Speech by Prime Minister Theresa May on Brexit - March 2
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INTRODUCTION I am grateful to the Lord Mayor and all his
team at the Mansion House for hosting us this afternoon. And
in the midst of the bad weather, I would just like to take a moment
before I begin my speech today to thank everyone in our country who
is going the extra mile to help people at this time. I think
of our emergency services and armed forces working to keep people
safe; our NHS staff, care workers, and all those keeping...Request free trial
INTRODUCTION
I am grateful to the Lord Mayor
and all his team at the Mansion House for hosting us this
afternoon.
And in the midst of the bad
weather, I would just like to take a moment before I begin my
speech today to thank everyone in our country who is going the
extra mile to help people at this time.
I think of our emergency
services and armed forces working to keep people safe; our NHS
staff, care workers, and all those keeping our public services
going; and the many volunteers who are giving their time to help
those in need.
Your contribution is a special
part of who we are as a country – and it is all the more
appreciated at a moment like this.
FIVE TESTS
Now I am here today to set out
my vision for the future economic partnership between the United
Kingdom and the European Union.
There have been many different
voices and views in the debate on what our new relationship with
the EU should look like. I have listened carefully to them
all.
But as we chart our way forward
with the EU, I want to take a moment to look back.
Eighteen months ago I stood in
Downing Street and addressed the nation for my first time as
Prime Minister.
I made this pledge then, to the
people that I serve:
I know you’re working around
the clock, I know you’re doing your best, and I know that
sometimes life can be a struggle.
The government I lead will be
driven not by the interests of the privileged few, but by
yours.
We will do everything we can to
give you more control over your lives.
When we take the big calls,
we’ll think not of the powerful, but you.
When we pass new laws, we’ll
listen not to the mighty but to you.
When it comes to taxes, we’ll
prioritise not the wealthy, but you.
When it comes to opportunity,
we won’t entrench the advantages of the fortunate
few.
We will do everything we can to
help anybody, whatever your background, to go as far as your
talents will take you.
We are living through an
important moment in our country’s history. As we leave the
European Union, we will forge a bold new positive role for
ourselves in the world, and we will make Britain a country that
works not for a privileged few, but for every one of
us.
That pledge, to the people of
our United Kingdom is what guides me in our negotiations with the
EU.
And for me that means five
things:
First, the agreement we reach
with the EU must respect the referendum. It was a vote to take
control of our borders, laws and money. And a vote for wider
change, so that no community in Britain would ever be left behind
again. But it was not a vote for a distant relationship with our
neighbours.
Second, the new agreement we
reach with the EU must endure. After Brexit both the UK and the
EU want to forge ahead with building a better future for our
people, not find ourselves back at the negotiating table because
things have broken down.
Third, it must protect people’s
jobs and security. People in the UK voted for our country to have
a new and different relationship with Europe, but while the means
may change our shared goals surely have not – to work together to
grow our economies and keep our people safe.
Fourth, it must be consistent
with the kind of country we want to be as we leave: a modern,
open, outward-looking, tolerant, European democracy. A nation of
pioneers, innovators, explorers and creators. A country that
celebrates our history and diversity, confident of our place in
the world; that meets its obligations to our near neighbours and
far off friends, and is proud to stand up for its
values.
And fifth, in doing all of
these things, it must strengthen our union of nations and our
union of people.
We must bring our country back
together, taking into account the views of everyone who cares
about this issue, from both sides of the debate. As Prime
Minister it is my duty to represent all of our United Kingdom,
England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland; north and south,
from coastal towns and rural villages to our great
cities.
So these are the five tests for
the deal that we will negotiate.
Implementing the decision of
the British people; reaching an enduring solution; protecting our
security and prosperity; delivering an outcome that is consistent
with the kind of country we want to be; and bringing our country
together, strengthening the precious union of all our
people.
A CRUCIAL MOMENT
We are now approaching a
crucial moment.
