Gibraltar and Post-Brexit

Brussels approves the mandate to negotiate with London the demolition of the Frontier at Gibraltar. (Direct translation, so it does not mean the actual demolition of the frontier, but rather the frontier controls etc.)

"The Rock will have a special status, but will not be part of Schengen and Spain will be responsible for the control of the port and the airport.

It has taken much longer than expected due to the "complexity" of the matter, but in the end Brussels assumes the agreement reached by Spain and the United Kingdom last New Year's Eve to tear down the Gate of Gibraltar. The European Commission has adopted on Tuesday the mandate to negotiate with London the status of the Rock in the EU after Brexit, which aims to eliminate controls on people and goods on the land border between Spain and Gibraltar."

Both the UK and Gibraltar have stated the European Commission's proposed mandate for the opening of negotiations for an EU-UK agreement is unacceptable. The Foreign Secretary says it directly conflicts with the agreed framework, adding it seeks to undermine the UK’s sovereignty over Gibraltar, and cannot form a basis for negotiations.

Dominic Raab points out the UK, with Gibraltar, and Spain carefully agreed a pragmatic Framework Agreement, in full consultation with the EU Commission. He adds the UK has consistently showed pragmatism and flexibility in the search for arrangements that work for all sides, and is disappointed that this has not been reciprocated. He urges the EU to think again.

For its part the Government says the mandate "strays unhelpfully" from the New Year's Eve Agreement, saying of the current draft that there is "no possibility for this forming the basis for an agreement".

Nonetheless, it says it will continue to work with the UK government to explore all possibilities, and also continue the work to be ready in the event that a treaty cannot be negotiated.

The Spanish Foreign Ministry is urging the EU to respect the agreement.

The recommendation builds on the New Year's Eve agreement between the UK and Spain and honours the EU'scommitment to Spain to negotiate a separate agreement on Gibraltar after the Rock was excluded from the Brexit deal. The EU says the draft mandate is without prejudice to the issues of sovereignty and jurisdiction, and focuses on co-operation in the region while respecting the territorial integrity of its Member States.

It is the EU's opening hand, with much of its content totally unacceptable to Gibraltar's red lines. The negotiating mandate would see border checks and surveillance carried out by Spain at the airport, the port and in our waters. You can read the full document here.

European Commission draft mandate 'unacceptable', says UK and Gibraltar

The Chief Minister has described the EU's Treaty negotiating mandate as "still born."

Fabian Picardo told GBC he wanted a treaty that would rocket-boost business and that what the EU had put on the table did the exact opposite.

He told Christine Vasquez his Government would never agree to it as it advocated "joint poverty" as opposed to joint prosperity.
Chief Minister says his Government will never agree to the EU negotiating mandate

The publication, yesterday, of the EU Commission (“EC”) negotiating mandate is a hard put down of Spain’s accords over Gibraltar, as made public in the Framework Agreement (“Framework”). Spain, an EU member, has agreed one thing, the EC ignores that member, pushing, like Oliver, for more. The Spanish Government has been embarrassed by the EC, to be polite.

The publication of this mandate also eclipses the Budget, which is irrelevant anyway, but more so in the face of the EC rebuff.

It seems there will be no negotiation for a post-Brexit EU-UK deal over Gibraltar. That being so what has been announced in the Budget, also yesterday, is futile. The provisions of the Budget will not meet the circumstances that will come about from Gibraltar not being included in some way within the EU. A second budget will be necessary.

GIBRALTAR’S REACTION

The GSLP Government reacted to the EC mandate without delay.

It highlights, rightly, that the EC mandate “strays unhelpfully from the Framework Agreement”. That puts reality mildly.

The tenderness of that statement is starkly contrasted by the next point made by the Government, “As a result, the mandate may, unfortunately, not form the basis for the negotiation of an agreement on a UK treaty with the EU.”

The use of the word “may”, is self-conscious and betrays weakness, despite that the Chief Minister, Fabian Picardo goes on to emphasise that “on the basis of the current draft, there is no possibility of this forming the basis for an agreement.” In brief, that a negotiation is pointless.

NO PROVISION IN BUDGET FOR NON-AGREEMENT

We are also told that “work to be ready in the event that there may not be negotiated outcome with the EU and that Gibraltar will not enjoy a treaty relationship with the EU”, continues. None of that is evident from any provision announced by Mr. Picardo in the budget yesterday. He merrily continues to walk a path as if nothing had changed.

It can only mean that the announced Budget is temporary, with the true budgetary measures are being secretly concocted, with a second Budget following in a few weeks or months. The lack of GSLP promised “openness and transparency” carries on blatantly.

UK REACTION

The speed of Gibraltar’s reaction to the publication of the EC mandate was matched by the UK. The strength of the UK rebuff to the mandate was even greater than that of Gibraltar’s.

The UK’s Foreign Secretary, Dominic Raab, makes no bones about it, stating that “The Commission’s proposed mandate … directly conflicts with that Framework.”. He goes so far as to say that “It seeks to undermine the UK’s sovereignty over Gibraltar, and cannot form a basis of negotiations.”

Yes, the UK are more upfront than Mr. Picardo’s GSLP Government. It sees there is no basis for a negotiation, i.e. do not waste our time!

ANY CHANCE OF A NEGOTIATION?

One conclusion is clear, there will be no negotiation based on the EC mandate as currently drafted. It will be for the EU Council of Ministers to possibly repair the damage done by the EC.

A second, conclusion is also clear, the EC mandate is a slap in the face to Spain who negotiated the Framework. Spain must be desperately trying to recover some credibility by attempting to save the position envisaged by the Framework.

As predicted in the blog of yesterday, not only has the Framework put Spain onside with the UK and Gibraltar, but “The initial test for the forthcoming negotiations will come about when the EC makes its negotiating mandate public … It may lay the ground to put Spain as the good nation, arguing Gibraltar’s position, in the face of opposition from other EU member states.”

The venue for this will be when the EC mandate goes for approval to the EU Council of Ministers, again as mentioned in yesterday’s blog, “Spain will likely have to bat for Gibraltar at that level”.

The ability to save negotiations rest on the shoulders of Spain. It will need to convince the EU Council of Ministers to put the mandate on track with the Framework.

If that fails, forget the Budget, and let us start preparing for life in a very different world than that of today. All the lengthy words of Mr Picardo, in his Budget speech, will be, as the Spanish saying goes, “palabras al viento”.

