Boris Johnson’s new challenges after Brexit

In the midst of a pandemic, the British Prime Minister must come to terms with the Scottish separatists.

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Return to service for the occasion, the Big Ben bell rang in the damp cold, on December 31, at 11 p.m. (London), above the district of Westminster deserted by the epidemic, to mark the final exit from the United Kingdom. United of the European Union (EU), after almost fifty years of common adventure. The capital celebrated the New Year with a ballet of illuminated drones over the Thames. From 10 Downing Street, Boris Johnson contented himself with a brief video message, once again congratulating himself on having secured a “trade and cooperation” agreement with Brussels on Christmas Eve.

“When the sun rises tomorrow, in 2021, (…) we will have the freedom to do things differently and if necessary, better than our friends in Europe”, welcomed the British Prime Minister. He also insisted on this “great moment” that the country was living, and promised “a United Kingdom that is global, open, generous, internationalist and pro-free trade”. At the brand new customs border with the EU, Friday 1 st in the morning of January, the dreaded disaster did not take place either: journalists sent to Calais and Dover observed rare traffic , but fluid.

Headlining the Brexit campaign, in the 2016 referendum, Mr Johnson succeeded in bringing his divorce from the EU to an end. This separation, the Europeans saw it as a tear and for a long time believed that it would not take place, that economic interests and British pragmatism would prevail over a populist discourse wrongly accusing Brussels of being responsible for all the evils from the country. They were wrong. However, the ex-journalist, who made a name for himself by caricaturing their faults in the early 1990s, is not at the end of his sentences.

Non-event

First emergency: avoid completely losing control of the Covid-19 epidemic, as the SARS-CoV-2 virus variant (at least 50% more contagious) spreads from the south of England to all the territory of the United Kingdom. The government wants to accelerate its vaccination campaign from January 4 (2 million injections per week), thanks to the green light given to the AstraZeneca / Oxford vaccine, much easier to deploy than the Pfizer-BioNtech vaccine. He absolutely must succeed in order to avoid tens of thousands of additional deaths, a general and prolonged containment of the country and an even more abysmal economic crisis.

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/Le Monde Report. View in full here.