Parliament has given the Swiss government a clear mandate to extend negotiations with the European Union over the shape of future bilateral ties. But the EU appears to have less appetite for haggling over details of the so-called framework agreement.
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El acuerdo con la UE debe volver a la mesa de negociaciones
On Thursday the House of Representatives agreed that several areas of the deal still needed “clarification”. The main areas of disagreement between Switzerland and the EU are on maintaining wage and worker protection as well as state subsidies and citizens’ rights.
The Senate had previously voted to instruct the government to go back to the negotiating table. This follows months of public consultation over an initial draft of the agreement that was thrashed out last year. Negotiations to formalise relations, currently covered by around 120 separate bilateral accords, have been ongoing since 2014.
European Commissioner Jean-Claude Juncker has categorically rejected the notion of extensive re-negotiations and says he only has time and patience for “rapid clarifications” of some points.
The parliamentary debate again demonstrated the sharp divide between left and right leaning parties on the EU issue. The government has stated that it will not sign a deal that has little chance of being accepted by parliament or the Swiss voters in a likely referendum.
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What is this EU framework deal?
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EU pushes Switzerland to back framework accord before June 18
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European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker says he is ready to clarify any doubts Switzerland may have about a institutional framework deal.
Swiss want ‘more clarification’ on EU framework deal
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Switzerland says it will not yet sign a framework agreement aimed at simplifying future ties with the EU as it wants certain points clarified.
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Over two-thirds of Swiss firms support the framework agreement that has been negotiated over the past five years with the EU.
Swiss public sceptical of EU deal amid tougher stance from Brussels
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A new poll by Swiss media agency Tamedia finds the Swiss are far from convinced about the merits of the draft Swiss-EU framework agreement.
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