Sunak could announce Northern Ireland protocol
deal on Monday
Move would come after four months of intense
negotiations and mark an end to two-year standoff with EU
Aubrey
Allegretti and Lisa O'Carroll
Fri 24 Feb
2023 16.49 GMT
Rishi Sunak
is poised to announce a deal to end the protracted row over the post-Brexit
Northern Ireland protocol as soon as Monday, the Guardian has been told.
The move
would come after four months of intense negotiations and mark an end to a
two-year standoff with the EU. But in a huge political gamble for the prime
minister, it may trigger a fresh battle with pro-Brexit Conservative
backbenchers in the European Research Group (ERG) and the Democratic Unionist
party (DUP).
Tentatively
said to have been named the “Windsor agreement”, the deal would overhaul
post-Brexit arrangements in Northern Ireland. No 10 hopes it will also pave the
way for the re-establishment of an assembly in Stormont given power-sharing has
been suspended since the DUP’s first minister resigned over the protocol in
February 2022.
According to
reports on Friday night, Ursula von der Leyen, the European commission
president, was scheduled to meet King Charles on Saturday as a final flourish
in sealing the deal but that was cancelled earlier in the day.
MPs have
been put on a three-line whip to attend parliament on Monday and cabinet
ministers are braced for a potential conference call over the weekend.
Discussions are still under way in Downing Street about inviting Von der Leyen
to the UK for a handshake to seal the deal.
Von der
Leyen and Sunak spoke on Friday afternoon – their third meeting in a week –
fuelling speculation that a deal was at the “presentation” stage.
Downing
Street sources did not confirm whether a deal would be announced in the coming
days, but stressed talks were continuing and that any discussion of timings was
“purely speculative”.
Earlier
this week, prominent MPs in the ERG, including its deputy chair, David Jones,
warned that if Sunak’s deal involved a tweak of the existing arrangements it
would amount to nothing more than a “glossary on how to implement the
protocol”.
The group
has said it is in “lockstep” with the DUP, which has indicated it will not
support the deal unless it ends the application of EU law in Northern Ireland,
which is the bedrock of the protocol and highly unlikely to happen.
Government
sources claimed the prime minister was relaxed about the threat of a backlash
from the ERG and the DUP because he believed the deal would address all their
concerns including checks on goods and food produce entering Northern Ireland
from Great Britain and the constitutional right to be treated the same as any
other country within the UK on trade matters.
The
Northern Ireland secretary, Chris Heaton-Harris, held an unscheduled meeting
with the EU’s chief Brexit negotiator, Maroš Šefčovič, on Thursday, according
to one insider. They said Heaton-Harris was determined to go for the
face-to-face summit to reassure Brussels the UK government was “fully aware” of
the ERG’s anxieties and would be pressing ahead despite the backlash. “This was
a reassurance mission, not a rescue mission,” the source said.
Heaton-Harris
is seen as an experienced judge of the mood of the party, having served as
chief whip previously.
But
concerns in Downing Street are growing that Boris Johnson could double down on
the critical intervention he made about Sunak’s handling of the Brexit
negotiations last weekend.
Sammy Wilson,
the DUP’s Brexit spokesperson, said the former prime minister was helping the
ERG and unionists ensure the Northern Ireland protocol bill, which would allow
the UK to unilaterally rip up some Brexit arrangements for Northern Ireland,
made it to the statute books.
It was
Johnson who agreed the protocol deal in October 2019, in order to bolster his
chances at the December election with his claim of an “oven-ready Brexit” for
the electorate. The bill is seen as a backstop to ensure the protocol is overhauled,
but it has been paused in parliament since mid-October and the EU has pushed
for it to be dropped.
Wilson told
the Chopper’s Politics podcast that Johnson had a “duty to help because after
all he was the person who got us into the situation”.
On Friday,
the foreign secretary, James Cleverly, told Times Radio he hoped any deal, if
it were sealed, would address all the conditions laid down by the DUP. “When,
hopefully, we get those issues resolved then I would hope that the DUP would
recognise that we’ve addressed their concerns and until we have addressed those
concerns we’re not going to sign off on the deal,” he said.
The
comments signalled a reluctance by some in government to press ahead without
agreement from the DUP, and risked rattling senior EU figures.
Those
involved in the negotiations have tightly guarded the substance of the deal but
informed sources said it involved a “carve out” for all goods that could be
shown to be consumed within Northern Ireland. This would give suppliers to supermarkets,
corner shops, canteens in hospitals and schools the right to trade as they did
before Brexit with no customs declaration or security and safety certificates.
In order to
enforce it, there would be hefty fines for any businesses caught smuggling
non-compliant goods into Northern Ireland and then exporting them on to the EU.
There is also expected to be a fudge on the role of the European court of
justice, removing the EU’s right to automatically go to the court in the event
of a claimed “infraction” of EU law.
The
agreement is expected to include the establishment of an arbitration panel
involving Northern Irish and EU judges as the first port of call in the event
of a dispute, with Northern Irish courts having a say over public health
issues.
It is not
believed that the deal includes a new arrangement to safeguard the supply of
medicines to Northern Ireland.
Sunak
hinted on Wednesday that MPs would get a say on any agreement, but No 10 later
clarified that the prospect of a vote remained “hypothetical” until a deal was
struck.
On Friday,
a House of Lords committee warned the foreign secretary not to forget the
problems with the supply of medicines to Northern Ireland in their protocol
negotiations.
In a
30-page letter they said claims that the medicines supply issue was fixed last
year with fresh EU legislation are not true. “The evidence we received from
industry stakeholders makes clear that this is far from the case,” said Michael
Jay, the chair of the protocol committee.

Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário