PM Johnson makes Lords of his brother, cricketer Botham and Brexit allies – Reuters

LONDON (Reuters) - British Prime Minister Boris Johnson has elevated to the House of Lords his younger brother, a cricket hero and some of his allies in the campaign to take Britain out of the European Union.

FILE PHOTO: Jo Johnson, brother of Prime Minister Boris, is seen outside Downing Street in London, Britain, September 4, 2019. REUTERS/Hannah McKay/File Photo

Under an arcane system whose inner workings are not exposed to public scrutiny, British political leaders are entitled on certain occasions to nominate people to the upper chamber of parliament, where they can sit for life.

Among 36 nominations announced on Friday was Jo Johnson, the prime ministers younger brother, who quit as a junior minister last year because he disagreed with his boss and older siblings Brexit strategy.

Jo Johnson supported remaining in the European Union in a 2016 referendum, in sharp contrast to Boris Johnson, who led the successful campaign for Britain to quit the bloc.

In another apparent olive branch to heal Brexit divisions within his Conservative Party, the prime minister nominated former finance minister Philip Hammond, a prominent remainer who was long the target of vitriolic attacks by Brexit supporters.

Other political nominations tilted more towards the Brexit camp, with peerages bestowed on former opposition Labour lawmakers Kate Hoey and Gisela Stuart, who as ardent Brexiteers became unlikely allies of Johnson during the referendum.

He also nominated former England cricket captain Ian Botham, who in his heyday in the 1980s was regarded by many fans of the sport as one of its finest all-rounders. Botham was not recognised for his achievements on the field, however, but for his enthusiastic Brexit campaigning.

Among other eye-catching nominations was that of Evgeny Lebedev, the British-Russian owner of the Evening Standard and Independent newspapers. He is the son of Alexander Lebedev, a former KGB agent who became an oligarch.

Evgeny Lebedev, who has spent most of his life in Britain, is frequently seen in high society circles in London, where he is active as a charity campaigner and patron of the arts. He controversially appointed former Conservative finance minister George Osborne, who had no previous experience in journalism, as editor of the Evening Standard in 2017.

The House of Lords has more than 800 members, and despite perennial complaints that the number is far too high and the nominations process opaque and prone to cronyism, prime ministers from all sides have enthusiastically added to its numbers.

Additional reporting by Hardik Vyas; editing by Stephen Addison

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PM Johnson makes Lords of his brother, cricketer Botham and Brexit allies - Reuters

U.K.s Truss in Washington to Press for Post-Brexit Trade Deal – Bloomberg

Photographer: Chris J. Ratcliffe/Bloomberg

Photographer: Chris J. Ratcliffe/Bloomberg

U.K. International Trade Secretary Liz Truss will meet with her U.S. counterpart Robert Lighthizer in Washington on Monday as part of the third round of talks to reach a trade deal between the two countries.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson put an agreement with the U.S. at the heart of his plans for the U.K. economy after Brexit, and Trusss decision to travel during the coronavirus pandemic reflects Londons commitment to a deal.

The Secretary of State is meeting Robert Lighthizer during a critical time in the negotiations and it is essential we agree the next steps and priorities for the trade talks, the Department for International Trade said in a statement. A deal will be a key driver in leveling up the U.K. by boosting the economy by 15 billion pounds ($19.6 billion) and removing almost half a billion pounds worth of tariffs.

The talks have been beset by disagreements, over agriculture in particular, and Lighthizer has said an agreement is unlikely this year, meaning Britain is set to complete its departure from the European Union on Dec. 31 without a trans-Atlantic trade deal in place.

U.K. Sees U.S. Trade Deal More Likely Next Year Than in 2020

Truss will also use the talks to press for the removal of retaliatory tariffs imposed as part of the dispute over subsidies for Boeing Co. and Airbus SE.

We will be tough in pressing our interests. The U.S. talk a good game about free trade and low tariffs, but the reality is that many U.K. products are being kept unfairly out of their market, Truss told lawmakers in June. Tit-for-tat tariffs are harming businesses on both sides of the Atlantic and I dont want to see any more.

U.S. Targets $3.1 Billion of EU and U.K. Imports for New Tariffs

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U.K.s Truss in Washington to Press for Post-Brexit Trade Deal - Bloomberg

Boris Johnson’s Brexit deal was a turkey, and we’re all getting stuffed – The New European

Opinion

PUBLISHED: 10:40 04 August 2020 | UPDATED: 10:40 04 August 2020

The New European

Boris Johnson. Photograph: Brian Lawless/PA.

PA Wire/PA Images

The reality of what the end of the transition period means is only now starting to hit home.

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Almost four years after its creation The New European goes from strength to strength across print and online, offering a pro-European perspective on Brexit and reporting on the political response to the coronavirus outbreak, climate change and international politics. But we can only continue to grow with your support.

Yet another piece of underhand behaviour by the Brexit at any cost government has just slipped out; we will no longer have reciprocal medical cover in EU countries.

Many millions of us who have European Health Insurance Cards (EHIC) will not be able to use them after 2020. The free card covers medical aid across the EU in much the same way the NHS does here.

Travel insurance will now need to include this basic healthcare cover, as well as emergencies, and premiums will inevitably cost us more.

This is just another example that Boriss oven-ready deal with the EU is a turkey and it is British citizens who are getting stuffed.

Hugh Janes

Plymouth

We now know that we are heading for a minimal or no-deal with the EU. This will also mean that we will be outside the collaborative safety and security measures of the EU.

We will be much less safe and secure. The government will have failed in its duty.

A track record of lack of preparation despite expert advice and warnings, inadequate emergency planning, woefully delayed, scattergun responses. No wonder they were so keen to announce quarantine for arrivals from Spain an attempt to show they can act swiftly, but at best a side-show.

One suspects they will be ill-equipped to stem the tide next January. No doubt Johnson will move his throne to the Kent beaches and command the waters of insecurity and economic pain to recede.

Anne Green

It was very kind of you to print my letter regarding potential problems in travelling in the EU (How not to go around the world in 180 days, Letters, TNE #204). Post-Brexit the government is apparently prepared to offer Europeans 180-day stays in the UK but will accept only 90-day spells for us to visit Europe.

This being one of the few aspects of the governments negotiations where we may hope to persuade them to change their mind, I should be grateful if you could draw your readers attention to the campaign to coordinate letters to MPs to draw attention to the matter: bit.ly/3f346Ss

There is also a petition which has only just gone live: bit.ly/300DHk6

John Frazer

John Kampfners piece on freedom of movement is so sad. I remember so well those days of travel to and from France in the 1970s.

During the five-year transition into the common market, as I think it was then, I travelled to and from France on business and occasional holidays, several days a month for many years. It gradually became easier as time went by, but now we are sadly building barriers again.

My days of crossing the Channel are at an end as I can now no longer afford health insurance. I am isolated and imprisoned in my own little island with nothing to look forward to.

My grandchildren have now had their work opportunities taken from them and I as an octogenarian will see no benefits of Brexit. Permission please to go away and die quietly?

Alan Craw

Old Whittington

Have your say by emailing theneweuropean@archant.co.uk. Our deadline for letters is Tuesday at 9am for inclusion in Thursdays edition. Please be concise - letters over five paragraphs long may be edited before printing.

Almost four years after its creation The New European goes from strength to strength across print and online, offering a pro-European perspective on Brexit and reporting on the political response to the coronavirus outbreak, climate change and international politics. But we can only rebalance the right wing extremes of much of the UK national press with your support. If you value what we are doing, you can help us by making a contribution to the cost of our journalism.

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Boris Johnson's Brexit deal was a turkey, and we're all getting stuffed - The New European

Twin threat of virus and Brexit causing concern in the fight against car crime – Telegraph.co.uk

In Austria, nearly 4,000 cars were stolen last year, with another 2,000 stolen from Austrian citizens while visiting neighbouring Hungary, Slovakia and the Czech Republic.

United States and Canadian thieves have also been tempted by a $3,000 payment and a free flight home to hire vehicles on false credit cards and drive them to any of Austria's eastern neighbours. A total of 489 Austrian-registered cars were stolen in Hungary last year, 299 in Slovakiaand 232 in the Czech Republic.

Bizarrely, people in the Czech Republic who do not own or indeed never owned a car have recently been questioned by police about vehicles registered in their name. The country loses around 7,000 vehicles a year but many more stolen cars pass through as criminals inthe Republic have become acknowledged experts in changing vehicle identities.

As one Czech officer suggested, The quality of cloning on a stolen car, together with its accompanying forged documents, is so high that it is difficult to spot a fraud during a routine inquiry. Also there is no system of insurers writing off vehicles after an accident, facilitating the altering of the identities of stolen cars.

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Twin threat of virus and Brexit causing concern in the fight against car crime - Telegraph.co.uk

Brexit LIVE: Barnier reveals in private chat he’s NEVER believed UK no deal threat serious – Daily Express

Former Brexit Party MEP Rupert Lowe has revealed he once had a conversation with the EUs chief Brexit negotiator, where Michel Barnier indicated he didnt think the UKs threats had any weight. The Brexiteer said he hopes Britain can hold its nerve against the bloc, as the talks between the two sides intensify.

Mr Lowe wrote on Twitter: When I spoke to Barnier about Brexit, it was always clear he never actually expected the UK Government to follow through.

Has the penny dropped? I really hope Frost can hold his nerve. We've played Barnier's game for far too long.

It comes as the UK prepares to host Japan for trade talks tomorrow.

Japan's Foreign Minister Toshimitsu Motegi will fly into London tomorrow for the start of the three-day trade talks with Liz Truss, Secretary of State for International Trade.

JUST IN:Barnier fears major disruption for EU on January 1 in 39 page dossier

The Japanese Foreign Minister will stay in the UK from August 5-7, with a deal expected to be signed in just a matter of weeks.

Japan and the UK will hope to bring talks on a free trade agreement to a close this week.

Such an outcome should be achievable, as the trade deal is set to be largely replicated on the EU-Japan trade agreement, but with added bonuses for both sides.

The Japan-UK trade deal will come into force when the EU transition period ends on December 31.

Mr Motegis visit to London will be the first overseas trip made by any Japanese minister since the coronavirus outbreak.

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4.30pm update: Joe Biden to 'favour US-EU deal' in major UK blow

Joe Biden could scupper a US-UK trade deal in favour of the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP) with the EU if he becomes US President, a scholar has claimed.

International Trade Secretary Liz Trussis expected to meet her US counterpart Robert Lightizer in Washington on Monday for the third round of talks to reach a trade deal between the two countries.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson put an agreement with the US at the heart of his plans to revive the British afterBrexit, and Ms Trusss decision to travel during the coronavirus pandemic highlights Londons willingness to broker a deal.

As the Brexit deadline looms closer and closer, the medicine suppliers have been warned to stockpile drugs as part of contingency plans.

The Department of Health issued a letter which read: "We recognise that global supply chains are under significant pressure, exacerbated by recent events with Covid-19.

"However, we encourage companies to make stockpiling a key part of contingency plans, and ask industry, where possible, to stockpile to a target level of six weeks total stock on UK soil."

3.20pm update: Migrants arrive in Dover after July spike

More than 1,000 migrants entered the UK throughout July and today, Border Force have stopped more people trying to illegally enter the country.

Pictures show men wearing lifejackets being brought into the Kent port via a Border Force speedboat.