There is no escaping the
complexity of the task ahead of us. We must not only negotiate
our exit from an organisation that touches so many important
parts of our national life. We must also build a new and lasting
relationship while, given the uncertainty inherent in this
negotiation, preparing for every scenario.
But we are making real
progress.
At the end of last year, we
agreed the key elements of our withdrawal.
We are in the process of
turning that agreement into draft legal text. We have made
clear our concerns about the first draft the Commission published
on Wednesday – but no-one should be in any doubt about our
commitment to the Joint Report we agreed in
December.
We are close to agreement on
the terms of an implementation period which was a key element of
December’s deal.
Of course some points of
difference remain – but I am confident these can be resolved in
the days ahead.
Both the UK and the EU are
clear this implementation period must be time-limited and cannot
become a permanent solution. But it is vital to give governments,
businesses and citizens on both sides the time they need to
prepare for our new relationship.
With this agreed, I want both
sides to turn all our attention and efforts to that new
relationship.
But before we can do that, we
need to set out in more detail what relationship we want,
building on my Lancaster House and Florence
speeches.
So last month, I spoke in
Munich about the security partnership we seek.
And today, I want to talk about
the other pillar of that relationship: how we build our economic
partnership.
EXISTING MODELS WILL NOT
WORK
In my speech in Florence, I set
out why the existing models for economic partnership either do
not deliver the ambition we need or impose unsustainable
constraints on our democracy.
For example, the Norway model,
where we would stay in the single market, would mean having to
implement new EU legislation automatically and in its entirety –
and would also mean continued free movement.
Others have suggested we
negotiate a free trade agreement similar to that which Canada has
recently negotiated with the EU - or trade on World Trade
Organisation terms.
But these options would mean a
significant reduction in our access to each other’s markets
compared to that which we currently enjoy.
And this would mean customs and
regulatory checks at the border that would damage the integrated
supply chains that our industries depend on and be inconsistent
with the commitments that both we and the EU have made in respect
of Northern Ireland.
This is a wider issue in our
negotiations and I want to dwell on this for a
minute.
Successive British governments
have worked tirelessly - together with all the parties in
Northern Ireland and with the Irish Government - to bring about
the historic achievement of peace.
This is an achievement that we
should all be proud of, and protect. That is why I have
consistently put upholding the Belfast Agreement at the heart of
the UK’s approach.
Our departure from the EU
causes very particular challenges for Northern Ireland, and for
Ireland. We joined the EU together 45 years ago. It
is not surprising that our decision to leave has caused anxiety
and a desire for concrete solutions.
We have been clear all along
that we don’t want to go back to a hard border in Ireland. We
have ruled out any physical infrastructure at the border, or any
related checks and controls.
But it is not good enough to
say, ‘We won’t introduce a hard border; if the EU forces Ireland
to do it, that’s down to them’. We chose to leave; we have a
responsibility to help find a solution.
But we can’t do it on our own.
It is for all of us to work together.
And the Taoiseach and I agreed
when we met recently that our teams and the Commission should now
do just that.
I want to make one final point.
Just as it would be unacceptable to go back to a hard border
between Northern Ireland and Ireland, it would also be
unacceptable to break up the United Kingdom’s own common market
by creating a customs and regulatory border down the Irish
Sea.
My personal commitment to this
is clear.
As Prime Minister of the whole
United Kingdom, I am not going to let our departure from the
European Union do anything to set back the historic progress that
we have made in Northern Ireland – nor will I allow anything that
would damage the integrity of our precious Union.
FACING UP TO SOME HARD
FACTS
So existing models do not
provide the best way forward for either the UK or the
EU.
But before I turn to what a new
and better model might look like, I want to be straight with
people – because the reality is that we all need to face up to
some hard facts.
We are leaving the single
market. Life is going to be different. In certain ways, our
access to each other’s markets will be less than it is now. How
could the EU’s structure of rights and obligations be sustained,
if the UK - or any country - were allowed to enjoy all the
benefits without all of the obligations?
