Professor Steve Peers,
University of Essex
Introduction
It’s not certain, at time of
writing, whether the Brexit withdrawal agreement
will be approved or not. But the UK Parliament is about to vote again on the
issue, following the recent agreement on a new version of the agreement – with
a revised
Protocol on the Irish border (for a full text of the revised withdrawal
agreement following this change, see here)
and a revised
political declaration on the future relationship. (There was already a minor
amendment to the text agreed in April, after UK membership was extended for
several months: the text of the agreement as it stood after that is here.)
So this is an opportune time to update my previous
overview of the first version of the withdrawal agreement.
This blog post is a summary and
explanation of the text for non-lawyers. It outlines the structure of the
agreement and the main content of each part of it in turn. It does not aim to
be exhaustive, but only to give a broad indication of what the revised agreement
entails. I have also updated my blog posts on the transition period, dispute settlement, citizens’rights and the related politicaldeclaration.
Throughout the blog post, I’ve
scattered the answers to ‘key questions’ which have been raised about what the
revised withdrawal agreement does. Let’s start with this question, in light of
the imminent vote on the withdrawal agreement:
Key
question: What if the withdrawal agreement is not ratified?
If Parliament
this week votes against ratifying the withdrawal agreement, and also votes
against leaving the EU with no deal, then the provisions of the ‘Benn Act’ kick
in, requiring the Prime Minister to request a three-month extension of EU
membership. I discussed the workings of that Act in detail here.
It’s possible that the EU refuses to extend membership, in which case the UK
leaves with no deal on October 31, unless it decides to revoke its notification
to leave the EU, which is possible unilaterally (as confirmed by the CJEU, and
discussed here).
There’s also a legal
challenge to ratification at this point.
It’s also
possible that parliament votes in favour of the withdrawal agreement, but runs
out of time or votes against the bill to give effect to the withdrawal
agreement. In that scenario there may be a fresh attempt at securing an
extension of membership. If that fails, the UK again leaves with no deal on
October 31, unless it decides to revoke the notification to leave. Note that
there’s a proposed amendment
to the government’s motion to approve the withdrawal agreement, which aims
expressly to trigger the Benn Act to give more time to consider it.
The EU
Commission has issued preparedness notices
setting out its view on what would happen if the UK leaves the EU without a withdrawal
agreement. The UK government has also issued its own no deal notices.
In order to
address the possibility of a no deal outcome, the EU has also adopted legislation
(a few amendments to this legislation will likely be adopted before October 31).
This includes a law waiving visa requirements for short-term visits by UK
citizens to the EU (for 90/180 days), which I discussed here.
This will not address residence for longer periods, which will be subject to EU
and national laws on non-EU citizens, which are more restrictive than EU free
movement rules. (For more details of the law applicable to UK citizens visiting
or staying in the EU after Brexit, see my discussion here. For
more details of the position of UK citizens in the EU27 who might be able to
claim long-term residence status, see discussion here;
this point may be relevant even if the withdrawal agreement is ratified).
Another key issue is what exactly
the imminent vote is about. It’s often claimed that a vote to approve the
withdrawal agreement (or to leave with no deal) would ‘get Brexit done’, but is
that the case?
Key
question: Does the withdrawal agreement cover the long-term relationship
between the UK and EU after Brexit?
Other than the
provisions related to Northern Ireland (discussed further below), the
withdrawal agreement governs only the details of leaving the EU, not the long-term relationship between
the UK and EU. On that issue, alongside the text of the agreement, there was
also a political
declaration on the future UK/EU relationship (discussed here),
which has now been revised
as part of the new overall ‘deal’. This is the basis for negotiations that
would take place after Brexit day. There would also be an issue of whether to
extend the transition period due to expire at the end of 2020, as discussed
below. So there will certainly be lots of Brexit discussion in future, even if the revised withdrawal agreement is approved.
Structure of the
withdrawal agreement
Part One of the withdrawal
agreement (Articles 1-8) sets out the “Common Provisions”. These deal with basic issues like definitions
and territorial scope.
Part Two of the withdrawal
agreement (Articles 9-39) deals with citizens’
rights, for those EU27 citizens in the UK, and UK citizens in the EU27,
before the end of the transition period.
Part Three of the agreement sets
out “separation provisions”
(Articles 40-125), ie the exact details of phasing out the application of EU
law in the EU at the end of the transition period.