The migrants are seen boarding a coach by officials in yellow vests.

3pm update: Steven Brown takes over fromEmily Ferguson

2.23pm update:Details emerge on Barnier's latest bid to avoid no deal

Details are emerging on Michel Barnier's latest compromise offer to the UK, as the EU continues to give ground in Brexit negotiations as it attempts to avoid a no deal scenario.

State aid has been one of the key issues between the two sides with Mr Johnson demanding Britain be free of EU state aid rules, environmental or social standards.

Instead of tying the UK into EU regulations and rules, Mr Barnier will present a hybrid model using an arbitration board to determine each individual case.

The concept of state aid is whereby resources are granted to companies in order to give them assistance.

EU officials have demanded an agreement on the concept in order to stop the UK from undercutting businesses to become a more attractive destination for organisations.

Although the EU may drop demands on the issue, one diplomat insisted there must be guarantees from the UK on state aid if trade to the bloc is to be maintained.

1.17pm update: Brussels dismiss calls for Brexit deal to be rewritten

The European Commission has rejected calls for the Brexit Withdrawal Agreement to be rewritten after senior Tories complained it could leave the UK liable for 160 billion of unpaid loans.

Former Tory leader Sir Iain Duncan Smith said the deal means we are "hooked into the EU's loan book".

But Brussels said the commitments made in the Withdrawal Agreement - the divorce deal signed by Boris Johnson and the 27 EU members - are reasonable and will stand.

Commission spokesman Eric Mamer insisted that the Withdrawal Agreement is a "firm document" which is not going to be rewritten.

He said: "I think it's very clear that we are not going to get into a debate with British politicians on liabilities or any other of the provisions of the Withdrawal Agreement.

"The Withdrawal Agreement is there, it is now a firm document that has been accepted by both parties and it is the basis on which both sides are acting.

"In this document it is clear that that the United Kingdom has taken a certain number of completely normal legal commitments when it comes to its share of liabilities related to loans that would have been given by the EIB whilst the UK was still a member of the European Union."

12.23pm update:Government braced for six months of Dover border chaos

Ministers have admitted they are braced for six months of significant border disruption at Dover at the conclusion of the EU transition period, new documents reveal.

The new document lays bare concerns over the looming prospect of a no deal Brexit, warning that disruption to cross-Channel travel is expected until the middle of next year - and could last until October 2021 in the worst-case scenario.

The document said delays would be caused by "low levels of border readiness" among lorry drivers and warned that "significant numbers" could be stopped by the French authorities.

11.15am update:Should Boris Johnson call Michel Barnier's bluff and force no deal?

Express.co.uk is asking its readers whether you think Boris Johnson should call Mr Barnier's bluff and force a no deal? Vote in our exclusive poll.

10.48am update: Scotland to lose 4billion over Brexit

A bombshell report from experts at Warwick University has found people were left up to 9,000 worse off since the date of the controversial vote to leave the European Union despite most of Scotland voting in favour of staying in the EU.

The study found Aberdeen had been hit the hardest as it lost more than 2billion leaving the city 9,000 worse off per head of population.

This was despite less than 39 percent of the electorate voting to leave the EU.

Across Scotland on average, the study found the country had lost 736 per head of population as a result of Brexit whilst Orkney where the Prime Minister recently visited would be about 3800 worse off.

In total, Scotland lost 3.94billion since the 2016 vote up to 2019.

9.55am update:Government urges companies to stockpile medicines

The Government has warned pharmaceutical companies in the UK to stockpile six weeks' worth of drugs in preparation for the end of the Brexit transition period in December.

The Department of Health and Social Care (DHSC) wrote a letter to medicine suppliers encouraging them to prioritise stocking their reserves to protect against any disruption that may happen in January.

The letter advised the companies to prepare for all scenarios when the UK leaves the Brexit transition period.

It highlighted the concerns around how the coronavirus crisis has caused a dwindling of some medical stocks.

8.54am update:EU could accommodate Britiain in Brexit negotiations

The EU could accommodate Britain in the struggle for a trade agreement, according to EU insiders.

The examination of state aid for British companies would not have to be implemented according to EU rules, EU diplomats said on Monday to the Reuters news agency.

Instead, a kind of arbitration board could be used as a compromise.

However, this must be based on fixed framework conditions and monitored independently, a diplomat said.

The question of fair competitive conditions for companies on both sides of the channel is a central issue in the deadlocked negotiations.

The 27 EU states have demanded guarantees from the British if they want to continue selling goods on the continent.

However, Boris Johnson does not want to be subject to EU aid rules, environmental or social standards.

Additional reporting by Monika Pallenberg

8.30am update: Britons fled to Europe after 2016 Brexit vote

The number of Britons emigrating to the EU has risen by 30 percent since the 2016 vote, with half making their decision to leave in the first three months after the referendum.

Migration from Britain to the EU averaged at 56,832 people a year in 2008-15, rising to 73,642 a year in 2016-18, according to analysis by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) and Eurostat.

The research found a large increase in Britons who made the move and then took up citizenship in an EU state.

Germany saw a 2,000 percent rise, with 31,600 Britons becoming a citizen there since the referendum.

Co-author Daniel Tetlow said Brexit was by far the most dominant driver of migration decisions since 2016.

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Brexit LIVE: Barnier reveals in private chat he's NEVER believed UK no deal threat serious - Daily Express

Tuesday briefing: Britons flee Brexit by the thousands – The Guardian

Top story: Exodus akin to economic or political crisis

Good morning, Warren Murray bringing you the headlines this Tuesday morning.

The number of British nationals emigrating to other EU countries has risen by 30% since the Brexit referendum, to a level akin to a country experiencing economic or political crisis, experts have found. Analysis of data from the OECD and Eurostat shows the number leaving was 73,642 a year in 2016-18, with a 500% increase in those who then took up citizenship in an EU state. In Germanys case 31,600 Britons have naturalised since the referendum a 2,000% rise. The biggest jump in migration has been to Spain, followed by France.

The withdrawal agreement signed in January enshrines residency, work and social rights of EU citizens in the UK and Britons in the bloc, but failed to guarantee the free movement rights of British migrants restricting future employment and residency prospects in other member states. Unless British nationals take out citizenship in their host country, they can no longer work in or offer a service to another EU member state, impacting professions including accounting, law, architecture, translation and health.

Carlos gone Spains former king, Juan Carlos, has exiled himself to an as-yet-unnamed country after allegations about his finances damaged the monarchy and embarrassed his son, King Felipe.

Juan Carlos played a pivotal role in restoring democracy to Spain after the death of General Francisco Franco in 1975. He abdicated six years ago after a series of scandals including taking an elephant-hunting trip to Botswana while Spain was in the grip of financial crisis. Juan Carlos said in a letter to Felipe that he was leaving to help his son exercise his responsibilities as king.

Coronavirus latest The government has one month to significantly boost its test-and-trace systems or risk a second wave of coronavirus after schools in England reopen, researchers have warned. Dozens of leading virus experts have complained that UK testing contracts have gone on ideological grounds to private sector companies rather than being based on expertise. The government has announced new 90-minute tests but the experts from the UK Clinical Virology Network say such tests were already available, whereas the types chosen by the government are not well known.

Advertising spending across the UK media fell by more than 1bn year on year during the coronavirus lockdown, according to figures that reveal the government as the biggest advertiser during the pandemic. Activists are calling on the pharmaceutical firm Gilead Sciences to develop a drug called GS-441524 that showed promise in curing cats of a coronavirus. Donald Trump has again lashed out at his own health experts while repeating his opposition to lockdowns. Keep up on coronavirus developments at our live blog in our latest global wrap, the UN has warned of a generational catastrophe as more than a billion children miss out on school, while Latin America has surpassed five million Covid-19 cases to account for nearly 30% of global infections

Health experts painkiller warning Painkillers such as paracetamol, ibuprofen, aspirin and opioids can do more harm than good and should not be prescribed for chronic primary pain, the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (Nice) says. It cites little or no evidence that the commonly used drugs make any difference to quality of life, pain or psychological distress in people with long-term pain. Draft guidance, which is open to public consultation until 14 August, says people should instead be offered supervised group exercise programmes, psychological therapy or acupuncture. Antidepressants might also be considered for some people with chronic primary pain, Nice says.

Striker pose Marcus Rashfords policy-changing campaign against child poverty has helped propel the footballer on to the front cover of British Vogues September issue.

The Manchester United striker, who forced a government U-turn on the granting of free food vouchers for the poorest families over the summer, headlines a special edition dedicated to activism posing alongside Adwoa Aboah, the supermodel turned mental health activist, for the Activism Now issue.

With NHS services consumed by the fight against Covid-19 in recent months, cancer care has been dealt a blow, with diagnoses and treatment delayed.

Sorry your browser does not support audio - but you can download here and listen https://audio.guim.co.uk/2020/08/03-69879-200804TIFcancer.mp3

In its first year of existence, Extinction Rebellion transformed the global conversation around the climate crisis. But then it was gripped by internal conflicts about its next steps. Can XR reinvent itself for the post-pandemic world?

English hockey has an endemic race issue from the national team down to the club game and junior levels, and is not doing enough to attract players from more deprived areas, the sports governing body has been told in a hard-hitting letter signed by nine clubs. Pakistans head coach, Misbah-ul-Haq, believes the 17-year-old Naseem Shah is a complete bowler and is pleased with his teams preparations for the Test series, which starts at Old Trafford on Wednesday. England defender Danny Rose has said he is regularly stopped by police in his car and questioned in various scenarios that would not happen if he were a white man as he detailed his anger and exasperation at racism in the UK. Manchester United are in advanced negotiations with Borussia Dortmund to sign Jadon Sancho for an initial 100m (90m) a fee that would set a transfer record for an English player. Odell Beckham Jr, one of the NFLs biggest stars, says the season should not go ahead as the Covid-19 pandemic continues its spread across the United States. And Sky Brown, Great Britains 12-year-old world skateboarding bronze medallist, is recuperating after a horrific accident but has told the Guardian she is already thinking of next years Olympic Games.

Asian shares have risen after strong US manufacturing data and gains in tech stocks helped investors look past broader worries about the coronavirus and global economy. Oil futures gave up overnight gains to fall in Asia due to nagging worries about an increase in the supply of crude. US stock futures were 0.02% higher in Asia. The pound is worth $1.307 and 1.111 while the FTSE is pitched to open 12 points lower.

Several of todays front pages memorialise John Hume and his role in Northern Ireland peacemaking. The Guardian remembers Hume as A titan and a visionary. Our print editions top story is the theft by Russians of secret UK-US trade documents from Liam Foxs private email account. The Telegraph leads with that one too.

Differing treatments of Eat out to help out. The Metro has Rishi two-snacks noting that instead of just snagging a 50% discount, some people went two-for-one, which the paper warns will fuel the obesity crisis. The Mail confects Weve had our lunch, now lets get back to work the paper finds a striking contrast in restaurants being packed while offices are largely deserted.

Test & trace fiasco is timebomb the Mirror really ought to have chosen one derogative or the other. Having virus may earn right to roam the i is reviving the immunity passport idea (maybe well call it the travel bug). The Express says Painkillers do more harm than good and the Times has Dont give paracetamol to patients, doctors told thats about treatment of chronic pain, and the warning also covers ibuprofen, aspirin and opioids. The Timess picture slot goes to Spains runaway king-emeritus. The FT has HSBC profits plummet 96% amid pandemic crisis and US-China spat heres Larry Elliott on that one.

