Author (Corporate) | United Kingdom: Department for Exiting the European Union |
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Series Title | Press Release |
Series Details | 18.06.18 |
Publication Date | 19/06/2018 |
Content Type | News |
A further series of EU-UK Article 50 Negotiations took place between officials in Brussels on the 19-20 June 2018. Key topics on the agenda were: + Northern Ireland/Ireland On the 19 June 2018 the two sides issued a Joint statement on Withdrawal Agreement. This provided an update on the latest areas of agreement in the draft legal text of the Withdrawal Agreement. Since March 2018 the two sides had reached new agreements on matters including goods on the market, Euratom related issues and judicial cooperation in civil and commercial matters. The UK and EU had committed to continuing to make progress as quickly as possible on the Withdrawal Agreement, taking account of the framework for the future relationship. Brexit Negotiations + 29 March 2017: The UK triggered Article 50, the process for the start of the negotiations for the United Kingdom to leave the European Union. During the first phase of negotiations (concluded in December 2017) there were three negotiating groups covering the key issues of: + citizens’ rights The issues related to Northern Ireland and the governance of the withdrawal agreement were addressed by the Coordinators. Note that negotiations at the level of officials took place in addition to the formal milestone negotiations listed above. Following the European Council held in Brussels on the 14-15 December 2017 the EU27 grouping (the EU Member States minus the United Kingdom) held a separate European Council (Art.50) on the 15 December 2017. The EU27 reviewed the latest developments in the Brexit negotiations. EU27 leaders agreed that sufficient progress has been achieved in the first phase of the Brexit negotiations. On this basis, they adopted the draft guidelines to move to the second phase of negotiations where they would also start discussions on: + a transition period The European Commission sent on the 20 December 2017 a Recommendation to the Council (Art 50) to begin discussions on the next phase of the orderly withdrawal of the United Kingdom from the European Union. The Council of the European Union (EU27) adopted on the 29 January 2018 its negotiating directives relating to the second phase of Brexit talks. On the 7 February 2018 the European Commission published a Position Paper called Transitional Arrangements in the The UK sent a formal response to the European Commission's Position Paper on the 20 February 2018 ('Implementation Period Update'). A further series of EU-UK Article 50 Negotiations took place between officials in Brussels, 6-9 February 2018, preceded on the 5 February 2018 by a working meeting in London between Michel Barnier, the EU’s chief Brexit negotiator and Brexit secretary, David Davis. Technical discussions covered: + Withdrawal issues (Governance) On the 9 February 2018 there was a meeting at the more senior Coordinators’ level covering: + Wrap-up During the same week the UK Prime Minister Theresa May held meetings of senior Cabinet Ministers within the Brexit Sub-Committee on the 7 and 8 February 2018 to attempt to try and agree on a UK proposal for of a final deal with the EU that could keep a divided Conservative Party together. News sources quoted on the 5 February 2018 said that a Downing Street spokesman had made clear that the UK would leave the EU customs union after Brexit. However, commentators noted that this might not preclude an agreement on some form of special customs arrangements. Michel Barnier said in London on the 5 February 2018 in this context: 'our future partnership between the UK and the EU. On that point we need also clarity about the UK's proposals for the future partnership. The only thing I can say now is that without a customs union - and being outside the Single Market - barriers to trade and goods and services are unavoidable. The time has come to make a choice'. On the 9 February 2018 Michel Barnier gave a downbeat assessment of the state of the negotiations. In particular, in connection with the issue of preventing a return to a hard border between Ireland and Northern Ireland. There would be a need to maintain full regulatory alignment with the rules of the Single Market and the Customs Union – current or future – which supported North-South cooperation, the all-island economy and the Good Friday Agreement. As a result, and because the UK had come up with no practical operational solutions, the European Commission would need to legally define how this scenario would work in operational terms. Commentators saw this as an ultimatum from the European Commission forcing the UK Government to come down on the side of a continued participation in the EU Customs Union or to take the Brexiteers line and not accept any such continued participation and, potentially, no agreed transitional period deal. Other continuing disagreements between the two sides involved: + the UK's refusal to guarantee permanent rights to EU nationals who came to live and work in the UK after March 2019 during the transition period On the 28 February 2018 the European Commission issued a Position Paper to the EU27 called European Commission Draft Withdrawal