Next, Part Four sets out the
rules on the transition period (Articles
126-132), during which substantive EU law still applies to the EU for a period after Brexit day.
Part Five concerns the financial settlement (Articles
133-157).
Part Six sets out “Institutional and Final Provisions”
(Articles 158-185). This includes rules on CJEU jurisdiction over EU27
citizens, dispute settlement, making further decisions to implement the
agreement and rules on entry into force and dates of application.
In addition there are three Protocols to the agreement (these have
the same legal force as the main treaty), on Irish border issues, UK
bases in Cyprus, and Gibraltar.
Part One: Common Provisions
The main legal issue in Part one
is the legal effect of EU law for the UK. The agreement must have the same
legal effect for the UK as EU law does for EU Member States – including the
principles of direct effect (meaning that the agreement as such can be enforced
in national courts) and implicitly supremacy (meaning that national law which
breaches the agreement must be disapplied by national courts). The UK must also
pass an Act of Parliament to give effect to the Agreement; this is above and
beyond the latest planned ‘meaningful vote’ on the revised agreement in
Parliament.
All references to EU law require
it to be interpreted in accordance with the normal rules of EU law. As for case
law of the CJEU, references to EU law must be ‘interpreted in conformity with’
CJEU case law delivered before the end of the transition period. However, the
rule is different for CJEU case law after the end of the transition period: in
that case, the UK courts and authorities are only required to have ‘due regard’
for the case law. Note that none of this gives jurisdiction to the CJEU as such
as regards the UK (although other parts of the Treaty give the Court some
jurisdiction).
References to EU law include that
law as amended until the end of the transition period, while references to
Member States include the UK except when they refer to having voting or
representation rights on EU bodies etc.
Part Two: Citizens’ rights
This part will mostly not apply
until after the end of the transition period, since free movement of people
will continue during that period. In principle, it provides that EU27 citizens
in the UK before the end of that period (and UK citizens who are in the EU27
before the end of that period) will retain the same rights as those who arrived
before Brexit day. To that end, it requires the two sides to keep applying EU
free movement legislation to the people concerned, including legislation on
social security coordination and the recognition of qualifications.
Some aspects of their legal
status will change, however: the UK or EU27 Member States may require them to
apply to prove their right to stay on the territory. The UK in particular plans
to implement this, by means of a ‘settled status’ scheme. The risk is that some
people will not have the documentation to prove their right to stay. Some
categories of people currently covered by EU law (such as UK citizens returning
to the UK with non-EU family members, or UK children in the sole care of one
non-EU parent) will not be covered by the withdrawal agreement, so their
position will be up to UK law. Similarly a number of EU27 citizens who would
not qualify for status because they do not meet the ‘comprehensive sickness
insurance’ requirement will be covered by a unilateral waiver of this rule by
the UK, not the withdrawal agreement.
Also, the rules on family reunion
in EU free movement law (which are more favourable than those under national
law or EU law on non-EU families) will only apply where the family relationship
existed before the end of the transition period, or the family member was
legally resident in the same State then. If the citizens commit a criminal
offence after the end of the transition period, national rules on expulsions
will apply – and they may be more stringent than EU free movement rules on this
issue.
The CJEU will have jurisdiction
to rule on how the rules apply to EU27 citizens in the UK, on the basis of
requests from UK courts, for eight years after the transitional period ends.
There will also be an independent monitoring body in the UK with power to bring
court cases on their behalf.
For further details, see my annotation of a
previous version of the citizens’ rights Part of the treaty, which is only a
little different from the final version.
Key
question: Does the withdrawal agreement end free movement of people?
Yes, free
movement between the UK and EU (remember this applies both ways) stops at the end of the transition period, unless the UK and EU decide
to sign a separate treaty as part of the future relationship extending free
movement in the future. Currently the UK government opposes this idea. The protocol
on Northern Ireland does not include free movement of people, but only the
continuation of the UK/Ireland common travel area, which is more limited.
The withdrawal
agreement also ends free movement between Member States for UK citizens already
in the EU27, unless (again) a separate treaty as part of the future
relationship addresses this issue. UK citizens in the EU27 might, however, be
able to qualify for a status (long-term resident of the EU) allowing movement
between Member States on a more restrictive basis, as discussed here.
Part Three: Separation provisions
This part tells out exactly how
EU law ceases to apply at the end of the transition period, for a list of
different issues. The biggest difficulties during negotiations were over
geographical indications (ie, protection for those who call their product
‘Parma ham’) and what happens to cases pending before the CJEU on Brexit day.
