Brexit Brief: Budget Offers Cash Prize for Brexit Deal

The last UK budget before Brexit could have been one timed for an election. It announced significant spending increases on public services and moving up tax cuts for millions.  Also promised was a £15 billion “deal dividend” if there is a Brexit deal.

The last UK budget before Brexit could have been one timed for an election. It announced significant spending increases on public services and moving up tax cuts for millions.  Also promised was a £15 billion “deal dividend” if there is a Brexit deal.  To make his restive colleagues’ incentives clear, the chancellor threatened to take back the gifts bestowed if there was no deal.  The dilemma for those threatening to vote down Theresa May’s Brexit deal is clear: is it worth £15 billion – or £42 million/week, to put it in side-of-the-bus terms?

May’s way or the highway

The debate over what constitutes a ‘meaningful vote’ has come back with a vengeance.  MPs are examining the complex compromise reached during the passage of the EU Withdrawal Act on the subject, which essentially deferred the issue to a parliamentary committee dealing with procedure.  While Brexit Brief enjoys reading Erskine May as much as the next person, the arcane terms of debate sometimes obscure the importance of the issue.  The outcome will, after all, determine parliament’s role in the Brexit endgame.  The government has confirmed – despite warm words in the past suggesting otherwise – that the vote on any deal the prime minister brings back from Brussels will allow MPs to endorse it, or commit the UK to crashing out of the EU with no deal. As expected, those who have insisted on a “meaningful vote” that would allow parliament to change the government’s Brexit strategy.  The UK parliament’s constitutional adviser has also suggested that their response to the legally mandated motion could never legally bind the government – but rightly pointed out it would provide a great deal of pressure.

The waiting game

The key message remains that Britain is optimistic of securing a deal, possibly at a special Brexit summit this month. Brexit Secretary Dominic Raab told MPs in a letter published yesterday that the end of negotiations was now “clearly in sight”, with expectation that a deal will be finalised within the next three weeks. Despite an initial flurry of excitement over the suggested date, the Department for Exiting the EU insisted there was no set date for negotiations to conclude. Hopes were further raised today after unconfirmed reports claimed that the UK has struck a tentative deal with the EU on post-Brexit financial services, that would give British financial services firms continued access to the bloc.  However, with no sign of a breakthrough in the Brexit negotiations on the backstop issue, this timetable seems optimistic, but mostly aspirational.

Related Articles

Access Alert: What the abolition of Mexico’s telecoms and competition regulators means and what to do next

Access Alert: What the abolition of Mexico’s telecoms and competition regulators means and what to do next

Mexico’s Congress has approved the constitutional reform for the elimination of the Federal Institute of Telecommunications (IFT) and the Federal...

25 Nov 2024 Opinion
Access Partnership Concludes 2024 with Double Recognition: Best Tech Policy Advisory and Innovative Tech Consultancy of the Year

Access Partnership Concludes 2024 with Double Recognition: Best Tech Policy Advisory and Innovative Tech Consultancy of the Year

London, UK – Access Partnership has celebrated the end of 2024 by winning Best Technology Policy Advisory at The Business...

22 Nov 2024 General
Access Alert: New agency for digital transformation and telecommunications in Mexico

Access Alert: New agency for digital transformation and telecommunications in Mexico

The Mexican Congress has approved the creation of the Agency of Digital Transformation and Telecommunications, which will have the level...

19 Nov 2024 Opinion
Access Alert: The wider impact of Australia’s social media ban for under-16s

Access Alert: The wider impact of Australia’s social media ban for under-16s

Australia’s states and territories have unanimously backed a national plan to ban children under sixteen from most forms of social...

18 Nov 2024 Opinion