The Guardian Morning Briefing is delivered to thousands of inboxes bright and early every weekday. If you are not already receiving it by email, you can sign up here.

For more news: http://www.theguardian.com

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Tuesday briefing: Britons flee Brexit by the thousands - The Guardian

Brexit breakthrough: Brexiteer reveals how UK will FORCE EU backdown in crunch talks – Daily Express

Former Brexit Party MEP Ben Habib claimed the UK could get the upper hand in the Brexit trade talks with the EU as we near the end of the transition period. During an interview with Express.co.uk, Mr Habib said the UK must reject the Northern Irish protocol and prepare for a no deal Brexit. He argued the UK could still greatly thrive regardless of whether a trade deal is agreed with the EU.

Mr Habib said: "There are two things that we would need to do to put proper pressure on the EU.

"The first thing is we need to repudiate the Northern Irish protocol.

"We need to say although we signed up to it, it is actually pernicious in its terms for the sovereignty of the United Kingdom."

Mr Habib noted the UK also needed to prepare for no deal, regardless or not whether it is a likely outcome.

DON'T MISS:Brexiteer exposes heavy restraints the EU had over the UK for years

He continued: "The other thing we would need to do is prepare positively for no deal.

"One of my biggest criticisms of Theresa May and indeed the current Government is that there is no positive vision of a no deal Brexit.

"Michael Gove, who is in charge of no deal planning, is on the record a number of times saying no deal would be a disaster for the UK.

"Actually no deal could be a huge liberator for the United Kingdom."

The Brexiteer outlined some of the benefits of a no deal Brexit that have been ignored by both Theresa May and Boris Johnson's governments.

He added: "If we were to no deal Brexit, fail to get a deal with the EU, we would be able to levy tariffs on the EU.

"We run a 100 billion pound trade deficit with them so the benefit of those tariffs would favour the UK dramatically.

"We would be able to cut VAT to whatever level we want and state fund those industries in the UK we wish to protect.

READ MORE:

Guy Verhofstadts cynical plot to see Brexit Britain suffer exposed[ANALYSIS]EU has NO future! Verhofstadt triggers backlash[INSIGHT]Brexit LIVE: EU breaks silence with scathing attack on UK[LIVE BLOG]

"We would be able to ensure that companies and the Government bought British products ahead of buying EU manufactured products.

"We would be able to take back proper control of our borders our cash and our country."

Mr Habib argued the EU was hoping to prevent the UK from gaining control of these things.

He noted this was one of the reasons the EU was not behaving progressively in the Brexit trade deal talks.

He closed by saying: "In the absence of proper no deal preparations and in the absence of being prepared to repudiate the Northern Irish protocol, I feel the Government would be unable to get a good Brexit deal from the EU."

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Brexit breakthrough: Brexiteer reveals how UK will FORCE EU backdown in crunch talks - Daily Express

Brexit a Bigger Threat to U.K. Food Supplies Than Virus, MPs Say – Bloomberg

Photographer: Bryn Colton/Bloomberg

Photographer: Bryn Colton/Bloomberg

A disorderly break with the European Union at the end of the year poses a bigger threat to Britains food supplies than the coronavirus pandemic that saw supermarket shelves emptied, a Parliamentary committee warned.

In a report published on Thursday, the Environment, Food and Rural Affairs Committee called on Boris Johnsons government to complete an urgent review of the food industrys resilience to shocks like Brexit and climate change. The panel singled out the importation of produce from overseas on a just-in-time basis as a particular concern.

The government cannot afford to be complacent, the report said. It should provide reassurances that food supply disruptions have been factored into contingency planning for the end of the transition period.

Origins of food consumed in the U.K. in 2018

Source: Defra

The fragility of the U.K.s food supply chain was exposed in March as the coronavirus struck Britain, leaving supermarkets struggling to replenish stocks.

Britain imports almost a third of its food from the EU, and its dependence on fruit and vegetables from the bloc is even greater. That trade is at risk of being disrupted as customs checks are reintroduced at the end of the post-Brexit transition period on Dec. 31.

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Brexit a Bigger Threat to U.K. Food Supplies Than Virus, MPs Say - Bloomberg

What Is Brexit? And What Happens Next? – The New York Times

Mary Turner for The New York Times

After three years of haggling in the British Parliament, convulsions at the top of the government and pleas for Brussels to delay its exit, Britain closes the book on nearly half a century of close ties with Europe on Jan. 31.

Its split with the European Union was sealed when Prime Minister Boris Johnsons Conservative Party won a resounding victory in Decembers general election. That supplied Mr. Johnson with the parliamentary majority he needed to pass legislation in early January setting the terms of Britains departure, a goal that repeatedly eluded his predecessor, Theresa May. European lawmakers gave the plan their blessing later in the month.

Mr. Johnson, a brash proponent of withdrawal, will now guide the country through the most critical stage of Brexit: trade negotiations that will determine how closely linked Britain remains with the bloc.

Little will change overnight. At midnight in Brussels on Jan. 31 11 p.m. in London, a reminder that the European Union sets the terms of departure Britain will begin an 11-month transition in which it continues to abide by the blocs rules and regulations while deciding what sort of Brexit to pursue.

What ultimately emerges as Britain parts ways with the European Union could determine the shape of the nation and its place in the world for decades. What follows is a basic guide to Brexit: what it is, how it turned into a political mess and how it may ultimately be resolved.

Lets start with the basics

A portmanteau of the words Britain and exit, Brexit caught on as shorthand for the proposal that Britain split from the European Union and change its relationship to the bloc on trade, security and migration.

Britain has been debating the pros and cons of membership in a European community of nations almost from the moment the idea was broached. It held its first referendum on membership in what was then called the European Economic Community in 1975, less than three years after it joined. At the time, 67 percent of voters supported staying in the bloc.

But that was hardly the end of the debate.

In 2013, Prime Minister David Cameron promised a national referendum on European Union membership with the idea of settling the question once and for all. The options offered to voters were broad and vague Remain or Leave and Mr. Cameron was convinced that Remain would win handily.

That turned out to be a serious miscalculation.

As Britons went to the polls on June 23, 2016, a refugee crisis had made migration a subject of political rage across Europe. Meanwhile, the Leave campaign was hit with accusations that it had relied on lies and that it had broken election laws.

In the end, a withdrawal from the bloc, however ill-defined, emerged with the support of 52 percent of voters.

Brexit advocates had saved for another day the tangled question of what should come next. Even now that Britain has settled the terms of its departure, it remains unclear what sort of relationship with the European Union it wants for the future, a matter that could prove just as divisive as the debate over withdrawal.

How did the referendum vote break down?

Most voters in England and Wales supported Brexit, particularly in rural areas and smaller cities. That overcame majority support for remaining in the European Union among voters in London, Scotland and Northern Ireland. See a detailed map of the vote.

Young people overwhelmingly voted against leaving, while older voters supported it.

Why is it such a big deal?

Europe is Britains most important export market and its biggest source of foreign investment, while membership in the bloc has helped London cement its position as a global financial center.

With some regularity, major businesses have announced that they are leaving Britain because of Brexit, or have at least threatened to do so. The list of companies thinking about relocating includes Airbus, which employs 14,000 people and supports more than 100,000 other jobs.

The government has projected that in 15 years, the countrys economy would be 4 percent to 9 percent smaller if Britain left the European Union than if it remained, depending on how it leaves.

Mrs. May had promised that Brexit would mean an end to free movement that is, the right of people from elsewhere in Europe to live and work in Britain. Working-class people who see immigration as a threat to their jobs viewed that as a triumph. But an end to free movement would cut both ways, and the prospect was dispiriting for young Britons hoping to study or work abroad.

How did we end up with a Jan. 31 deadline?

Before Parliament approved Mr. Johnsons withdrawal agreement in January, just about the only clear decision it made on Brexit was to give formal notice in 2017 to quit, under Article 50 of the European Unions Lisbon Treaty, a legal process setting it on a two-year path to departure. That made March 29, 2019, the formal divorce date.

But departure was delayed when it became clear that hard-line pro-Brexit Conservative lawmakers would not accept Mrs. Mays withdrawal deal, which they said would trap Britain in the European market.

The European Union agreed to push the date back to April 12. But the new deadline did not bring about any more agreement in London, and Mrs. May was forced to plead yet again for more time. This time, European leaders insisted on a longer delay, and set Oct. 31 as the date.

Mr. Johnson took office in July, and vowed to take Britain out of the bloc by that deadline, with or without a deal. But opposition lawmakers and rebels in his own party seized control of the Brexit process, and moved to block a no-deal withdrawal, which would have meant Britain leaving without being able to cushion the blow of a sudden divorce.

That forced Mr. Johnson to seek an extension, something he had said he would rather be dead in a ditch than do. European leaders agreed to extend the deadline by three months, to Jan. 31, as Britain considered its options.

Ultimately, Mr. Johnson persuaded enough opposition lawmakers to agree to an early general election. His Conservative Party won an 80-seat majority, the largest since Margaret Thatcher in 1987.

What happens next?

Much as Jan. 31 marks a symbolic milestone, it is merely the beginning of a potentially more volatile chapter of the turbulent divorce, in which political and business leaders jockey over what sort of Brexit will come to pass.

Every path holds risks for Mr. Johnson, all the more so after an election in which he was buoyed by voters in ex-Labour heartland seats in northern and central England who stand to suffer from trading barriers with Europe.

And the clock is ticking: The end of the transition period is Dec. 31. Any request to extend that deadline would have to be made by June.

Mr. Johnson, though, has repeatedly vowed to complete the departure by the end of the year. If he sticks to his word, Britain and the European Union will have to strike a deal governing future trade across the English Channel at an unusually fast pace. (It took seven years, for example, for the European Union and Canada to negotiate their 2016 trade deal.)

That will involve negotiations over trade in manufactured goods as well as services, which make up the bulk of the British economy. Should the two sides fail to reach an agreement, even a narrow one that leaves some issues for next year, Britain would crash out of the bloc with no deal at all, raising the prospect of tariffs and border disruption that would mirror the sort of no-deal Brexit that lawmakers have long feared.

Among the points of contention will be Mr. Johnsons wish to break from European standards on labor, the environment and product safety. The more space Britain puts between its rules and Europes, the blocs leaders have said, the more they will hamper Britains access to the European market. Any restrictions of that sort would threaten British jobs, reliant as many of them are on European customers.

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What Is Brexit? And What Happens Next? - The New York Times

Pro-Brexit and right-wing academics ‘forced to censor views’ for fear of being shunned – Daily Express

Academics who identify their political views as right-wing are much more likely to conceal their views from their employers. This was intensified among Brexit supporters, with many fearing expressing such views would have a negative impact on their careers.

The report titled Academic Freedom in the UK, by the Policy Exchange think tank, found university campuses are increasingly governed by unwritten rules, which encourage academics to hide unfashionable opinions.

It found that right-wing and pro-Brexit academics were most likely to censor their political views, in fear of being ostracised or passed over for promotion.

The authors described this as having a chilling effect on academic research and teaching.

