Chances of Hard Brexit Grow Amid EU’s Reluctance to Change Divorce Deal

The chances of the United Kingdom’s “hard” withdrawal from the European Union, which means leaving without a ratified agreement on the conditions of this process, have grown after the parliamentary vote in the UK and the EU’s reluctance to change the draft agreement on the “divorce”.
The terms of the UK’s withdrawal from the EU have been under discussions for months, and not without difficulties. Last November, the EU and the United Kingdom nevertheless managed to agree on the conditions of the divorce deal, as well as on the Political Declaration, which sorts out the framework for the future relationship.

 
On January, 29, the UK parliamentarians expressed their position on a number of issues related to Brexit and gave the country’s Prime Minister Theresa May a clear program for the next round of negotiations with the EU. MPs confirmed that they do not support the agreement with the EU in its current form, but at the same time, they stand against withdrawal without an agreement.The head of the European Commission recalled that the EU had repeatedly raised this issue.

“The backstop is part and parcel of the Withdrawal Agreement and it will not be renegotiated”, the chief negotiator said.

The Irish border issue has been the main reason why the UK parliament refuses to support the draft agreement with the EU on Brexit concluded by May.

In fact, it refers to the so-called backstop, the mechanism to ensure that there will be no hard border between the Irish Republic and Northern Ireland if the sides failed to agree on all the terms of their relationship by the end of the Brexit transition period. At the same time, Juncker said that in fact both sides, the European Union and the United Kingdom, believed that there should be no return to the hard border. 

After the draft Brexit agreement had been agreed upon, the extraordinary summit of the leaders of the 27 remaining EU countries in December last year stressed that the backstop was provided for in the agreements as a guarantee that there would be no real border between Ireland and Northern Ireland. The EU is committed to working on an additional agreement that would allow finding an alternative solution to this issue.

Thus, the EU wants to make sure that this backstop never happens at all.
This is possible because, until the end of 2020, which means during the transition period in relations between the EU and the United Kingdom, which is foreseen and possible only if the divorce agreement enters into force, the relations between them will remain the same as they are now. They will have to work out concrete agreements on future relations, including the Irish border, during the transition period. The transition period may be extended. 

“Ireland’s border is Europe’s border – and it is our Union’s priority”, Juncker said.

“Hard” Brexit threatens to erupt in unforeseeable economic consequences not only in the United Kingdom, but also in the EU itself. For example, Bank of England Governor Mark Carney said earlier that in the event of such a “divorce,” the country’s port and border infrastructure would have to restructure from a seamless trading environment to a one with customs and other barriers, such as rules of origin of products, safety standards and others.

At the same time, the head of the European Commission remains optimistic that the agreement with the United Kingdom will still be reached so that they can move towards new cooperation between the country and the union.