BUDGET IRRELEVANCE

Yes Mr Picardo, you have said that this is the hardest Budget since the closure of the frontier. Really? It does absolutely nothing to alleviate or face up to the reality of what Gibraltar faces or will face. It is a sidestep of Giant’s Causeway proportions. Surely, that Budget will be so much harder?

The magnified financial difficulties faced by Gibraltar are due to Mr. Picardo and his GSLP Government. We have had GSLP years of overspending, misspending and overborrowing, rather than of caution considering Gibraltar’s size and internationally fragile position.

Yes, of course COVID has brought the financial difficulties to a head. But Mr. Picardo, your GSLP Government’s mismanagement has left Gibraltar in a much worse position to face that situation. Gibraltar would have been better placed to meet the circumstances if more financial caution had ruled the day.

GSLP TO BLAME FOR FINANCIAL DOWNSIDE

Mr. Picardo, you cannot escape that reality. You have caused, over and above the COVID effect, our increased financial weakness. That fragility will undermine our ability to resist the financial consequences of the lack of a deal with the EU.

Mr. Picardo you promised to halve the public debt. You have tripled it!

Leader of the Opposition, Keith Azopardi did a great job in replying to your Budget spin, which is what your speech was.

As he said, your debt, waste, abuse, and overspending has put us “in financial ICU”. It is the GSLP Government’s, headed by you Mr. Picardo, recklessness which has created a situation where we are substantially financially weaker to meet the COVID effect, and now, the likely downside of Brexit, without a Gibraltar deal.

Mr. Picardo, as Mr Azopardi also said, “It is not your money. It is the people’s money.”

To make matters worse, you do not take from the rich, you take from the poor to cover for your financial mismanagement. Most of your measures hurt the poor more than the rich, for example, the increases in Social Security and in electricity charges.

The GSLP Government under Mr. Picardo, has meandered on for five years in a financial mess, knowing that Brexit was coming. It has made no provision for it. It has continued overspending and over borrowing as if we were never going to hit the wall.

Well, what now, Mr. Picardo? I look forward to hearing your solutions. Yes, COVID has some blame attached to it, but it does not excuse your financial recklessness in dealing with the people’s money.

Written by YGTV Team on 22 July 2021.

The Government has welcomed the “very clear position” on the EU negotiating mandate set out by the Foreign Secretary, Dominic Raab, at his first meeting with the new Spanish Foreign Minister, Jose Manuel Albares. The Government has also welcomed the Spanish Foreign Minister’s remarks committing to the New Year’s Eve Agreement.

A statement from the Government follows below:

Her Majesty’s Government of Gibraltar notes and welcomes the very clear position on the EU negotiating mandate set out by the Foreign Secretary, Rt Hon Dominic Raab MP, at his first meeting with the new Spanish Foreign Minister, Jose Manuel Albares.

The Government of Gibraltar also notes and welcomes Snr Albares’ remarks committing to the New Year’s Eve Agreement and recognising that the potential treaty between the UK and the EU in relation to Gibraltar would be good, not just for the Campo de Gibraltar, but also for Gibraltar.

The position of the Governments of the United Kingdom and Gibraltar are entirely united and joined up.

The Government and people of Gibraltar will never accept a treaty that in any way resembles the mandate issued by the EU Commission.

It goes beyond the careful balance reached in the New Year’s Eve Agreement in very sensitive respects and is unacceptable to the Government as a basis of negotiation.

The Chief Minister said: ‘The Government of Gibraltar and the United Kingdom are entirely at one on this issue. I am very grateful to the Foreign Secretary for having set out so clearly the position of the UK, which is wholly aligned with us.

“No one should believe that we would ever be prepared to accept the things set out in the EU’s draft negotiating mandate. We will not even be prepared to accept things that are close to that.

“Gibraltar remains fully committed to the New Year’s Eve Agreement. The United Kingdom has already said they remain fully committed also.

“But the notion that Spanish law enforcement officers might be present on our land, at our port or airport, is one thatthe Government or the people of Gibraltar will not accept. That is not something that can be finessed or negotiated. That is a non-negotiable red line. I have said so throughout this process and I will not change my mind or my position. The Cabinet as a whole will not change the position of Gibraltar. Anyone who wants to argue against that or think that they can negotiate around it are driving this process into a brick wall.

“Additionally, most other parts of the EU mandate are equally unacceptable on matters related to asylum, residence etc. There are too many problematic parts of the mandate for itto form the basis for the successful negotiation of a treaty.

“For that reason, I very much welcome Jose Manuel Albares’ statements in London yesterday recommitting Spain to the terms of the New Year’s Eve Agreement and to the Frontex aspects of it in particular.

“We have a lot of work to do in order to be able to bring to fruition in a UK/EU treaty the enthusiasm and optimism that welcomed the New Year’s Eve Agreementin Gibraltar and the region around us.

“I will not give up, but the EU needs to become a partner in the process and not continue to be a hinderance to it. I hope that with more information and more cooperation between relevant officials, we may see some progress for the benefit of citizens of all the Member States, and that we will not see the historic opportunities that the New Year’s Eve Agreement presents for Gibraltar and the Campo de Gibraltar sacrificed.”

The Spanish Foreign Minister says he is backing the New Year's Eve agreement. Following a meeting in London with his UK Counterpart, Jose Manuel Albares told the press that a climate of trust needed to be created in relation to Gibraltar.

The statement has been welcomed by the Government which says the position of the Governments of the United Kingdom and Gibraltar are entirely united and joined up.

Jose Manuel Albares says Spain will comply with everything that has been agreed on the 31st of December and that that's what he'd told Dominic Raab during his first meeting abroad,

And, he added Spain would be asking for Frontex's assistance in order to do this.

The Government has welcomed these statements and the recognition that the potential treaty between the UK and the EU in relation to Gibraltar would be good, not just for the Campo de Gibraltar, but also for Gibraltar.

It has also welcomed what it says is the very clear position on the EU negotiating mandate set out by the Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab following the meeting.

It says the Government and people of Gibraltar will never accept a treaty that in any way resembles the mandate issued by the EU Commission.

Spanish Foreign Minister says Spain will comply with everything agreed

22nd July 2021
Publication of the European Commission’s draft mandate for negotiations on a UK/EU treaty on Gibraltar earlier this week triggered a process of technical discussions in Brussels that will last until after the summer, and which could yet lead to changes in the document.

Commission officials will meet this month and in September with representatives from all EU member states to discuss the proposed negotiating guidelines in detail, the first in a three-step process culminating in ministerial approval.

