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Category Archives: Brexit

Brexit LIVE: ‘Reality!’ Economist says UK GDP growth to outpace EU by more than DOUBLE – Express

Posted: May 1, 2022 at 11:50 am

According to reports, the former Brexit Minister has been approached by several friends and allies to put his name forward to succeed Mr Parish as the new Tory candidate for the Devon seat.

The Telegraph reported that one ally described Lord Frost as a proper Conservative with star quality, who could even be a potential successor to Boris Johnson.

Lord Frost, who quit the Government last year, is understood to have indicated to friends that he would consider contesting the seat if Conservative headquarters want him to do it.

Lord Frost, who has been deeply critical of the direction of Mr Johnson's Government, warned that Britain had developed a strongly established culture of dependency, where people look to the state to solve their problems rather than making efforts themselves, and where business faces ever-growing practical obstacles to normal commercial activity.

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Brexit LIVE: 'Reality!' Economist says UK GDP growth to outpace EU by more than DOUBLE - Express

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India trade deal has trillions of ‘untapped potential’ for Brexit Britain compared to EU – Express

Posted: at 11:50 am

Following the PMs visit to India last week, hopes have been raised of a possible free trade deal with the rapidly-growing economy by 2035.

The value of such a deal is currently estimated at 28billion - but industry expert Gauruv Singh predicts it to be much higher.

Mr Singh argued the massive growth experienced in India and its existing ties with the UK make it the perfect economic ally for Brexit Britain.

He toldExpress.co.uk: How I look at trade is, I look at it more in terms of an investment on both sides of the corridor, because ultimately, it has to lead to a better economy and better jobs.

India is currently marked as a 3 trillion dollar economy - but with the growth that it is experiencing, by 2040 that is going to see quantum leaps.

You have to take into account that there are 1.4 billion people in India, and a huge proportion of them are under the age of 30. Theres huge potential there.

More than 50 percent of Indias population is below 25, while over 65 percent are under 35.

According to statista, the countrys economy saw 9.5 percent GDP growth last year, and is projected to experience 8.52 percent this year.

Meanwhile, the EU is predicted to grow just 4 percent this year, while the UK is predicted to grow 3.8 percent.

Asked what is different about a trade deal with India than with the EU, Mr Singh said: Every ecosystem has its benefits, but there are things which set India apart.

There are two parts. One is that India is producing millionaires and billionaires at a faster rate than anywhere else in the world.

India is currently home to 6,884 ultra-high-networth individuals and 113 billionaires, according to international property consultancy Knight Frank.

READ MORE:GB News slanging match over Keir Starmer and Partygate[REVEAL]

They predict the number of billionaires in India is expected to increase by 43 percent to 162 by 2025.

The other is that India already has great ties with the UK. India is already the second largest investor in the UK after the US.

He stated that as time goes on, the two countries working together would only exponentially improve their innovation and technology.

British technology has very good regard in India.

As we grow, that investment will grow too.

Other partners might be going steady, growing a few percent a year - with India, its unrestrained growth.

Theres trillions in untapped potential.

DON'T MISS:Brexit LIVE: 'Never made sense' Lord Frost throws down gauntlet at EU[INSIGHT]

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India trade deal has trillions of 'untapped potential' for Brexit Britain compared to EU - Express

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‘Brexit ruined my business almost overnight’: UK dealer says his income has plummeted by 60% since Britain left the EU – Art Newspaper

Posted: at 11:50 am

The British dealer Steve Shovlar has been selling art for the past 15 years. He mainly deals in Old Master paintings priced between 100 and 1,500not enormous sums, but enough for his small business to be worth 1m.

But, he says, his firm is now in ruins thanks to Brexit. And he sees no way out.

Since the UK left the EU on 31 January 2020, Shovlars income has dropped by 60%. He says trade with the EU, where 99% of his clients are based, is now virtually impossible and the 30 to 50 sales he was making a week have dwindled.

Before Brexit, selling to European collectors was just like selling to a customer in Hull, he says, but now Shovlar has to fill out multiple invoices and customs declarations, while shipping delays of around four to six weeks are not uncommon.

As he puts it: A parcel costing 14 inc VAT to Italy before Brexit now costs 22 with no VAT. Instead of a customer receiving the painting and hanging it on their wall, they receive a customs notification demanding import duty, handling fee and 20% VAT before they get it. Approximately 230 extra for a 1000 item.

Collectors and other dealers who would routinely buy hundreds of paintings from Shovlar now tell him its just not worth the hassle.

With the added costs and onerous red tape, Shovlar says he can no longer compete with dealers in the EU. Brexit has wrecked small businesses trading with Europe, he says. Why on earth would an EU citizen buy from a UK business when it entails extra expenses and delays? Brexit has made trading with our closest customers extremely challenging and I am sure I am just one of many thousands who have had the heart ripped out of what was once and very successful and lucrative small business.

