EU takes legal action against UK over planned Brexit bill
The European Union took legal action against Britain
on Thursday over its plans to pass legislation that would breach parts of the
legally binding divorce agreement the two sides reached late last year.
The EU action underscored the worsening relations with
Britain, which was a member of the bloc until Jan. 31. Both sides are trying to
forge a rudimentary free trade agreement before the end of the year, but the
fight over the controversial U.K. Internal Market bill has soured relations
this month.
European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen
said that the British plan “by its very nature is a breach of the obligation of
good faith laid down in the Withdrawal Agreement.”
“If adopted as is, it will be in full contradiction
to the protocol of Ireland-Northern Ireland” in the withdrawal agreement,” she
said.
EU leaders fear that if the U.K. bill becomes law,
it could lead to the reimposition of a hard land border between Northern
Ireland, which is part of Britain, and EU member Ireland, and erode the
stability that has underpinned peace since the 1998 Good Friday accord.
The EU had given London until Wednesday to withdraw
the bill, but U.K. lawmakers voted 340-256 Tuesday to push the legislation past
its last major hurdle in the House of Commons.
Von der Leyen said “the deadline lapsed yesterday.
The problematic provisions haven’t been removed. Therefore this morning, the
commission has decided to send a letter of formal notice to the U.K.
government,” which augurs the start of a protracted legal battle.
“The commission will continue to work hard towards a
full and timely implementation of the Withdrawal Agreement,” she said. “We
stand by our commitment.”
The bill must also be approved by the U.K.’s House
of Lords, where it is sure to meet strong opposition because it breaches
international law.
The British government stood its ground in an
immediate reaction, saying “we need to create a legal safety net to protect the
integrity of the U.K.’s internal market, ensure ministers can always deliver on
their obligations to Northern Ireland and protect the gains from the peace
process.”
If the Internal Market Bill becomes law, it will
give Britain the power to disregard part of the Brexit withdrawal treaty
dealing with trade to and from Northern Ireland, which shares a 300-mile
(500-kilometer) border with the Republic of Ireland.
The U.K. government says it respects the Good Friday
peace accord and the Brexit withdrawal agreement, but wants the law in case the
EU makes unreasonable demands after Brexit that could impede trade between
Northern Ireland and the rest of the U.K.
Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s large parliamentary
majority ensured the bill passed its final House of Commons vote on Tuesday
night, despite resistance from opposition parties and even some members of the
governing Conservative Party.
At the same time, EU and U.K. officials were
continuing talks on a trade deal, going into detailed negotiations over
everything from fisheries rights, state aid rules and legal oversight in case
of disputes.
Time is short for the U.K. and the EU to mend
fences. A transition period that followed Britain’s Brexit departure ends in
less than 100 days, on Dec. 31.
The EU-U.K. trade negotiating session is supposed to
wrap up Friday but expectations are that negotiations will continue right up to
an Oct. 15-16 EU summit, which British Prime Minister Boris Johnson has set as
a deadline for a deal. The EU said talks could continue right up to the end of
the month.
Britain says it wants a free trade deal along the
lines of the one the EU has with Canada, allowing for goods to be traded with
no tariffs or quotas.
The EU says if the U.K. wants access to EU markets
it must respect standards that EU companies have to live by since Britain is
just too close to allow for undercutting rules that would allow for so-called
“dumping” of U.K. merchandise at prices lower than in the EU.