But the UK and Gibraltar governments’ ice-cold reaction to the mandate could prompt a rethink, particularly given Spain’s publicly expressed desire to negotiate a treaty beneficial to communities on both sides of the border and in line with the New Year’s Eve framework agreement.

On Thursday, Brussels was urged to become “a partner, not a hindrance” to treaty talks that aim to ensure post-Brexit stability and prosperity on both sides of the border without crossing long-established red lines on sovereignty, jurisdiction and control.

The pressure for the Commission to reassess its proposed negotiating position is already mounting, not just in discussions behind closed doors but in public statements following publication of the mandate.

On Tuesday, Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab said the UK, Gibraltar and Spain had “carefully agreed a pragmatic framework agreement” in full consultation with the Commission, adding that the draft mandate “directly conflicts with that framework”.

“It seeks to undermine the UK’s sovereignty over Gibraltar and cannot form a basis for negotiations,” he said, urging the Commission to “think again”.

A day later in London, Jose Manuel Albares, the Spanish Foreign Minister, sought to reassure Mr Raab that Spain remained committed to the framework agreement as the key to negotiating a treaty acceptable to all sides.

“We are going to comply with everything agreed on the 31st of December and that is what I have told [Mr Raab] and we are going to request the assistance of Frontex,” Mr Albares told reporters after the meeting, adding: “We have to create a climate of trust.”

And yet, even before this week, Spain’s State Secretary for European Affairs, Juan Gonzalez-Barba, had already warned that convincing the Commission to reflect the spirit of the New Year’s Eve agreement in the mandate “hasn’t been easy”, given the legal complexity of what the treaty seeks to achieve.

The focus now shifts back to Brussels, where a process of technical discussion has commenced that will drag into the autumn given EU institutions largely close down during August.

An EU official in Brussels told the Chronicle that the Commission has several sessions planned in July and September in the Council Working Group – which brings together Commission officials and representatives of member states - to explain and discuss its proposed negotiating guidelines in detail.

“In terms of process, the proposal is first discussed at technical level, following which it goes to the level of ambassadors,” the EU official said.

“The final step would be the adoption by the Council at ministerial level.”

The official could not confirm a timetable for the process but the final mandate is unlikely to be approved before mid-September at the earliest, after which the Council would ask the Commission to nominate the EU’s chief negotiator for the talks.

In London on Wednesday, the UK – with Gibraltar’s prior backing - and Spain extended Memorandums of Understanding agreed in the Brexit withdrawal process that, for now at least, will help foster confidence and ensure normality at the border pending the outcome of the treaty process.

What shape the final guidelines will take remains to be seen, but the UK and Gibraltar have made their position very clear and there will have to be significant changes if there is to be any prospect of negotiations, let alone a treaty.

“No one should believe that we would ever be prepared to accept the things set out in the EU’s draft negotiating mandate,” Chief Minister Fabian Picardo said.

“We will not even be prepared to accept things that are close to that.”

“Gibraltar remains fully committed to the New Year’s Eve Agreement. The United Kingdom has already said they remain fully committed also.”

“But the notion that Spanish law enforcement officers might be present on our land, at our port or airport, is one that the Government or the people of Gibraltar will not accept.”

“That is not something that can be finessed or negotiated. That is a non-negotiable red line. I have said so throughout this process and I will not change my mind or my position.”

“The Cabinet as a whole will not change the position of Gibraltar. Anyone who wants to argue against that or think that they can negotiate around it are driving this process into a brick wall.”

Mr Picardo went further and said “most other parts” of the EU mandate were “equally unacceptable”, including on matters related to asylum, residence and commercial arrangements.

“There are too many problematic parts of the mandate for it to form the basis for the successful negotiation of a treaty,” he said.

“For that reason, I very much welcome Jose Manuel Albares’ statements in London [on Wednesday] recommitting Spain to the terms of the New Year’s Eve Agreement and to the Frontex aspects of it in particular.”

“We have a lot of work to do in order to be able to bring to fruition in a UK/EU treaty the enthusiasm and optimism that welcomed the New Year’s Eve Agreement in Gibraltar and the region around us.”

“I will not give up, but the EU needs to become a partner in the process and not continue to be a hinderance to it.”

“I hope that with more information and more cooperation between relevant officials, we may see some progress for the benefit of citizens of all the Member States, and that we will not see the historic opportunities that the New Year’s Eve Agreement presents for Gibraltar and the Campo de Gibraltar sacrificed.”

The process, already fraught with complexity, could be further hampered by the wider strained relationship between the UK and the EU on issues such as the Northern Ireland protocol.

Since it completed its exit from the EU at the end of last year, Britain's ties with the bloc have reached new lows, with both sides accusing each other of acting in bad faith over an agreement for post-Brexit trade with Northern Ireland.

On Thursday, Prime Minister Boris Johnson urged European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen to consider seriously Britain's proposals to change what he called the "unsustainable" way a Brexit deal is governing trade with Northern Ireland.

London accuses Brussels of being too purist, or legalistic, in interpreting what the deal means for some goods moving from Britain to its province of Northern Ireland. The EU says it is adhering to the deal, which Mr Johnson signed just last year.

Britain proposed on Wednesday to renegotiate parts of the Northern Ireland protocol that govern the movement of goods such as chilled meats, and to dispense with EU oversight of the accord.

The EU has rejected the demand to renegotiate, with Mrs von der Leyen repeating the bloc's message on Twitter, saying: "The EU will continue to be creative and flexible within the protocol framework. But we will not renegotiate."

Some observers have raised fears that the trust issues between the UK and the EU on Northern Ireland could spill over into efforts to reach agreement on Gibraltar, a point raised by the Earl of Kinnoull this week during a debate on the Northern Ireland protocol in the House of Lords.

The UK Government, however, sought to play that risk down.

“The issue of Gibraltar that he raises obviously is a dispute about a different issue,” Brexit minister Lord Frost replied.

“There are analogous elements, but it is important to keep these things separate.”

“The mandate that the EU agreed [on Tuesday] does seem to be problematic in a number of ways, as [the Foreign Secretary] made clear.”

“But I do not think it makes sense to connect one thing with another.”

“We deal with each of these issues on its own terms and try to proceed in a constructive way.”

There we have it, our GSLP Government verifying that Gibraltar, the UK, and Spain are all on the same side pushing for the EU to respect the UK-Spain New Year’s Eve Agreement over Gibraltar, commonly referred to as the Framework Agreement. All of them want the European Commission (EC) to rethink its mandate.