The only solution, Shovlar believes, is for the UK to rejoin the customs union or for a better trade deal to be struck with the EU. At the moment these trade barriers are killing our business, he says.

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'Brexit ruined my business almost overnight': UK dealer says his income has plummeted by 60% since Britain left the EU - Art Newspaper

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Robertson: Brexit and UK Government inaction exacerbating cost-of-living crisis – GB News

Posted: at 11:50 am

He also hit out at 'foot dragging' by the Westminster Government, which he claimed has added to the issues of inflation and soaring food prices.

Brexit and the UK Governments inaction have exacerbated the cost-of-living crisis, a Scottish Government minister has said.

Constitution Secretary Angus Robertson said the effects of Britains exit from the EU have been highlighted as rising bills leave families struggling in food and fuel poverty.

He also hit out at foot dragging by the Westminster Government, which he claimed has added to the issues of inflation and soaring food prices.

His comments follow a report by the London School of Economics Centre for Economic Performance which said Brexit-related trade barriers have driven a 6% increase in UK food prices, adding to the squeeze on consumer spending power.

The study covered two years to the end of 2021 and attempted to strip out the effect of the pandemic.

Scotland's Constitution Secretary Angus Robertson Andrew Milligan

Commenting exactly one year after the UK Governments Brexit agreement came into full legal force, the MSP said: Brexit has made the cost-of-living crisis worse for the UK and Scotland in particular since we did not vote for this damaging policy.

It has brought into sharp focus how Scotland has a cost of living with Westminster crisis.

Inaction and foot dragging by the Westminster Government compared to other countries is already making this crisis worse for ordinary people, but their Brexit plays a big part in exacerbating the problems people face.

Brexit has hit businesses with increased costs, paperwork and border delays and our food and drink sector is being unfairly disadvantaged, just as we warned it would be; and it is but one of a number of industries suffering worsening labour shortages as a direct consequence of Brexit and the pandemic.

Scotland voted against Brexit and wanted no part of this disarray, but still we are living with the consequences of the Westminster Governments hard Brexit deal.

By its actions during the Brexit process and in its aftermath, the Westminster Government has shown it is not interested in a partnership with the Scottish Parliament or the Scottish Government.

A view of EU flags outside The Berlaymont building, the Headquarters of the European Commission in Brussels. Aaron Chown

Independence, he added, is the only realistic route for Scotland to regain EU membership and escape from repeats of a cost of living with Westminster crisis.

A UK Government spokesperson said businesses are being supported to trade effectively with Europe, while seizing new opportunities as trade deals are struck around the world

The spokesperson said: We are also acutely aware of the pressures people are facing with rising costs of living and continue to do everything we can to help those who need it most.

This month alone, weve provided immediate help with energy bills through the 150 council tax rebate, an uplift to incomes of the lowest paid through the National Living Wage, and the biggest cut, in cash terms, on fuel duty on top of a range of other support worth 22 billion this year.

People in Scotland rightly want to see both of their governments working together with a relentless focus on the issues that matter to them.

That means, amongst other things, working to drive down NHS backlogs, protecting our long-term energy security and supporting our economic recovery so that everyone has access to the opportunities, skills, and jobs for the future.

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Brexit’s potential is beginning to be realised – The Spectator

Posted: at 11:50 am

The purpose of Brexit was to strengthen Britains ties with both the world beyond Europe and with Europe itself, but in a more democratic way that carries popular support.

It was clear to Boris Johnson and to the Leave campaign that the EU ideal of free movement of people, an idea forged in the 1990s, had become difficult to reconcile with the reality of the contemporary world. High-skilled immigration made more sense than low-skilled, they thought, and a new system was needed to deal with 21st-century challenges while strengthening national cohesion.

Johnsons critics, naturally, portrayed the supporters of Brexit as xenophobes and knuckle-draggers who were afraid of the modern world and sought to return the country to the 1950s. But the reverse was and is true. Most supporters of Brexit simply wanted the freedom to implement immigration policies suitable for the modern world. The vision that this magazine supported in both the 1975 and 2016 referendums was summed up by the words we used on our cover both times: Out, and into the world. Two years on from Brexit, it seems right to ask whether it is working.

The first test is about restoring faith in democracy. Has Brexit succeeded in making voters feel more empowered? Leaving the EU, while painful, has certainly realigned mainstream political parties with public concerns. Today Britain is pretty much the only European country with no populist parties in parliament or with any serious support. Theres no British version of Marine Le Pen attracting 42 per cent of the vote.

