THE HINDU Editorial Vocabulary - September 25, 2018 - Topic 2
The rejection of Prime Minister Theresa May’s post-Brexit blueprint at
the Salzburg summit rules out nothing as yet in Britain’s rocky negotiations on
withdrawing from the European Union. All the same, the development is a blow to
Ms. May, who faces a possible backlash at the Conservative party conference
this month. Her proposal, adopted by the Cabinet in July, has deepened
divisions among the Tories. Two senior Eurosceptic ministers have quit. A
controversial idea in the July white paper is for a hybrid arrangement, with
Britain staying in the common market only for trade in goods and agriculture,
and without the obligations of free movement of people.
This is at odds with
the EU stance of not allowing cherry-picking when it comes to its four basic
freedoms — of movement of capital, goods, services, and labour. The other
dispute is over the post-Brexit status of the soft border between Northern
Ireland and the Republic of Ireland. Maintaining the status quo is critical to
keeping the peace under the terms of the 1998 Good Friday agreement. Brussels
seems flexible on its original proposal for full regulatory convergence and
jurisdiction of EU courts over Belfast. This is meant to assuage London’s
concerns about two separate jurisdictions operating within the U.K. Britain’s
alternative proposal to avoid the return of checkpoints on the Irish border and
to get around the difficulties of erecting invisible borders is to bring all of
the U.K. under a common customs arrangement. Eurosceptics see this as aligning
the country too close to the EU and curbing its freedom to negotiate trade deals
outside the bloc. For Brussels, it would still amount to an unacceptable
division of the EU’s four freedoms.
European Council President Donald Tusk’s remarks
in Salzburg that the July proposals were not workable amplified these concerns.
They drew angry reactions from Ms. May, who harked back to
the mantra that a no-deal was better than a bad deal. But then,
discrepancies in the opposing positions go back to the 2016 referendum outcome.
Brussels had said then that while it regretted the verdict, it respected
London’s decision to leave. It stuck firm on established procedure and stressed
that withdrawal negotiations could not commence until Article 50 of the EU
treaty was triggered. It emphasised that exit from the bloc would involve costs
for Britain, just as the benefits of membership entailed obligations. This
accent on process could harden in the wake of the populist threat across the
region to the European project. With elections to the European Parliament due
next May, the leaders are keen that the anti-EU parties see the economic and
political perils of quitting the bloc. Brexit uncertainty will linger,
meanwhile.
Vocabulary
Blueprint: a
design plan or other technical drawing.
Example: None
of the plans were real blueprints or technical drawings.
Synonyms: plan, design, diagram, drawing, sketch, map, layout, representation
Negotiations: discussion
aimed at reaching an agreement.
Example: A
worldwide ban is currently under negotiation
Synonyms: discussion(s), talks, deliberations, conference, debate, dialogue
Blow: an
act of blowing on an instrument.
Example: A
number of blows on the whistle
Synonyms: toot, blast, blare, whistle
Controversial: giving
rise or likely to give rise to public disagreement.
Example: Years
of wrangling over a controversial bypass
Synonyms: contentious, disputed, at
issue, disputable, debatable, arguable
Obligation: an
act or course of action to which a person is morally or legally bound
Example: He
has enough cash to meet his present obligations
Synonyms: duty, commitment, responsibility, moral
imperative, function
Dispute: a
disagreement, argument, or debate.
Example: A
territorial dispute between the two countries
Synonyms: debate, discussion, disputation, argument, controversy
Assuage: make
an unpleasant feeling less intense.
Example: The
letter assuaged the fears of most members
Synonyms: relieve, ease, alleviate, soothe, mitigate, allay, palliate, abate
Discrepancy: a
lack of compatibility or similarity between two or more facts.
Example: There's
a discrepancy between your account and his
Synonyms: difference, disparity, variance, variation, deviation, divergence
Peril: serious
and immediate danger.
Example: His
family was in peril
Synonyms: danger, jeopardy, risk, hazard, insecurity, uncertainty, menace