The development, following the publication of the EC negotiating mandate, confirms the accuracy of what was written earlier this week on this blog. Those blogs foresaw the recent pronouncements of the UK Foreign Secretary and the Spanish Foreign Minister, following the latter’s visit to the UK.

Faced with the possibility of no agreement with the EU, into the future, Gibraltar needs to consolidate what makes us different and distinct. It needs to act that way more than ever and irrespective of whether a deal is reached in the end.

It is that uniqueness, enjoyed by Gibraltar, that will retain our attractiveness as a jurisdiction in many spheres, and so our continued longer term financial wellbeing, however difficult things might get in the short term.

PICARDO’S ADMISSIONS

The GSLP admissions came in a press release issued yesterday.

The Chief Minister, Fabian Picardo, said, “Gibraltar remains fully committed to the New Year’s Eve Agreement. The United Kingdom has already said they remain fully committed also.”

He went on to say, “I very much welcome Jose Manuel Albares’ statement in London yesterday recommitting Spain to the terms of the New Year’s Eve Agreement and to the Frontex aspects of it in particular.”

Statements that were supported by what both the U.K. and Spanish foreign ministers have said to the press this week.

So, there we have it each of Gibraltar, the UK and Spain on the same page in their respective reaction to the EC mandate.

UNPRECEDENTED COLLABORATION

We have now, clearly evidenced by these statements from Mr. Picardo, a historically unprecedented collaboration between Gibraltar, the UK and Spain, having the aim of bringing the EC, and so the EU, round to match the objectives of all three. Goals that were agreed by all in the Framework Agreement, seemingly with input from the EC.

The reaction of the three could not have been choreographed better, but of course that is not what has happened! Each is simply keeping to the agreed Framework Agreement; that it is full of holes and inconclusive provisions, which the EC attempts to fill in its mandate, is ignored.

Of course, there is no doubting that the EC has gone beyond the ‘intent’ behind the Framework Agreement, but all expected that, before any negotiation. Mr Picardo himself, in advance of its publication, identified that the EC mandate would have “disagreeable” aspects, perhaps not so “disagreeable” as is now known.

EU’S EXTREME POSITION

It is that EU extreme position which will likely allow for compromise. But the more extreme the EC’s position, the more likely any outcome will wander more towards the views held by the EC, than any other view. Extreme positions in any negotiations pull other parties closer to that party holding the more extreme view.

For now, however, the chances of a negotiations have disappeared, but for how long?

It is unlikely that it will be long before a position is reached to allow for discussion. Anything else would simply embarrass an EU member, Spain. The EU will not prolong that. It is likely that the EU Council of Minister will ameliorate the position adopted by the EC in its negotiating mandate.

Is that a certainty, however? Not at all. The distinct possibility exists that a few other member states will have wider agendas involving the UK.

If that is so, there may be some representatives on the EU Council of Ministers who may prove difficult to convince to back a compromise EU position. Could that be a reason why the EC mandate is so extreme, namely, to give more room for compromise for the extreme positions held by some?

OTHER FUNDAMENTALS THAN JUST SPANISH BOOTS

What is worrying is the over exaggeration in all Gibraltar Government statements of the non-acceptability of “Spanish boots on the ground”, and the continuous reference to Frontex.

Spanish presence on the ground is the emotive issue, but that is not likely to be the only fundamental, but unacceptable, concern that the EU and Spain will fight for inclusion in any final treaty. There are other unacceptable fundamentals in the EC mandate, as currently drafted, that need to be understood.

One should remember that the UK left the EU because it wanted to recover its full sovereignty. It wanted to recover those aspects of sovereignty that it had volunteered to the EU. It did so at Brexit.

Continued at link.

1 Like

Nick Ottens (Atlantic Sentinel) has an opinion about Gibraltar and Schengen:

Britain Walks Back Commitment to Gibraltar

A deal reached just before New Year’s gives Spain nore control than it has had in three centuries. Non-EU citizens, including Britons, would need to apply for a Spanish visa if they wanted to stay in Gibraltar for more than ninety days. Gibraltar’s air- and seaport would become external EU frontiers, manned for the next four years by Frontex guards under Spanish command.

Gibraltar does most of its trade with the EU. With no capital gains tax, its economy has become dependent on banking and other financial services. It unilaterally adopts many European financial regulations and standards to avoid being blacklisted as a tax haven.

It’s not at all clear Gibraltarians mind being pulled closer into Europe. 96 percent of them voted to remain in the EU in the 2016 referendum.

The executive director of Frontex, Fabrice Leggeri, has said the European Union’s borders and coastguard agency would be “honoured” to handle frontier controls at Gibraltar’s port and airport as part of an agreement for the Rock’s post-Brexit relations with the bloc.

In an interview with Spain’s Europa Press news agency published on Sunday, Mr Leggeri said work continued to find a “legal framework” to make such arrangements possible and, in effect, enable Gibraltar to form part of the Schengen area despite having left the EU alongside the UK.

“It would be an honour if Spain, the United Kingdom, Gibraltar and the European Commission asked Frontex to take on that role or to support that type of role,” he told Europa Press.

“It would be an honour for Frontex.”

“We know that Spain and the United Kingdom have expressed a desire for Frontex to assist in the entry points of Gibraltar’s external frontiers and this means controlling arrivals and exits at the port and the airport.”

Mr Leggeri was speaking after the publication late July of the European Commission’s draft negotiating mandate for talks on a treaty for Gibraltar’s future relations with the bloc, as envisaged in the framework agreement announced by the UK, Spain and Gibraltar on New Year’s Eve.

The 26-page mandate set out the Commission’s proposal for the EU’s negotiating guidelines and must be adopted by the European Council before negotiations for a treaty can commence.

But the draft guidelines drew a cold response from the UK and Gibraltar, which said they strayed significantly over longstanding red lines that the framework agreement had been careful not to cross, including on the presence of Spanish officers on the ground in Gibraltar.

The Commission’s proposed negotiating position put forward solutions to remove physical checks and controls on persons and goods at the land border between Spain and Gibraltar, while ensuring the integrity of the Schengen area and the Single Market.

The proposals included rules establishing responsibility for asylum, returns, visas, residence permits, and operational police cooperation and information exchange.

But the mandate contained Commission goals that are unacceptable to Gibraltar and the UK and will make any talks fraught with complexity.