Those who saw Brexit as a project of political reform this reuniting of mainstream parties with voters in a way that would leave no room for populism can claim success. Immigration is no longer a major issue of public concern, yet not because Brexit has somehow raised the drawbridge. Its true that the endless supply of cheap labour has slowed, which means employers must pay a higher wage or offer training if they want more skilled workers.

But Brexit, it seems, has succeeded in keeping Britain open under this new system, with immigration now above pre-2016 levels. Movement from the EU has (naturally) fallen but the number of incomers from elsewhere in the world has swelled by 50 per cent, taking the total of new arrivals last year to 843,000. This year, the numbers could be even higher. Some 70,000 Ukrainians have been granted visas and there are a possible 150,000 emigrants from Hong Kong.

Since the plan for Brexit was to swap low-skilled EU migrants for more highly-skilled ones from further afield, in this respect it has succeeded. The number of work-related visas issued to non-EU citizens is up 20 percent on 2016 levels. The number of graduate visas which allow students to work in Britain for up to two years after graduation is up 41 per cent. This increase doesnt trouble anxious voters because it is controlled via a points system. A sense of fairness and order has been restored.

The notable exception are the boatloads of migrants crossing the Channel in the hope of claiming asylum. It remains a very visible problem, and the government has attracted much criticism for its proposal to try to deter incomers by sending them to Rwanda. While offshore migration processing can make sense if done speedily and efficiently, it is hard to reconcile leaving successful applicants in Rwanda with Britains international obligations. This is a mess that the government will eventually have to fix.

Nonetheless, if globalisation is defined by movement of people, then Britain can claim in many ways to be doing it well. But successful globalisation means trade too, and here the figures have been disappointing. Trade with the EU was always going to fall, but the hope was that this would be more than offset with trade from the rest of the world. This has not (yet) happened in a way that tallies with the Global Britain agenda. And while figures were affected by lockdown, its also true that the trade deals agreed so far have been tentative and uninspiring.

Too many exporters small ones especially have found themselves tangled in red tape when attempting to send goods to the EU. British customers buying from EU suppliers have ended up being stung for unexpected customs duties. And then, of course, theres the huge blot on Brexit that is the Northern Ireland protocol which the government keeps promising to solve but has so far failed to. That failure could have grim consequences for the Union if, as the polls suggest, it leads to a Sinn Fein victory in next weeks Stormont elections.

Britain has always been a country with its eyes lifted to distant horizons: a worldview that was hard to reconcile with an increasingly parochial and protectionist EU. There is much work to do in exploiting the free-trade opportunity perhaps addressing the cost of living by taking down our own tariffs now we have the power to do so. Yet it is already possible to see the outlines of the vision put forward many times during the Brexit campaign: that of a Britain open to the world. The process was never going to be painless, or quick. But we do, after two years, have clear Brexit successes that can now be built upon.

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Brexit's potential is beginning to be realised - The Spectator

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Jacob Rees-Mogg has given the game away even this government knows Brexit is a disaster – The Guardian

Posted: at 11:50 am

The definition of a gaffe is when a politician accidentally tells the truth. So ruled the veteran Washington journalist Michael Kinsley, who would surely take delight in the textbook example of the form served up on Thursday by Jacob Rees-Mogg, the satirically titled minister for Brexit opportunities.

On a visit to the Eurotunnel terminal at Folkestone, hi-vis gilet over his double-breasted suit, Rees-Mogg announced that the government was delaying yet again the imposition of post-Brexit border checks on imports from the EU. He asked the public to celebrate this decision, on the grounds that it would save 1bn a year and help hard-pressed consumers by avoiding an increase in the cost of imported food. Enforcing post-Brexit checks, said the minister, would have been an act of self-harm.

You read that right. Jacob Rees-Mogg, arch-leaver and longtime loather of the EU, is now parroting lines from the remain campaign. He is admitting that implementing Brexit in full, honouring the 2016 promise to take back control of Britains borders, would be an act of self-harm.

Theres plenty to attack here, starting with the nerve of hailing this move as saving Britons 1bn, when this was 1bn that Britons would never have had to spend at all if it hadnt been for Brexit. Or you could share the outrage of British farmers, appalled that, thanks to Brexit, they have been left at a serious competitive disadvantage: they now face onerous and costly checks when they ship their goods across the Channel, while French, Italian or Spanish farmers face no such hassle moving their products in the other direction. Or you could worry along with the British Veterinary Association, which warns that not checking food imports leaves Britain exposed to catastrophic animal diseases such as African swine fever a risk that was reduced when Britain was part of the EUs integrated and highly responsive surveillance systems. Or you could join the lament of the UK Major Ports Group, whose members have spent hundreds of millions of pounds building checking facilities, which now stand unused as bespoke white elephants.

