Home

Brexit trade deal document scrutiny begins

Sam Blewett and David HughesAAP
Boris Johnson has been messaging Tory MPs on WhatsApp as he tries to get them all on side.
Camera IconBoris Johnson has been messaging Tory MPs on WhatsApp as he tries to get them all on side.

Scrutiny of the Brexit trade agreement with the European Union has begun after the full document was published less than a week before it is due to be implemented.

Both sides published the treaty running at up to 1255 pages on the morning of Boxing Day, as Boris Johnson works to persuade Eurosceptic Tories to back it as the "right deal" for the country.

The prime minister acknowledged "the devil is in the detail" but insisted it would stand up to inspection from the European Research Group (ERG) of Brexiteers, who will assemble a panel of lawyers to examine the full text.

His message to Tory MPs came as the EU's 27 member states indicated they will formally back the deal agreed by the UK with Brussels' officials within days.

Get in front of tomorrow's news for FREE

Journalism for the curious Australian across politics, business, culture and opinion.

READ NOW

EU ambassadors were briefed on the contents of the deal by Michel Barnier, who led Brussels' negotiating team in the talks with the UK.

After a highly unusual meeting on Christmas Day - with at least one diplomat wearing a Santa hat and another in a festive jumper - they agreed to write to the European Parliament to say they intend to take a decision on the provisional application of the deal.

The timing of the Christmas Eve deal forced politicians and officials in the UK and Brussels to tear up their plans.

MPs and peers will be called back to Westminster on December 30 to vote on the deal, but MEPs are not expected to approve it until the new year, meaning it will have to apply provisionally until they give it the green light.

The agreement will almost certainly be passed by Parliament, with Labour supporting it, as the alternative would be a chaotic no-deal situation on January 1.

But Johnson is keen to retain the support of the Eurosceptics on his benches who helped him reach No 10.

On Saturday, Conservative former cabinet minister Theresa Villiers told BBC Breakfast: "I very much hope this treaty stands up to scrutiny and I hope to be able to support it.

"But I was elected on a manifesto which promised to get Brexit done so I need to read (the document) before I can work out whether this actually enables us to do that or whether it traps us in the regulatory orbit of the European Union."

Johnson messaged Tory MPs on WhatsApp as he tried to get them all on side.

"I truly believe this is the right deal for the UK and the EU," he wrote.

"We have delivered on every one of our manifesto commitments: control of money, borders, laws, fish and all the rest.

"But even more important, I believe we now have a basis for long-term friendship and partnership with the EU as sovereign equals."

He added that "I know the devil is in the detail" but the deal will survive "ruthless" scrutiny from the "star chamber legal eagles".

Officials in Brussels and the capitals of EU states are also beginning to scrutinise the deal, with another meeting of ambassadors expected before the new year, possibly on December 28.

Get the latest news from thewest.com.au in your inbox.

Sign up for our emails