Archive for the ‘European Union’ Category

Theresa May details post-Brexit plans for EU citizens in UK – The Seattle Times

LONDON (AP) British Prime Minister Theresa May tried Monday to reassure European Union citizens living in Britain that their lives and those of their family will not be disrupted when Britain leaves the EU in 2019.

She told Parliament that steps will be taken to make sure the split with the EU is handled with care with regard to the estimated 3 million EU citizens living inside Britain. She said Britain wants them to stay after Brexit.

No families will be split up, she said, adding that family dependants who move to Britain to join an EU citizen living here would be able to apply for settled status after five years.

That will be the term used for EU citizens who meet the five-year rule. May says they will be entitled to full U.K. health and pension benefits.

After the U.K. has left the European Union, EU citizens with settled status will be able to bring family members from overseas on the same terms as British nationals, she said.

She said her plans mean that no one from the EU who is now in Britain lawfully will be made to leave when Brexit happens.

The prime minister said this offer will be dependent on British citizens in the 27 other EU countries receiving the same treatment from those countries.

Our offer will give those 3 million EU citizens in the U.K. certainty about the future of their lives and a reciprocal agreement will provide the same certainty for the more than 1 million citizens living in the European Union, she said.

May was elaborating on proposals made last week during a summit of EU leaders. She said she wants to resolve the issue early in the two-year Brexit negotiations to ease anxiety for EU citizens living in Britain.

EU officials had said the proposals were a reasonable first step but fell short of expectations.

After Mondays announcement, the EUs chief Brexit negotiator, Michel Barnier, tweeted that there was still more ambition, clarity and guarantees needed.

Many details have not yet been worked out and further negotiations are expected.

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Theresa May details post-Brexit plans for EU citizens in UK - The Seattle Times

European Union further restricts four phthalates – Chemical & Engineering News

The European Union is a step closer to prohibiting the use of four phthalates in consumer products. The Socio-Economic Analysis Committee of the European Chemicals Agency voted on June 20 in favor of restricting most uses of the chemicals under the EUs Registration, Evaluation, Authorisation & Restriction of Chemicals (REACH) law.

The four phthalates are butylbenzyl phthalate (BBP), di(2-ethylhexyl) phthalate (DEHP), dibutyl phthalate (DBP), and diisobutyl phthalate (DIBP).

The EU banned the use of the substances, which have been linked to reproductive effects, in 2015 under REACH. But companies can seekand have obtainedcontinued-use authorizations if there are no safer alternatives. The proposed restrictions would eliminate continued-use authorizations for consumer products that contain the phthalates at levels greater than 0.1% by weight.

The four phthalates are used to soften plastics found in a wide range of consumer products, including flooring, coated fabrics and paper, recreational gear, mattresses, footwear, office supplies, wires, and cables. Measuring equipment for laboratory use would be exempt from the restrictions.

The European Commission still needs to formally adopt the restrictions, which would become effective three years after they are finalized.

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European Union further restricts four phthalates - Chemical & Engineering News

One year after the Brexit vote, Britain’s relationship with the EU is unlikely to change much. Here’s why. – Washington Post

By Andrew Moravcsik By Andrew Moravcsik June 26 at 5:00 AM

It has been a year since the Brexit referendum. Negotiations between Britain and Europe have now begun and will continue for most of the next decade. As a matter of formal international law, we do not know whether Britain will remain in the European Union, become an associate member, achieve a partially attached status akin to that of Norway or Switzerland, or negotiate a unique arrangement.

Yet one thing has become clear: A broad renunciation of substantive policy coordination with the European Union the hard Brexit option is unlikely. Instead, when it is all over, surprisingly few real policies are likely to change and those that do will probably favor Europe, not Britain.

These predictions stem from an analysis of the three most important factors that political scientists believe structure international economic and political affairs: interdependence, influence and institutions.

Interdependence: Why Britain does not really want to eliminate E.U. policies

British Euroskeptics often decry E.U. policies as unnecessary and damaging regulations crafted by arbitrary bureaucrats and unelected judges. But Brexit is unlikely to change the substance of very many E.U. rules because the British government does not really want it to.

[Pundits condemn Britains tough line on Brexit. Theyre wrong.]