The text, for example, recommended that border controls in full compliance with the Schengen acquis be carried out by Spain, including checks on entry and exit at newly established Border Crossing Points at the airport and port of Gibraltar “and the performance of border surveillance in the adjacent waters”.

There was no mention in the mandate of Frontex officers carrying out those checks, as envisaged in the framework agreement, although an accompanying statement issued by the Commission at the time acknowledged that “Spain has already expressed its full intention to ask Frontex for assistance” in meeting its obligations.

Two days after publication of the draft mandate, Spain’s Foreign Minister, Jose Manuel Albares, told his UK counterpart Dominic Raab that Spain remained committed to the framework agreement as the key to negotiating a treaty acceptable to all sides.

“We are going to comply with everything agreed on the 31st of December and that is what I have told [Mr Raab] and we are going to request the assistance of Frontex,” Mr Albares told at the time, adding: “We have to create a climate of trust.”

Since its publication, the Commission has been involved in technical talks with representatives of EU member states to set out its position on Gibraltar, the first in a three-step process culminating in ministerial approval.

An EU official in Brussels told the Chronicle in July that the Commission had several sessions planned through to September in the Council Working Group – which brings together Commission officials and representatives of member states - to explain and discuss its proposed negotiating guidelines in detail.

After these technical talks the mandate will be discussed by EU ambassadors before adoption by the European Council at ministerial level.

The official could not confirm a timetable for the process but the final mandate is unlikely to be approved before mid-September at the earliest, after which the Council would ask the Commission to nominate the EU’s chief negotiator for the talks.

In theory at least, the Commission’s mandate could change through that process of discussion with EU member states, not least because the UK and Gibraltar have made clear that in their current form, the guidelines cannot form the basis for treaty talks.

And while there is no public indication of any shift in the Commission’s position, Mr Leggeri’s comments on Sunday will be welcomed by the Gibraltar Government because they acknowledge that Gibraltar has a crucial say in any decision on the role of Frontex officers on the Rock.

The New Year’s Eve agreement envisaged that Spain would take responsibility on behalf of EU member states for the integrity of Schengen borders if these were extended to include Gibraltar.

But in order to avoid the contentious issue of ‘Spanish boots on the ground’, the UK, Spain and Gibraltar agreed that responsibility would be delegated to Frontex officers.

At the time, Chief Minister Fabian Picardo said this could only happen if the UK and Gibraltar, which has constitutional responsibility for immigration matters, agreed.

He spoke of a “double filter” for people arriving through the airport and the port, first through Gibraltar’s immigration controls, subsequently through Frontex-manned Schengen controls.

Mr Picardo said too that if a treaty was finally agreed, it would be Gibraltar’s Parliament that would have to enact legislation in order to bring its contents into practical effect.

“It is a recognition that in the territorial extent of what we call Gibraltar, any actions to be carried out by Frontex, any mechanisms through which a person will be required to pass, can only be compelled by an Act of the Parliament which governs our nation,” he said.

“It is that essential. And in that respect, what we have is an assertion of our sovereignty, our jurisdiction and our control in the most direct, most obvious and most undeniable manner.”

The issue of Frontex, however, is just one of many concerns arising from the Commission’s proposed negotiating mandate for the treaty talks.

The UK and Gibraltar governments agreed that the guidelines were “unacceptable” in a number of other areas ranging from asylum and residence to commercial arrangements, analysis shared by the Opposition too.

“There are too many problematic parts of the mandate for it to form the basis for the successful negotiation of a treaty,” Mr Picardo said at the time of the mandate’s publication.

“We have a lot of work to do in order to be able to bring to fruition in a UK/EU treaty the enthusiasm and optimism that welcomed the New Year’s Eve Agreement in Gibraltar and the region around us.”

“I will not give up, but the EU needs to become a partner in the process and not continue to be a hindrance to it.”

1 Like

Recently the press is reporting that the Spanish Foreign Minister, Jose Manuel Albares, has described the draft negotiating mandate, prepared by the European Commission (EC), as “very positive in relation to Spain’s interests.” A truism that perhaps our sensitivity may lead us to exaggerate in interpreting. But we should await developments before throwing the baby out with the bathwater.

Mr. Albares’ comment, coincidentally, is capable of being read with a Tweet from the Governor that he has met various UK Diplomats, on EU withdrawal and defence matters, and with a press release issued by the Government indicating that Gibexit matters are still on the rails.

These same Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office (FCDO) officials met, over the last 48 hours, in Gibraltar, without any prior publicity, with our Chief Minister, Fabian Picardo and members of his Gibexit negotiating team, with Mr Picardo then expressing optimism.

SPAIN’S FOREIGN SECRETARY

Mr Albares’ comment supports the views expressed by the UK Foreign Secretary, Dominic Raab and Mr. Picardo, namely that the EC draft mandate, as it stands currently, is not an acceptable basis for the UK or Gibraltar to negotiate.

The statement, however, should perhaps be understood not to undermine, and be read in the context of, his previous assurances that Spain is committed to the New Year’s Eve framework agreement. The two positions are not incompatible.

Any incompatibility that may exist between the UK and Spanish positions, may become apparent when negotiations progress. Certainly, the incompatibility does exist between the EU and UK/Gibraltar positions, as set out in the draft EC negotiating mandate.

Spain’s desire that the EU negotiating mandate should be approved soon, also, is not indicative that such approval will be to an unchanged text of the draft approved by the EC.

Further it is trite that Spain will not accept a ‘deal’ with the EU over Gibraltar that challenges its position on sovereignty; just as Gibraltar will not accept any infringement on our sovereignty status.

It is that diplomatic tightrope that all who discuss Gibraltar’s international status must walk, and have walked for decades. It is nothing new. What is new are the circumstances, namely Brexit, with the impact that will have on our current way of being and life.

Continued at link.

6th September 2021

Unite the Union said it remains concerned about the impact of Brexit and the Covid-19 pandemic on jobs in the private sector, with seasoned union officials admitting they had never before seen so many employers struggling simultaneously to sustain employment going forward.

During the lockdown, the union had been very concerned about the hospitality and tourism sectors, which were hard hit by the overnight loss in business despite solid support from the government.

A successful vaccination programme and the reopening of borders have provided a boost to those businesses in recent months, but in other areas of Gibraltar’s economy, uncertainty remains the defining sentiment.

Gibraltar’s businesses have received unprecedented support thanks to the BEAT scheme implemented by the Gibraltar Government and other initiatives such as government-backed loans.

