By Robert Stevens
21 December 2019
21 December 2019
MPs have backed Conservative
Prime Minister Boris Johnson Withdrawal Agreement Bill (WAB), laying the basis
for the UK to leave the European Union (EU) on January 31.
MPs voted yesterday 358 to
234—a majority of 124. They also voted to return to Parliament in January for
three days of debate on the bill.
Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn,
who has already declared he will stand down after the party’s election debacle,
instructed his MPs to oppose the bill. But he has dwindling authority, so that
32 abstained and six—Sarah Champion, Rosie Cooper, Jon Cruddas, Emma
Lewell-Buck, Grahame Morris, Toby Perkins—voted with the government.
The WAB will be discussed
again by MPs on January 7 and is set to pass through all stages in Parliament
and the House of Lords and receive Royal Assent before January 31.
The bill to enable the WAB’s
passage was rushed through, with the government applying to the speaker
Thursday for a session of Parliament to be held yesterday. The new speaker, Sir
Lindsey Hoyle, replaced Remain supporting John Bercow, who played a central
role in preventing Johnson’s predecessor Theresa May and Johnson himself from
passing previous incarnations of the WAB during the last Parliament.
The massive majority vote was
the first since Johnson defeated Labour by a landslide in last week’s general
election. The result gave Johnson an 80-seat majority, with the Tories taking
365 seats and Labour just 203. The only candidates allowed to stand for the
Tories in the election were those pledging that they would back Johnson’s WAB
and leaving the EU at the end of January.
Following the resignation of
Theresa May in June—after she failed to pass her own EU exit deal in Parliament
on three occasion—Johnson agreed a new deal with the EU. But he lost the
backing of the Democratic Unionist Party, which had propped up the Tories since
2017, by accepting that there will be a legal customs border between Northern
Ireland (part of the UK) and the Irish Republic (an EU member state). This mean
post-Brexit there will be a border in the Irish Sea, between mainland UK and
island of Ireland which was anathema to the DUP. Goods will be checked at
“points of entry” in Northern Ireland yet to be determined and a convoluted
tariff system established.
MPs voted in October in favour
of the principle of Johnson’s WAB deal by 329 votes to 299. However, he lost
the subsequent vote on his planned timetable to get the necessary legislation
through Parliament in just three days, with Remain-supporting MPs agreeing this
tactic to prevent Johnson being able to pass the Bill outright. As Johnson
inherited a minority government from May, and had lost the DUP’s support, he
declared that he would “pause” the WAB and consult with the EU.
Johnson pressed for a snap
general election and succeeded after Labour abandoned its opposition at the end
of October.
Given that the UK is set leave
the EU on January 31, the UK now enters an 11-month “transition period” during
which it is scheduled to negotiate a new trade deal. In the meantime, Britain
will formally cease to be an EU member but is able to trade with the EU based
on the previous relationship and will continue to follow EU rules.
The new WAB confirms that
Johnson will make it illegal to extend the Brexit transition period beyond
December 2020, meaning that if a new trade deal is not finalised with the EU
Britain will crash out of the bloc with a no-deal Brexit. Dominant sections of
the ruling class, in the manufacturing sector and City of London, are strongly
opposed to this outcome in which the UK would be forced to trade under World
Trade Organisation rules.
In an indication of the
right-wing agenda of the Johnson government, the Bill passed yesterday was
stripped of various concessions May was forced to make to Labour and other
parties in her failed attempt to win their support.
The sections promising to
aligned workers’ employment rights with those of the EU were removed. The
October WAB included a pledge that each time ministers passed a new law in
future they would have to commit that “in their view” it did not “regress” from
EU workers’ rights. Were they unable to do so, they would have had to make a
statement acknowledging that the new law might regress from EU workers’ rights.
Even this token “commitment”
cannot be tolerated by Johnson and his government of fanatical Thatcherites. In
place of the previous wording, all legislation on workers protection will now
be legislated in the UK Parliament.
Thursday’s Queen’s Speech
outlining Johnson’s legislative agenda for the next years cynically states that
the government will make “Britain the best place in the world to work.” A
separate Employment Bill on workers’ rights is to be introduced in this session
of parliament.
The new WAB also scraps a
previous commitment to negotiate a new deal for child refugees after Brexit.
The WAB’s explanatory notes state that an obligation to secure an agreement
that an “accompanied child who has made a claim for international protection in
a member state can come to the UK to join a relative” has been discarded.
Instead the government will only make a statement to Parliament on the issue.
The WAB also allows British
courts lower than the Supreme Court to reconsider European Court of Justice
rulings that have been retained in British law after Brexit.
In Parliament, pro-Remain Blairite
Shadow Brexit Secretary Keir Starmer declared Johnson’s ruling out any further
extension to the transition period as “reckless and irresponsible.”
Ahead of the trade
negotiations, the EU played down the chances of the Johnson government being
able to secure a deal in 11 months. On Wednesday, European Commission President
Ursula von der Leyen warned that the timetable was “extremely challenging,”
with negotiators having “very little time” available.
Speaking to European
Parliament members, she warned, “In case we cannot conclude an agreement by the
end of 2020, we will face again a cliff-edge situation.” In a threat to Johnson
she warned, “This would clearly harm our interest but it will impact more the
UK than us, as the EU will continue benefiting from its single market, its
customs union and the 700 international agreements we signed with our
partners.”
The Financial Times noted
that Johnson faced a “bumpy year ahead” on Brexit: “He [Johnson] seems to think
that the EU will agree a zero-tariff, zero-quota free trade agreement next
year, even if the British make no commitment to dynamically align with EU
regulations in future. But it’s very hard to believe that member states will
agree to this.”
With the Johnson government
seeking to transform the UK into a deregulated, low-tax, low-wage haven for big
business off the shores of mainland Europe, the EU fears that any economic and
trade advantage it is able to secure in negotiations will facilitate trade war
measures directed against an “over-regulated” Brussels.
Peter Foster commented in
the Telegraph, the Tories pro-Brexit house organ: “The EU has made clear
that the ‘size and proximity’ of the UK to Europe means that the UK will need
to sign up to EU rules to guarantee the ‘level playing field’ if it wants to be
the only country outside the EU’s customs union to get ‘zero/zero’ access to
the single market.”
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