Friday, 19 January 2018

Politics at Friday lunch: The real news happens backstage

"We are making a new tapestry together" - Emmanuel Macron
View this email in your browser

Outside of Carillion, the news this week was colourful and inane. Ukip's leader is dating a model who sent racist texts, unless he has stopped dating her, which he may or may not have done, in which case he is simply maintaining a romance-free social relationship with a model who sent racist texts. Boris Johnson has not overseen enough pointless, expensive, humiliating vanity projects and therefore wants to build a bridge over the Channel. The Tories new 'vice-chair for youth' (it is a bad time for political job titles) Ben Bradley once wrote awful things about the poor. The wretched political blather is ceaseless.

While this goes on, talks are being held, very quietly, in Europe, which will define Britain's future for a generation. There have been few, if any, news reports about it in the British press. There have been few, if any, broadcast segments on it. It's as if Brexit is on pause. But it is not on pause. It is simply happening without us.

Additional negotiating directives on transitional arrangements are being adopted. Views are being taken from member states on guidelines for the next phase. Everything will be finalised by the Council summit meeting on March 22nd and 23rd. None of it is easy for the EU. Though they've managed to keep an impressive appearance of a united front, there are divisions between countries which would benefit from a decent trade deal with the UK, and those who wouldn't. In other cases, there are different political cultures pushing them towards different positions. Others have non-economic areas, like military cooperation, where they might be open to British advances. It's a complex process open to canny diplomacy.

Once these guidelines are in place, they are hard to shift. In the first phase, British politicians spoke to a domestic audience, promising them that they could have their cake and eat it, while tough negotiating frameworks were finalised in Europe. All of that earned barely a squeak of attention in the British press. But once negotiations started, their rigidity was a constant source of amazement.

Now the same process is taking place again. January to March is treated like a holiday from the Brexit issue. Many editors suspect their readers are bored rigid by it, after so many consecutive months of talk about country of origin checks and trade rules and the like. One local journalist I spoke to after a DExEU briefing on dispute resolution systems rightly asked: 'How on earth am I meant to turn this into something that is interesting for my readers?'

These are sensible editorial concerns. Any emotionally well-rounded reader avoids this stuff. It is dry in the extreme. But our instinctive lack of patience for it does not change the fact that the lives of millions of Brits will be affected by these decisions for decades to come, and that this is a key moment in that process, which is currently going underreported.

None of the signs from Europe are good. MEPs, who have a vote on the final deal, have cautioned the UK not to take the transition period for granted. Some are arguing for further requirements to be placed on London, including granting any European using free movement rights to come to the UK in that period the right to stay afterwards under the new residency scheme. There may also be a Brussels veto on rolling-over third party trade arrangements, although Liam Fox's ineptitude in this area is so severe and far-reaching that they can probably only be dealt with with Brussels' help anyway.

Meanwhile Norway launched a telling warning shot, telling the EU that any move to give Britain single market privileges without responsibilities - for instance by allowing services to be included in a deal outside the single market - would affect its own relationship with Europe. That served to highlight just how real and practical the dismissal of cherry picking is. It is not ideological. It is a matter of pragmatism.

On his visit to the UK, Macron reiterated that point. Everything is very nice and fluffy between him and Theresa May. They love pub lunches and selfies. But ultimately the message on financial services is clear, as it has been throughout: Nope. No way, mate.

The noises are not good. It is entirely unclear what kind of diplomatic operation the UK has trying to influence these crucial talks as they take place over the next two months, not least because the British press seems completely uninterested in uncovering it. But while we all talk about racist texts from nobodies and Johnson's bridge and dimwitted Tory blogs, the real mechanics of our political future is being decided, with barely a whisper of British involvement or press coverage.

Latest Articles

 
 

Everything you need to know about the Brexit endgame in five minutes


 

On Jan 18, 2018 03:00 pm
Your down-and-dirty guide to the Brexit year ahead, from the fight over transition to the chances of a second referendum.
Read more... »
 


 
 

NHS data sharing with the Home Office is putting lives at risk


 

On Jan 18, 2018 03:47 pm
Vulnerable migrants are too afraid to seek medical help
Read more... »
 

Want to tackle loneliness? Stop closing libraries


 

On Jan 18, 2018 11:15 am
Libraries have taken up the slack of countless parental and elderly services - closing them closes communities.
Read more... »
 

Carillion: A story of Britain's fake markets


 

On Jan 17, 2018 02:27 pm
The truth is that public services can never be run as competitive consumer markets
Read more... »
 

What next for Labour's factions?


 

On Jan 16, 2018 10:11 am
Both the left and right of the party have work to do
Read more... »
 

The three-stage plan to stop Brexit


 

On Jan 16, 2018 09:33 am
Caroline Lucas sets out a plan to stay in the EU
Read more... »
 

The success or failure of Brexit hinges on the next two and a half months


 

On Jan 15, 2018 10:11 am
The next phase of talks will be critical
Read more... »
 

Hunt's secret NHS plan opens the door to further privatisation


 

On Jan 15, 2018 09:52 am
These plans are being pushed through without public consultation or parliamentary scrutiny
Read more... »
 

Opinion Former videos


 

Reducing UK greenhouse gas emissions and the Clean Growth Strategy

 

On Jan 17, 2018 04:34 pm
How well is the UK doing when it comes to meeting its legally-binding climate change targets? This video sets out progress to date and provides an independent assessment of the government's Clean Growth Strategy.
Read more... »
 

Opinion Formers press releases

 
 

Noel Conway wins permission to appeal his assisted dying case


Noel Conway has today won permission to appeal the decision of the High Court that he cannot be assisted to die with dignity
Read more... »
 

Opportunities are within industry's grasp but uncertainty grows, says NOAH's second Brexit Barometer


Lack of Government progress contributes to increasing uncertainty surrounding the post-Brexit future of the animal medicines industry
Read more... »
 

 

Jobs and courses

 
 

Combine your sales skills with your passion for politics


 

On Dec 02, 2016 12:53 pm
Are you a graduate, who is driven by success? Are you an excellent communicator, with the ability to convince others? Do you have a passion for current affairs? If so, Senate Media could be the place for you.
Read more... »
 

 

Facebook
Facebook
Twitter
Twitter
Website
Website
Copyright © 2018 Senate Media Ltd, All rights reserved.
You are receiving this email because you opted in at www.politics.co.uk

Our mailing address is:
Senate Media Ltd
18 Vine Hill
London, EC1R 5DZ
United Kingdom

Add us to your address book


unsubscribe from this list    update subscription preferences 

No comments:

Post a Comment