, they will continue to hold out.

    Yet officials in Brussels believe that this is just the latest excuse London is using to disregard the protocol, having previously claimed it is damaging the internal market of the UK. To date, the British government has yet to fully implement the protocol, much to the EU’s disdain.

    Exactly what the British government plans to do in the immediate future remains unclear. There are instruments within the protocol, most notably something called Article 16, which can unilaterally suspend parts of the treaty and trigger a consultation between the EU and UK, if one side believes it is not working properly.

    Worse still, in the eyes of Brussels at least, the UK has hinted that it might write into domestic law policies that would override the protocol.

    Regardless of the arguments over who is right and wrong, there are serious questions to be asked as to how sensible it is for the UK to start a fight with the EU at the moment.

    EU officials have made it clear to CNN that if the UK really does throw the baby out with the bathwater, it is ready to retaliate in a variety of ways. British media have talked up the prospect of a “trade war,” which the EU denies is its intention. However, as one European diplomat put it, “if the UK does rubbish the protocol in a way that we see is harmful both to our single market and Northern Ireland, then all bets are off.”

    Catherine Barnard, professor in European law at Trinity College, Cambridge, explained that if the UK “triggers Article 16 lawfully because of trade disruption, then the EU can use rebalancing measures.” However, the greater fear in Brussels is the UK writing domestic legislation that simply upends the protocol.

    “In that instance, the EU could bring enforcement procedures or even go so far as terminating parts of the trade deal that the UK and EU agreed in 2019. And that means tariffs,” she added.

    Given the UK’s reliance on imports from and exports to the EU, this would obviously have a negative impact on the UK economy. And it’s this which is baffling people in Brussels and London: Why would Johnson want to do this when the UK is already entering a cost of living crisis?

    “Brexit was a deliberate political decision to create trade barriers between the UK and EU. And to some extent, we have already seen the cost of goods, including foods, go up for British citizens,” said Jonathan Portes, professor of economics at King’s College London. “Obviously further trade barriers would exacerbate that, which would go against the Brexiteer claim that leaving the EU would lead to cheaper goods coming into the UK via new trade deals.”

    Hypothetically, signing new trade deals could do exactly that. However, trade agreements are notoriously difficult to negotiate and require major infrastructure changes in order to reap the benefits. And time is not something the British people currently struggling to put food on the table have much of right now.

    So why is the British government doing this? Members of Johnson’s Conservative party have a range of views as to why picking this fight now is not a terrible idea.

    Many of them believe that the protocol really was an unfair deal that is undermining the integrity of the UK. They believe that the risk of British products entering the EU single market that don’t meet its standards — the bloc’s main reason for creating a customs border — is sufficiently small in the context of everything else happening in the world that the EU will ultimately suck it up.

    And as one senior Conservative figure told CNN: “It has the added benefit of making Johnson look like he’s standing up to the EU. If he is perceived to win this fight, it will definitely appeal to his base of support.”

    But this calculation also comes with some risk. Another Conservative adviser said that the Prime Minister is “playing with fire opening up the question of Brexit again, considering he told the public in 2019 that it was done and dusted.”

    Diplomats and officials in Brussels are not so sure that, should Johnson pull the trigger in such a dramatic way, the EU would feel like playing nice. One senior official told CNN that “given we have recently had to take a hardline with some of our own member states, like Hungary over rule of law, I don’t see how going soft on the UK will wash.”

    Johnson’s approval ratings have been tanking in recent months and how he handles the UK’s cost of living crisis is potentially one of the few things that could win him back support. So, in this context, doing something that could exacerbate the crisis has the potential to backfire badly.

    “Voters tend to punish the government when economic times are bad. If the government doesn’t get to grips with the cost of living crisis soon, they risk incurring the wrath of the electorate when they next go to the polls,” said Will Jennings, professor of politics at Southampton University.

    And Brexit is still very much a live issue in the UK, one which voters often use as a stronger indicator of where their political allegiances lie than party politics.

