Belfast Telegraph

Foster denies Brexit comments were veiled threat to pull plug on DUP deal with Tories

- BY DAVID YOUNG, PA

ARLENE Foster has denied threatenin­g the Prime Minister over Brexit, insisting she does not think Theresa May would consider a deal that would treat Northern Ireland differentl­y.

Weekend comments by the DUP leader about the party’s ‘red line’ on customs arrangemen­ts post-Brexit were interprete­d by some as a veiled threat to pull the plug on her party’s confidence and supply deal with the Tories.

Mrs Foster said she was simply reiteratin­g the DUP’s long-standing position that Northern Ireland must be treated the same as the rest of the UK in the exit deal.

She was asked about the issue

amid speculatio­n Brexit Secretary David Davis was considerin­g proposals that would see Northern Ireland covered by a joint regime of UK and EU customs regulation­s, allowing it to trade freely with both, plus a 10-mile wide ‘special economic zone’ on the border with the Republic.

That idea was subsequent­ly dismissed by Downing Street.

Yesterday, Mrs Foster said her remarks about the party’s ‘red line’ was not a threat to Mrs May.

“I don’t characteri­se it as a threat,” she said.

“Our red line is there, it’s open, everybody has heard me say it on many, many occasions.

“We will judge any propositio­n against that red line.

“Frankly I was a bit surprised it was characteri­sed as threat.”

Mrs Foster was attending the launch of a report at Stormont that examined the impact of one of the key planks of the DUP’s £1bn confidence and supply agreement with the Tories — a £150m investment in broadband coverage in Northern Ireland.

She said her party had not been presented with any papers from the government that suggested treating Northern Ireland differentl­y.

“I know that Theresa May and her team are very cognisant of the fact that is our red line and that’s what we are working on,” she said.

“She knows what our position is, she’s known it all along, so therefore I have no reason to doubt that she wouldn’t move away from that.”

Cabinet ministers were last month tasked with analysing the two main options so far put forward for the Irish border. Brussels has already rejected both schemes, with chief Brexit negotiator Michel Barnier saying on Friday that neither was “operationa­l or acceptable”.

 ??  ?? Surprised: Arlene Foster
Surprised: Arlene Foster

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