How about we start this lovely morning with a trip down memory lane?
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You'll recall the Maastricht treaty: bane of eurosceptics, source of so many woes, embodiment of federal visions? Whatever
Today I'm more interested in its signing
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If you think back to then (those of you old enough to remember the early 1990s), you probably think about this: the late-night debates and arguments in 9-10 Dec at the #EUCO 3/
This was the moment of Major's "game, set and match" comment, as he secured opt-outs on the single currency, JHA and the social provisions (resulting in the Social Charter)
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"so what" you say, "that was different from anything May might do"
And you'd be right.
However, that's not the point
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As any good textbook will tell you [cough], the Maastricht Treaty wasn't signed at that meeting, but on 7 Feb the following year
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The reason? Precisely that the #EUCO had made a bunch of decisions that needed to be turned into legal text
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That included Major's concessions, but also other stuff that bubbled up. @AndrewDuffEU wrote soon after on this
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All of this meant that despite principals' agreement on a deal, that was not the same as a legal text that could be signed and then sent for ratification
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So your image of signature should really be that of Hurd and Maude in a room decorated with curtain material, not a bullish Major
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The point, I hope, is clear: holding out for a last minute in Art.50 is problematic for many reasons, but a simple one is that - given the hard deadline (which Maastricht didn't have) - you can't turn words into legal text instantaneously
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and here endth the trip
/end
@AndrewDuffEU I can't find a copy of the Belmont European Policy Centre book noted in footnote 2 anywhere: would be v.interested to read about the other issues involved here. Do you have a copy?
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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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