But put all that aside for a moment and grasp the full meaning of Rees-Moggs admission. He and his fellow Brexiters once looked forward to these border checks, seeing them not merely as a price worth paying for leaving the EU but as a genuine benefit. Britain would at last be free to set its own food standards, superior to the EUs. And yet now the minister admits that putting up barriers just makes food more expensive for British consumers and risks bankrupting British farmers: precisely the act of self-harm remainers always said it would be. The irony of hearing Rees-Mogg declare that free trade is hugely advantageous to consumers after he and his comrades pulled us out of the largest, most successful free trade bloc in the world the European single market would be funny if it werent so bitter.

At a stroke, the minister for Brexit opportunities has implicitly admitted that there are none or, at the very least, any opportunities are outweighed by costs so great they represent economic self-mutilation. In the long story of Britains needless, pointless departure from the EU, the Rees-Mogg admission should count as a milestone.

Which is not to say the Conservatives wont keep banging the Brexit drum, hoping it will rally the electoral coalition it summoned back in 2019. But the sound, always hollow, will now be hollower still: thanks to Rees-Mogg, the Brexiters themselves have admitted as much.

This matters not just as a twist in the Brexit saga but for the life expectancy of this government. For Brexit was this governments founding purpose. When the best that even the loudest advocates for that project can promise is a delay in its realisation, its clear: the drive has gone. And without such a goal, a destination to aim for, governing parties drift and become vulnerable.

If the two usual determinants of an incumbent administrations popularity are the economy and the personal standing of the leader, those now combine dangerously for the Tories. The cost of living crisis is both deep and wide, reaching into families that had previously been getting by, albeit with a struggle. Its the mother living off a tin of soup for herself so her children can eat; its the parent getting the kids to change into pyjamas when they get home from school, to avoid wearing out their uniforms.

But this crisis runs in parallel with Partygate, each revelation of indulgence in Downing Street affronting not only those who followed the rules and denied themselves contact with loved ones during lockdown, but all those who do not have the money to put bread on the table, let alone pay for a suitcase full of booze. This is a Marie Antoinette government, pampering itself while too many of its people go hungry.

The usual alibis are no longer working. The much trumpeted vaccine rollout is increasingly offset in the public mind both by Partygate and the handling of the first phase of the pandemic: witness this weeks high court ruling that discharging people from hospitals into care homes was irrational and unlawful. A new poll shows a sharp decline in the number of voters ready to forgive those early decisions just because theyre glad they got the jab.

Nor does law and order any longer offer its traditional comfort to Conservatives, not when new figures show overall crime has increased by 18% in the past two years, with the proportion of those charged down to just 5.8%. On almost every issue, from inflation to immigration, tax to housing and the NHS, big majorities think the government is handling things badly. Only on defence and terrorism do the Tories get positive marks. No wonder they like to hail Boris Johnson as a leader on Ukraine, though that is of limited political value: most voters surely sense that todays Labour party would not be doing anything different.

In normal circumstances, you would say this spells doom for Johnson. He lags behind Labour and Keir Starmer on the two big ones: the economy and leadership. People are far worse off than they were, and they have lost all trust in him. His government is stripped of its defining purpose, leaving it exposed to daily squalls and scandal.

And yet, while the evidence is strong that voters are making the break from this government, they are not yet fully sold on the alternative. The old line says its governments that lose elections, rather than oppositions that win them. But changing governments is a two-stage process: first, the electorate moves away from the incumbent party; then it moves towards the challenger. Labour and Starmer have work to do on that second stage. But the first phase is well under way and Rees-Moggs accidental truth revealed one reason why.

Jonathan Freedland is a Guardian columnist

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Britains hopes of post-Brexit US trade deal depend on workers rights – The Guardian

Posted: at 11:50 am

Britains hopes of a favourable post-Brexit trade deal with the US risk being undermined by the governments lack of engagement on workers rights, trade unions have warned.

As a second round of US-UK talks begins this week, union leaders from both countries said Washington would push for a worker-centred approach to trade to help unlock a deal.

Accusing Boris Johnsons government of failing to grasp the importance of labour rights, the TUC and the AFL-CIO, the biggest union federations in the UK and the US, said a change of tack was urgently required.

It comes as ministers push to build new ties around the world after leaving the EU, with a US trade deal considered a prize target for the government as it attempts to demonstrate benefits of Brexit.

After opening a dialogue on the future of Atlantic trade last month in Baltimore, talks resume this week in Aberdeen and London between the UK trade secretary Anne-Marie Trevelyan and Katherine Tai, the US trade representative.

At the first round of meetings Trevelyan pledged she would strengthen the protection of labour rights and the environment and tackle forced labour globally.