Key
question: Is the UK bound to EU law on geographical indications forever?
No, but it
would be guaranteeing the continued protection of geographical indications for
products which were protected at the
end of the transition period.
More precisely, this part sets
out rules for ending the application of EU law as regards thirteen issues:
goods placed on the market; ongoing customs procedures; ongoing VAT and excise
procedures; intellectual property protection; police and criminal law
cooperation; cross-border civil litigation; personal data; public procurement;
Euratom; judicial and administrative procedures; administrative cooperation;
privileges and immunities; and other issues, such as the European Schools.
Key
question: Does the CJEU have jurisdiction in the UK indefinitely?
No. Some have
misread Article 89 of the withdrawal agreement, which refers to CJEU
jurisdiction as regards cases coming from the UK, to mean that the UK will be
covered by the Court’s jurisdiction forever. In fact, Article 89 simply confirms
that the Court will have jurisdiction for cases sent from UK courts before the end of the transition period.
After that
point, UK courts can send the CJEU cases only in limited contexts: for eight
years after the transition period ends as regards EU27 citizens in the UK, or
the protocols on Northern Ireland (in part) and Cyprus. Also, the Court has
jurisdiction after this point to decide on how to interpret EU law if a dispute
about the withdrawal agreement goes to arbitration (see Part Six).
Furthermore,
the Commission can sue the UK in the CJEU for failure to implement EU law
correctly for four years after the end of the transition period (though this
can only concern alleged breaches which occurred as an EU Member State, or during
the transition period Part of the agreement). Finally, the Commission can sue
the UK to enforce State aid and competition decisions which were based on
proceedings which started before the end of the transition period, but
concluded afterward. (I have discussed
the CJEU provisions of the withdrawal agreement in more detail here).
It is possible that the future
relationship will provide for continued EU/UK cooperation on some of these
issues, in which case some of these separation clauses either will not come
into practical effect at all, or will only apply in part. For instance, the EU
and UK might end up agreeing in a new
security treaty on another form of fast-track extradition instead of the
European Arrest Warrant (EAW), and may therefore choose to agree different
rules on transition from the EAW system to that new fast-track system.
Part Four: transition period
This is a short part of the
withdrawal agreement, yet it has the biggest effect: it keeps most substantive
EU law in place in the UK until at least the end of 2020, with a possible
extension.
The key elements of the transition
period are that EU law (including new EU law) applies to the UK, except in
areas covered by UK opt-outs (such as the single currency and justice and home
affairs law; in the latter case, the UK retains part of its power to opt-in to
new proposals on a case-by-case basis). There are special rules on external
relations: for instance, the EU will notify non-EU countries that the UK should
still be regarded as covered by EU free trade agreements, or other types of EU
treaties between the EU and non-EU countries (the non-EU countries aren’t
obliged to agree to this. For the text of the notification, see here).
The current rules on the allocation of fisheries catches can’t be changed to
benefit either the EU or UK fishing fleets.
However, the UK will not be
represented on any EU institutions or bodies – including on the CJEU, which
will continue to have its usual jurisdiction regarding the UK during the
transition period. The UK will only be consulted on new EU measures as a
special exception. In one area – foreign and defence policy – the UK can refuse
to apply new EU measures if it has fundamental objections to them, and the
withdrawal agreement foresees an early treaty between the EU and UK that will
replace the transition period rules in this area. The UK will remain opted out
from the rules on further defence cooperation between Member States (known as
‘PESCO’).
For a detailed annotation of the
transition period clauses – except for the extension clause which was added
later – see my earlier blog post.
Key
question: Which EU laws does the transition period cover?
I’m often
asked if the transition period covers a particular EU law like driving licences
or aspects of the free movement of people, because readers can’t find a
specific reference to that law in the withdrawal agreement. The simple answer
is that the transition period covers all
laws applying to the UK except a handful of exclusions, so the drafters didn’t
bother with a list of those EU laws which are covered by it.
The EU laws
which are not covered by the
transition period are those about the European citizens’ initiative (on that
process, see the case law discussed here) and also
voting and standing for office in the European Parliament and local
government. The UK (or its devolved legislatures) can, if it chooses,
unilaterally continue to let EU27 citizens vote in local elections, and EU27
countries can choose to do the same for UK citizens. Also, as noted above, EU
foreign and defence policy might not fully apply to the UK for the whole of the
transition period.