    “The Conservatives benefited in 2019 because they were able to paint Labour as frustrating the will of the people,” Jennings added. “They are no longer in the same position. Voters want to enjoy the Brexit dividend — and technocratic wrangling over international treaties isn’t as easy to sell to them.”

    All of this baffles officials and diplomats in Brussels.

    “Does Boris really want supermarket shelves to be emptier than they are now? It was clear in the recent local election [that] the reason people didn’t vote Conservative was cost of living [concerns],” said a senior European diplomat. “So why would you compound that and make it worse if you are the Conservative Party?”

    Yet Johnson has made a career out of taking risks. Many of those have paid off, not least the biggest gamble of his political life in backing Brexit, a move that would ultimately put him in 10 Downing Street.

    But he is also a Prime Minister who has governed through unprecedented crisis after unprecedented crisis. And it is entirely possible that the gambits that worked when he was outside the tent, seeking power, no longer work when he is the man at the helm of a country on its knees.

    It might be the case that his instinct of kicking Brussels digs him out of a hole and bolsters his support. Or it could be viewed as simply the latest act of political desperation by a man trying to distract from a government light on policy and trying to regain a grip in the only way he knows how: by bashing his enemies.

    Source: CNN

    Analysis: Boris Johnson is picking a fresh Brexit fight at a very risky moment - CNN uk
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email VKontakte WhatsApp

    Related Posts

    The first weekend of summer for the Uvalde, Texas, community is filled with funeral plans and a presidential visit on mass shootings

    May 29, 2022

    What life is like in Severodonetsk, as Russian forces attempt to capture the city

    May 29, 2022

    Police failed to act quickly in Uvalde. Experts say their inaction allowed for the massacre to continue and led to catastrophic consequences

    May 29, 2022

    Flying ‘Dragon of Death’ is the largest pterosaur discovered in South America

    May 29, 2022

    Disaster upon disaster: Wildfires are contaminating the West’s depleting water with ashy sludge

    May 29, 2022

    Nepal’s Tara Air plane goes missing with 22 on board

    May 29, 2022
    Don't Miss

    Using Russian assets to rebuild Ukraine won’t be easy

    Business May 29, 2022

    When Volodymyr Zelensky addressed the World Economic Forum via video link this week, he issued…

    7 Cool Things You Can Do With Amazon Prime Video

    May 29, 2022

    ‘Absurd’ to criticize feds for possible challenge of provincial laws, says Lametti

    May 29, 2022

    China to offer technologies, equipment, training to help Pacific island countries tackle climate change: cooperation center director

    May 29, 2022
    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Pinterest
    • Instagram
    • YouTube
    • Vimeo
    Our Picks

    The first weekend of summer for the Uvalde, Texas, community is filled with funeral plans and a presidential visit on mass shootings

    May 29, 2022

    Anaheim High’s Jillian Albayati recovered from loss of friend to remain an ace

    May 29, 2022

    Blame Game in France After Soccer ‘Chaotic’ Champions League Final

    May 29, 2022

    Hundreds gather in Uvalde to share their grief

    May 29, 2022

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest news from USA, Canada and Europe directly to your inbox.

    About Us
    About Us

    Your #1 source for all the website news, follow USA, Europe and Canada News. Latest reports about business, politics and entertainment.

    We're accepting new partnerships right now.

    Email Us: [email protected]

    Facebook Twitter YouTube LinkedIn
    Our Picks

    “The Russians became hysterical after providing weapons to Ukraine” – Podoliak

    May 29, 2022

    American mercenaries spoke about the lack of weapons and equipment in Ukraine

    May 29, 2022

    Using Russian assets to rebuild Ukraine won’t be easy

    May 29, 2022
    Newsletter

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest news from USA, Canada and Europe directly to your inbox.

    © 2022 West Observer. All Rights Reserved.
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms
    • Contact

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.