They say an army marches on its stomach. The European Union does it with slides.

The EU negotiating team is gearing up for talks with the UK about the post-Brexit relationship by holding a series of seminars for diplomats from the 27 member states.

The presentations are being published online. Stuffed with jargon and seriously lacking in inspirational clipart, they provide important clues about how things might play out.

Remember the Political Declaration? Known in Brussels as “the PD”, it’s the 26-page sketch of the future relationship agreed alongside the 600-page Withdrawal Agreement, which settled the terms of the UK’s departure.

The Political Declaration is often seen as a lesser document because it isn’t legally binding, or as a sweetener to make the divorce terms more palatable.

It’s clear that the EU takes the document as gospel because it’s quoted at length in the slides. At length. Like it’s the law.

EU officials are alert for signs that the UK might be softening on commitments made in the PD.

It’s also a handy tool for keeping EU member states in line. For example, some have asked for other things to be added, to be told it’s now too late.

One of the sessions for diplomats was about the centrepiece of the new relationship with the UK – the Free Trade Agreement (FTA).

This presentation was full of the EU’s usual catch-phrases about this stuff: being out can’t be as good as being in, there’s no way to replicate membership of the single market without the free movement of people, etc etc.

In the Theresa May era, this would read like a comprehensive rejection by Brussels of requests made by the UK.

It doesn’t feel that way, now that there’s a new British government which is relaxed about a looser economic relationship and can live with some friction in its trade with the EU.

But the EU thinks the UK still has to be reminded about what it can and can’t get.

And the message on financial services in the slides is unambiguous: “not subject to negotiation.”

That’s because both sides will use existing ways of monitoring each other’s regulations rather than inventing new ones.

Get used to another acronym – the LPF, or Level Playing Field.

This is a series of measures to manage economic competition with the UK, which the EU says is necessary to reduce the risk of it being undercut by British firms that benefit from the new free trade agreement.

And the EU wants the UK to stay in lock-step with European policies on the environment and state aid as they develop.

It’s described in the presentations to diplomats as an “ambition to improve over time”, but in negotiating parlance is called “dynamic alignment”.

This is a massive no-no for the British government and will likely cause a big row.

The EU negotiators think this will all have to be managed and they place great importance on an “overarching governance framework”, part of which would be a joint committee of ministers and officials.

According to the slides, one of its big tasks would be deciding how to apply new EU laws or initiatives that didn’t exist when the deal was negotiated.

Another would be working out what to do when one side or the other diverged from where things started.

At the same time, the EU would develop its own tools to retaliate quickly if the UK did something deemed unacceptable.

This is at the heart of the deal the EU agreed with Switzerland (but which hasn’t been approved yet) and my hunch is it’ll be at the heart of what’s negotiated with the UK.

And finally, who could forget what access the EU will get to UK waters to catch fish, and British access to the EU market to sell it, billed as the biggest flashpoint?

The slides reiterate that a deal on trade is contingent on a deal on fish. What’s not clear is how the two will be linked – either in the negotiation process or in the final agreements.

The EU says it will look at “socio-economic” factors – the real-world effect on fishing communities. That might be surprising if you think this should be a purely technical, environmental matter, but it reflects the importance of the sector in the European psyche.

Another key phrase is “relative stability”. This is code for agreeing the broad outlines of how many fish can be caught over a long period of time, maybe decades. It means there might not be much to decide in annual fishing negotiations between the UK and the EU.

There are more presentations and a lot of details still to come. They might seem dull but today’s slides are tomorrow’s big news stories.

Source: BBC News

In its annual report US News & World, together with the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania presents which counties are the best to have children in.

Last year Sweden ended up in first place, but this year we lost one place is content now the second best country inbthe world for families.

Instead, Denmark is a new number one at the top of the podium. And our neighboring coubtry Norway takes the third place.

“These three countries tend to have a generous parental leave, offer free preschool and generally have a good education system,” says Deidre McPhillips at US News & World report to CNN.

Factors such as education systems, health care, human rights care, equality and economic equality have been taken into account.

73 nations have been evaluated through 65 metrics and interviewed more than 20,000 people in America, Asia, Europe, the Middle East and Africa.

The same report also found, among other things, which country has the best education and which country is best for women.

Here are the countries where it is best to have childrenaccording to the study;

  1. Denmark
  2. Sweden
  3. Norway
  4. Canada
  5. Netherlands
  6. Finland
  7. Switzerland
  8. New Zealand
  9. Australia
  10. Austria
  11. United Kingdom
  12. Luxembourg

The 92nd Oscars Academy Award Gala 2020 does not have a clear favorite. It has four.

Todd Phillips clown thriller “Joker” leads the league with 11 full Oscar nominations.

10 nominations each went to Martin Scorsese’s “The Irishman”, Quentin Tarantino’s “Once Upon a Time in Hollywood” and Sam Mendes war movie “1917”.

The nominations paves the way for an exciting and unpredictable gala where anyone of these four can take a grand slam.

Taika Waititi’s satirical “Jojo Rabbit”, Greta Gerwig’s “Young Women” and South Korean success “Parasite” by Bong Joon Ho split on 6 nominations each.

The Oscars gala is held on February 9.