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Genetically modified soybean gains EU Commission approval

Euractiv.com - Thu, 01/10/2020 - 11:32
The European Commission authorised a genetically modified soybean for food and feed, but not cultivation, on Monday (28 September), paving the way for a full launch of the variety in the US and Canada in 2021.
Categories: European Union

[Ticker] EU launches legal action against UK over Brexit bill

Euobserver.com - Thu, 01/10/2020 - 11:22
The EU Commission on Thursday launched a legal action against the UK for breaching its obligations under the Brexit withdrawal agreement. The commission has sent a letter to London beginning a formal infringement process, to which the UK now has one month to reply. The UK's internal market bill will violate the agreements on the Northern Ireland border issue, and London has already acknowledged it breaks international law.
Categories: European Union

Latest news - Next AFET Committee meetings - 1, 12, 26 October - Committee on Foreign Affairs

"In the context of the exponential growth of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19), the President of the European Parliament has announced a number of measures to contain the spread of epidemic and to safeguard Parliament's core activities.

On 2 April, the Conference of Presidents updated the EP's calendar of activities to introduce an extraordinary plenary session on Thursday 16 and Friday 17 April in Brussels, and additional dates for remote meetings for EP governing bodies, committees and political groups.

The current precautionary measures adopted by the European Parliament to contain the spread of COVID-19 do not affect work on legislative priorities. Core activities are reduced, but maintained to ensure that the institution's legislative, budgetary, scrutiny functions are maintained.

The next ordinary AFET Committee meetings will take place on 1, 12, 26 October (via videoconference).


New Calendar 2020
Source : © European Union, 2020 - EP
Categories: European Union

How likely is a Future Relationship deal?

Ideas on Europe Blog - Thu, 01/10/2020 - 10:09

This is the big question of late 2020 in Brexit-land. All summer and into the autumn, we’ve have multiple briefings, this way and that; some setting us on the road to a rapid settlement, others pointing towards whatever euphemism-of-the-day we might have for a no-deal outcome.

So which is it?

Rather than try to list and weigh up all the possible factors, I’ll instead try to focus on the more inflexible and mechanical aspects that might be in play, since these appear to be increasingly important.

Central in these is our old friend, time.

From the very start of the process, before the referendum was even held, it was generally agreed among researchers that this would be a long-term set of interactions to get to a new relationship and that Article 50 would struggle to suffice for all of that.

And so it proved: not only were there the multiple extensions of 2019, but the content of the Withdrawal Agreement was very closely drawn to cover only the bare minimum of issues relating to ending UK membership (as opposed to building a new relationship).

The failure of both sides to extend transition back out to its original 20 month schedule with those Art.50 extensions, plus the refusal of the UK to countenance using the one-off extension mechanism this summer, plus the delays caused by Covid-19, all have contributed to one of the more heroic interpretations of what can be done in short order on a deal.

Right now, three months out, we have not only not got a legal text that can be ratified, we don’t have even a joint draft, or a basic political arrangement to allow any of those things to happen.

PDF version: https://bit.ly/UshGraphic44

The simple mechanical requirements for each of those steps take time, time that is increasingly not there: the legal drafting could easily take several weeks, even if everyone agrees with everything (which they won’t).

Which leads to a second key element in the mix, trust.

Just as time has run out, so too has the extent to which each side finds the other credible and constructive. London politicians treat the EU as if everything it does is a trap to entangle the UK and/or reverse the referendum result; those in Brussels and EU27 capitals wonder whether the Internal Market Bill can really be a serious proposition, given that it undermines the entire basis of international agreements.

That trust has been falling for a long time. From the delay in triggering Article 50, to the immediate calling of the 2017 general election; the mess over the joint text and the blowing up of Cabinet over Chequers; the meaningful votes and the extensions; even the popping up of Gibraltar at the last minute: all of this has led EU-UK relations to a pretty bad place.

My personal sense check on this is the Salzburg European Council two years ago. Yes, Theresa May might have made a mess of the attitude/rhetoric, but at least there remained a functioning political negotiation.

So if we know that trust is low, and that trust is very much harder to rebuild than to lose, then we can be confident that this will remain a barrier through the remainder of current talks, whatever they aim for.

And that aim represents a final stable factor: the lack of difference in outcomes.

If we imagine a deal is concluded, and one on UK terms, then we would have to note that there would still be very extensive contraction of UK-EU alignment and a rise in barriers to economic, political and social interactions. The UK government is asking for a very minimal relationship, partly because it wants to limit the ability of the EU to make cross-linkages in the current negotiations.

As much as a no-deal would come with huge costs, so too would a deal be linked with smaller, but still substantial, downsides.

Recall too that this is different from Article 50, when the UK remained a member until the end and neither side had a fall-back to protect its interests. Indeed, that’s precisely why the EU structured the process like this; so that if this current stage failed, at least it would have the legal certainty [sic] of the Withdrawal Agreement.

For the UK, if this is obviously going to hurt either way, and if Number 10 decides that the public might not be too thrilled by the message “we know this hurts, but believe us when we say it could have hurt a lot more”, then the incentive to push for a deal would seem to drop.

Moreover, a deal implies mutual acceptance, which drips the negotiating parties’ hands very firmly into the blood, whereas a no-deal contains the potential to shift blame on to the other lot. Hence, in part, a lot of those briefings I mentioned: we’re trying really hard to make this work, but they’re making it impossible, etc.

Taken together, it’s hard not to be pessimistic about the next months.

Time is running away and there’s no credible mechanism for adding more (even if both sides wanted to), trust is as low as it’s ever been (not helped at by the completion of the Internal Market Bill’s progress through the Commons), and the gains of a deal seem to be now limited to reducing the costs of exit.