So we need to strike a new
balance. But we will not accept the rights of Canada and the
obligations of Norway.
The second hard fact is that
even after we have left the jurisdiction of the ECJ, EU law and
the decisions of the ECJ will continue to affect
us.
For a start, the ECJ determines
whether agreements the EU has struck are legal under the EU’s own
law – as the US found when the ECJ declared the Safe Harbor
Framework for data sharing invalid.
When we leave the EU, the
Withdrawal Bill will bring EU law into UK law. That means cases
will be determined in our courts. But, where appropriate, our
courts will continue to look at the ECJ’s judgments, as they do
for the appropriate jurisprudence of other countries’
courts.
And if, as part of our future
partnership, Parliament passes an identical law to an EU law, it
may make sense for our courts to look at the appropriate ECJ
judgments so that we both interpret those laws
consistently.
As I said in Munich, if we
agree that the UK should continue to participate in an EU agency
the UK would have to respect the remit of the ECJ in that
regard.
But, in the future, the EU
treaties and hence EU law will no longer apply in the UK. The
agreement we reach must therefore respect the sovereignty of both
the UK and the EU’s legal orders. That means the jurisdiction of
the ECJ in the UK must end. It also means that the ultimate
arbiter of disputes about our future partnership cannot be the
court of either party.
The next hard fact is this. If
we want good access to each other’s markets, it has to be on fair
terms. As with any trade agreement, we must accept the need for
binding commitments – for example, we may choose to commit some
areas of our regulations like state aid and competition to
remaining in step with the EU’s.
The UK drove much of the policy
in this area and we have much to gain from maintaining proper
disciplines on the use of subsidies and on anti-competitive
practices.
Furthermore, as I said in
Florence, we share the same set of fundamental beliefs; a belief
in free trade, rigorous and fair competition, strong consumer
rights, and that trying to beat other countries’ industries by
unfairly subsidising one’s own is a serious
mistake.
And in other areas like
workers’ rights or the environment, the EU should be confident
that we will not engage in a race to the bottom in the standards
and protections we set. There is no serious political
constituency in the UK which would support this – quite the
opposite.
Finally, we need to resolve the
tensions between some of our key objectives.
We want the freedom to
negotiate trade agreements with other countries around the
world. We want to take back control of our laws. We
also want as frictionless a border as possible between us and the
EU - so that we don’t damage the integrated supply chains our
industries depend on and don’t have a hard border between
Northern Ireland and Ireland.
But there are some tensions in
the EU’s position too – and some hard facts for them to face as
well.
The Commission has suggested
that the only option available to the UK is an ‘off the shelf’
model.
But, at the same time, they
have also said that in certain areas none of the EU’s third
country agreements would be appropriate.
And the European Council’s
Guidelines aspire to a balanced, ambitious, and wide-ranging
deal, with common rules in a number of areas to ensure fair and
open competition.
This would not be delivered by
a Canada-style deal – which would not give them the breadth or
depth of market access that they want.
And it is hard to see how it
would be in the EU’s interests for the UK’s regulatory standards
to be as different as Canada’s.
Finally, we both need to face
the fact that this is a negotiation and neither of us can have
exactly what we want.
FUTURE ECONOMIC
PARTNERSHIP
But I am confident we can reach
agreement.
We both want good access to
each other’s markets; we want competition between us to be fair
and open; and we want reliable, transparent means of verifying we
are meeting our commitments and resolving disputes.
But what is clear is that for
us both to meet our objectives we need to look beyond the
precedents, and find a new balance.
As on security, what I am
seeking is a relationship that goes beyond the transactional to
one where we support each other’s interests.
So I want the broadest and
deepest possible partnership – covering more sectors and
co-operating more fully than any Free Trade Agreement anywhere in
the world today. And as I will go on to describe we will also
need agreements in a range of areas covering the breadth of our
relationship.
I believe this is achievable
because it is in the EU’s interests as well as
ours.
