FOR the previous few months Theresa Could and her ministers have allowed some ambiguities to swirl round Britain’s future relationship with the European Union. Sure, she confirmed in her convention speech in October, Brexit would take it past the jurisdiction of the European Court docket of Justice and the EU’s free motion regime. Some discovered this difficult to sq. with stories that particular preparations can be searched for elements of the British economic system (just like the Metropolis of London and carmaking) or with Mrs Could’s assurance to companies that she would search to keep away from a “cliff edge” on Britain’s exit from the membership. Many in different European capitals questioned whether or not Britain would depart in any respect.

To the extent that such uncertainties continued regardless of her limitless choruses of “Brexit means Brexit”, at a speech to EU ambassadors in London on January seventeenth Mrs Could put them to the sword. Britain will go away the one market and the customs union, and can thus be capable to negotiate its personal commerce offers with third-party economies. It is not going to pay “enormous sums” to safe sectoral entry (a phrase whose exact that means now issues rather a lot). She desires this all wrapped up throughout the two years permitted by Article 50, the exit course of she’s going to launch by the top of March; ideally with a “phased strategy of implementation” afterwards protecting issues like immigration controls and monetary regulation. In different phrases there shall be no formal transitional interval. There’ll, actually, be a cliff fringe of types.

This displays two realities to which policymakers in Britain and on the continent should now get accustomed. First, Mrs Could unequivocally interprets the vote for Brexit as a vote for decrease immigration even at the price of some prosperity. By no means thoughts that the polling proof supporting this assumption is restricted: such is now the transaction on the coronary heart of the brand new authorities’s political technique. Second, even permitting for a certain quantity of expectation-management, it appears Mrs Could is just not inserting enormous significance on the end result of the talks. She desires a complete free-trade settlement (FTA) primarily based on the one just lately signed between the EU and Canada; however the place “CETA” took about seven years to barter, she has permitted herself two. She mentioned that this would possibly cowl finance and automobiles, but in addition recognised the significance the EU locations on the “4 freedoms” (making freedom of motion a situation of market membership), suggesting a realism in regards to the extent of any such FTA within the slender time constraints out there. Mrs May additionally desires some affiliate membership of the customs union however declared herself relaxed in regards to the particulars. Briefly: she’s going to do her finest, but when the talks come to little or nothing, so be it.

In fact, they are going to be powerful. The prime minister will need firstly to maximise the scope of the FTA, secondly to maximise the advantages of any affiliate relationship with the customs union and thirdly to minimise the precipitousness of the cliff off which British corporations will fly in 2019. She hinted at how she supposed to take action, characterising the nation’s present defence and safety co-operation with the continent as a potential negotiating chip and warning that her authorities might “change the premise of Britain’s financial mannequin” (i.e. flip it right into a tax haven) if the EU doesn’t play good. She additionally mentioned that she can be keen to stroll out on the talks: “no deal…is best than a foul deal.”

So Britain’s economic system is in for a tough journey and, although the federal government will attempt to clean it out, the precedence is getting the nation out of the EU in essentially the most full and speedy method potential. If the value of this precedence is financial ache, then pay Britain should. All of which provides corporations a few of the certainty they’ve craved since June twenty third: these basically reliant on continental provide chains or the EU “passport” for monetary providers, say, now have the inexperienced mild to plan their complete or partial relocation. It additionally means the Brexit talks shall be easier and even perhaps much less fractious than they could have been had Britain tried to “have its cake and eat it”. The nation will eat its cake and stay with an empty plate afterwards. Brexit actually does imply Brexit.