However, the US and UK union leaders said the British government had too often hurtled into deals with unsavoury regimes that had no respect for fundamental human and labour rights.

The government had promised a role for union representatives in powerful post-Brexit trade advisory groups, which are consulted on negotiations. However, the TUC warned its nominees for the posts had not yet been confirmed by ministers, meaning unions did not have a place at the table.

In a joint statement, the two groups representing more than 17 million workers, called on the US and UK governments to work together to protect employment standards.

Frances OGrady, the general secretary of the TUC, said the UK government had rushed into post-Brexit negotiations with countries that readily abuse fundamental human and labour rights such as Colombia and Turkey.

Trade deals can lift labour standards, promote decent work and reduce inequality around the world. But the UK government has agreed too many deals that leave working people worse off, she said.

Enough is enough. Its time for a truly worker-centred trade approach. That means meaningfully consulting with trade unions and acting on our concerns. Only then is the US government likely to consider closer trade ties with the UK.

Eric Gottwald, a trade policy specialist at the AFL-CIO, said: For too long, the voices of working people have been shut out of trade negotiations or discussions. We need the TUC and its unions at the table to shape a fair agreement that lifts wages and standards on both sides of the Atlantic.

The groups said that under Joe Bidens administration, the US had increasingly involved protections for workers rights in trade negotiations in recent years, including in the latest US-Mexico-Canada agreement.

The leaders said as a result of trade union involvement in the USMCA negotiation, the agreement contains one of the strongest labour rights enforcement chapters ever agreed, with possibilities for sanctions to be introduced against companies that are abusing workers rights.

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A Department for International Trade spokesperson said: Trade unions attended the first UK-US trade dialogue in Baltimore last month, and tomorrow the TUC general secretary is speaking in the plenary session of the second dialogue which were hosting in Aberdeen.

The UK has a strong trading relationship with the US, worth over 200bn per year, and through our joint trade dialogues we can deliver a broader and even more ambitious trade agenda.

We are committed to listening to trade unions and a wide range of voices to ensure our trade policy delivers for the whole of the UK.

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Britains hopes of post-Brexit US trade deal depend on workers rights - The Guardian

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Boris Johnson is flailing so he is reviving his Brexit greatest hits – The Guardian

Posted: at 11:50 am

One day, when Boris Johnson is no longer prime minister and the full catalogue of his frauds is compiled, a special place will belong to one that got him elected in the first place. Before he attended any lockdown parties, before there were pandemic rules to break or lies to tell about the breakage, there was the promise to Get Brexit Done.

It is not done. That is why Johnsons government is drafting a law that would give ministers the power to override the Northern Ireland protocol of the Brexit deal. This is the very treaty that Johnson hailed as great, excellent, a fulfilment of all his negotiating ambitions. If that were true, he would not now be planning to set it on fire.

Sound familiar? It should do. It is the latest sequel in a hackneyed franchise with a formulaic plot. In the Brexiteer imagination it is an action adventure movie. Brussels has taken a portion of UK sovereignty hostage. Plucky Boris must go in, all guns blazing, to retrieve it. In such escapades of derring-do, playing by the rules and respecting treaties is for remoaner softies.

A recap from previous episodes: to avoid reimposing a hard border on the island of Ireland, a special customs regime was agreed for the North that requires checks on some goods crossing from the British mainland. Johnson signed up to this. Ministers now claim it was never meant to be a permanent solution, by which they mean Johnson lied to his European counterparts as well as his voters. He never intended to honour the deal.

Until now, the governments agitation has been expressed by fingering, but never quite pulling, the trigger on article 16 the break clause written into the Brexit deal. But article 16 is a route to more negotiation and mediation within the scope of the treaty itself. It is a conventional weapon. The new device being assembled in the Downing Street bunker goes nuclear.

Will it be detonated? Veterans of past Brexit wars will be familiar with the cost-benefit equation. It comes down to a test of where Johnson thinks his short-term self-interest lies. The theory is that it takes a proper crisis for Brussels to take notice of British grievance. Currently, the EU is addressing the Northern Ireland question in technical, legal terms, via the commission. Johnson wants to escalate it to a deal between political leaders. He thinks a British prime minister shouldnt have to haggle with bureaucrats. He should be stitching something up with Paris and Berlin. Thats how it worked in the old days. But in the old days Britain was a member of the EU. That isnt how it works for third countries.

A downside to confrontation is that it would be divisive at a time when western nations are striving for solidarity over Russias attack on Ukraine. On that front, Johnson thinks his credentials as a stalwart friend of Kyiv are sufficiently well established and noted in Washington that he has wriggle room to make demands over Northern Ireland, a subject on which the Americans might previously have slapped him down.