The EU is the UK’s biggest
market – and of course the UK is also a big market for the EU.
And furthermore, we have a unique starting point, where on day
one we both have the same laws and rules.
So rather than having to bring
two different systems closer together, the task will be to manage
the relationship once we are two separate legal
systems.
To do so, and to realise this
level of ambition, there are five foundations that must underpin
our trading relationship.
First, our agreement will need
reciprocal binding commitments to ensure fair and open
competition.
Such agreements are part and
parcel of any trade agreement. After all, why would any country
enter into a privileged economic partnership without any means of
redress if the other party engaged in anti-competitive
practices?
But the level of integration
between the UK and EU markets and our geographical proximity mean
these reciprocal commitments will be particularly important in
ensuring that UK business can compete fairly in EU markets and
vice versa.
A deep and comprehensive
agreement with the EU will therefore need to include commitments
reflecting the extent to which the UK and EU economies are
entwined.
Second, we will need an
arbitration mechanism that is completely independent – something
which, again, is common to Free Trade Agreements.
This will ensure that any
disagreements about the purpose or scope of the agreement can be
resolved fairly and promptly.
Third, given the close
relationship we envisage, we will need to have an ongoing
dialogue with the EU, and to ensure we have the means to consult
each other regularly.
In particular we will want to
make sure our regulators continue to work together; as they do
with regulators internationally. This will be essential for
everything from getting new drugs to patients quickly to
maintaining financial stability. We start from the place where
our regulators already have deep and long-standing relationships.
So the task is maintaining that trust; not building it in the
first place.
Fourth, we will need an
arrangement for data protection.
I made this point in Munich in
relation to our security relationship. But the free flow of data
is also critical for both sides in any modern trading
relationship too. The UK has exceptionally high standards of data
protection. And we want to secure an agreement with the EU that
provides the stability and confidence for EU and UK business and
individuals to achieve our aims in maintaining and developing the
UK's strong trading and economic links with the EU.
That is why we will be seeking
more than just an adequacy arrangement and want to see an
appropriate ongoing role for the UK's Information Commissioner's
Office. This will ensure UK businesses are effectively
represented under the EU’s new ‘one stop shop’ mechanism for
resolving data protection disputes.
And fifth, we must maintain the
links between our people.
EU citizens are an integral
part of the economic, cultural and social fabric of our country.
I know that UK nationals are viewed in entirely the same way by
communities across the EU. And this is why at every stage of
these negotiations, I have put the interests of EU citizens and
UK nationals at the heart of our approach.
We are clear that as we leave
the EU, free movement of people will come to an end and we will
control the number of people who come to live in our
country.
But UK citizens will still want
to work and study in EU countries – just as EU citizens will want
to do the same here, helping to shape and drive growth,
innovation and enterprise.
Indeed, businesses across the
EU and the UK must be able to attract and employ the people they
need. And we are open to discussing how to facilitate these
valuable links.
Reciprocal commitments to
ensure fair and open competition, an independent arbitration
mechanism, an ongoing dialogue, data protection arrangements and
maintaining the links between our people. These are the
foundations that underpin the ambition of this unique and
unprecedented partnership.
It will then need to be
tailored to the needs of our economies.
This follows the approach the
EU has taken with its trade agreements in the past - and indeed
with its own single market as it has developed.
The EU’s agreement with Ukraine
sees it align with the EU in some areas but not others. The EU’s
agreement with South Korea contains provisions to recognise each
others’ approvals for new car models, whereas their agreement
with Canada does not. Equally, the EU’s agreement with Canada
contains provisions to recognise each others’ testing on
machinery; its agreement with South Korea does not.
The EU itself is rightly taking
a tailored approach in what it is seeking with the UK. For
example, on fisheries, the Commission has been clear that no
precedents exist for the sort of access it wants from the
UK.
The fact is that every Free
Trade Agreement has varying market access depending on the
respective interests of the countries involved. If this is
cherry-picking, then every trade arrangement is
cherry-picking.
