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Tribune News Service
Tribune News Service
World
Lyubov Pronina

EU restarts legal action against UK in clash on Brexit bill

LONDON — The European Union is restarting legal proceedings against the U.K. as Brussels prepares for a drawn-out fight over London’s move to override part of the Brexit deal.

The U.K.’s planned legislation announced earlier this week is a breach of international law, Maros Sefcovic, the EU’s chief Brexit negotiator, told reporters on Wednesday. He added that the U.K. proposal to eliminate the role of the European Court of Justice in governing disputes was a further breach.

“Let there be no doubt: There is no legal, nor political justification whatsoever for unilaterally changing an international agreement,” Sefcovic said. “Opening the door to unilaterally changing an international agreement is a breach of international law as well. Let’s call a spade a spade: This is illegal.”

The simmering yearslong dispute between the U.K. and EU is heating back up, with the bloc restarting legal proceedings against the U.K. over London’s proposed bill. The legislation would give British ministers the power to unilaterally rewrite the bulk of the Northern Ireland protocol, which keeps the area in the EU’s single market while creating a customs border with the rest of the U.K.

U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson is heading for a fresh fight with his own Conservative Party over his proposed bill published Monday, which is likely to run into trouble in Parliament’s unelected upper chamber — the House of Lords — where peers have repeatedly pushed back on efforts to override the Brexit agreement.

The EU is restarting a case filed against the U.K. in March 2021 over the implementation of the protocol, and is also launching two new infringement cases over the U.K.’s failure to carry out health and safety obligations. Infringement proceedings could ultimately lead to financial penalties being imposed on the U.K., but the cases will play out over the course of many months.

Max Blain, Johnson’s spokesman, said the U.K. government will “review these documents carefully and respond formally in due course.” Blain said the U.K. was “disappointed” with the EU’s legal action and added that the U.K. would still prefer a negotiated solution, like the bloc.

“The EU’s proposed approach, which doesn’t differ from what they said previously, would increase burdens on business and citizens and take us backwards from where we are currently,” Blain said. “The infractions are related to the implementation of the protocol, not our recently published bill. It’s difficult to see how scrapping grace periods and adding additional checks and controls would make the situation better.”

Asked whether the EU could impose tariffs against the U.K., or suspend the bloc’s trade agreement with the U.K., Sefcovic replied he expects the bill to “take some time” going through parliament. “Of course if the draft bill will become the law then of course I cannot exclude anything,” he said. “But we are not there yet and we want to solve this issue as two partners should, through negotiations, looking for common ground.”

The European Commission, the EU’s executive arm, on Monday cited the trade deal, saying that “the conclusion of the Withdrawal Agreement was a pre-condition for the negotiation of the Trade and Cooperation Agreement.” The proposed bill “undermines the trust that is necessary for bilateral EU-UK cooperation within the framework of the Trade and Cooperation Agreement,” it said.

Other options open to the EU include stopping the privileged access U.K. companies have to the single market and halting talks over the status of Gibraltar, according to a person familiar with the matter.

Sefcovic on Wednesday called for more talks with London. “I am still convinced that with genuine political will to make the protocol work, we can reach our objectives,” Sefcovic said. “I call on my U.K. counterparts to engage in good faith and explore the full potential of the solutions we have put forward.”

EU financial services commissioner Mairead McGuinness told Bloomberg TV earlier Wednesday that Johnson’s push is driven more by internal politics than a concern for the region.

“I think this is about politics in the Conservative Party,” McGuinness said. When the referendum to leave the EU took place six years ago, “do you remember much discussion about Northern Ireland, its needs, its difficulties?”

Johnson’s ministers have shifted the justification for rewriting the protocol, from focusing primarily on trade disruption to the threat to Northern Ireland’s fragile politics. The Democratic Unionist Party balked at the rules Johnson signed up to, and is now refusing to take its place in Northern Ireland’s power-sharing government until the protocol is removed.

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