But status as the most pro-Ukrainian leader in the room doesnt get Johnson as far as he thinks in Brussels, where he isnt in the actual room. He needs goodwill from Emmanuel Macron to shift diplomatic dials for him on the European council. The French president, with a newly acquired domestic mandate but a lot of trouble in his in-tray, wont spend any political capital doing favours for a man he mistrusts, having dealt with him before.

The prime minister has never been one for cultivating foreign alliances, since it requires consistency and reliability. His interests are more parochial. Also, wounded by Partygate, his focus is now on the bare-knuckle fight for survival. To that end, a conflagration of EU issues might help to thaw relations with the rightwing faction that traditionally settles the fate of Tory leaders. It would irritate moderate MPs, but they arent as ruthless or as organised.

No rival for the leadership will risk criticising an act of hardline Brexit revivalism. Liz Truss, the foreign secretary, fancies the top job and is notionally in charge of negotiations over Northern Ireland. She would not have chosen a manoeuvre as wantonly vandalistic as the protocol override bill, but she is said to be reconciled to the move. The chancellor has previously been an obstacle whenever No 10 has wanted to pick fights with Brussels, channelling Treasury anxiety about the cost of a trade war. But Rishi Sunak is badly diminished by recent political missteps around tax the ones he raised for voters and the ones his non-domiciled spouse avoided paying. Johnson no longer sees him as a threat.

Cabinet has not discussed the plan to sabotage the Brexit deal in law. Much depends on elections next week. The Stormont assembly poll in Northern Ireland could trigger a crisis by making Sinn Fin the largest party. Unionists would then lose the right to name the first minister a loss of political primacy that would be mostly symbolic, but culturally intolerable for that reason. Meanwhile, if council elections in England reveal massive discontent with Johnson, Tory MPs may be spurred to move against him.

Then there would be double temptation to go all in with a Brexit bust-up. Johnson would say that only scrapping the protocol could ease tensions in Northern Ireland (although in reality the election there will probably show a majority in favour of keeping it). The override law might not even need to be passed. The prime minister would be most interested in the spectacle a battle with Brussels, obstruction in the House of Lords, the fulminations of remain-supporting liberals; a fireworks display to get the old Eurosceptic core vote oohing and aahing in appreciation, just like the old days.

Would it work? Probably not. The pledge to Get Brexit Done had such breadth of appeal because it raised hope of ending the toxic, self-involved national drama over an issue that most people had not considered all that important before a choice was forced on them in a referendum. Only a fanatical minority misses the fight enough to restart it. And todays Johnson has lost the knack that his former self had for turning crisis into carnival. His levity no longer gets him leniency from an audience that has heard just a few too many lies. Still, there would be a certain tidy symmetry if his downfall included a Brexit bill that offered false resolution to a crisis without end his last great dishonesty in office being a mirror of the first.

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Boris Johnson is flailing so he is reviving his Brexit greatest hits - The Guardian

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Brexit is fuelling the cost of living crisis, and Rishi Sunak risks making it even worse – iNews

Posted: at 11:50 am

Back in 2017, just over a year after Vote Leaves triumph in the EU referendum, Jacob Rees-Mogg declared Brexit would cut costs for millions of ordinary families. Rightly identifying that food and clothing make up a disproportionate amount of the budgets of the less well off, he said such costs could come down significantly once the UK was fully free of Brussels orbit.

What Brexit should be about is ensuring the standards of living, he said. Cheaper oranges from Florida rather than Spain could reduce peoples food costs by 20 per cent, he said. Wine from Australia and California rather than Itay could be 30 per cent cheaper, he said.

Rees-Mogg doubled down on his prediction in 2019. We could have cheaper food, clothing and footwear straight away by getting rid of the protectionist anti-trade tariffs that the EU imposes, he told the BBC.

Unfortunately, the phrases cheaper or straight away dont quite capture what happened to the prices of such basic goods since the UK-EU post-Brexit trade deal kicked in from 1 January 2021. Far from prices falling, theyve been soaring.

Earlier this month, Rees-Mogg was confronted with callers angry about the sharp rise in the cost of living. When Brenda from St Ives (sadly, not from Bristol) said on LBC that he had lied about the benefits of quitting the EU, the Minister for Brexit Opportunities replied: There is a global inflation in food prices which has nothing to do with Brexit.

A similar case was made by Boris Johnson in Tuesdays Cabinet meeting, as ministers discussed preliminary ideas for helping cut the cost of living. The PM told cabinet that the public were facing real pressures on prices because of continued Covid lockdowns in China and Putins continued crazed malevolence in Ukraine pushing up things like wheat prices.

Of course, much of the inflation is indeed a global problem. But new research by the London School of Economics (LSE) and the think tank UK in a Changing Europe suggests Brexit may well be playing a role too.