Moreover, with all its
neighbours the EU has varying levels of access to the Single
Market, depending on the obligations those neighbours are willing
to undertake.
What would be cherry-picking
would be if we were to seek a deal where our rights and
obligations were not held in balance.
And I have been categorically
clear that is not what we are going to do.
I think it is pragmatic common
sense that we should work together to deliver the best outcome
for both sides.
GOODS
Let me start with how we do
this for goods.
This is the area where the
single market is most established and both the UK and the EU have
a strong commercial interest in preserving integrated supply
chains that have built up over forty years of our
membership.
When it comes to goods, a
fundamental principle in our negotiating strategy should be that
trade at the UK-EU border should be as frictionless as
possible.
That means we don’t want to see
the introduction of any tariffs or quotas. And – as the Secretary
of State for Exiting the European Union set out in his speech in
Vienna last week - we must ensure that, as now, products only
need to undergo one series of approvals, in one country, to show
that they meet the required regulatory standards.
To achieve this we will need a
comprehensive system of mutual recognition.
The UK will need to make a
strong commitment that its regulatory standards will remain as
high as the EU’s. That commitment, in practice, will mean that UK
and EU regulatory standards will remain substantially similar in
the future.
Many of these regulatory
standards are themselves underpinned by international standards
set by non-EU bodies of which we will remain a member – such as
the UN Economic Commission for Europe, which sets vehicle safety
standards. Countries around the world, including Turkey, South
Africa, South Korea, Japan and Russia, are party to the
agreement.
As I said in my speech in
Florence this could be achieved in different ways.
Our default is that UK law may
not necessarily be identical to EU law, but it should achieve the
same outcomes.
In some cases Parliament might
choose to pass an identical law – businesses who export to the EU
tell us that it is strongly in their interest to have a single
set of regulatory standards that mean they can sell into the UK
and EU markets.
If the Parliament of the day
decided not to achieve the same outcomes as EU law, it would be
in the knowledge that there may be consequences for our market
access.
And there will need to be an
independent mechanism to oversee these
arrangements.
We will also want to explore
with the EU, the terms on which the UK could remain part of EU
agencies such as those that are critical for the chemicals,
medicines and aerospace industries: the European Medicines
Agency, the European Chemicals Agency, and the European Aviation
Safety Agency.
We would, of course, accept
that this would mean abiding by the rules of those agencies and
making an appropriate financial contribution.
I want to explain what I
believe the benefits of this approach could be, both for us and
the EU.
First, associate membership of
these agencies is the only way to meet our objective of ensuring
that these products only need to undergo one series of approvals,
in one country.
Second, these agencies have a
critical role in setting and enforcing relevant rules. And if we
were able to negotiate associate membership we would be able to
ensure that we could continue to provide our technical expertise.
Third, associate membership
could permit UK firms to resolve certain challenges related to
the agencies through UK courts rather than the ECJ.
For example, in the case of
Switzerland, associate membership of the European Aviation Safety
Agency means that airworthiness certifications are granted by its
own aviation authority, and disputes are resolved through its
courts. Without its membership, Swiss airlines would need to gain
their certifications through another member state or through the
Agency, and any dispute would need to be resolved through the
ECJ.
Fourth it would bring other
benefits too. For example, membership of the European Medicines
Agency would mean investment in new innovative medicines
continuing in the UK, and it would mean these medicines getting
to patients faster as firms prioritise larger markets when they
start the lengthy process of seeking authorisations. But it would
also be good for the EU because the UK regulator assesses more
new medicines than any other member state. And the EU would
continue to access the expertise of the UK’s world-leading
universities.
And, of course, Parliament
would remain ultimately sovereign. It could decide not to accept
these rules, but with consequences for our membership of the
relevant agency and linked market access rights.
Lastly to achieve as
frictionless a border as possible and to avoid a hard border
between Northern Ireland and Ireland, we also need an agreement
on customs.