Yes, a deal would mean one less headache for both sides, both economically and politically, especially since their asks will not magically disappear as midnight strikes on New Year’s. But as we’ve seen time and again, this is not a rationally-constructed process, but instead one of politics, short-time thinking and the entanglement of many other factors (not least Covid-19).

Put it like this: I never built up some extra food staples in the run-up to the conclusion of Article 50, but I am doing it now.

The post How likely is a Future Relationship deal? appeared first on Ideas on Europe.

Categories: European Union

NGOs attack plans to include carbon offsets into EU climate goals

Euractiv.com - Thu, 01/10/2020 - 09:21
Environmental campaigners have condemned proposals to include carbon credits from projects in developing countries when the European Parliament votes on the EU’s proposed climate law next week.
Categories: European Union

Spain to put entire capital under partial lockdown

Euractiv.com - Thu, 01/10/2020 - 08:37
With coronavirus cases spreading like wildfire, the entire city of Madrid is to be put under partial lockdown, Spain's government said Wednesday (30 September) as it stepped up measures to fight the epidemic.
Categories: European Union

Rule of law divisions threaten to hamper Europe’s recovery hopes

Euractiv.com - Thu, 01/10/2020 - 08:35
In today's edition of the Capitals, find out more about how the EU member states reacted to the European Union-wide assessment of the rule of law, as well as other news from the Capitals.
Categories: European Union

BELGRADE – EU prepared to mediate talks between Serbia’s government and opposition

Euractiv.com - Thu, 01/10/2020 - 08:34
EU representatives have expressed readiness to mediate a dialogue between Serbia’s government and the opposition, said Zoran Lutovac, a representative of the United Opposition of Serbia (UOS), on Wednesday (30 September) in Belgrade. The date of the talks depends on...
Categories: European Union

ZAGREB – A Double Taxation Convention with the US?

Euractiv.com - Thu, 01/10/2020 - 08:34
A Double Taxation Convention would lead to many benefits when it comes to the taxation of all kinds of income and to the improvement of conditions for boosting bilateral trade, said Croatian Finance Minister Zdravko Marić . “This is a...
Categories: European Union

WARSAW – Fewer ministries, no gender balance

Euractiv.com - Thu, 01/10/2020 - 08:33
After the reshuffle of the Polish government the number of ministries has decreased from 20 to 14. Some of the functioning ministries will be expanded with additional departments. The reconstruction will also see familiar faces come back into government. PiS...
Categories: European Union

ATHENS – Migrants transfer to Germany

Euractiv.com - Thu, 01/10/2020 - 08:32
A group of 139 asylum seekers, 53 unaccompanied minors along with children with serious health problems and their families, left the Greek islands on Wednesday (30 September) in order to be transferred to Germany. Rather than being a European solution,...
Categories: European Union

ATHENS – Good US-Greece relations

Euractiv.com - Thu, 01/10/2020 - 08:32
The Greek government is very pleased with the visit of US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and the announcements he made from the Souda port-military base in Crete. Pompeo had chosen to visit Greece twice in a very short period...
Categories: European Union

MADRID – Some areas at risk of ‘uncontrolled’ COVID-19 spread

Euractiv.com - Thu, 01/10/2020 - 08:31
Spain’s health ministry warned on Wednesday of a “high risk of uncontrolled” virus transmission in some regions, including in the capital city of Madrid, which is one of the most affected by the COVID-19 pandemic, EFE reported. The risk is...
Categories: European Union

ROME – US Secretary of State visits Rome

Euractiv.com - Thu, 01/10/2020 - 08:31
US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo met with Italian Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte and Foreign Minister Luigi Di Maio in Rome on Wednesday (30 September). “We are counting on the influence the US has on Libya and other international actors...
Categories: European Union

LONDON – Britain to work with Trump or Biden on trade

Euractiv.com - Thu, 01/10/2020 - 08:30
Britain will work with Republican President Trump or his opponent Democrat Biden in order to clinch a US trade deal, trade minister Liz Truss said on Wednesday (30 September), declining to comment directly on a chaotic first US presidential debate....
Categories: European Union

PARIS – Paris fears new COVID-19 restrictions

Euractiv.com - Thu, 01/10/2020 - 08:29
Health Minister Olivier Véran is expected to announce on Thursday (1 October) new government measures to curb the spread of COVID-19. The French capital, which has already reached a stage where it could fall into a high alert zone, fears...
Categories: European Union

FINLAND – Rule of law

Euractiv.com - Thu, 01/10/2020 - 08:28
The Finnish government had not by Wednesday evening (30 September) commented on the Commission’s Report. However, it would be safe to predict that the country would welcome the report. The rule of law has traditionally been high on Finland’s agenda,...
Categories: European Union

HUNGARY – Rule of law

Euractiv.com - Thu, 01/10/2020 - 08:27
At the same time, Hungary’s parliament has warned it will withhold its consent for the EU’s recovery plan if there is a proposal to link the bloc’s funds to rule-of-law criteria. Read more. The Hungarian government said “Hungary is one...
Categories: European Union

POLAND – Rule of law

Euractiv.com - Thu, 01/10/2020 - 08:26
With regard to Poland, the European Commission’s report states that justice system reforms introduced in 2015 raise serious concerns, noting that these reforms affected the Constitutional Tribunal, Supreme Court, common courts, National Council of the Judiciary and the prosecutor, which,...
Categories: European Union

POLAND/HUNGARY – Rule of law

Euractiv.com - Thu, 01/10/2020 - 08:24
As expected, Poland and Hungary said they have serious reservations regarding the report’s concept, methodology and sources of content. It cannot serve as a basis for the discussions on the rule of law in the EU, said Polish Justice Minister...
Categories: European Union

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