Germany and Ireland denounce Boris Johnson’s bid
to ditch Northern Ireland protocol
Rare joint declaration indicates hardening of EU
position on plans that more than 70 Tory MPs failed to vote for
Michael
Savage Policy Editor
Sun 3 Jul
2022 07.00 BST
Boris
Johnson has been warned there is “no legal or political justification” for his
plans to override the Brexit agreement on Northern Ireland, in an extraordinary
joint denunciation by the Irish and German governments.
With senior
figures already warning Johnson that he risks the break-up of the union by
ploughing ahead with the plan, the German foreign minister Annalena Baerbock
and her Irish counterpart Simon Coveney make a rare joint statement condemning
the UK for “unilaterally breaking an international agreement”.
Writing in
the Observer, the two ministers suggest that Johnson’s determination to
effectively override the so-called Northern Ireland protocol, which he agreed
two years ago, risks undermining the “rules-based international order” just as
the continent is attempting to confront Russia’s illegal invasion of Ukraine.
The two
ministers say that recent elections to Northern Ireland’s assembly, which
delivered a majority of members who back the protocol, showed support for the
current arrangements. They add that the EU had been and would continue to be
“flexible and creative” to deal with issues that have hampered trade between
the region and Great Britain.
“Unfortunately,
the British government chose not to engage in good faith with these proposals,”
they write. “Instead of the path of partnership and dialogue, the British
government has chosen unilateralism. There is no legal or political
justification for unilaterally breaking an international agreement entered into
only two years ago. The tabling of legislation this month will not fix the
challenges around the protocol. Instead, it will create a new set of
uncertainties and make it more challenging to find durable solutions.
“In these
difficult times, as Russia is leading a ruthless war in Ukraine, breaking with
our European peace order, the EU and UK must stand together as partners with
shared values and a commitment to uphold and strengthen the rules-based
international order.
“We urge
the British government to step back from their unilateral approach and show the
same pragmatism and readiness to compromise that the EU has shown. By working
together – in partnership and with mutual respect – common ground can be found
and challenges, no matter how difficult, can be overcome.”
The
intervention shows a coordinated effort within the EU to back Ireland in the
dispute, as well as a hardening of Germany’s position on Brexit with the
arrival of the new German chancellor, Olaf Scholz. It will intensify concerns
that Johnson’s decision to press ahead with the Northern Ireland protocol bill,
which many legal experts believe breaches international law, will trigger a
trade war with the EU as inflation continues to hit.
While the
UK’s proposals passed their latest parliamentary vote last week, more than 70
Tory MPs abstained or were given permission to miss the vote. The proposals
were also criticised as breaching international law by former PM Theresa May.
Other senior figures not to cast a vote included the former Northern Ireland
secretaries Julian Smith and Karen Bradley, and Johnson’s former attorney-general,
Geoffrey Cox.
Some MPs
are already plotting ways to stop the government from deploying the plans,
which effectively override the existing agreement. One plan, drawn up by Sir
Bob Neill, the chair of the justice committee, would hand parliament a veto
over whether or not the new powers in the bill could be deployed.
Anger has
been growing in Dublin since the bill was published. Leo Varadkar, Ireland’s
deputy prime minister, last week accused the British government of risking the
break-up of the UK with its handling of Northern Ireland. Varadkar, who is due
to succeed Micheál Martin as taoiseach later this year, agreed the principles
of the protocol in talks with Johnson in 2019.
He said
last week that the UK government’s actions were disrespectful. “I think that’s
a strategic mistake for people who want to maintain the union, because if you
continue to impose things on Northern Ireland that a clear majority of people
don’t want, that means more people will turn away from the union,” he told the
BBC. “It’s a peculiar policy coming from a government that purports to want to
defend the union.”
Liz Truss,
the foreign secretary, has claimed that proposals put forward by the EU to
resolve some of the trade issues created by the protocol would create more
unwanted bureaucracy.

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