But sectors such as construction and maritime services continue to be affected, the union said, and there are layoffs and job terminations in other areas such as the legal and retail sectors.

And with no clarity yet as to what shape Gibraltar’s post-Brexit future will take, Unite chair Christian Duo and regional officer Kaylan Lucas expressed deep unease about the long-term effects on jobs across many areas of the economy, presenting a bleak picture.

Mr Duo said the exact figures for terminations since the start of the pandemic was not yet known, and neither had the true impact of Brexit and the pandemic become evident yet.

The local unemployment figure is not as high as may have been anticipated because many of those affected are cross-border workers and will have registered as unemployed in Spain, he said.

Data published by the Department of Employment shows it had received 10,384 notices of termination in the private sector in 2020, with 4,133 forms accepted in the first six months.

In the first six months of this year alone, already the figure is higher with some 5,771 terminations “and more to come”, Mr Duo said.

Going forward, the union remains particularly worried about the future of the private sector and those working within it.

“Although we have received concerns about the public sector, the big area of concern for us remains the private sector,” Mr Duo said.

“The reality is that the number of terminations of employment since last year to now continues to grow.”

“In the first impact of the pandemic, we did raise [the fact] that locals were also losing jobs, especially in the hotel industry and the construction industry, although I know there is not a lot of resident employment in this field.”

“What we have also seen is how GJBS has also been impacted in [terms of] the work coming in their direction, so they are also suffering the consequences of a reduction of works in the construction industry.”

In the construction sector, Unite said there had been numerous redundancies and warned that some companies had told the union they may have to close down.

The Gibraltar Government, one of the key drivers in the construction sector, delivered a more conservative budget this year which will have a knock-on effect on the number and scale of projects in the community, at least in the short term.

“The reality is that the budget really indicates the direction of flow we are having, so clearly that is something that is to be expected and we knew what was going to happen,” Mr Duo said.

“But that doesn’t stop us from worrying because for us, the main focus for Unite is the preservation of employment.”

“I have been at the forefront of the union for the past 15 or 20 years and I have never come across so many discussions with employers around future sustainability of employment as we are currently having.”

“This will have an impact on the economy because those people would have had to pay tax and insurance and no longer do so.”

“We don’t know the exact figures for industries such as retail and construction because not everyone who has lost their job is a member of the union.”

Mr Lucas told the Chronicle that this is where union recognition “comes into play” and is important.

“That will in effect ensure that private companies discuss and consult with any union any significant changes that will affect their employees,” Mr Lucas added.

“That is why it is extremely important that the Government actually produces the union recognition legislation as soon as possible.”

Mr Lucas hoped that in due course, Gibraltar's economy would recover to the levels of activity before the impact of Brexit and the pandemic.

But he said too that the union was ready to adapt and defend its members in the event of a severe downturn in the economy, for example if negotiations for Gibraltar’s post-Brexit relations with the EU fail to lead to an agreement.

“In a way, we trust the competence of those in charge to navigate through this in the best possible way, so we hope we never have to sit and discuss this with the government,” Mr Lucas said.

Mr Duo added that Unite had spent many months engaged in difficult discussions with the government and with employers as they sought to address the challenges of the past 18 months.

“We have been having those difficult discussions and we will continue to have them because that is the reality of the situation, but I think we are also waiting for the outcome of the treaty negotiations and that is also a worrying thing,” he said.

Both Mr Duo and Mr Lucas encouraged employers to engage with the union, adding that the Unite provides a balance and looks out for the best interests of its members as well as the company which employs them.

And if Gibraltar were forced to go into another lockdown in the autumn months, the union said it would once again discuss a furlough scheme with the government.

“That would at least protect the employment as it did last time for a certain period of time,” Mr Lucas said.

“If that were not to happen for whatever reason, we would see a significant, significant rise in unemployment and businesses closing, without a doubt.”

The Chief Minister says he continues to be optimistic about entering into a UK/EU Treaty that protects Gibraltar's interests.

Speaking to GBC, Fabian Picardo said it's important, however, not to allow this period of limbo, nor the EU's unacceptable draft mandate, to dampen the enthusiasm for an agreement.

On Frontex, he gave assurances that no-one from Borders and Coastguards will lose their jobs, as the Agency will continue to deal with Gibraltar immigration issues.

News Editor Christine Vasquez spoke to the Chief Minister and first asked him for his reaction to the Frontex trials at the frontier.

Unite the Union speaks, in an article published in today’s Gibraltar Chronicle, of a reduction in levels of employment, and of many employers struggling to keep current levels of employment. It then speaks of the consequent drop in social security and tax revenue, in turn referring to the impact of that “on the economy”.

The ‘doom and gloom’, which is how some have labelled what has been written in this blog, is now being displayed in statements by Unite, also reflecting Government budget assessments and measures.

BREXIT AND COVID-19 UNCERTAINTY BLAMED

Unite’s concerns centre around employment in the hospitality and tourism sectors, although these are experiencing an element of resurgence following the vaccination campaign, and in the construction, maritime services, the legal and retail sectors, which continue to suffer.

The concern of Unite centre on the effect on employment of the uncertainty surrounding Brexit and on Covid-19. It is a concern that seems to be founded on generic evidence, as few statistics are yet available from when the pandemic started, nor is the true effect of Brexit fully apparent yet, especially absent any ‘deal’ over Gibraltar between the UK and the EU.

Continued at link.

WHAT IS THE GOVERNMENT DOING?

Yes, we have a GSLP/Liberal Government, but are they doing right for us in the circumstances? There is no way to tell due to the secrecy, nor is there a real choice between parties left to voters, unless Gibexit is finalised before the next general election. Even then, the choice will have been limited by what will have happened at Gibexit, or if nothing has happened, precisely by that nothingness.

There is little choice for mainly two basic reasons.

First, the current Government has total control of what Gibraltar faces following Brexit. That does not mean that it will do things right. It is doing them the way it wants to, as restricted by the reality of the circumstances and situations that Gibraltar finds itself in, but without openness and transparency.

No other party or grouping is going to want to take up the poison chalice, thereby risking the blame for any downside caused by situations and the decisions over Gibexit made by the GSLP-Liberal Government, led by Fabian Picardo and Joseph Garcia.

WHERE IS THE OPPOSITION?

Secondly, The GSD Opposition is by the wayside. It does little to nothing. It certainly does not hold the Government to account. A huge failing when we are faced by an issue as large as Gibexit. That your ability to act is limited by your lack of power? Well find ways, that is what you are paid for!

