This is a good starting point for thinking about what #EUCO Is going to do this week:
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by @Usherwood view original on Twitter
There are two, interlinked issues at play this week.
Desire to get a WA deal and lack of UK suggestions on how to get to one
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EU, like HMG, wants a deal very much, because no-deal is both intrinsically bad and it'll add to the already overly-long list of problems on its plate
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But HMG has only producing one substantive suggestion - on customs - since early spring. Nothing on IE dimension, or governance, or the other outstanding issues.
And nothing will come until the WP next month
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So what's the EU to do?
(And it is the EU. UK won't get to shape #EUCO conclusions on this)
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One part is suggested by @nick_gutteridge piece: hold out olive branch/carrot to UK, by promising richer deal if UK moves on red lines.
Has been done before, but wording might be more prominent than last time
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However, that has to be long game for eu: time is short, so choice has to be made now about next steps.
Key Q is whether to set explicit timeframe for progress to allow for Oct deal, or already now retrench to final act later on
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Precedent suggests push will be to stick to original timetable until last moment: have to assume more problems to come, so why give away any time now?
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Therefore, the main choice facing EU will be balance of admonition and encouragement in conclusions: need to help get HMG over the line, but w/o compromising own position
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Giving extent to which EU had tried to sound +ve about Customs proposals, might expect similar appeals/boilerplate statements about progress and intent
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However, that shouldn't obscure that things are alright getting very tight indeed to reach a deal in Oct, and even Dec will require a real change of gear
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So comments around the conclusions should be attended to too. Note recent ramping-up of language (and work) to prep EU for no-deal
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I'd assume that if #EUCO leaders reference the coming WP a lot, then they'll be expecting it to deliver solutions, so making the next week's vital for success of Art.50
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Realistically, if WP fails to deliver then summer will be very thin and autumn will be utterly frantic
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In sum #EUCO isn't going to deliver much beyond some words: Q is which ones
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Possibly more for me than for you, let's try to pull this week together a bit:
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Let's start with the EU side
Having largely kept heads down during conference season, yesterday's Tusk/Varadkar presser demonstrated that EU is keeping the pressure on
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The tension seems to be between COM/EUCO and IE, as @pmdfoster explained well yesterday: IE making conciliatory noises, central EU bodies pushing EU integrity line
Back in Sept, there was much talk about this being a crunch point in the UK debate, as May would come under fire for Chequers and there would be scope for changes/realignments/whatever
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Certainly that first bit has happened, with numerous op-eds over the weekend and assorted fringe events (inc. yesterday's Johnson speech)
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