A YouGov poll of 820 academics, carried out on March 27 2020, found that almost one third of respondents (32 percent) of those who say their political views are right or fairly right have stopped openly airing opinions in teaching and research.

This was compared with 13 percent of those in the centre and on the left.

When it came to views on Brexit, 27 percent of pro-Leavers said they had refrained from publishing or airing views for fear of consequences to their career.

This compares with 11 percent of Remain supporters.

The report also found there is widespread support for discrimination on political grounds in publication, hiring and promotion - especially when it came to views on Brexit.

JUST IN:POLL: Should Boris walk away now or enter into autumn talks with EU?

It found that only 54 percent of academics said they would feel comparable sitting next to a known Leave supporter at lunch, while 86 percent said they would be happy to sit next to a Remainer.

Furthermore, a third of academics said they would avoid hiring a known Leave supporter.

The researchers also estimated that between a third and a half of those reviewing a grant bid would mark it lower if it took a right-wing perspective.

The report said: It is likely that academics do not discriminate more than other professions, nor does left discriminate more than right.

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The evidence, however, is that due to the small number of academics who identify as on the right, there is a structural discriminatory effect against them.

Hostile or just uncomfortable attitudes signal to those subject to such discrimination that they should conceal their views and narrow their research questions to conform to prevailing norms, if they wish to progress and enjoy a positive workplace experience.

The 123-page report pointed out that UK-based academics are now significantly more left-leaning than before, with fewer than 20 percent voting for right-leaning parties, and about 75 percent voting for Labour, the Lib Dems or the Green parties in the 2017 and 2019 general elections.

As a result, the smaller proportion of Tories in academia results in a much larger discriminatory effect against them, the report claimed.

The report was written by Remi Adekoya, who teaches politics at Sheffield University, Eric Kaufmann, professor of politics at Birkbeck College, and Tom Simpson, associate professor of philosophy at Oxford and published on Monday.

The authors call for Parliament to create a director for academic freedom with ombudsman powers.

The sample of 820 academics interviewed for the study consisted of 484 currently employed and 336 retired.

It also urges MPs to put forward an Academic Freedom Bill to ensure that universities support intellectual dissent and allow for all lawful speed to be protected on campus.

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Pro-Brexit and right-wing academics 'forced to censor views' for fear of being shunned - Daily Express

DUPs Brexit ads: Who bankrolled the secretive 435,000 campaign? – The Irish Times

Longford-born journalist Peter Geoghegan was sitting in a train carriage in Newcastle just before the Brexit referendum in 2016 when a quest began to unravel a mystery about the Democratic Unionist Partys role in winning it.

Flicking through a well-thumbed copy of the Metro newspaper, Geoghegan, who works now in Glasgow and London, saw the free newspapers front page wraparound advertisement.

In it, British voters were urged to Take back control, the slogan of the official Vote Leave campaign, Geoghegan recalls in his new book, Democracy for Sale, which is published by Head of Zeus on Thursday.

I turned the paper over. An imprint on the back said that the advert had been paid for by the Democratic Unionist Party, says Geoghegan, a journalist with opendemocracy.net.

This was very curious. Since its foundation in 1971, the Democratic Unionist Party had never run a single candidate outside Northern Ireland, he writes.

It was a little epiphany that ultimately led him down a number of other tracks and has resulted in the book.

It is filled with the likes Steve Bannon, Donald Trump, Dominic Cummings, Boris Johnson, Nigel Farage and a former head of Saudi Arabian intelligence, Prince Nawwaf bin Abdul Aziz al Saud.

Right there, too, is the DUP, which spent 435,000 on a massive ad campaign promoting Brexit in England. I knew that election spending in the UK is tightly capped.

I also knew, having worked as a reporter in Belfast, that political donations to Northern Irish parties were kept secret under anachronistic local laws. Perhaps this was a way around campaign limits?

So, would he solve the mystery?

In his sleuthing Geoghegan examines how the DUP was bankrolled by the biggest [political] donation in Northern Irish history to support the campaign to take the UK out of the European Union.

Geoghegan contends in Democracy for Sale that the money was channelled to the DUP through the official Vote Leave campaign because Vote Leave had almost used up its permitted spending of 7 million.

Vote Leave and the DUP have denied the claim.

Other organisations on both sides of the campaign were allowed additional spending of up to 700,000. The author recounts how he discovered that an uncommunicative organisation called the Constitutional Research Council (CRC) donated 435,000 to the DUP to support the Leave crusade.

To prop up his Vote Leave-DUP connection conviction, Geoghegan writes, Two months before the referendum, Matthew Elliott, Vote Leaves chief executive, wrote in an email to senior staff: The DUP also have a 700k spending limit, which can be spent nationwide!

At that stage the DUP had yet to register as a referendum participant, Geoghegan writes. It only did so in late May. When the CRC started giving money to the DUP, Vote Leave had almost completely exhausted its spending allowance.

Geoghegan writes how the DUPs Brexit spending spree began on June 9th, exactly two weeks before the vote, when the DUP bought 100,000 worth of placards, bags, window stickers, T-shirts and badges from a small branding agency called Soopa Doopa.

This company was based in the Cambridgeshire cathedral town of Ely. The location and the company was a surprising choice for the DUP, thought Geoghegan. The fact that it published more than 800,000 of material for various Leave-supporting groups reinforced his belief that this was part of the alleged Vote Leave-DUP nexus.

Two days before polls opened, Geoghegan writes, the CRC donated a further 334,993 to the DUP, much of which was spent on the wraparound ad in the Metro a paper that does not circulate in Northern Ireland.

He also says the DUP spent 32,000 on digital advertising through a Canadian company called AggregateIQ (AIQ) which had bought millions of pounds worth of Facebook ads on behalf of a suite of pro-Brexit campaigns clustered around Vote Leave.

The Westminster fake news inquiry that began in 2017 and concluded in 2019 heard that AIQ had links with Cambridge Analytica, the political consulting firm founded by US billionaire Robert Mercer and US president Donald Trumps former chief strategist Steve Bannon, although this has been denied by AIQ co-founder Zack Massingham.

Cambridge Analytica got in serious trouble over allegedly misappropriating digital information, including acquiring the personal data of tens of millions of Facebook users.

Geoghegan, following the money trail, writes that according to Cambridge Analytica whistleblower Chris Wylie, the DUP were simply a front organisation to allow Vote Leave to go beyond spending limits imposed by election laws again a charge that Vote Leave and the DUP strongly deny.

Geoghegan explores how the only publicly known person associated with the CRC the group that gave the 435,000 to the DUP is Scottish businessman Richard Cook, a Conservative Party activist and Glasgow Rangers supporter.

He is depicted as a colourful figure, who in 2013 jointly founded a company called Five Star Investments with Prince Nawwaf bin Abdul Aziz al Saud, a former director general of the Saudi intelligence agency who died in 2015. Cook held 5 per cent of the shares, the prince 75 per cent, and a third man, Danish national Peter Haestrup, held the other 20 per cent.

Haestrup was allegedly linked to an Indian gun-running case known as the Purulia Arms Drop. Haestrup told Geoghegan he was never charged, had a 100 per cent clean record and had done nothing wrong. He also explained how the wealth management business did not get off the ground and was dissolved in 2014 after a lot of good dinners.

Despite these intriguing connections, Geoghegan portrays Cook as a man who would not have 435,000 to easily hand over to the DUP. He is convinced the CRC money came from other sources. Former Scottish Labour leader Jim Murphy told Geoghegan that Cook, his long-time political adversary in East Renfrewshire, was a bizarrely unlikely middle-man for this sort of money.

In addition to the 435,000, the author writes about how the CRC made two further contributions to the DUP after the Brexit referendum, totalling more than 13,000 the DUP very generally and impenetrably saying it had used the money to further the cause of unionism at home and abroad.

Geoghegan writes that Cook refused to reveal the source of the cash and said that, although he had administered the massive DUP donation, he had never received any money from his involvement in the CRC. I just run a small consultancy company, doing some waste energy stuff internationally, he said.

Geoghegan does a lot of mining to find the other CRC backers but, as he admits, the gold seam proves elusive, his work not helped by electoral law in Northern Ireland or the DUPs refusal to answer questions.

Under previous electoral legislation in the North, political donors during the Troubles did not have to disclose their names or the size of their contributions because doing so could endanger their lives.

In July 2017 that changed when then northern secretary James Brokenshire decided that life had moved on and donation details could be published.

It could have been the moment that changed everything. However, it was not to be. Brokenshire could have backdated that legislation to January 2014, but decided not to.

This led to allegations that he had done a side deal with the DUP a charge bolstered by the fact that this was at a time when the DUP had signed up to a 1.5 billion confidence and supply deal to keep then UK prime minister Theresa Mays Tory government in power.

It prompted former head of the Norths Electoral Commission Seamus Magee to deduce: The deal on party donations and loans must be part of the DUP/Conservative deal. No other explanation.

This was denied at the time by DUP MP Jeffrey Donaldson.

Geoghegan, still chasing, writes how, in mid December 2017, 17 MPs met in a Westminster committee room to consider a legal order that would bring donor transparency to Northern Ireland.

During a truncated and bad-tempered debate, DUP MPs Sammy Wilson and Ian Paisley, who were observers, insisted that their party had been wholly transparent about the 435,000 donation.

Saying that the failure to backdate the legislation stinks, Labour MP Ben Bradshaw added: The only conclusion that any reasonable person can draw is that the DUP was used, with its knowledge, by the CRC to funnel money to the Leave campaign in a way that to this day keeps the source of that money secret. By refusing to make this provision retrospective, the government are effectively complicit in covering that up.

In his book Geoghegan addresses many fascinating issues in relation to dark money, Brexit and political funding but in the end admits his investigation into the DUP and CRC does did not answer the big question.

The wall of silence could not be penetrated. He concedes, Just how much control the DUP had over its record donation and how it was spent remains unclear. And who was behind the money is still a mystery.

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DUPs Brexit ads: Who bankrolled the secretive 435,000 campaign? - The Irish Times

Brexit hit looms for industries that escaped worst of pandemic – The London School of Economics and Political Science

Businesses that have escaped the worst effects of the economic fallout from the COVID-19 pandemic are typically in sectors which are more likely to feel the impacts of Brexit, a new analysis finds.

The reportCOVID-19 and Brexit:Real-time updates on business performance in the United Kingdomwas published today (29 July 2020) by the LSEs Centre for Economic Performance (CEP). It shows that sectors which entail more human contact such as airlines, restaurants, hotels and arts and entertainment have been hardest hitby the pandemic.

Meanwhile, those sectors that rely more on business-to-business demand, and which can be delivered virtually, have been less hard hit. These include ICT services and professional, technical and scientific industries such as accounting, legal activities and scientific research.

Report authors, Josh De Lyon and Dr Swati Dhingra,alsoshow that sectors affected by Brexit are generally different to those currently impacted by COVID-19. When comparing the effect of COVID-19 with the predicted impact of increased trade barriers with the EU, there is some evidence that those lesshitby COVID-19 are likely tosuffer more fromBrexit. Electrical and Optical Equipment and Chemicals and Chemical Products are examples of such sectors.

A closer look shows the experiences of industries differs a lot. While businesses such as hotels and restaurants have been hit hard by COVID-19, they are predicted to see little change from trade rules with the EU. Other sectors, however, such as Inland Transport have been impacted by the pandemic and are also expected to be significantly affected by a no-deal Brexit, thus experiencing a double hit.