It is that failing which allow the Government to get away with acting as it does, freely and without constraint. A huge danger when we are faced with the enormity of what Gibexit is.

WILL PICARDO AND GARCIA GET GIBEXIT RIGHT?

Let us hope that Mr. Picardo and Mr. Garcia get Gibexit right. Gibraltar is not renowned for being kind to political leaders and parties that get it wrong in a manner that affects sovereignty or individual pockets and lives.

If there is a downside, and there probably will be, the sooner the public is informed of it, the safer our political leaders will be. It is time to stop playing the politics of populism, which is what Mr. Picardo continuously plays. Those politics do not work when crisis hits.

Continued at link.

17th September 2021

By Brian Reyes and Maria Jesus Corrales

European Union member states remain engaged in technical discussions with the European Commission on the bloc’s draft mandate for negotiations on a UK/EU treaty on Gibraltar, with no date yet set for it to be formally adopted by the European Council.

The EU’s internal assessment of the draft document began in July within the Working Party on the United Kingdom, which brings together officials from member states and the Commission to deal with all matters relating to the bloc’s relationship with the UK following Brexit.

The meetings were put on hold during August while Brussels shut down for the summer break but resumed earlier this month.

The Gibraltar mandate was discussed during a meeting of the UK working group on September 14 chaired by Slovenia, which currently holds the six-monthly presidency of the European Council.

In August, Spanish Foreign Minister Jose Manuel Albares had urged his Slovenian counterpart to use the country’s presidency of the European Council to press for the approval of the Gibraltar mandate “as soon as possible”.

The draft Gibraltar mandate will likely be on the agenda for the UK working group’s final two meetings this month on September 24 and 28.

But even after the working group discussions end, the process still has to go through two more stages.

The working group provides assistance to the Committee of Permanent Representatives [Coreper] made up of ambassadors from each EU member state.

The mandate must be discussed by Coreper first and then approved by the European Council at ministerial level as the final step.

The European Council has various mechanisms through which to formally adopt the EU’s final negotiating position once the technical discussions conclude. In theory at least, that process could potentially conclude this month or early next.

But officials refuse to set a timeline, at least publicly.

“The proposed mandate was presented by the Commission at the working party on the UK in July,” one EU source told the Chronicle.

“The Presidency has planned to continue the examination of this file at technical level in the working party in September.”

“At this stage I cannot speculate on a timeline for adoption of the mandate.”

Process aside, the key question is whether there will be any change to the draft position published by the Commission in July.

The draft mandate drew a cold response from Gibraltar and the UK when it was released.

Both governments said it strayed “unhelpfully” from the New Year’s Eve agreement and could not form the basis for talks.

EU officials remain tight-lipped about the nature of the discussions within the UK working group but there are some clues that suggest some changes to the Commission’s original text are being considered.

Public records of the September 14 meeting available on the European Council’s website show the General Secretariat of the Council tabled two documents on the mandate including one with additions.

The documents themselves, however, are not public at this stage, so there is no indication of what potential changes are being discussed during the internal discussions.

Pending the outcome of the EU process, the UK and Gibraltar governments have also continued preparatory work ahead of any negotiations and recently held a series of meetings on the Rock.

Further preparatory meetings will continue in the coming days and weeks, but in common with the EU, no information has been publicly released about the nature of those talks.

The complexity of any UK/EU agreement on Gibraltar means that all parties are maintaining a discreet silence to allow room for manoeuvre and avoid flare-ups even before discussions commence.

“Perhaps it’s no accident that there’s no information,” one Spanish diplomatic source told this newspaper.

In the meantime, despite the uncertainty as to what might lie ahead, normality continues at the border.

The Spanish Government last July extended through to the end of October the bridging measures it put in place to ensure fluidity at the border, although it is also trialling the biometric automatic gates it will use to check documentation in the event of no treaty.

Separately Spain and the UK, the latter with Gibraltar’s agreement, last July also extended the MoUs stemming from the Withdrawal Agreement through to the end of December, in a further step aimed at maintaining trust.

28th September 2021

Chief Minister Fabian Picardo said this week he remained “very confident” that a UK/EU treaty for the Rock’s post-Brexit relations with the bloc could be agreed.

Speaking at a reception hosted by the Gibraltar Government at the Labour Party conference in Brighton, Mr Picardo said the treaty, if agreed, would guarantee fluidity for people moving across the border between Gibraltar and the Schengen area starting in Spain, as well as “the potential” for fluidity of goods too.

Mr Picardo said Gibraltar was "very conscious" of the difficulties it could face without a deal, but he remained optimistic of prospects for an agreement and said talks could start "soon".

“I'm very confident that we're going to be able to do this treaty...” he told guests.

“I believe it distils the best of what membership of the European Union meant for Gibraltar into a new, bespoke arrangement, and I know that our friends in the Labour Party, on the front bench and on the back benches, and not just in Parliament but in the whole Labour family, are looking on to ensure that Gibraltar is protected and that nothing goes wrong in this critical period as we try and finalise this UK/EU treaty on Gibraltar.”

Continued at link.

1st October 2021
European Union ambassadors on Friday approved a negotiating mandate for talks with the UK on a treaty for Gibraltar’s future relations with the bloc, which could start as early as this month.

The mandate was approved at a meeting of Coreper II, the EU committee of member states’ permanent representatives that deals with foreign, economic, general, justice and home and financial affairs.

It has yet to be adopted by the European Council at ministerial level, but following the approval of Coreper II, this final step is a formality that could happen within days.

In Gibraltar on Friday, Attorney General Michael Llamas, QC, who has played a central role in Gibraltar’s Brexit negotiating team since the referendum in 2016, indicated treaty negotiations could start as soon as this month.

He expressed the hope too that the final EU mandate, which is not yet public, will incorporate changes from the draft published in July by the European Commission, and which received a cold response from both the UK and Gibraltar.

Among the key concerns was that the draft mandate made no reference to the role that Frontex is expected to play in implementing any Schengen arrangements for Gibraltar, as set out in the framework agreement reached by the UK, Spain and Gibraltar on New Year’s Eve.

“It is expected that the final draft of the mandate will be adopted very shortly and we are both confident and hopeful that it will have been amended to record the role that Frontex will play,” Mr Llamas said during a speech at the Ceremonial Opening of the Legal Year in the Supreme Court in Gibraltar.

