EU leaders sign Brexit deal as British MPs debate
EU leaders signed their post-Brexit trade deal with
Britain and dispatched it to London on an RAF jet Wednesday, setting their seal
on a drawn-out divorce just hours before the UK brings its half-century
European experiment to an end.
EU chiefs Ursula von der Leyen and Charles Michel,
the heads of the European Commission and European Council, smiled at a brief
televised ceremony to put their names to the 1,246-page Trade and Cooperation
Agreement.
"It has been a long road. It’s time now to put
Brexit behind us. Our future is made in Europe," von der Leyen said
Britain will leave the European single market and
customs union at 11:00pm (2300 GMT) on Thursday, the end of a difficult year
and of a post-Brexit transition period marked by intense and tortuous trade
negotiations.
But first the hefty document, bound in blue leather,
will be flown by the Royal Air Force to London for Prime Minister Boris Johnson
to add his signature, and the UK parliament will embark on a rushed debate to
clear the decks before the looming deadline.
According to Downing Street, Johnson will tell MPs
that the agreement heralds "a new relationship between Britain and the EU
as sovereign equals, joined by friendship, commerce, history, interests and
values".
In Brussels, Michel agreed, saying: "On major
issues, the European Union stands ready to work shoulder to shoulder with the
United Kingdom.
"This will be the case on climate change, ahead
of the COP 26 in Glasgow, and on the global response to pandemics, in
particular with a possible treaty on pandemics."
Johnson's government only published the accompanying
UK legislation on Tuesday afternoon -- less than 24 hours before the debate is
to start in parliament an hour after the signing in Brussels.
The government intends to ram all stages of the
85-page European Union (Future Relationship) Bill through the Commons and the
House of Lords in one day.
The agreement averted the prospect of a cliff-edge
separation which would have seen quotas and tariffs slapped on all
cross-Channel trade, exacerbating strains in the middle of the coronavirus
pandemic, which has hit Britain harder than most.
British fishermen have accused the government of
selling them out.
Services, accounting for 80 percent of the UK
economy, were largely omitted, and the City of London faces an anxious wait to
learn on what basis it can continue dealing with Europe in the future.
But a faction of arch-Brexiteers in Johnson's ruling
Conservatives gave their blessing to the EU agreement on Tuesday, and the main
opposition Labour party signalled its reluctant backing, ensuring the
legislation will pass.
Despite misgivings among some of his own MPs, who
plan to abstain in Wednesday's vote, Labour leader Keir Starmer said neutrality
was not an option given the stakes for Britain as it unwinds nearly five
decades of integration with the European mainland.
"But the consequences of it are yours, and
yours alone," he said, addressing Johnson's government. "We will hold
you to account for it, every second you are in power."
Indeed, the full consequences of the agreement will
only play out in the coming months, and UK businesses will still be grappling
with the kind of customs red tape they have avoided for decades in trading
across the Channel.
From January 1, there will no longer be free
movement of people from Britain to the EU or vice versa.
The UK government is pulling out of a European
student exchange programme that has benefited tens of thousands of young people
over the years.
Under the deal, musicians are not covered by
exemptions allowing for free passage of short-term business visitors in the EU,
sparking warnings that continental tours by UK bands will become unviable.
The many British owners of European holiday homes
are finding that unless they apply for residency permits, they will face limits
on how often they can visit their properties.
Under the compressed legislative calendar, the
European Parliament will only debate the Brexit deal after the New Year, but
they are expected to eventually nod it through.
Pending that, EU member states gave their green
light on Monday for the accord to take provisional effect before Thursday's
deadline.