The UK has been clear it is
leaving the Customs Union.
The EU has also formed a
customs union with some other countries.
But those arrangements, if
applied to the UK, would mean the EU setting the UK’s external
tariffs, being able to let other countries sell more into the UK
without making it any easier for us to sell more to them, or the
UK signing up to the Common Commercial Policy. That would not be
compatible with a meaningful independent trade policy. It would
mean we had less control than we do now over our trade in the
world. Neither Leave nor Remain voters would want
that.
So we have thought seriously
about how our commitment to a frictionless border can best be
delivered. And last year, we set out two potential options for
our customs arrangement.
Option one is a customs
partnership between the UK and the EU. At the border, the UK
would mirror the EU’s requirements for imports from the rest of
the world, applying the same tariffs and the same rules of origin
as the EU for those goods arriving in the UK and intended for the
EU. By following this approach, we would know that all goods
entering the EU via the UK pay the right EU duties, removing the
need for customs processes at the UK-EU border.
But, importantly, we would put
in place a mechanism so that the UK would also be able to apply
its own tariffs and trade policy for goods intended for the UK
market. As we have set out previously, this would require the
means to ensure that both sides can trust the system and a robust
enforcement mechanism.
Option two would be a highly
streamlined customs arrangement, where we would jointly agree to
implement a range of measures to minimise frictions to trade,
together with specific provisions for Northern
Ireland.
First, measures to ensure the
requirements for moving goods across borders are as simple as
possible.
This means we should continue
to waive the requirement for entry and exit declarations for
goods moving between the UK and the EU.
And we should allow goods
moving between the UK and the rest of the world to travel through
the EU without paying EU duties and vice versa.
Second, measures to reduce the
risk of delays at ports and airports. For example, recognising
each other’s “trusted traders” schemes and drawing on the most
advanced IT solutions so that vehicles do not need to stop at the
border.
Third, we should continue our
cooperation to mitigate customs duty and security
risks.
And fourth, measures to reduce
the cost and burden of complying with customs administrative
requirements, including by maximising the use of
automation.
And recognising the unique
circumstances in Northern Ireland, and our shared commitments to
avoiding a hard border, we should consider further specific
measures.
80% of North-South trade is
carried out by micro, small and medium sized
businesses.
So for smaller traders – who as
members of the community are most affected but whose economic
role is not systemically significant for the EU market - we would
allow them to continue to operate as they do currently, with no
new restrictions.
And for larger traders we would
introduce streamlined processes, including a trusted trader
scheme that would be consistent with our
commitments.
Both of these options for our
future customs arrangement would leave the UK free to determine
its own tariffs with third countries - which would simply not be
possible in a customs union.
I recognise that some of these
ideas depend on technology, robust systems to ensure trust and
confidence, as well as goodwill – but they are serious and merit
consideration by all sides.
So to conclude on goods, a
fundamental principle in our negotiating strategy is that trade
at the UK-EU border should be as frictionless as possible with no
hard border between Northern Ireland and Ireland.
We believe this can be achieved
via a commitment to ensure that the relevant UK regulatory
standards remain at least as high as the EU’s and a customs
arrangement.
We recognise this would
constrain our ability to lower regulatory standards for
industrial goods. But in practice we are unlikely to want to
reduce our standards: not least because the British public would
rightly punish any government that did so at the ballot
box.
AGRIFOOD AND
FISHERIES
This approach to trade in goods
is important for agriculture, food and drinks – but here other
considerations also apply.
We are leaving the Common
Agricultural Policy and will want to take the opportunity that
brings to reform our agriculture and fisheries
management.
The UK has among the highest
environmental and animal welfare standards of any nation on
earth. As we leave the EU we will uphold environmental standards
and go further to protect our shared natural heritage. And I
fully expect that our standards will remain at least as high as
the EU’s.
But it will be particularly
important to secure flexibility here to ensure we can make the
most of the opportunities presented by our withdrawal from the EU
for our farmers and exporters.