The analysis uses data from the real-time business survey of member and non-member firms collected by the Confederation of British Industry (CBI). This shows how business performance and expectations have varied in April, May and June 2020.

It reveals:

Josh De Lyon, research assistant at CEP, said:As the impacts of COVID-19 on different types of business become clearer, the government must move beyond its broad assessment of Brexit impacts to much more finely tuned plans that account for the differences in market conditions and constraints faced by UK businesses in the biggest slowdown of our lifetime.

Dr Swati Dhingra, CEP associate and Associate Professor in Economics at LSE, said:The large negative hit from the pandemic has reduced the capacity of the UK economy to take further shocks. The UK is highly integrated with Europe and these links are likely to be even more important throughout the pandemic. The slowdown of the world economy has also cast another shadow on the idea of a Global Britain unlocking a higher trade potential outside of the EU.

Our analysis shows that the sectors that will be affected by Brexit and those that are suffering from the COVID-19 pandemic and lockdown are generally different from each other. Rushing Brexit through this year without a new deal in place would therefore broaden the set of sectors that see worsening business conditions.

The report concludes that government policies to stimulate demand, support workers to remain in employment or find new employment, and to support businesses remain essential.

The full report can be read here:COVID-19 and Brexit: Real-time updates on business performance in the United Kingdom

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Brexit hit looms for industries that escaped worst of pandemic - The London School of Economics and Political Science

Brexit will deliver double shock to UK economy, study finds – The Guardian

A Brexit hit is looming for sectors that have emerged relatively unscathed from the Covid-19 pandemic, analysis by the London School of Economics suggests.

The LSE report says Brexit will deliver a double shock to the economy with business conditions worsening for those sectors that have survived the impact of coronavirus and lockdown measures whether Boris Johnson secures a deal with the EU or not.

The analysis, seen by the Guardian before its publication on Wednesday, includes information from a monthly survey of Confederation of British Industry members.

Our analysis shows that the sectors that will be affected by Brexit and those that are suffering from the Covid-19 pandemic and lockdown are generally different from each other, said Swati Dhingra, an economics professor who co-authored the report.

A simultaneous impact from Brexit and coronavirus will be felt across the business spectrum from the autumn when the chancellor Rishi Sunaks pandemic policies aimed at supporting the unemployed end and the new trading environment for the UK outside the EU begins to bite, the research finds.

The report, Covid-19 and Brexit: Real-Time Updates on Business Performance in the United Kingdom by the LSEs Centre for Economic Performance, shows sectors that entail more human contact including hospitality, air travel, restaurants, hotels, and arts and entertainment have been the hardest hit by the pandemic.

The affect on other sectors such as the scientific industries, professional services, including accountancy and legal services, and publishing has been less severe because they can continue to operate with staff working from home.

Among those reportedly continuing to operate with remote working are firms such as Vodafone, Google, the accountancy firm KPMG, GlaxoSmithKline, Rolls-Royce and the consumer goods group Unilever.

But Brexit will impose barriers on those trading goods or services with the EU, whether it is pharmaceutical companies seeking regulatory approval, banks or services needing to transfer data from servers in the bloc or car manufacturers or clothes importers being required to fill in customs declarations for the first time in decades.

The report points out that as far back as 2017 the government announced that Brexit would be guided by impact assessments across sectors; it has provided detailed analysis in only 10 sectors to date.

The government must move beyond its broad assessment of Brexit impacts to much more finely tuned plans in preparation for the biggest slowdown of our lifetime said Josh de Lyon, a research assistant at the LSE centre who co-authored the report.

Dhingra said the coronavirus pandemic had reduced the capacity of the UK economy to take further shocks, and rushing Brexit through would broaden the set of sectors that experienced worsening business conditions.

Using monthly data collected by the CBI on business experiences and expectations of growth or declines, along with what it describes as state of the art modelling, the centre has been able to assess the outlook for the next three months.

LSE, like other big institutions, is loath to put a figure on the projected combined shock to the economy although various sectors have warned of hardship coming down the tracks. The manufacturing body Make UK warned that more than half of the manufacturing sector was planning redundancies when the business support schemes ended.

The LSE report urges the government to put in place an industrial strategy that must reflect the cold reality of being in a post-Brexit UK which is placed in a post-Covid world economy in which global trade shrinks.

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Brexit will deliver double shock to UK economy, study finds - The Guardian

Government says medicines must be stockpiled for no-deal Brexit on top of Covid-19 pressures – The Independent

The government has written to to medicine suppliers urging them to stockpile drugs for a possible no-deal in EU trade talks at the end of the year after firms warned that this may not be possible because of the pandemic.

In a letter made public on Monday officials at the health department said the government recognises "that global supply chains are under significant pressure" because of coronavirus, but said the expensive precaution was still necessary.

In June a pharmaceutical industry memo said original stockpiles meant for no-deal had been used up entirely and that it might not be possible to replenish them before December, when the UK is due to leave the single market.

Sharing the full story, not just the headlines

Boris Johnson refused to extend the Brexit transition period last month despite disruption caused by coronavirus and the fact the UK is facing a cliff-edge at the end of the year.

Flagging trade talks mean it is increasingly likely that Britain will leave the single market without any trade agreement at all, with disruption to trade and supply chains expected.

"Holding additional stock in the UK provides a further buffer against some disruption and we believe, where its possible, its a valuable part of a robust contingency plan," the letter, signed by Steve Oldfield, chief commercial officer at the Department of Health and Social Cares says.

"To build upon past work and ensure a co-ordinated approach, we will be asking suppliers to confirm their contingency plans for the end of the [transition period], and in particular the balance between stock-holding in the UK, re-routing away from the short straits and readiness for new customs and border arrangements.

"We recognise that global supply chains are under significant pressure, exacerbated by recent events with COVID-19. However, we encourage companies to make stockpiling a key part of contingency plans, and ask industry, where possible, to stockpile to a target level of 6 weeks total stock on UK soil. DHSC stands ready to support companies with their plans if required and understands that a flexible approach to preparedness may be required that considers a mixture of stockpiling and rerouting plans as necessary."

But the memo reported earlier in the year from the pharmaceutical industry warned that there would be less or zero product available in the market to allow for stockpiling a broad range of products thanks to the pandemic.

It continued: We would warn against any drastic policies mandating wholesale changes to global supply chains, as this could fundamentally disrupt the supply of medicines for the NHS and patients in other countries."

Pro-Brexit supporters celebrating in Parliament Square, after the UK left the European Union on 31 January. Ending 47 years of membership

PA

Big Ben, shows the hands at eleven o'clock at night

AFP via Getty

Pro Brexit supporters attend the Brexit Day Celebration Party hosted by Leave Means Leave

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Brexit Party leader Nigel Farage smiles on stage

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People celebrate in Parliament Square

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A Brexit supporter celebrates during a rally in Parliament square

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Police form a line at Parliament Square to prevent a small group of anti-Brexit protestors from going through to the main Brexit rally

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Nigel Farage speaks to pro-Brexit supporters

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JD Wetherspoon Chairman Tim Martin speaks as people wave flags

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Brexit supporters wave Union flags as they watch the big screen

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Brexit Party leader, Nigel Farage arrives

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Brexit supporters gather

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Ann Widdecombe speaks to pro-Brexit supporters

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Brexit supporters wave Union flags as they watch the big screen

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AFP via Getty

People wave British Union Jack flags as they celebrate

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Pro-Brexit demonstrators celebrate on Parliament Square on Brexit day

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A pro-Brexit supporter jumps on an EU flag

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AFP via Getty

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A man waves Union flags from a small car as he drives past Brexit supporters gathering

AFP via Getty

A pro-Brexit supporter pours beer onto an EU flag

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An EU flag lies trampled in the mud

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AFP via Getty

Pro-Brexit supporters celebrating in Parliament Square, after the UK left the European Union on 31 January. Ending 47 years of membership

PA

Big Ben, shows the hands at eleven o'clock at night

AFP via Getty

Pro Brexit supporters attend the Brexit Day Celebration Party hosted by Leave Means Leave

Getty

Brexit Party leader Nigel Farage smiles on stage

AFP/Getty

People celebrate in Parliament Square

Reuters

A Brexit supporter celebrates during a rally in Parliament square

AP

Police form a line at Parliament Square to prevent a small group of anti-Brexit protestors from going through to the main Brexit rally

PA

Nigel Farage speaks to pro-Brexit supporters

PA

PA

JD Wetherspoon Chairman Tim Martin speaks as people wave flags

Reuters

Getty

Brexit supporters wave Union flags as they watch the big screen

AFP via Getty

Brexit Party leader, Nigel Farage arrives

Reuters

Brexit supporters gather

AP

Ann Widdecombe speaks to pro-Brexit supporters

PA

Brexit supporters wave Union flags as they watch the big screen

AFP via Getty

AFP via Getty

People wave British Union Jack flags as they celebrate

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Government says medicines must be stockpiled for no-deal Brexit on top of Covid-19 pressures - The Independent

From the C to the B – Putting the B back in Brexit – Finextra

Do you remember when Brexit dominated almost every element of the daily discourse? Every headline, every TV news story, every social media link involved the B-word. Half of all conversations touched upon or outright focussed on the latest B-news. You could barely look a computer, a billboard or dare I say a bus without seeing B-stuff. It was almost a relief when you looked at a news outlet and something dramatic had happened because at least it afforded some slight respite from bloody Brexit!

Then in true Sesame Street fashion, the next episodes of life were brought to us by the letter C and as well as the actual pandemic there was a pandemic of coverage. C-themed stories were everywhere and the deluge of C-topics washed away all those B-stories. Ok, this is not entirely true as there were one or two B-C-stories such as our transition deal membership of the EU keeping UK food supplies moving, the contribution of EU nurses to our heroic NHS frontline and the failure to accept the EUs help with PPE. But Im sailing dangerously close to the political line that business commentators are best avoiding. In an effort to navigate back to safer waters and reinforce my theme, lets just agree that pesky C pushed troublesome B off of the agenda.

Bringing it

Well the good news is that Im bringing back Brexit!

Admittedly, this is probably only good news if you are totally fed up with crummy COVID (almost certainly yes). Are nostalgic for all the Brexit talk (pretty sure youre not). Or involved in banking and wondering how to dispose of that excess budget this year (guess thats probably nope too).

So why do we want to discuss Brexit? Simple. Its the end of July. That simple really. The real question is why arent we discussing Brexit?

Barring a spectacular change in direction (though 2020 so far has taught me not to ruleanything out) this Brexit business happens in 5 short months. The remainder of this article focuses on what that means for regulatory transaction reporting.

The bamboo chopping board of fate

At the 30,000 feet level, there is currently an EU-wide implementation of EMIR, MiFIR and SFTR that covers the 27 EU countries plus the UK. At the stroke of midnight on December 31st the hand of fate takes a meat cleaver and chops each of these three regimes into two very similar, but nonetheless distinct versions. Whilst many are raising their festive glasses to the new year, UK/FCA versions of EMIR, SFTR & MiFIR will come into being.

The following morning when many are nursing sore heads, the ESMA or EU-27 countries versions of these three regulations will similarly be facing the hangover of being greatly diminished and disrupted by the departure of Britannia. 28 minus one might not seem a big margin but its hard to overstate the contribution of the UK financial markets in the European context. With all due respect London is more comparable to New York or Tokyo, than say Paris, Frankfurt or Madrid.