In recent decades, Europe has moved decisively in directions Britain favors. The European Union is now built around a single market with shared regulations. Participation in other policies is essentially optional; thats true for the Euro, collective defense, the Schengen zone for free movement, social policy, homeland security, external immigration, and so on. Britain long opted out of most E.U. policies it dislikes. But on those issues where Britain participates fully in the European Union, it is deeply connected to Europe.

Prime Minister Theresa Mays negotiating stancetoward Brussels actually treats most of Britains current commitment to policy coordination with Europe as essential or uncontroversial. London does not even propose, much less expect, to tamper with free trade in manufactured goods and services under common regulations, which is the European Unions most important policy, or with common research policies or the rights of all Europeans currently living abroad.

Britain needs the European Unions liberal rules because it benefits from them: It wants continental countries to guarantee access for its exporters, service providers and educated individuals all areas where the British are relatively competitive. Nor does London propose to dilute anti-crime and homeland security policies or defense cooperation, which help keep Britain safe.

Influence: Why Britain lacks the bargaining power to get a better deal

The second reason Brexit is unlikely to involve major policy changes is that Britain is weak. British leaders are tempted, as governments usually are in international negotiations, to cherry-pick policies, keeping those they like but rejecting a few they dont. London has proposed to retake control of fisheries, agriculture, foreign trade and especially immigration policies, where it feels disadvantaged, and it has voiced ambivalence about the process by which rules are enforced. The Europeans, naturally, will not want to let Britain treat such policies as optional items on a menu.

On these disputed issues, Britains ability to exempt itself from existing E.U. policies depends on its power. The government promises toughness. May asserts that no deal is better than a bad deal. David Davis, her secretary of state for exiting the European Union, adds, If our country can deal with World War II, it can deal with this.

Yet experienced diplomats and political scientists distrust such Churchillian rhetoric. They know that what a government can get in an international negotiation depends on that countrys relative bargaining power.

[The real reason the U.K. voted for Brexit? Jobs lost to Chinese competition.]

Decades ago, political scientists Robert Keohane and Joseph Nye identified asymmetrical interdependence as the basic source of influence in international economic negotiations. When a buyer and seller bargain over the price of a house or a car, the person who needs the deal more is at a structural disadvantage. In world politics, power similarly stems from interdependence: The more dependent a country is on external flows of trade and investment, the more concessions it will make to secure a liberalizing agreement. That is why small countries, for which trade constitutes a critical lifeline, usually have less clout.

Britain is unlikely to extract many concessions from a far larger Europe on which it is asymmetrically dependent. Almost 50 percent of British exports go to Europe: They total 13 percent of British GDP, while European exports to Britain total only 4 percent of European GDP. If no agreement is reached, Britain has at least four times more to lose.

Britain will have to prioritize what it cares most about, such as future migration; it is likely to expend its limited bargaining power to achieve those goals. Yet, generally, if anyone is to make concessions to preserve the basic relationship, it is more likely to be Britain than Brussels. And that means retaining current policies.

To enhance British bargaining power, some Tories suggest rapidly signing trade agreements with non-European countries. Yet such trade agreements generally take a decade or more to negotiate and implement, and Britain is so small that it is unlikely to wield more influence on the United States or China than on the European Union.

Institutions: Why European political institutions block the spread of Euroskeptic populism

British Euroskepticsstill hoping for a hard Brexit might look beyond these international factors and hope that domestic politics will lead to their preferred outcome. Euroskepticism could spread, leading the European Union to collapse. Over the past year, many commentators have jumped on the bandwagon, portraying the Netherlands, France and other European countries as teetering on the brink of government by radical-right Euroskeptic populists who would demand Frexit, Grexit and similar referendums.

Yet a final reason a hard Brexit is unlikely is that surprisingly few Europeans are skeptical about the European Union; almost all who are lack real domestic power.

[The wave" of right-wing populist sentiment is a myth]

European political institutions create a bulwark against radicalism. Electoral systems underrepresent small splinter parties. Two-round elections prevent minorities from imposing their views. Coalition government excludes or moderates extremist parties. Binding referendums are widely illegal or narrowly constrained by the need for parliamentary approval.