The LSE paper, which disentangled the impact of Covid and predates the war in Ukraine, identified a sudden and persistent 25 per cent fall in relative UK imports from the EU after the Brexit trade deal last year. Crucially, it also found that while UK exports overall to the EU were steady, small firms in particular saw a 30 per cent fall in export relationships to the EU.

The LSEs Thomas Sampson tells me that his working assumption is that the fixed costs and extra red tape caused by Brexit have been absorbed by bigger firms, but have led smaller businesses (for whom such costs make up a bigger proportion of their spending) to just stop exporting to the EU altogether.

Theres more. Another report, published by the think tank UK in a Changing Europe on Wednesday, found that trade barriers on imports from the EU have led to a 6% increase in food prices in the UK. Products with high EU import shares such as fresh pork, tomatoes and jams were more affected than those with low EU import shares such as tuna and exotic fruits like pineapple.

There is some good news for Brexit supporters, however. The report also suggests that there has been significant adjustment by UK businesses to the reality of trading outside the EU, with many using fellow British firms in their supply chains instead.

Its also worth saying that some ministers get increasingly irritated when asked why the UK lacks better trade and regulation deals with the EU.

Yesterday, in evidence to the Lords European Affairs Committee, the normally mild-mannered City minister John Glen was so riled by Lord Hannay that he blurted out: The point is we have left the EU. I just wonder whether you are quite reconciled to that. Hannay, a former Brussels representative for Margaret Thatcher, hit back that the suggestion he was a Remainer was improper. For the usually sedate Lords, the exchange counted as fireworks.

Yet even though we are nearly six years on from the Brexit vote, and nearly three years on from Johnson becoming PM, only now is the Government looking at ideas to help with the cost of living (including any Brexit freedoms like cutting our global tariff on things like rice, that cant be produced in the UK). The lack of urgency, even now, was confirmed when No 10 today said the domestic and economic strategy committee, tasked with this new prices-busting drive, will report back in coming weeks.

As for fuel bills, several Tories are still baffled that Rishi Sunak didnt seize on the Brexit freedom to scrap VAT on energy in his Spring Statement. One minister tells me: The VAT cut [on energy] would play perfectly into the governments narrative so well. Especially because the Treasurys energy stuff [a loan to be paid back over five years] doesnt cut it.

Still, perhaps the most telling contribution at Cabinet on Tuesday was from the Chancellor, with his warning of the importance of not feeding into further inflation rises and his emphasis that the UK is currently spending 80 billion servicing its debt.

No new spending will accompany any of these whizzo schemes to tackle rising prices. Thats why, even though the PM finally sees that childcare is a growing cost of living issue, the lame response appears to be relaxing carer-to-child ratios rather than investment in breakfast and after-school clubs that really tackle child hunger and improve attainment.

A survey by the Pregnant Then Screwed campaign group this year found that one in four parents have had to cut down on food, clothing and heating in order to afford childcare. Some 62 per cent said that the cost of childcare is now the same or more than their rent or mortgage.

The Government last year gave 24 million for breakfast clubs over the next two academic years but the funding is woefully inadequate. In a rare spending commitment, Labour is actually committed to spending 500m for universal breakfast club provision, part of Shadow Education Secretary Bridget Phillipsons 14bn Covid recovery plan.

Indeed, the admirably candid defence minister James Heappey admitted the public want more action beyond what they got in the recent mini-Budget. The cost of living is getting to such a point now where even people on good wages are struggling to make ends meet and they are looking to the Government to help them with solutions.

For many Brexit voters, quitting the EU was always meant to be a means to an end. As well as a desire to take back control of their own destiny, there was a hope that areas that had for years been neglected would finally get the attention they deserved. But overselling promises of swift cuts in costs of food and clothing and other essentials looks more unwise now than at the time.

Red tape and trade are arguably fuelling inflation, so the Government already risks the charge that Brexit is worsening the cost of living, not easing it. And with a Treasury refusing to offer any more direct help, that impression may only get worse.

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Brexit is fuelling the cost of living crisis, and Rishi Sunak risks making it even worse - iNews

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Dear GB: Worried About Brexit and Northern Ireland? Read This – Slugger O’Toole

Posted: at 11:50 am

For years now people in Northern Ireland have watched some in GB fret and beard-stroke about Brexit causing a return to violence.

The comments continue to this day as if, subconsciously disappointed by the continual failure of war to reappear, saying it more often might make it more true.

Heres two bits of homegrown-in-NI advice for those with concerns:

1, That Sea Border

The sea border is the kind of symbolic playground shoving match were used to having all the time in NI.

In fact, politics here is such a mess that a portable office in Larne examining cheese or whatever is the kind of problem wed dream of calling a crisis. Bear in mind that we have a political scandal most Mondays with our morning coffee.

