Brexit - Conservative Handling of Brexit

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In a referendum on 23 June 2016, 51.9% of the participating UK electorate voted to leave the EU, out of a turnout of 72.2%. On 29 March 2017, the UK government invoked Article 50 of the Treaty on the European Union. The UK is thus due to leave the EU at midnight on 30 March 2019 Central European Time (11 pm on 29 March 2019 GMT)

The transitional period will last from Brexit day on 29 March 2019 to 31 December 2020 under the following terms:
 * EU citizens arriving in the UK between these two dates will enjoy the same rights and guarantees as those who arrive before Brexit. The same will apply to UK on the continent
 * The UK will be able to negotiate, sign and ratify its own trade deals during the transition period
 * The UK will still be party to existing EU trade deals with other countries
 * The UK's share of fishing catch will be guaranteed during transition but UK will effectively remain part of the Common Fisheries Policy, yet without a direct say in its rules, until the end of 2020
 * Northern Ireland will effectively stay in parts of the single market and the customs union in the absence of other solutions to avoid a hard border with the Republic of Ireland

This page does not attempt to cover the rights and wrongs of leaving the EU, only to draw attention to how badly the Conservative government as handled the whole process and by doing so, further damaged the livelihoods of the British people. It also doesn't blame the present poverty and social problems on Brexit. These events were happening before Brexit and would have continued should the UK voted to remain. Whether we'll get poorer faster can be debated, but certainly the Tory management of the process can only worsen the country's outlook.

Triggering Article 50
There is a simple rule before embarking on any medium to large project; ensure that you know where you intend to end up prior to committing to a completion date. This is critical to the success of any reasonably complex project and was an absolute must for Brexit, which is one of the most complex projects in modern times. The number of parties with a stake in the outcome ensures that extreme care should have been applied prior to Article 50 being triggered.

For any project to be a success there are things that must be agreed in advance, whether the other parties involved are willing or not. So for example if the party you are negotiating with is unwilling to negotiate a starting point or terms of engagement suitable to your aims, then it is imperative that you clearly document all your aims, timings and ways of working prior to committing to project. With these tools at your disposal you can as much as is possible drive the outcome that best suits you.

Prior to triggering article 50 the following documents should, as a minimum, have been in place and discussed with the European Union:

Statement of Work (SOW)
This is an agreement between two parties that details the activities to take place. In this case it should be a document created by the UK government and agreed between UK parliament and the European Union prior to article 50 being triggered.

Purpose
Regardless of views on whether there is any purpose to Brexit, it does not take away from the fact that a purpose should be understand and agreed prior to setting out to deliver. This needs to be detailed to the extent that both parties can understand the expectations of the UK parliament. The key message in this section of the SOW is why is this work going ahead? Government serve us (or should) and as stakeholders we should be privy to this information. “Brexit means Brexit” does not meet the requirements of this section.

Scope of Work
In the case of Brexit this required a high level of detail prior to article 50 being triggered due to the level of complexity and in particular because this process was not two parties necessarily agreeing an amicable outcome. It does not serve the EU well to give the UK all that it wants, so it was imperative to gain formal agreement at the start about what both parties would agree to during negotiation. Both parties (UK & EU) have much to lose if the process fails to be carried out successfully. This section should have included every agency impacted and the a description of those impacts. This section was one of the most important to go out for consultation with all impacted agencies, whether that be Gibraltar, Northern Ireland or such agencies / agreements such as the European Arrest Warrant or Fisheries Policy. This was key to understanding the level of work required and so ensure that reasonable timescales were planned for.

Location of Work
Where people will meet to do the work. Not only negotiators, but the UK team. This focuses the mind on the complexity of putting a working team in place.

Timescale
On a project of this nature, where once article 50 was triggered, there is a final date that must be met, it is imperative not to start until it is clear that deliverables can be met. An example of the governments ineptitude in this area, is that having triggered article 50, they then introduced the idea of an Implementation Period (based on the Labour policy of a Transition Period). Having not agreed an implementation period in a SOW has meant that the government is reliant on the EU agreeing to it at the 11th hour. This has handed the whip hand to the EU. If the SOW work had been carried out in advance, the government could have set a realistic date for triggering article 50 and faced down EU protestations at the delay.

Deliverables Schedule
This section should have included a high level project plan, with:


 * What is due and when
 * Main tasks and their start and end date
 * Overlapping tasks
 * Interdependencies
 * Who is responsible for delivery

Normally a SOW would only need a high level plan in the early stages, but due to the difficulties that Brexit presents and due to the drop dead date written into article 50, the SOW should have included a very detailed delivery plan. This would have been a separate document, but would have formed part of the SOW sign off.

This section should also include the following table:
 * Who is accountable for delivery
 * Who is a consult on delivery (UK Parliament, Business, Unions, Public Service Organisations & EU Parliament for example)
 * Who should be informed (UK & EU public)

Further to the above documents, there should have been a communication plan. This would detail the methods of communicating, who will be communicated with and what level of detail will be provided. This would also detail what the intended result (deliverable) of that communication should be.

Legal Framework
Many demands raised by the UK government have fallen foul of the EU legal framework. In short the demand cannot be met as it contravenes EU law. This should have been covered in an SOW and where EU law needed to be changed to meet the demand, a likelihood of success and timescale should have been detailed.

Also this section should have included a clear procedure for dispute handling during the negotiation process. This would have avoided the shot gun style media show boating that has been a feature of this negotiation. What a group of politicians expressed as their view on a particularly aspect of the targeted outcome, it would be irrelevant to the overall agreed process.

Further to the above, and of far more importance, are the issues around the legality of triggering article 50. Nearly 18 months into the process and there is still a case pending on whether the whole process is legal.

Acceptance Criteria
This should have detailed the exact process of sign off for all the activity and any testing that would be required in advance of the UK leaving the EU. It seems not to occurred to either party in these negotiations that testing the outcome of a given decision should be considered in advance.

Payment Schedule
Being as the government was insistent that there would be no exit bill to be paid and then had to face the reality that they are legally bound to meet previous commitments, it was important to have agreed these prior to triggering article 50. Even to this day it is not being made clear to the public what we will eventually end up paying and we are open to the EU adding new demands at the last minute.