We are also leaving the Common
Fisheries Policy.
The UK will regain control over
our domestic fisheries management rules and access to our
waters.
But as part of our economic
partnership we will want to continue to work together to manage
shared stocks in a sustainable way and to agree reciprocal access
to waters and a fairer allocation of fishing opportunities for
the UK fishing industry.
And we will also want to ensure
open markets for each other’s products.
SERVICES
Just as our partnership in
goods needs to be deeper than any other Free Trade Agreement, so
in services we have the opportunity to break new ground with a
broader agreement than ever before.
We recognise that certain
aspects of trade in services are intrinsically linked to the
single market and therefore our market access in these areas will
need to be different.
But we should only allow new
barriers to be introduced where absolutely
necessary.
We don’t want to discriminate
against EU service providers in the UK. And we wouldn’t want the
EU to discriminate against UK service providers.
So we want to limit the number
of barriers that could prevent UK firms from setting up in the EU
and vice versa, and agree an appropriate labour mobility
framework that enables UK businesses and self-employed
professionals to travel to the EU to provide services to clients
in person and that allows UK businesses to provide services to
the EU over the phone or the internet. And we want to do the same
for EU firms providing services to the UK.
And given that UK
qualifications are already recognised across the EU and vice
versa – it would make sense to continue to recognise each other’s
qualifications in the future.
There are two areas which have
never been covered in a Free Trade Agreement in any meaningful
way before – broadcasting and, despite the EU’s own best efforts
in the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership, financial
services.
But we have some ideas for how
we can do this – and it is in all our interests to explore
these.
On broadcasting, we recognise
that we cannot have exactly the same arrangements with the EU as
we do now. Currently, because of the “country of origin”
principle, a company based in the UK can be licenced by Ofcom and
broadcast into any EU member state and vice versa.
The relevant directive will not
apply to the UK, as we leave the EU, and relying solely on
precedents will hurt consumers and businesses on both
sides.
The UK’s creative hub leads to
the development of products that European consumers want - the UK
currently provides around 30% of the channels available in the
EU. But equally, many UK companies have pan-European ownership,
and there are 35 channels and on-demand services, which are
offered in the UK but licensed in the EU.
So we should explore creative
options with an open mind, including mutual recognition which
would allow for continued transfrontier broadcasting -
recognising the enriching role that British broadcasters and
programme makers play, not only in British - but more broadly in
our common European - culture.
Similarly, on financial
services, the Chancellor will be setting out next week how
financial services can and should be part of a deep and
comprehensive partnership. We are not looking for passporting
because we understand this is intrinsic to the single market of
which we would no longer be a member. It would also require us to
be subject to a single rule book, over which we would have no
say.
The UK has responsibility for
the financial stability of the world’s most significant financial
centre, and our taxpayers bear the risk, so it would be
unrealistic for us to implement new EU legislation automatically
and in its entirety.
But with UK located banks
underwriting around half of the debt and equity issued by EU
companies and providing more than £1.1 trillion of cross-border
lending to the rest of the EU in 2015 alone, this is a clear
example of where only looking at precedent would hurt both the UK
and EU economies.
As in other areas of the future
economic partnership, our goal should be to establish the ability
to access each others’ markets, based on the UK and EU
maintaining the same regulatory outcomes over time, with a
mechanism for determining proportionate consequences where they
are not maintained. But given the highly regulated nature of
financial services, and our shared desire to manage financial
stability risks, we would need a collaborative, objective
framework that is reciprocal, mutually agreed, and permanent and
therefore reliable for businesses.
There are many other areas
where the UK and EU economies are closely linked – including
energy, transport, digital, law, science and innovation, and
education and culture.
On energy, we will want to
secure broad energy co-operation with the EU. This includes
protecting the single electricity market across Ireland and
Northern Ireland - and exploring options for the UK’s continued
participation in the EU’s internal energy market. We also believe
it is of benefit to both sides for the UK to have a close
association with Euratom.