However, there are some major, urgent issues in NI we rarely hear mentioned in GB.

If you genuinely want to help NI, then read on to discover the elephants in the room we have lived with, with relatively little outside interest or help, for years.

2, Bigger Issues Than The Protocol

Here goes

Political collapse as a tactic: Politics in NI is a bit like a child learning to ride a bike. Except the child doesnt want to learn at all. And the bike is made of rolled up flags. Collapsing institutions and going off in a big huff are often default settings in NI. The kicker? Every time the institutions are allowed to unpause as if one more try, without major changes, will make the slightest bit of difference.

Covid restriction deniers in NI: You know those folk who convinced themselves that Covid was some kind of 5G conspiracy and took up YouTube epidemiology to avoid wearing a face mask to buy a loaf? They have influence, and significant influence too, at multiple levels of NI politics. And that means that far-right thinking and far-right identity politicshave found a proxy way into layers of government. Sound terrifying? You should try living here.

Wrecking ball Belfast: We love Belfast but it is, frankly, an absolute state. A combination of poor planning, grifty developers and bad decisions have the place in a mess. Its heartbreaking to see. Yes, the cruise ships and conferences are coming in but its like holding a house sale open day before youve done the dishes.

A mixed bag media-wise: Well simply say that NIs national broadcaster is (in my view, YMWV) allowed to pump socially-damaging tabloid hot air into this fragile environment in a way no other region would tolerate. For an extra twist no one can study or quantify this properly as guest and complaint data isnt FoIable. Oh, and at least one of our newspapers is infected with that far-right, Trumpian, Covid restriction-resistant influence mentioned above.

Lack of political leadership: Because short-termism and pantomime politics have been allowed to dominate life here, something like a border poll is going to leave whole communities without capable representation. It will be what wed call an absolute handling, and were sleepwalking towards it.

Two box social and political systems: Its an oddity of life in NI, and a hangover from a well-meaning aspect of the peace process, that government, employment and politics itself are often measured using someones background, ie childhood, religion.

Problems with this include its dismissal of societal change (example, the fastest growing political parties in NI generally arent based on constitutional view) plus there are so many occasions when it doesnt make sense in practice. These include mislabelling atheists, people who have changed religion, people whose religion doesnt match their politics and more. Essentially, it creates division just so it can measure division. Help us with this one. Please.

Public services: Like GB, our public services are close to collapse. Yes, it might be a sign of the times elsewhere too but in a place with the highest rate of mental health issues in the UK its a state of affairs that is undoubtedly costing lives.

Abortion: A new framework for lawful abortion services came into effect on 31 March 2020, but services in NI have still not changed to provide that legally-enshrined healthcare for women here in NI. Does that sound democratic to you?

Low pay as the norm: Tourism money hasnt reach many pockets in NI and probably never will. And we really, really need proper pay. In 2019 a (very) major local hotel business advertised for a qualified, experienced marketing professional at circa 16,000pa. This shameful conduct and in particular barefaced fleecing of graduates was, and is, often accepted as a norm.

Disproportionate social conservatism: NI folk are, in the main, liberal-minded but years of elections turning into de factor border polls (a trend beginning to lessen, thankfully) has gifted other agendas a free ticket into government. For example, it took until January 2020 for equal marriage to be legal. If you find yourself fretting about a politically convenient return to violence but didnt speak up on this wed be entitled to wonder what kept you so long. Oh, and a number of our local councils, some as scandal-hit as the rest of our politics, are at times a forum for views that would have being embarrassing in a 1950s gentlemans club.

This is just a sample, there are many more examples besides.

So, you can see why some extra forms needed to ship stuff to NI isnt keeping as many people awake as it might first appear. Yes, the Protocol has its problems and its politically difficult for some, but a broad failure to either bring humility to the debate by those who supported Brexit as well as a failure to separate themselves from those who would wish the border on their neighbours instead means the campaign is responsible for its own failures.

But does this constitute a genuine crisis or even return to violence? No. Weve had, and will have, worse and more tangible political problems on good day.

Still Want to Help?

There are many more issues like the above and theyre all frustrating, acceptable experiences people in NI are expected to live with as a fact of life.

Plus, they all have one thing in common: they arent the nice easy NI identity debates often allowed to shout the loudest in the news agenda.

If you definitely want to lend a hand and ameliorate the actual lives of people here, wed love more awareness around these everyday issues and many others along the same lines.

To hear them you only have to listen.

Conor Johnston @CJohnstonNI writes about subjects including culture, identity and media.

He also blogs at:

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Dear GB: Worried About Brexit and Northern Ireland? Read This - Slugger O'Toole

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