The EU has ruled out the UK government’s preferred approach to a future trade deal, describing it as a risk to the European project, just as Theresa May is seeking to strike an agreement on the way forward within her cabinet.
The inner cabinet is meeting at Chequers on Thursday to try to find an agreement among warring cabinet members on an approach sketched out to ministers by the prime minister’s Brexit adviser, Olly Robbins.
Under what is understood to be the prime minister’s preferred model, the UK would stay lock-step in regulatory alignment with the EU in some areas while finding different ways to achieve the same outcomes in other sectors.
Yet, with something close to incendiary timing, the European commission, hours ahead of the cabinet get-together, has published a document ruling out the model.
It is claimed by the EU that such an approach would breach an agreement among leaders to prevent cherry-picking by the UK that it is said would pose a risk to the integrity of the single market.
The document says: UK views on regulatory issues in the future relationship including ‘three basket approach’ are not compatible with the principles in the guidelines.
The paper, discussed and agreed among member state diplomats, claims the model proposed by the UK would also appear to give the UK a say in EU decision-making. The paper responds that no EU-UK co-decision is possible and that the UK is either in or out.
If UK aspires to cherry-pick: risk for integrity and distortions to proper functioning of internal market, aggravated by absence of full EU ‘ecosystem, the document notes.
There will be customs controls at the borders, although waiting times may be mitigated. There will be no mutual recognition of rules in financial services, for example, to give businesses on both sides of the channel confidence they will be able to continue to operate.
The paper warns: No escaping from significant impact on trading conditions.
The intervention by the EU will only add to the pressure on the prime minister to rethink her insistence that the UK will leave both the single market and the customs union when it withdraws from the EU.
Next week, the EU will publish its draft withdrawal agreement, including legal text on the Irish border, under which the UK would in effect commit to keeping Northern Ireland in the single market and customs union, unless a future free trade deal or unheard of technological solution can be devised to do an equal job in avoiding a hard border.
The Labour leader, Jeremy Corbyn, has already said his party backs the UK staying in a customs union in order to ensure that such a dangerous situation would not emerge.
He is to make a speech next week fleshing out his approach. Those comments will be watched keenly because of an amendment to the forthcoming trade Bill put down by Tory rebels, committing Britain to seeking a customs union.
Labour has not yet committed to supporting the amendment, but if the party threw its weight behind it, Conservative MPs could inflict a highly damaging defeat on May that would amount to a direct challenge to the prime minister on her red lines.