Few of the dire press predictions about populism have come to pass or have any realistic chance of doing so. In France, National Front (FN) candidate Marine Le Pens first-round presidential run became global news, although she never had a real chance to prevail in the decisive second round. Now Emmanuel Macrons pro-European party has swept legislative elections, leaving only eight out of 577 seats for the FN. Recent Austrian elections had a similar result. In the Netherlands, even though Gerd Wilderss anti-immigrant and moderately Euroskeptic party came in second in recent parliamentary elections with 13 percent, it has been shunned as a coalition partner.

Even in the rare circumstances when Euroskeptics win, the fundamentals of E.U. policy remain largely unchanged. In a nonbinding referendum a year ago, Dutch voters rejected the European Unions treaty of association with Ukraine yet last month, without any public controversy, the Dutchparliament ratified the treaty anyway. In Hungary, Euroskeptic Prime Minister Viktor Orbns right-wing party controls the government. Yet while Orbn has criticized Brusselss immigration policy, he has never proposed exiting the European Union a suicidal prospect for a small country such as Hungary.

Britain is in a difficult negotiating position: Its economy and security are too deeply connected with Europe, its international bargaining power too limited, and its populists too politically constrained to sustain a hard Brexit. In theory, Britain could ultimately carry out its threat to leave the European Union, but in practice, more will remain the same than will change.

Andrew Moravcsik is professor of politics and public affairs at Princeton University and director of Princetons European Union Program.

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One year after the Brexit vote, Britain's relationship with the EU is unlikely to change much. Here's why. - Washington Post

‘You need a dose of reality’ Irish MEP in attack on Brussels over controversial tax reform – Express.co.uk

GETTY

Brian Hayes has issued a furious statement regarding attempts to unify business taxes for companies which trade in different European Union (EU) countries.

He said the EU was not being clear enough about how this proposal, known as the Common Consolidates Corporate Tax Base (CCCTB), would impact individual states like Ireland.

Mr Hayes described the situation as unacceptable in a post on his website.

The MEP for Dublin wrote: How can any Member State logically sign up to a proposal like this when they dont know the exact impact it will have on their tax revenues?

The Commission needs a dose of reality if they want this file to make real progress.

EPA

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German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President Emmanuel Macron (not pictured) give a press conference at the end of the second day of the European Council in Brussels, Belgium, 23 June 2017

He said Ireland should continue to look into the benefits of the system but more understanding was required from Brussels.

Mr Hayes continued: We have on one hand the Commission telling us that the CCCTB will deliver huge savings to the EU and all Member States.

On the other hand, the Commission now says that they are not in a position to do a proper evaluation of the overall impact of CCCTB on each Member State.

We must remember that this is the Commissions proposal, they have ownership of it. If they want to convince Member States to back it, they need to have the necessary evidence available.

GETTY

Mr Hayes has repeatedly expressed frustration at the EU, recently warning against threats to punish Britain with a harsh Brexit deal.

He said last month: We know that there will be Member States who want to punish the UK, especially given that the British government is taking a hard Brexit line.

GETTY

There needs to be a strong counter balance to this view and Ireland should take a leading role in rallying against this harmful course of action.

He also said the months and years ahead would be a battle for all sides but Brussels must resist playing hardball.

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'You need a dose of reality' Irish MEP in attack on Brussels over controversial tax reform - Express.co.uk

Google Could Be a Day Away From At Least $1 Billion EU Antitrust Fine – Wall Street Journal (subscription)


Wall Street Journal (subscription)
Google Could Be a Day Away From At Least $1 Billion EU Antitrust Fine
Wall Street Journal (subscription)
BRUSSELSThe European Union's antitrust watchdog will as soon as Tuesday hit Alphabet Inc.'s Google with a fine of more than 1 billion ($1.12 billion) and demand changes to the company's business practices, according to people familiar with the ...
Google to Face EU Antitrust Fine as Soon as TuesdayBloomberg
Google's $1 Billion EU Antitrust Fine Could Be ImminentFortune
Google could be days away from $1 billion EU antitrust fineFox Business

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Google Could Be a Day Away From At Least $1 Billion EU Antitrust Fine - Wall Street Journal (subscription)