by Mark Docherty
Last week the Brexit saga took its most recent twist as the
House of Lords voted for an amendment to the Brexit bill which will seek to
guarantee the rights of EU citizens already living in the UK. The amendment was passed in the House of
Lords by 358 to 256 votes and the bill will now go back to the House of Commons
where MPs will have to vote on the amendment.
On the face of it, the amendment seems to be a perfectly
reasonable one as, realistically, EU citizens in the UK were always going to be
allowed to keep their rights because there would have been uproar if the
government had made any significant changes.
However, if the amendment does get passed in the Commons - and I think
it probably will - all that will happen is that the government will have had
one of their key bargaining tools taken away from them. As Theresa May said, it is impractical to
guarantee the rights of EU citizens in the UK before the rights of UK citizens
living in the EU have also been guaranteed.
The House of Lords are undoubtedly trying to do the right
thing in protecting EU nationals living in Britain, but in my view they are
simply weakening the UK’s position in negotiating any trade deal with the
EU. If the amendment is passed by the
Commons then the EU will be able to threaten Theresa May with a poor deal
without having any worries about needing to protect their own people. If the amendment is not passed, all that will
happen is that the leaders of EU nations and Mrs May will agree to guarantee
the right of everybody living in the Uk or EU already, but now there is no
incentive for the EU to make such a promise to the UK.
Angela Merkel was asked by Mrs May to remove the issue of
citizens’ rights from the post-Brexit negotiations, but the German Chancellor
refused which suggests that there is a real chance that Uk nationals living in
the EU will not have their rights protected, especially if the rights of EU
citizens in the same position are not negotiable. At a time when Britain needs all the
bargaining power possible, the last thing they need is to have one of the main
incentives for the EU to give them a positive trade deal taken away.
I have no doubt that the House of Lords is trying to do the
right thing with the amendment to the Article 50 bill, but i fear that the only
result will be weakening the country’s position in negotiations with the
European Union. Everybody wants the best
deal possible for the UK, so I feel we need to leave negotiations to the
government to try and do that, and the House of Lords getting involved can only
have a negative impact. I’m just hoping
that the Commons vote against the Lords’ amendment, as well as any other
amendments they make to the current bill, so that the government can have the
freedom to come back from negotiations with the very best deal possible for the
country.
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