“We anticipate that the first round of negotiations with the EU will take place during this month of October.”

“Recent events in the UK, with the shortage of petrol supplies, has acted as further evidence as to why the UK’s own treaty with the EU would not have been a good one for Gibraltar, and why a bespoke solution for Gibraltar was essential.”

“It is remarkable, if I may so, that notwithstanding the fact that no treaty has been in place for Gibraltar since the end of the transitional period under the Withdrawal Agreement, the Government has managed to preserve a great level of the status quo, not least on border fluidity.”

Mr Llamas said the New Year’s Eve framework agreement was the culmination of “many months of intensive negotiations” led by the Chief Minister, Fabian Picardo, the then UK Foreign Secretary, Dominic Raab, and the then Spanish Minister for Foreign Affairs, Arancha Gonzalez Laya.

He said it addressed the Gibraltar Government’s core objective, which was to deliver fluidity for the movement of persons across the land frontier with Spain.

The agreement envisages a regime where both Gibraltarian and Schengen immigration checks will be operated at the Gibraltar airport and port.

Under the framework agreement it will be Frontex, the EU’s Border Agency, which will carry out the Schengen checks.

It remains to be seen whether the EU negotiating mandate adopted today will reflect that in its text.

The framework agreement also provides for the possibility of a bespoke regime for the movement of goods, environmental and labour protection, law enforcement and judicial cooperation, Mr Llamas reminded guests at the Supreme Court event.

It will also contain its own governance provisions, including an institutional framework and a dispute resolution mechanism.

The ghost of a hard Brexit is haunting Gibraltar once again. Instead of being eliminated, the border between the British Overseas Territory and Spain, known locally as La Verja (literally, the fence), could become a daily nightmare for the nearly 10,000 Spaniards who cross it every day for work.

If ongoing post-Brexit negotiations between the United Kingdom and the European Union fail to bear fruit, the European Commission could demand that Spain start carrying out the kind of checks on passengers and goods at La Verja that are performed at the EU’s external borders.

Right now the biggest danger is that the Gibraltar negotiation could be affected by stalled talks on the Northern Ireland protocol, after the British government signaled that it wants to replace rules it agreed to in 2019 covering trade between Northern Ireland (in the UK) and the Republic of Ireland (in the EU).

Continued at link.

The key sentence below in this continuation of the punch and judy show may be this one:- "In recent weeks, he {opposition} pretends to persuade Gibraltarians that the announcements of intended foreign direct investments in Gibraltar are somehow a bad thing."

When will the GSLP let it be know who is the creditor for the 300 million GBP loan to GOG? Where 6 local housing estates were put up as colateral for this loan.

"I met demonstrators last Monday who were expressing views on issues that passionately matter to them and some of which the Government is already committed to addressing."

To be clear, he met with one demonstrator accepted the letter and then high tailed it back into no.6!

8th November 2021

by Chief Minister Fabian Picardo

In his recent Opinion Piece, the Leader of the GSD Opposition, Keith Azopardi, suggested that the truth no longer mattered to me. He is completely wrong about that and so much else. The truth matters to me today as Chief Minister as much as it ever did to me as a young, idealistic lawyer and as Leader of the Opposition.

What is definitely true, however, is that these days, Mr Azopardi’s every word and step are cynical manipulations transparently designed to advance his political ambitions.

He is always saying and doing things to beat me and to become Chief Minister.

As your actual Chief Minister, I am always working with my teams to do things to protect Gibraltar and our way of life and to improve our community and nation.

These days Mr Azopardi is using language designed to imitate the style of other populist politicians from countries far larger than our own.

He is acting just like Pablo Casado in Spain who argues that everything the PSOE do is wrong, whatever the measure may be.

Luckily, in our politics, I believe that the Gibraltarian is not easily fooled.

Some of our louder elements may be more fickle and easier led, but the vast majority can see through political bluster.

In fact, it is actually Mr Azopardi who is uninterested in the truth and who is treating our community with contempt by trying to mislead our citizens.

Mr Azopardi’s most recent tactic is to try to turn everything that is good into a negative.

Every virtue is portrayed as a sin and every obvious sin the GSD perpetrated in Government is presented as a virtue, even though as the former leader of the PDP Mr Azopardi was highly critical of many of the things he now praises of his current party’s time in office.

In recent weeks, he pretends to persuade Gibraltarians that the announcements of intended foreign direct investments in Gibraltar are somehow a bad thing.

A huge and positive virtue is presented as if it were a terrible vice.

The transparent truth is that the tender and expressions of interests process is designed to ensure we get the best deal for the taxpayer – and that is what we have done in every tender process since we were elected.

In fact, the deal we have done is the deal that produces the largest premium per square metre of land in our history.
That is in your best interests as a taxpayer.

That is how we have found the best, most advantageous commercial arrangements in respect of the Eastside and Bayside projects for you, the taxpayer.

We, on the other hand, have not done what Mr Azopardi’s party did with Midtown – which was a direct allocation for LESS than the market value.

That was a good old GSD scandal.

Two wrongs do not make a right – and that is why we have not followed their improper path.

Mr Azopardi’s position on these investments is just one more variation on the theme of his politics.

He is determined to run a Trump-like campaign where every truth is turned into a lie and his every lie is presented as an unimpeachable truth.

Keith Azopardi has left aside his long avowed ‘reasonableness’ and is now determined to rubbish good news or to introduce his toxicity into the narrative of every issue facing our community.

This does Gibraltar no favours.

In the long term, it will do the GSD no good either.

People can see that Mr Azopardi is relishing rubbishing everything.

He seeks to criticise so aggressively that his actions can actively threaten and jeopardise positive developments that are good for Gibraltar.

The fact of the matter is that to fight for the heart and soul of a community you must be willing to put the community first, to give everything.

Before self interest.

Before party political interest.

Before everything.

That is how I have done the job of Chief Minister since the day I was elected.

I will continue to do so for another term if my party and you wish me to.

The past five years have been really hard.

Since the result of the Brexit referendum and especially so since March 2020 when COVID hit us, running Government in Gibraltar has been the most difficult job I have ever done and am ever likely to do.

I dare say even my political opponents preferred to see me having to shoulder the burdens of governing these past 20 months.

The pandemic has seen us bury almost 100 of our people and has made us lose two precious years on our projects.

Covid has also decimated our public finances as a result of the payments the GSD urged and agreed we should make to ensure workers had enough to feed their families.

Continues at the link.

1 Like