Agreement on the withdrawal of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland from the European Union and the European Atomic Energy Community. From a European Commission perspective this document translated into legal terms the Joint Report from the negotiators of the European Union and the United Kingdom Government on the progress achieved during phase 1 of the negotiations, published on 8 December 2017, and proposed text for those outstanding withdrawal issues which were mentioned in, but not set out in detail, in the Joint Report. It also integrated the text on the transition period, based on the supplementary negotiating directives adopted by the Council (Article 50) on 29 January 2018. The draft Withdrawal Agreement would be discussed with the EU27 Member States and and the European Parliament and, subsequently, for negotiation with the United Kingdom. From a UK perspective the document created considerable controversy as regards, in particular, the issue of the border between Northern Ireland and Ireland. Between 14 February and the 2 March 2018 the UK Prime Minister and a number of senior government ministers gave a series of Road to Brexit speeches. Their avowed objective was to outline aspects of the UK's aspirations post-Brexit and, in particular, to clarify the nature of the relationship sought between the EU and itself. The climax to this series was a keynote speech by Theresa May at the Mansion House, London, 2 March 2018. The European Union and the UK announced on the 19 March 2018 that progress had been reached on the negotiations for the UK to leave the EU by the publication of a Draft Agreement on the withdrawal of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland from the European Union and the European Atomic Energy Community. The draft Withdrawal Agreement included agreed legal text for the implementation period from March 2019 until the end of 2020, citizens’ rights, and the financial settlement, as well as a significant number of other articles. The UK and the EU negotiating teams aimed to finalise the entire Withdrawal Agreement by October 2018. There was still no final agreement on an arrangement for the border between Ireland and Northern Ireland There had been pressure to reach agreement on this draft text of the agreement to rule EU-UK relations during the implementation period before the European Council, 22-23 March 2018. The Article 50 (EU27) format of the European Council was due to review the state of the Brexit negotiations and formally adopt the negotiating guidelines for EU-UK relations after the end of the implementation period from 2021. Carolyn Fairbairn, Director-General of the Confederation of British Industry (CBI) said: 'Agreeing transition is a critical milestone that will provide many hundreds of businesses with the confidence to put their contingency planning on hold and keep investing in the UK'. A further series of EU-UK Article 50 Negotiations took place between officials in Brussels on the 16-18 April 2018. A schedule of further negotiations was agreed between the EU and the UK leading up to the European Council in June 2018. These negotiations would focus on all outstanding issues in the March 2018 draft Withdrawal Agreement as well as the future relationship. A further series of EU-UK Article 50 Negotiations took place between officials in Brussels on the 22-24 May 2018. + 22 May 2018: Withdrawal Agreement – remaining issues. Future relationship Commentators noted little progress on any of the major sensitive issues. An anonymous European Commission official was reported as saying that some of the UK demands in the negotiations were 'fantasy' and that 'the sooner we can get out of the business of denying the consequences of Brexit, the sooner we can get on with finding solutions'. The chief EU negotiator Michel Barnier said (in a speech to the FIDE Congress (International Federation of European Law) in Estoril on the 26 May 2018): 'to negotiate effectively, you must know what the other party wants. A negotiation cannot be a part of hide and seek. We need realistic proposals from the UK. Proposals that respect the institutional architecture and the integrity of the European Union. I can see the temptation of the blame game to bring the negative consequences of Brexit on the European Union. But we will not be impressed. I will not be impressed. It is the United Kingdom that leaves the European Union. It cannot, on leaving, ask us to change who we are and how we operate'. Topics for discussions on the Future Framework at forthcoming meetings, May 2018 On the 4 May 2018 the EU and the UK jointly published the topics for discussions on the Future Framework which would be discussed at meetings in the coming weeks. Basis for co-operation, discussions will include: Economic partnership, discussions will include: Security partnership, discussions will include Cross-cutting cooperation and standalone issues, discussions will include: For a further round-up of EU-UK Brexit negotiations March-June 2018 click here. |
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Source Link | Link to Main Source https://www.gov.uk/government/news/programme-eu-uk-article-50-negotiations-brussels-week-of-18-june-2018 |
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Countries / Regions | Europe, United Kingdom |