This brings us to the potential extension
of the transition period. It’s possible for the Joint Committee set up by the
withdrawal agreement – which works by the mutual consent of the EU and UK – to
decide by July 2020 if the transition period will be extended, for a single
extension of up to one or two years.
In that case, the transition
period rules continue to apply to the UK for that extended period, except there
would have to be an ad hoc negotiation on how much the UK pays into the EU
budget during the extended period. There
are also special rules on agricultural support.
Key
question: Can the UK be forced to stay in the transition period
indefinitely?
No. First of
all, any extension of the transition period has to be agreed jointly, as noted
already. So the UK could veto it. Secondly, any extension won’t be indefinite,
since the withdrawal agreement sets a maximum extension time limit of two years.
On the other
hand, the UK might theoretically end up applying the rules relating to Northern
Ireland (discussed further below) indefinitely. However, these rules are more
limited in scope than the transition period, as they concern only some EU laws
(on equality law, external trade, customs, goods regulation, electricity, and State
aids), and they only apply to Northern Ireland. In particular, the backstop
does not concern the free movement of people or services, or contribution to
the EU budget.
Part Five: financial settlement
This part incorporates the
earlier agreement that the UK takes part in the EU’s spending until the end of
the current budget cycle (end 2020), which matches the end of the transition
period (unless that period is extended). As noted above, though, if the
transition period is extended, the UK and EU will negotiate a separate EU
contribution to the EU budget. It also includes UK payments to the budget
incurred because the EU often makes financial commitments in one year and then
pays them out in later years (the system known as reste à liquider). Furthermore, it includes continued payments to
‘off-budget’ EU spending such as commitments to developing countries, until the
current versions of those programmes expire. For a detailed discussion of the
finances of the deal, see reports from the OBR, the National Audit Office
and the Institute for Government.
Key
question: Has the UK agreed to pay £39 billion in return for nothing?
No. First of
all, some of that money has already been contributed during the period of
extension of EU membership. Secondly, this begs the question: the EU regards
the financial settlement as money which is payable in any event regardless of
any future relationship, and took the view that the future relationship could
not be formally negotiated before Brexit day anyway. Even on its own terms, the
argument that ‘£39 billion is paid for nothing’ is wrong, since about half of
of the money relates to the UK still applying substantive EU law during the
transition period (see the OBR report), during which the UK still has its
current access to EU goods and services markets (and vice versa).
Part Six: Institutional and Final Provisions
First of all, as noted above (in
Part Two), the CJEU will have jurisdiction to rule on how the rules on citizens’
acquired rights apply to EU27 citizens in the UK, on the basis of requests from
UK courts, for eight years after the transitional period ends. There will also
be an independent monitoring body in the UK with power to bring court cases on
their behalf. The two sides might agree to wind up the monitoring body at the
end of the same time period.
Secondly, the CJEU will have
jurisdiction, after the end of the transitional period, over the reference to
EU law in the financial settlement part of the agreement, in references from
national courts or as regards Commission infringement actions brought against
the UK.
Next, there’s a Joint Committee
set up to oversee and implement the agreement. It will meet at least once a
year, and there are a number of sub-committees dealing with specific issues
like Northern Ireland and citizens’ rights. It can take certain decisions to
add to the agreement – such as an extension of the transition period – but for
all these decisions the EU and UK must both agree.
There are detailed rules on
dispute settlement, providing for arguments about the agreement to go to a
panel of arbitrators. However, if the arbitrators have to decide an issue of EU
law when settling the dispute, they will have to ask the CJEU to give a ruling.
This is unavoidable, since CJEU case law insists that the EU and its Member
States cannot be bound by an interpretation of EU law other than the CJEU’s
(see, for instance, CJEU Opinion 1/92).
As noted above, the CJEU has
jurisdiction over part of the Protocol on Northern Ireland, as well as the
Protocol on bases in Cyprus.
Key
question: Does the CJEU have jurisdiction over the entire agreement?
No. The Court
has its usual jurisdiction under the transition period, and following that
specific jurisdiction over EU27 citizens’ rights and EU law referred to in the
financial settlement, as well as the protocols on Northern Ireland (in part)
and bases in Cyprus. But the arbitrators can only refer disputes over EU law to
it, not disputes over the entire agreement – although a lot of the agreement
does refer to EU law.
Note that this part of the
agreement differs a lot from the dispute settlement clauses as the Commission
proposed them in March 2018 (see discussion here) – which
included powers (tilted toward the EU) for both sides to impose sanctions on
each other. The final version looks a lot more like traditional international
dispute settlement, and is presumably a concession by the EU to the UK.
Finally, the last provisions of
the main withdrawal agreement set out ‘boilerplate’ rules: confirming that the
three Protocols and nine Annexes are binding; setting out the authentic
languages of the text and the depositary; and setting the date of entry in
force (which was amended
in April 2019). The withdrawal agreement applies from that date, except
the parts on citizens’ rights, separation provisions, dispute settlement and
the three Protocols mostly apply from the end of the transition period (with
specified exceptions which apply immediately). There’s also a commitment to
negotiate on the future relationship, referring to the separate joint
declaration on that issue, ‘with a view to’ agreeing those texts by the end of
the transition period ‘to the extent possible’.
Protocol on Irish border issues
The changes to the Northern
Ireland Protocol, as compared to the previous version of this Protocol, have
been tracked here.
Article 1 specifies that it does not affect the UK’s territorial integrity. But
the provisions emphasising that the Protocol is meant to be temporary have been
dropped, as have a link back to the possible extension of the transition period
and a review clause. However, the possibility of replacing the Protocol by
future UK/EU trade arrangements is maintained.
Next, Article 2 and 3 of the Protocol, which are
unamended, refer to equality rights and the common travel area between
the UK and Ireland (these issues were never controversial).
Key
question: Does the common travel area continue the free movement of people
between the UK and EU?
No. The
absence of border checks makes it impossible to refuse entry to people at the
border with Ireland, but that does not mean any EU27 citizens crossing that
border (besides Irish citizens) have the right to reside or work in the UK (and
vice versa for people crossing into Ireland, besides UK and EU citizens). There
is UK legislation on liability for employers, landlords et al who hire or do
business with people who are not authorised to work or reside that will be
relevant here.
The revised Protocol then drops the
previous UK-wide customs union backstop. This text had linked to Annexes on: a)
trade in goods between EU/UK/non-EU states; b) customs cooperation; and c) a
‘level playing field’, which meant some degree of continued harmonisation of
law relating to tax, the environment, labour law, state aid, competition, and
public companies/monopolies.
However, this had fallen short of
the obligations of EU Member States; there had been limited obligations to keep
up with new EU legislation and CJEU case law; and the arbitration rules
(including CJEU jurisdiction) mostly had not applied to this ‘level playing
field’. There’s a lot of EU law that wouldn’t
have applied to the UK – most notably the free movement of persons, services
and capital, and contributions to the EU budget. So while the backstop would
still have committed the UK to a chunk of EU law on trade in goods, and in a
limited way to some law in the ‘level playing field’ areas, the continued
application of EU law would have been much less than under the rules on the
transition period.
In place of the UK/EU customs
union backstop, in the revised Protocol a new Article 4 first specifies that
Northern Ireland is part of the UK’s customs territory for international trade
purposes. A new Article 5 then, first of all, regulates trade between Great
Britain and Northern Ireland. No customs duties are charged on goods moved from
Great Britain to Northern Ireland, unless there is a risk that the goods may be
sold in the EU. The further definition of what that means must be worked out by
the Joint Committee by the end of the transition period. There is an exemption
for personal property. As before, an Annex applies a long list of EU laws on
customs, trade and goods regulation to Northern Ireland – although in the
previous version some of these laws would have applied to the whole UK. It’s now specified explicitly that customs
duties charged for goods entering Northern Ireland are kept by the UK, not
given to the EU.
The Protocol also retains
provisions on the UK internal market, as well as lists of specific EU laws that
apply in Northern Ireland: product regulation, VAT and excise tax, a single
electricity market, and State aids. However, an Annex on agriculture and the
environment has been dropped, and the VAT provisions have been amended to clarify
that the UK keeps the revenue, can reduce VAT rates for Northern Ireland, and
to give the Joint Committee powers to amend these rules. The vague reference to
other North/South cooperation is retained.
The institutional provisions of
the Protocol are retained, including the proviso that EU bodies, including the
CJEU, have competence to apply or interpret the provisions of the Protocol that
are specific to Northern Ireland. Finally,
a new provision on ‘consent’ specifies that the Northern Ireland Assembly can,
under certain conditions, terminate the customs and other economic provisions
of the Protocol. There’s also a unilateral
UK declaration related to this. (The absence of a power to end the previous
backstop unilaterally had been controversial).