Infantile problems

Phases 1 & 2 of SFTR went live earlier this month so its basically a newborn, screaming a lot and causing sleepless nights. Phase 3 goes lives in October. By December SFTR is a toddler at best. Many firms will still be busy with early remediation items and bedding down the controls, data and processes around SFTR. But nonetheless it will be split into UK-SFTR and EU-SFTR and many of those firms will need to adapt to a new landscape.

The Trade Repositories will offer separate UK and EU TR businesses. Each with separate connectivity, onboarding, reports and so on. The regulation itself insists upon Operational Separation so the firms running the TRs have no choice but to separate them out. Adapting your brand new reporting solution to start sending some transaction reports to a different TR and integrating all the responses and reports back from the new TR is a considerable undertaking. Especially for the firms that have yet to catch their breath from the October phase going live.

The EMIR regulation also gets split into European EMIR and UKMIR. Ok I might have made that last bit up and UK-EMIR or FCA-EMIR is more accurate nomenclature for the UK slice. But in these crazy times Im not sure Id fully rule out the UK tabloids campaigning to kick the E out of our sovereign Market Infrastructure Regulation.

Splitting their EMIR reporting into two versions is slightly less fraught for the reporting firms compared to SFTR, as EMIR is a much more mature regulation. But as well as separate UK/EU Trade Repositories, connectivity and so forth there are other challenges to consider. What about the impact on Delegated Reporting for firms either offering a delegated service or firms utilizing such a service? What about the explicit permissions that was implemented earlier this year? Firms need to ensure they have the appropriate explicit permissions at each TR for the appropriate clients.

Fitting in the REFIT

And what about the EMIR REFITs introduction of Mandatory Delegated Reporting which, as of last month, means the FC (Bank or large dealer) selling OTC derivatives to an NFC- (small non-financial firm below the clearing threshold) has a mandatory obligation to report on behalf of the smaller firm. This was introduced to make the burden on the smaller firms more appropriate. But what happens when the Bank/Dealer finds themselves on a different EMIR jurisdiction to their NFC- client? For example, a London based bank facing a small continental based manufacturing company where the bank falls under the UK-EMIR and their client falls under the EU-EMIR. The mandatory element is gone but the desire to service the client surely remains.

The REFIT is also very much an inflight initiative with many more changes coming including potentially new fields and the introduction of an ISO 20022 schema that Ive been predicting for the lastfour years. On the 1st of January 2021 the EU & UK versions of EMIR will be essentially carbon copies of each other. But each jurisdiction has the potential to diverge and any of the many firms caught with obligations to report to both will need to deal with any divergence. The REFIT is the most obvious example of potential divergence but it only takes an update to the ESMA EMIR Q&As, the ESMA validation rules or the FCA to publish its own guidance and the two versions will be branching off in different directions. There is a slight possibility the FCA and ESMA try to collaborate and agree any changes in common but that looks like a slim chance currently.

The Cheeseboard

And last but by no means least there is the MiFIR regulation or rather the reporting components of the MiFID 2 regulation. The Brexit cheese wire will split this regulation into UK cheddar and EU mozzarella slices. Under MiFIR Transaction Reporting, firms have the option of reporting directly to their home country regulator or reporting via an Approved Reporting Mechanism (ARM).

This reporting directly to the home regulator will alleviate a lot of the disruption to MiFIR reporting firms. However, the ARMs and the firms using them are impacted similarly to the TRs under EMIR & SFTR and in order to provide ARM services for EU firms the ARM needs to be located within an EU country. Many of the ARMs will need to split their offerings into a UK based one and an EU based one.

Anyone familiar with MiFIR reporting will also be aware that firms are dependent on data aggregated by the various regulators across the EU and published by ESMA. For example the Financial Instrument Reference Data (FIRDs) or Financial Instrument Transparency System (FITS) data which ESMA is mandated to publish are key inputs into firms MiFIR reporting. Brexit impacts a few things here. Firstly, the UK data that currently feeds into this system will end and needs decoupled. Secondly the FCA needs to start publishing the UK only version of this data to support UK firms with their UK-MiFIR reporting obligations. The firms themselves need to adapt and configure their systems appropriately for the new data feeds landscape.

And thats just the summary

All the issues mentioned above are the simplified big picture items. In a globalised world with the European financial infrastructure so closely interlinked, the reality will be a lot more complicated for most firms. Very few of the medium to bigger sized firms will have the luxury of falling neatly into UK regulations or EU regulations. The majority will need to deal with both after the Brexit bifurcation.

Im frankly curious why this topic is not getting more coverage. Part of me wonders if some firms are in denial, given how much work and expenditure went into preparing for the previous 2019 March 29th date. [Though I still think the go-live date of April 1st 2019 is the more apt date for that one]. Is there a danger that having put so much work into something that didnt happen that firms are awaiting another Hail Mary event to postpone the pain? Or is it more a case that the heavy lifting was done for the previous deadline and firms are simply dusting down the previous plans and updating them?

Regardless, its time to start discussing the B word again. And no, I dont mean Boris!

The rest is here:

From the C to the B - Putting the B back in Brexit - Finextra

Brexit Tears: A pithy political collection of images and clever wordplay – The National

BREXIT Tears is published by Kettillonia, the small press run by the novelist James Robertson. I wrote about Robertsons novels in The National in an essay called Pushing boundaries (June 10, 2019).

Brexit Tears pushes boundaries of a different kind from those encountered in Robertsons novels.

Its a collection of images by Calum Colvin, the artist and professor of Fine Art Photography at the University of Dundee, along with a series of epigrammatic puns by Robert Crawford, the poet and professor of Modern Scottish Literature at St Andrews University.

Words and images talk to each other through forceful but ambiguous meanings. The words themselves engage ambiguity while emphasising the value of judgment. We can enjoy the playfulness, but they also sustain protest and lament, both angry and determined.

The work is resigned: there is no sentimental wishfulness about what we have failed to prevent (at least, so far, in Scotland), but there is also a sense of why we need to keep resisting it. The lament is there in the title: tears are being shed, but the sheer tearing away, the violence in the word tears (whats being torn) is registered as well.

The book is beautifully produced, on silk art paper, with bold upper case lettering and brightly coloured, sharp and vivid pictures. But the cover, white letters on a black background, is as stark and decisive as a headstone. Consider a few examples of the texts.

LEAVE.CON

ITS impact is instantaneous and should need no further comment. However, as the great American poet William Carlos Williams once said, You should never explain a poem, but it always helps.

Were surely all or almost all of us aware of email addresses that end in dotcom or literally .com and its easy to mistake the m sound for an n sound, so you might look twice before you see what should be obvious.

And thats how con-tricks work. Con as in confidence: the trick is to seduce you into having confidence in something you should be sceptical about, that you should not trust for a moment for a moment is all it takes. Brexit is surely the biggest Leave con-trick of them all (Like Better Together answer: Stronger Apart).

The letters on the page pun and provoke, back and forth, covering years of Westminster government ineptitude, malevolent self-servicing intention, and skilful manipulation (because it has operated effectively). The meanings the letters construct employ all these things and more.

Ali Smith once said she grew up with an appetite for reading everything she could see, the side of a cornflakes packet, the side of a pencil, the side of a bus. If only more people could have read the side of a bus, truthfully.

SCOTTISH LABOUR PAINS

AN interface: Scottish Labour and labour pains: two pairs of words that should belong in different worlds, you might think. Bring them together and theres a judgment: Scottish Labour pains because its so awful, so evasive of necessary questions, and its history of Unionism has been horrible to see unfolding.

But remember the actual birth of the Labour Party through the potency of the Labour movement, breaking through from the Liberal Party as once was in the 19th century into outright opposition to class privilege and entitlement which the Conservative and Unionist Party stood and still stands for.

Labours formation began with the Scottish Labour Party in 1888, then the Independent Labour Party in 1895, and only then the Labour Party as such in 1906.

WE might recollect the founders, Keir Hardie and RB Cunninghame Graham. In their day, more than 100 years ago, home rule and independence were Labour priorities, to break up the British Empire and its history of exploitation, and to establish rights for working men and women.

Do the three words of the poem suggest even fancifully that a truly Scottish Labour Party might even yet begin to feel its own birth pangs returning? Perhaps a sufficient number of party members believe in Scottish independence to suggest that its possible. If so, it would be a fulfilment of Cunninghame Grahams practical insistence that the Labour movement and the vision of an independent Scotland could only realise something valuable by working together.

BREXIT WITHDRAW ALL AGREEMENT

WITHDRAWAL Agreement is replaced by its opposite meaning, Withdraw All Agreement, which seems no more than a fair description and as pessimistic as you might imagine. Then you might ask how the words connect with the terrifying suggestion in the image.

UNTIED KINGDOM

AND the positive sense of breaking free from an imprisonment, liberation from diminishment and limitation, is surely a positive prospect. But the warning remains.

WAR IS JOHNSON

AND a much larger sense of neither dependence not isolationism is affirmed in the idea of interdependence, which requires both individual nations and internationalism.

ECOSSE YOURE WORTH IT

AND to illustrate that, instead of the insidious lie of the advertising campaign (buy this for the sake of your self-esteem: BECAUSE), we have the understanding that Scotland is multiple, seen through the French language (Ecosse), or implicitly as it might be understood through any number of languages in the world, in its own right, in an international context.

YOUR COUNTRY NEEDS EU

IN her novel Spring, Ali Smith writes: Now what we dont want is Facts. What we want is bewilderment. What we want is repetition. What we want is repetition. What we want is people in power saying the truth is not the truth and We need it not to matter what words mean. And: Were what this countrys needed all along ,were what you need, were what you want.

This book reminds us that we want something else.

Brexit Tears costs 10 (including postage and packing) via PayPal from http://www.kettillonia.co.uk

Payment by cheque is also possible by arrangement with the publisher.

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Brexit Tears: A pithy political collection of images and clever wordplay - The National

Brexit, Australian style: will leaving the EU breathe new life into an old friendship? – The Conversation UK

This piece is republished with permission from GriffithReview69: The European Exchange, edited by Ashley Hay and Natasha Cica, and published in partnership with the Australian National University

When Boris Johnson unveiled his governments new points-based immigration system in February 2020, designed to deliver Brexit by shifting Britains migrant intake away from a reliance on cheap labour from Europe, the spin cycle was at full tilt. This was no raising of the drawbridge, but a signal that the UK is open and welcoming to the top talent from across the world inspired by the shining example of Australia.

Throughout the 2019 election campaign, Johnson had relentlessly touted an Australian-style points-based system in order to take back control of Britains borders. Though criticised by his own advisers for signalling different things to different people, the Australian-style tag stuck.

Capitalising on the encouraging voter response, Johnson took the Australian connection a step further within days of getting Brexit done on January 31. In a major address to business leaders, the prime minister went out of his way to dispel outmoded conceptions of Britains future options outside the European Union. The choice is emphatically not deal or no deal, he insisted. The question is whether we agree a trading relationship with the EU comparable to Canadas or more like Australias. In either case, I have no doubt that Britain will prosper.

