Future UK-EU relationship report published

4 Apr 2018 11:38 AM

In this third report of its overarching inquiry into the Article 50 negotiations, the Exiting the European Union Committee sets out key tests by which any deal agreed by October 2018 must be judged.

Having published the Draft Agreement on the withdrawal of the UK from the EU on 19 March 2018, the EU and the UK are now moving on to the detailed scoping of future relations with a view to reaching agreement on a political declaration on the framework for this future relationship in October 2018.

This will be agreed alongside the Article 50 withdrawal agreement and the agreement on the transition period. The European Council adopted its guidelines for the forthcoming negotiations in March.

An agreement reached on the UK's future relationship with the EU will, by definition, be bespoke. The Committee acknowledges that the UK has an enormous amount to offer the EU as a third country and that it is in the interests of the UK and the EU to reach an agreement that will benefit both.

Key tests

The Committee's tests by which it will judge the political declaration in October 2018 are as follows:

Chair's comments

The Chair of the Exiting the EU Committee, Hilary Benn MP, said:

"Having listened to the evidence, we today offer a series of tests against which any deal reached must be judged. I hope these will assist Parliament when it comes to its meaningful vote at the end of the Article 50 negotiations.

Our tests set a high bar but they are based on the Prime Minister's vision for our future outside the EU and the statement by the Secretary of State for Exiting the European Union, David Davis MP, that any new deal would be at least as good as what we have now. It is vital that UK businesses are able to continue to trade freely and sell services into our largest market after we leave, without additional costs or burdens or a hard border in Northern Ireland, and that we maintain close co-operation on defence, security, data and information sharing and consumer safety.

And should negotiations on a 'deep and special partnership' not prove successful, we consider that EFTA/EEA membership remains an alternative which would have the advantage of continuity of access for UK services and could also be negotiated relatively quickly."

Further information