Protocol on UK bases in Cyprus
This Protocol confirms that the
bases in Cyprus remain within EU customs territory after Brexit, and EU
regulations on goods, including agricultural and fisheries laws, still apply.
EU law on excise taxes and VAT also continues to apply. Goods supplied to the
staff on the bases are exempt from customs and taxes, and the UK and Cyprus may
agree further rules on social security coordination. There are rules on checks
at the border of the bases area, and a general obligation to cooperate to
prevent fraud. Finally, the EU institutions, including the CJEU, have
competence to apply and interpret EU law referred to in the Protocol.
Protocol on Gibraltar
First of all, this Protocol
provides for the UK and Spain to cooperate on workers’ rights as regards the
Spain/Gibraltar crossing. Next, it retains the status quo on access to
aviation, unless the Joint Committee decides differently. It also contains
general provisions on cooperation on tax and fraud, environmental protection
and fishing, and police cooperation.
Assessment
The only changes in the revised
withdrawal agreement as compared to the previous version relate to the
‘backstop’ (I’ll come back to changes to the political declaration in a further
blog post). These changes replace the UK/EU customs union, with associated
‘level playing field’ rules on tax, the environment and labour law, which was
theoretically temporary, with permanent provisions which relate to Northern
Ireland only, moreover dropping the bulk of ‘level playing field’ rules. This
entails new provisions on trade between Great Britain and Northern Ireland, as
well as on the related Northern Ireland political process.
While the potential continued
application of some EU laws to the UK as a whole has been dropped, most of the
EU laws that would have continued to apply specifically to Northern Ireland
have been retained, and the agreement now regulates aspects of internal trade
and the internal political process. In short, the quid pro quo for limiting the
ongoing relationship between the UK as a whole with the EU as compared to
the previous withdrawal agreement is retaining, and even strengthening, the
ongoing relationship between Northern
Ireland and the EU.
The absence of a UK-wide backstop
means that the end of the transition period will create a new ‘no deal’ cliff
edge for the UK/EU relationship as regards trade – as there would no longer be a guarantee that
the backstop provisions on trade in goods would apply in the event of any
failure to agree a new broad trade relationship. ‘Level playing field’ rules will not kick in
either in this scenario. It’s therefore possible that the whole drama of a
potential no deal outcome will simply be replayed at some point in the near
future (except as regards Northern Ireland – unless the Assembly there wants to
terminate the key provisions of the relevant Protocol, probably at a separate
date).
The greater divergence from the
UK and the EU provided for in this revised agreement also therefore has a cost
of a potentially larger drop in reciprocal market access at the end of the
transition period, which would be accompanied by a greater possibility for the
UK to deregulate as regards tax, labour and environmental standards.
Those MPs who opposed the
previous withdrawal agreement formed part of different groups, who opposed that
agreement for various conflicting reasons: to obtain a ‘harder’ Brexit (fewer
ties to the EU, more capacity to deregulate); a ‘softer’ Brexit (stronger ties
to the EU, less capacity to deregulate); and to increase the chances of
preventing Brexit completely. These three aims were necessarily in conflict:
only one of the three groups could achieve its intended objective, and the
other two groups would have gambled and lost, putting themselves further away
than before from their ideal outcome. As
things stand, if the revised withdrawal agreement is approved, it’s
the hard Brexiters who won their gamble, and the soft Brexiters and Remainers
who made a serious tactical mistake.
Barnard & Peers: chapter 27
Photo credit: Sky News
The conclusion is correct. So, Labour MPs tempted to vote for this deal, you are about to empower the project of the likes of Baker, Rees-Mogg, Redwood and Cash. Really?
ReplyDeleteExcellent summary, thank you.
ReplyDelete50 occurrences of the word 'should' in the protocol document ...so a) its not a legal term and b) its a modal verb and doesnt translate to other eu languages exactly ie other phrases have to be used.
ReplyDeleteIt seems to mean that goods from Ireland can enter N.I. (and then GB) tariff free, while goods from third countries cannot. How can that be squared with MFN under WTO law?
ReplyDeleteIt might be argued that the protocol sets out a free trade agreement with part of the UK.
DeleteMaybe. But it does need arguing, doesn't it? Otherwise the whole deal violates WTO law.
Delete