On transport, we will want to
ensure the continuity of air, maritime and rail services; and we
will want to protect the rights of road hauliers to access the EU
market and vice versa.
On digital, the UK will not be
part of the EU's Digital Single Market, which will continue to
develop after our withdrawal from the EU. This is a fast
evolving, innovative sector, in which the UK is a world leader.
So it will be particularly important to have domestic
flexibility, to ensure the regulatory environment can always
respond nimbly and ambitiously to new developments.
We will want our agreement to
cover civil judicial cooperation, where the EU has already shown
that it can reach agreement with non-member states, such as
through the Lugano Convention, although we would want a broader
agreement that reflects our unique starting point. And our
agreement will also need to cover company law and intellectual
property, to provide further legal certainty and
coherence.
The UK is also committed to
establishing a far-reaching science and innovation pact with the
EU, facilitating the exchange of ideas and researchers. This
would enable the UK to participate in key programmes alongside
our EU partners.
And we want to take a similar
approach to educational and cultural programmes, to promote our
shared values and enhance our intellectual strength in the world
- again making an ongoing contribution to cover our fair share of
the costs involved.
In all these areas, bold and
creative thinking can deliver new agreements that are in the very
best interests of all our people - both in the UK and across the
EU.
And in the face of a worrying
rise in protectionism, I believe such agreements can enable us to
set an example to the world.
POST BREXIT
BRITAIN
For the world is
watching.
We should not think of our
leaving the EU as marking an ending, as much as a new beginning
for the United Kingdom and our relationship with our European
allies.
Change is not to be feared, so
long as we face it with a clear-sighted determination to act for
the common good.
Nor is Brexit an end in
itself.
Rather, it must be the means by
which we reaffirm Britain’s place in the world and renew the ties
that bind us here at home. And I know that the United Kingdom I
treasure can emerge from this process a stronger, more cohesive
nation.
A United Kingdom which is a
cradle for innovation; a leader in the industries of the future;
a champion of free trade, based on high standards; a modern,
outward-looking, tolerant country, proud of our values and
confident of our place in the world.
This is an optimistic and
confident future which can unite us all.
A Global Britain which thrives
in the world by forging a bold and comprehensive economic
partnership with our neighbours in the EU; and reaches out beyond
our continent, to trade with nations across the
globe.
The approach I have set out
today would: implement the referendum result, provide an enduring
solution, protect our security and prosperity, helps us build the
kind of country we want to be, and bring our country together by
commanding the confidence of those who voted Leave and those who
voted Remain. It is an approach to deliver for the whole of our
United Kingdom and our wider family of overseas
territories.
I am in no doubt that whatever
agreement we reach with the EU, our future is bright. The
stability and continuity of centuries of self-government, our
commitment to freedom under the rule of law, our belief in
enterprise and innovation, but above all, the talent and genius
of all our people – and especially our young people – are the
seeds of our success in the future, as they have been the
guarantors of our success in the past.
I look forward to discussing
our future partnership with our European friends. Because
although we are leaving the EU – and in that regard we will
become separate – we are all still European and will stay linked
by the many ties and values we have in common. And because it is
only by working together that we will find solutions that work
for all our peoples.
Yes, there will be ups and
downs in the months ahead. As in any negotiation, no-one
will get everything they want. We will not be buffeted by the
demands to talk tough or threaten a walk out. Just as we will not
accept the counsels of despair that this simply cannot be done.
We will move forward by calm, patient discussion of each other’s
positions. It is my responsibility as Prime Minister to
provide that leadership for our country at this crucial time. By
following the course I have set out today, I am confident we will
get there and deliver the right outcome for Britain and the
EU.
A generation from now what will
be remembered is not the rough and tumble of negotiation but
whether we reached an enduring solution cast in the interests of
the people we are all here to serve.
So my message to our friends in
Europe is clear.
We know what we
want.
We understand your
principles.
We have a shared interest in
getting this right.
So let’s get on with
it.
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