From the DW:
"The draft Brexit deal: What you need to know"
The EU and UK have drafted a Brexit deal, which includes a financial settlement and a customs union backstop to prevent a hard border between Ireland and Northern Ireland. DW breaks down the agreement. After 18 months of negotiations, the United Kingdom and the European Union have published their 585-page draft withdrawal agreement. British Prime Minister Theresa May secured the support of her cabinet on Wednesdsay, though ministers and backbenchers have criticized parts of the agreement, specifically one related to a backstop arrangement which would keep the UK in the EU's customs union.
Here is an overview of the key takeaways from the drafted deal:
Citizenship rights
Transition period
Financial settlement
Ireland and customs union 'backstop'
What happens next
The EU has announced that a summit on November 25 has been scheduled to finalize the Brexit deal.
The agreement then has to pass through the UK parliament, the stage of the process where many expect the deal to fall apart. If the agreement does survive, it's still only foreseen as a temporary stopgap to facilitate an orderly exit and allow both sides to negotiate a permanent relationship. Failing that, both sides would have to extend the transition period before July 2020 or the UK could enter a "single customs territory" as part of the deal's backstop arrangement.
^ It seems like a basic, doable plan if the UK can keep it's current government together and not have everyone resign. ^
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