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Brexit: New UK plan for Northern Ireland to stay in single market – BBC News, BBC News

Brexit: New UK plan for Northern Ireland to stay in single market – BBC News, BBC News


        

                                 Irish borderImage copyright                 AFP / Getty Images                                                  

The government has delivered its new Brexit proposals to the EU, including plans to replace the Irish backstop.

The plan, outlined in a seven-page document, would see Northern Ireland stay in the European single market for goods, but leave the customs union – resulting in new customs checks.

The Northern Ireland Assembly would get to approve the arrangements first and vote every four years on keeping them.

The European Commission says it will “examine [the proposals] objectively”

The UK is set to leave the EU on 31 October and the government has insisted it will not negotiate a further delay beyond the Halloween deadline.

Speaking at the Conservative Party conference earlier on Wednesday, Boris Johnson said the only alternative to his Brexit plan was no-deal.

In a letter to European Commission’s president, Jean-Claude Juncker, the prime minister said the new proposals “respect the decision taken by the people of the UK to leave the EU, while dealing pragmatically with that decision’s consequences in Northern Ireland and in Ireland” .

Government sources said they believed they could enter an intense 10 – day period of negotiations with the EU almost immediately, with the aim of coming to a final agreement at an EU summit on (October.

John Campbell, the BBC’s Northern Ireland business editor, said the UK’s acknowledgement there would be new customs checks for cross-border trade would make it very hard for the Irish government to accept the package.

                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                      

The EU will analyze these proposals and probably keep the door open to further talks with UK so there’s no risk of being blamed for a no-deal Brexit.

They will likely welcome the massive increase in regulatory alignment proposed for Northern Ireland – which a few days ago was only going to cover food and agriculture and now covers virtually all goods.

The UK will also allow the European Court of Justice to administer EU law in Northern Ireland.

The customs arrangement is based on a lot of trust and a lot of checks, including at “dedicated premises” which sound a bit like the customs infrastructure the EU wants to avoid.

But there will be lots of information about goods traveling into Northern Ireland from the rest of the UK, which the government could share with the EU.

There’s also a big problem with the exit mechanism for the Northern Irish Assembly: is this handing the DUP a veto, and what happens if they decide to end the backstop arrangements?

                                                                                                                      

Northern Ireland’s Democratic Unionist Party – long-term critics of the backstop and partners of the Conservative Party in Parliament – gave a cautious welcome to the proposals .

In a statement, the DUP said the plan “demonstrates commitment to working with our neighbors” in Ireland and respected “the integrity of Northern Ireland’s economic and constitutional position within the United Kingdom “.

            

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Media captionPM: Boris Johnson: “It (no deal) is not an outcome we want … but is an outcome for which we are ready”

But Sinn Fein said the plans were a “non-starter” and accused their former power-sharing partners of “working against the interests of the people “of Northern Ireland.

And Labor leader Jeremy Corbyn said the deal was “not acceptable” and “worse” than Theresa May’s agreement, as it “undermined” the Good Friday Agreement that secured peace in Northern Ireland.

What is in the proposals?

The prime minister has set out details of his plan to replace theIrish border “backstop”in the current Brexit agreement.

The backstop is the controversial “insurance policy” that is meant to keep a free-flowing border on the island of Ireland but which critics – including the PM – fear could trap the UK in EU trading rules indefinitely.

Under Mr Johnson’s proposals, which he calls a “broad landing zone” for a new deal with the EU:

  • Northern Ireland would leave the EU’s customs union alongside the rest of the UK, at the start of 2021
  • But Northern Ireland would, with the consent of politicians in the Northern Ireland Assembly, continue to apply EU legislation relating to agricultural and other products – what he calls an “all-island regulatory zone”
  • This arrangement could, in theory, continue indefinitely, but the consent of Northern Ireland’s politicians would have to be sought every four years
  • Customs checks on goods traded between the UK and EU would be “decentralized”, with paperwork submitted electronically and only a “very small number “of physical checks
  • These checks should take place away from the border itself, at business premises or at “other points in the supply chain”

The government is also promising a “New Deal for Northern Ireland “, with financial commitments to help manage the changes.

                                                                                                                          
Image caption                                    Mr Johnson has written to the European Commission president about his proposals                             

What’s the reaction been?

Later, Mr Johnson will speak to Mr Juncker on the phone and the two sides’ negotiating teams will also meet, while the UK PM will also speak to his Irish counterpart.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel said the EU would study the proposals carefully and she “trusted” the bloc’s Brexit negotiator Michel Barnier to maintain European unity .

But opponents of Brexit in Parliament indicated they would not support the proposals, unless they were accompanied by the promise of another referendum.

The Lib Dems said the proposals would deal a “hammer blow” to the Northern Irish economy while the SNP said it gave the DUP a veto over the proposed alternative to the backstop.

“This is not a way forward,” the SNP’s Ian Blackford told the BBC. “It is window dressing from the government.”

    

        

            

                

                    

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