This instantly had pundits scrambling for their international trade-deal manuals. Although Canadas free-trade agreement with the European Union has long figured as one of several possible alternatives for Britain, at no point during the interminable Brexit negotiations had an Australian model ever been tabled. There is a simple reason for that, of course Australia doesnt have a formal trade agreement with the EU.

As it happens, Australias trading history with the European Union is one of decades of frustration, recrimination and sheer hard slog in the face of Europes infamous protectionist barriers. Although the situation has improved in the more liberal trading climate of recent years, Australia is hardly the place to turn for a model of frictionless borders and free-market access. But that was immaterial to Johnson, who calculated that an Australian-style deal sounded less calamitous than no deal at all. By a deft turning of the Antipodean dial, he sought to neutralise the deal or no deal debate that had plagued the nation for years. Somehow, the mere mention of Australia worked as an analgesic. It cast the hardest conceivable Brexit in a safer, more familiar guise.

To understand how this was even remotely plausible, considerMatesong the Australian Tourism Commissions recent AU$15 million campaign featuring Kylie Minogue as a seductive siren, beckoning Brexit fatigued Britons with a breezy ironic melody. Launched on British television screens on Christmas Day 2019 immediately before the Queens speech the advert promoted Australia as the natural antidote to a tough and confusing year of negotiating tricky trade deals. Despite their battle with the EU, the audience were reassured, they could always rely on Australias instinctively sunny disposition:

But all of Australia loves you

And well never judge you

You just need some space.

As though drawing on Johnsons own market research, the song chimed with the spirit of a beleaguered people craving unconditional friendship abroad:

When you need an end to what ails ya

Call on your friends in Australia

Glorious United Kingdom

Lean on your wing-men and women.

Far more than just a welcome getaway, Australia was portrayed as a pal to rely on, a shoulder to cry on because helping a mate, is a national trait.

And not just any old mate. The implication throughout was that Australia owed a special duty of care to its British sisters and brothers.

For all the evident lightheartedness, there was serious intent in the campaigns core pledge: Well put you right. Like Brexit itself, the ad nurtured the fantasy that no matter the adversity, the Brits could always call on their besties across the ocean.

It is unlikely that the majority of Australians actually feel that way about Britain today but thats beside the point. The campaign was made for Britain, tapping into how the Brexit-voting public would like to think Australians feel about the mother countrys peril at the hands of obdurate Europeans.

Prime Minister Scott Morrison (himself a former senior tourism executive) gave further encouragement with a suitably fawning tweet congratulating Johnson on his December 12 electoral victory. Lookingforward to the stability this brings and a new deal for Oz with the UK. Say gday to the quiet Britons for us.

Morrison left no room for doubt that Australia and Britain were on the same side when it came to Brexit.

One of his predecessors, Tony Abbott, seemed even more mate-struck. In one of his scribblings for the Brexit-worshipping Daily Telegraph, he heralded the imminent restoration of the unrestricted commerce that we enjoyed for 150 years as a historic vindication of Australias deepest loyalties. It was, Abbott declared, the best 2019 Christmas present either of us could have.

Really? There is surely no rational, self-interested economic argument for Australia to champion Brexit from the sidelines, not least at a time when the prospects for an AustraliaEuropean Union trade agreement have never been better. Britain has remained a key market for certain sectors such as the wine industry, but its overall importance to the Australian economy has become increasingly marginal (as its thirteenth-largest trading partner, wedged between Thailand and Vietnam). Trade with the remaining 27 European Union members combined has outgunned Britain by three to one, and a significant portion of Australias exports to Britain have been destined ultimately for European consumers.

Where Britain has remained crucial to Australia is as a colossal source of investment capital, but this also contains considerable risks should Brexit-related volatility rebound sharply on British financial markets.

That was essentially the view of the Australian government under Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull at the time of the Brexit referendum in 2016.

Perceiving that the disruptive effects on the global economy could only be to Australias detriment, no official encouragement was given to the idea whatsoever. The referendum itself received only low to medium-level media coverage in Australia, a far cry from the drama of the 1960s and 1970s when the tortuous path of British entry into the Common Market (as it was then known) was front-page copy for a country still heavily reliant on the British market to sustain a wide range of key primary-producing sectors, from wheat to beef, dairy goods, sugar, apples and pears.

In the intervening 47 years, Australians have long since recovered from the shock of Britains decision to turn its back on traditional Commonwealth suppliers for the benefits of an exclusive new preferential trading zone. There was no matesong sung when Australias Deputy Prime Minister Doug Anthony returned empty handed from London in 1971 in a last-ditch bid to salvage a portion of the British market for Australian producers. It was the cold, clinical terms of separation that enabled Australia to embark on a thorough process of self-examination, contemplating a future without Britain.

How, then, to make sense of the recent stirring of such obviously outworn affinities? Johnsons predilection for Australian-style is perhaps not quite so recent nor solely focus-group driven. During a visit to the Melbourne Writers Festival in 2013, he latched on to the story of an Australian teacher forced out of Britain when her work permit expired. This disgraceful, disgusting, indefensible treatment of hard-working Australians, he ventured, was the infamous consequence of entering the EU in 1973. It was a decision that amounted to the betrayal of a people who were much more intimately cognate with Britain.

Even then, it was a view better attuned to EU enmities in Britain than any lingering resentment in Australia. Some 25 years ago, I started work on what would become Australia and the British Embrace a history of Britains purported sellout of Australia at its point of entry into the new Europe; the very burden of Johnsons beef. It was a time when Australias economy and political culture had been so profoundly reoriented towards the Asia-Pacific region that Europe generally and certainly any residual acrimony over Britains place in Europe had entirely receded from view. I doubt I would have come across the subject at all had I not made the unfashionable choice to study European history and languages.

It was while working in Europe for a Brussels-backed project on the history of European integration that I first stumbled onto the Australian side of the story of Britains courtship of the Common Market. It had never featured in my school or university curriculum and I had no recollection of anyone ever mentioning the existential dread that had conditioned Australias official response to Britains early European overtures. But in British and European archives, the raw feeling and dogged recidivism of Prime Minister Robert Menziess government in coming to terms with Britains choice was unmistakable.

It was not just that entire rural communities, from fruit growers to dairy farmers to sugar producers, faced financial ruin from the loss of imperial preferences in the British market. It was a question of loyalty, of an Australia devoted to the civic rites and rituals of being British, suddenly and unceremoniously edged from the imperial nest (in the words of one contemporary newspaper). Cartoonists had a field day depicting Britain variously as the neglectful mother, the wayward spouse, the fairweather friend, while whispers of ingratitude for wartime sacrifices were frequently insinuated.

There was every reason why Australian primary producers would want to fend off an urgent threat to their livelihood, but what seemed extraordinary was the emotional leverage they were able to muster. Commerce was inseparable from matters of fealty, of implicit codes of conduct and unwritten obligations that any self-respecting British government was duty-bound to honour.

What intrigued me about the material was its sheer remoteness from the Australia of the 1990s. Within a mere matter of decades, the assumptions, sentiments and everyday common sense of Australias organic ties to Britain had seemingly fallen by the wayside.

In Britain, too, although euroscepticism was a familiar feature of the political landscape in the post-Thatcher era, it no longer drew on the language and imagery of kith and kin overseas to uphold its moral claims. Talk of a momentous choice between Commonwealth and Common Market had all but disappeared in the wake of the first referendum in 1975. Britains place in Europe per se was no longer the bone of contention; it was more a question of how much Europe there should be, and the scope of its permissible intrusions into British national life.

The events of the past four years have turned all this on its head, although it would be a mistake to make too much of Britains renewed love for the Commonwealth. Significantly, Johnsons signature post-Brexit vision of building a Global Britain was only coined three weeks after his Brexit triumph of June 2016. He went on to road-test it several times in the autumn of that year before deeming it a serviceable sales pitch, furnishing a shell-shocked Conservative government with some semblance of a way forward. It never formed a part of the Brexit package that had been sold to the electorate in the spring of 2016. Indeed, the Leave campaign deliberately shied away from global messaging out of fear of alienating core constituencies that wished to completely rid the country of pernicious outside influences.

It therefore cannot be assumed that voters were consciously swayed by dreams of restoring links with the old white British world.

Nor has Global Britain been developed beyond a fleeting soundbite. That has fuelled suspicion that it is merely an exercise in cynical euphemism to conjure older, discredited enthusiasms. The British parliaments Foreign Affairs Committee took the extraordinary step in 2017 of launching an official inquiry into the term itself concluding that for Global Britain to be more than a worthy aspiration, the slogan must be backed by substance. But this missed the point entirely. For a government that thrives on ambiguity, the very vagueness of Global Britain its capacity to take in everywhere and nowhere in a single gesture is its principal asset. Unsurprisingly, Johnson made zero effort to rail in the uncertainty about its ambivalent historical resonances.

Similarly, Johnsons intimately cognate feel for Australia is nowhere near as instinctive as he has imagined. His antipodean affinities, like so many of his enthusiasms, resemble a superficial skimming of the semantic surface. He avails himself of easy cross-cultural references the Ashes, the rugger, the cursory likeness with the Morrison government though seemingly without conviction. He recently pledged to bring the two countries closer together than ever before while waving a packet of Arnotts Tim Tams, trivialising the very object of his purported affections. Like Global Britain, his overtures are more made up than real, grasping at shards of a shared inheritance rather than seriously attempting to reboot the Commonwealth.

Such outward displays of an instinctive rapport can also be extraordinarily insensitive. At the height of Australias bushfire carnage in early January, popular British broadcaster Jeremy Clarkson devoted his column in The Sun to the notion that Australia is Gods laboratory and people were not actually meant to live there. For all his signature effrontery, he concluded on a note of fraternal outreach: So if youre reading this down there, please come home. Youll like it. It never stops raining. And we are better at sport.

Equally, Abbotts presumption in rejoicing for Britain on behalf of all Australians was as much an outlet for his own pent up frustrations from the political wilderness. Rest assured that Britains friends are cheering you on as you reclaim your destiny as a sovereign nation, he urged in a follow-up splash in the Telegraph, casting Australia yet again as the spear-carrying mate-in-chief.

No doubt there is much goodwill towards Britain in Australia, but it is virtually certain that this doesnt translate into blind, broad-based support for a policy that has brought so much division in Britain itself.

All of which suggests that there was something decidedly forced and inauthentic about the rekindled enthusiasms of Matesong. It was evidently (and exclusively) the exigencies of Brexit that necessitated Johnsons seaward tack to Global Britain. Why his Australian sponsors elected to sail along was less obvious. Partly it had to do with the polarisations of the culture wars, where Brexit has become tenuously aligned with a raft of right-wing causes from climate change denial to draconian border laws to the all-out assault on political correctness.

When US President Donald Trump can feel perfectly at home in the company of Mr Brexit himself, Nigel Farage, tweeting gratuitous denigrations of the European Union, there is every reason to suspect that more is at stake than British parliamentary sovereignty. Boosting Brexit has drawn on a deeper well of discontents, a new front in the rear-guard defence of the old order, with an Australian contingent at the ready to do their bit.

But when all is said and done, it is hard to deny that Australia still harbours something of the old, Menziean allegiance to the UK something that I had not expected to resurface.

The temptation to indulge in elaborate theories about time looping backwards needs to be resisted, however. The Brexit debate has furnished a profusion of speculation about the Empire striking back. But although the past seems ubiquitous in the putative striving for Global Britain or a revitalised Anglosphere, blaming history-in-reverse can also be a distraction from the political and commercial imperatives of the present.

I am reminded of the complexity and plurality of differing temporalities, as historian Bill Schwarz terms it. This is the distinction between the course of history itself and the imprint it leaves on our imaginations, allowing the reveries of the past to be reactivated in the present, apparently immune to the fact that the historical conditions that originally gave them life had come to an end. It is as apt a description as I can find of the tortured imaginative twists that brought us Brexit, Australian-style.

It is not the past inhabiting the present but the other way around. Fragments of residual feeling harnessed to present-day impulses where their modalities their ways of seeing can be rendered serviceable. Not to be confused with the past, nor even a reliable facsimile, it is the repackaging of old emotional investments in ill-fitting garb.

These things, of course, are never static. In the past few months alone, the political agenda has been utterly transformed by the relentless onslaught of COVID-19. Though Johnson has insisted throughout that his Brexit timetable remains unchanged, there can be no denying that the all-dominant issue of the last four years has receded amid the mayhem of managing a global pandemic.

Yet upon his release from hospital after a near-fatal run in with the disease, the convalescent prime minister could not resist a subtle nod to Global Britain. In paying heartfelt tribute to the NHS staff who saved my life, he singled out two nurses the one Portuguese, the other from New Zealand who stood by his bedside during the critical hours when things could have gone either way. It was the latter Jenny from Invercargill who monopolised the imagination of the ensuing media frenzy. Luis from Porto was relegated to the other nurse. It was a portrait in miniature of the skewed affections that pervade the politics of Brexit Britain. Had Jenny from Invercargill hailed from Inverell, New South Wales, she would equally have served Johnsons purpose.

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Brexit, Australian style: will leaving the EU breathe new life into an old friendship? - The Conversation UK

New report claims pro-Brexit academics are being ‘silenced’ because they have to ‘self-censor’ – The New European

PUBLISHED: 10:23 03 August 2020 | UPDATED: 10:23 03 August 2020

Adrian Zorzut

Radcliffe Camera, Oxford University; Carl Court/Getty Images

2016 Getty Images

A union has hit back at a report that claims academics are being silenced in their work over their pro-Brexit views.

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The report, by think tank Policy Exchange, suggested there is a structural discriminatory effect towards academics who identified as being on the right of politics.

Entitled Academic Freedom in the UK, the paper suggested that hostile or just uncomfortable attitudes signal to those subject to such discrimination that they should conceal their views and narrow their research questions to conform to prevailing norms, if they wish to progress and enjoy a positive workplace experience.

Researchers suggested pro-Leave professors were being forced to self-censor out of fear that sharing such views could hamper their career opportunities.

The challenge today is that a serious threat to academic freedom may now, in addition, arise from within universities.

This internal threat derives from the way that some in the university-both students and faculty members-relate to others on campus, being willing to penalise them on the basis of their perceived or actual political views, it warned.

But the report - based on 820 working or retired academics - found very little evidence of political discrimination.

Jo Grady, general secretary of University and College Union (UCU), called the reports findings a myth.

The idea that academic freedom is under threat is a myth, she said.

The main concern our members express is not with think tank-inspired bogeyman, but with the current governments wish to police what can and cannot be taught at university.

Others on Twitter agreed. One user wrote: We all know there are many right wing Brexiteers. We have a Tory government and we are out of Europe. Now things are going down the toilet, all of a sudden they dont have a voice? Please.

Garry said: They are not being forced to hide their views, theyre scared of debate and of being challenged to back up their views. If they can present their views with evidence and fact to back it up, maybe they wouldnt be so reticent to express them.

Andy King questioned the reports subjectivity: A scan through the Alumni page of the Think [tank] that brought this report show every MP they have or had on their books are all Conservative, including no other than Rishi Sunak. One assumes their reports will have a certain bias.

The Office for Students, a university regulator, is planning to issue guidance on how higher education institutions can meet principles relating to academic freedom and free speech in the autumn.

A Universities UK (UUK) spokesman said: Academic freedom and freedom of speech are critical to the success of UK higher education and universities take seriously their legal obligations on both.

Robustly protecting these characteristics in a constantly evolving world is of the utmost importance to universities.

Almost four years after its creation The New European goes from strength to strength across print and online, offering a pro-European perspective on Brexit and reporting on the political response to the coronavirus outbreak, climate change and international politics. But we can only rebalance the right wing extremes of much of the UK national press with your support. If you value what we are doing, you can help us by making a contribution to the cost of our journalism.

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New report claims pro-Brexit academics are being 'silenced' because they have to 'self-censor' - The New European

Brexit: new residency cards will be sent direct to your home – The Connexion

Covid-19 delays

The site accessible via the Brexit option at tinyurl.com/vvey9z6 was due to open in July.Officials from the Interior Ministrys residency section told Connexion that concerns that prefectures would not have been able to cope with the additional demand had prompted the decision to delay the sites launch.

One said: We wanted to allow Britons who benefit from the deal to have residency cards as soon as possible though they wont be obligatory until July 1, 2021. During that time, Britons benefiting from the WA are not obliged to hold any residency card.Whats more, the government could decide to put it off a bit beyond that, perhaps to autumn 2021. On the other hand, there are people who are citizens of other third-country states, who must always have a valid residency card, whose cards were expiring during the confinement period."

"We gave them a six-month extension, but it meant that as soon as prefectures reopened, they had to deal with them urgently, as well as those whose cards were about to expire and who had not had an extension. Its going to take months to deal with them all and the prefectures would ...

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Brexit: new residency cards will be sent direct to your home - The Connexion

Where is Gibraltar heading to after Brexit? – Gibraltar Chronicle

By Robert VasquezDo the hawks perched in the GSLP-Liberal Government and party members still claim that there is nothing to fear about Brexit? If an agreement over Gibraltar is reached, there could be inroads made that will lead to an increased separation from the UK, and greater connection with the EU, and so with Spain. This distancing is beginning to be a visible consequence of Brexit that can be deduced from the little that is public about discussions over Gibraltar.

The recent meeting between Spanish Foreign Minister, Arancha Gonzlez Laya, and Chief Minister Fabian Picardo emphasises this conundrum that faces Gibraltar now. Additionally, we hear In the Spanish Parliament of a charm offensive voiced by socialist political parties, which is an additional danger.

The core Spanish position of all political parties in Parliament and the State position of Spain on Gibraltar does and has not changed: Spain claims the sovereignty of Gibraltar and does not and will not renounce that claim.

What the socialist Government of Spain is changing is the strategy that they consider will make achieving that objective more probable. A strategy that Spain has developed by reference to geographical location, past failures and external factors engaging wider international affairs that impact directly on Gibraltar, mainly the effect of Brexit.

Spain has already made small inroads into Gibraltars British sovereignty.

The UK has signed a Tax Treaty with Spain that governs tax issues concerning Gibraltar. That treaty gives Spain large elements of tax sovereignty over its nationals, companies and other entities residing or operating within Gibraltar.

The Gibraltar Protocol to the UK-EU Withdrawal Agreement has several Memorandums of Understanding (MoUs) attached. These cover citizens rights, the environment, police and customs and tobacco and other products.

The MoUs give Spanish input on each of these subjects, thus giving Spain a say on what happens in our (British) sovereign territory. The MoUs are said to expire on the 31st December 2020, but will this be so in practice?Well, the issue of citizens rights is amply covered in the Withdrawal Agreement and are effective beyond that date. The changes to the Gibraltar law governing tobacco prices are not said to expire on that date.

Further, in the real world, can matters covered in the Gibraltar Protocol and the MoUs actually come to an end on that date? Well, yes, it is possible, but what will be the effect of ending these, when they have been agreed as being acceptable to Gibraltar, time does not change that? International relations rarely work on the basis of stepping back, without such a change in position having repercussions.

Gonzlez Laya has said that her meeting with Picardo did not touch on issues concerning sovereignty, and that this is an issue exclusively between Spain and the UK. Further she emphasises that her meeting with Picardo only touched on the MoUs.

The reunion with Picardo was held in the context of a visit to the area to meet with and understand from Campo Mayors and some other local dignitaries what the issues faced by them at Brexit engaging Gibraltar might be. The question that we in Gibraltar should ask is, was our Chief Minister seen and treated by Gonzlez Laya in the same category as the others she met with?

The Partido Popular (PP) criticises that meeting by elevating it to a State occasion. It is, undoubtedly, a view which many will consider has argument and substance. Further it is an opinion, which, if correct, strengthens Gibraltar and the Chief Minister. The danger to Gibraltar, however, is highlighted by the arguments of Spains socialist parties.

Briefly these views are, that Spains claim to sovereignty is not renounced or undermined in any way, rather by increasing and emphasising Gibraltars dependence on Spain, showing friendship and improving the economic wellbeing of the Campo attitudes and opinions will change in Gibraltar over time. In that context, Gonzlez Layas meeting with Picardo, in the eyes of the current Spanish Government was a resoundingly positive step favourable to Spains sovereignty claim.

The PPs opinion is undermined and the views of the socialist parties are reinforced by reports in El Pais (29th July 2020) that Gibraltar is seeking to keep links with the EU after the Brexit transition period ends on the 31st December 2020. The harsh reality is that a post-Brexit solution is needed, by both Gibraltar and Spain, that will safeguard cross-frontier free movement of persons and goods beyond that date; much of Gibraltars economy and public finances are dependent on that.

The article suggests that the UK and Spain with Gibraltar are looking at various options. All of them, in some small way, separate us from the UK and bring us closer to and more dependent on the EU and so Spain; Spain being the EU interlocutor on matters involving Gibraltar.

The options, which are intended to retain ties between Gibraltar and the EU (and so keep us close to Spain), that seemingly are being looked at are, that Gibraltar joins either the EU customs union or the Schengen passport-free area.

This is not unusual for non-EU members. Monaco, for example, is a part of the customs union, Norway, Liechtenstein and Iceland are part of the single market and Schengen and Switzerland is part of Schengen. What is a mystery is, whether or what Spain may demand in return?

It is further reported that Spain made an offer on aspects of bilateral relations over Gibraltar, at a meeting in Malaga in June. The terms of this offer remain secret, beyond Spains desire to create a zone of shared prosperity in part reflecting its desire to protect cross-frontier workers and to achieve an attractive neighbouring territory.

All this is in the public domain for those who care to look. What is strange is the ominous silence from our Government, beyond mirroring Spains call for shared prosperity, by expressing its own desire to achieve prosperity for the area. Otherwise, not one peep of denial, just continuous reaffirmations of Gibraltar remaining British.

Wake up all political parties, especially the currently responsible GSLP-Liberal Government! See that Spain has put its sovereignty claim to one side without renouncing it. See that Spain has changed its strategy to achieve that sovereignty. What is the GSLP-Liberal Governments plan to counter that danger without destroying Gibraltars economy, or that of any party that might replace it in Government?

No one knows because they dont say, or is it because the Government does not have one, beyond Picardo having high-profile meetings with Spains Foreign Minister to attract media attention? These meetings are dangerous without a clear strategy. Well some advice to our Government: keep your electorate informed, because if you dont you may face a backlash when any arrangements become public.

Robert Vasquez is a barrister. He stood as an independent candidate at the last general election.

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Where is Gibraltar heading to after Brexit? - Gibraltar Chronicle