‘NI will not pay back £1bn if pact ends’
THE £1bn given to Northern Ireland by Theresa May’s minority government as part of a confidence and supply arrangement will not be paid back if the pact with the DUP ends, Sammy Wilson has said.
The party’s outspoken Brexit spokesman (below) stressed the deal between his party and the Conservatives would be “finished” if the Prime Minister’s Brexit plan was approved by the Commons, but he vowed to continue to support the Government if it was voted down.
Mr Wilson said the “threat” to Northern Ireland would be ended if the deal was beaten, in which case the DUP would be “committed to supporting the Government throughout this Parliament”.
He dismissed suggestions his party would consider abandoning the Government if there was a confidence vote, saying there would be “no reason” to support it if Mrs May’s deal failed to get through the Commons.
Mr Wilson said: “Ironically, voting down a deal is probably more likely to ensure the confidence and supply arrangement goes on.
“It may well be that this could go through.
“If it goes through and she persists with this deal, then the confidence and supply arrangement is finished, because we couldn’t possibly support a government that was persisting in breaking up the Union.
“But our focus at the minute is on making sure that the deal doesn’t go through, and if the deal doesn’t go through, then the arrangement we would have with the Conservatives... well, why would we break it?”
Asked whether the DUP would pay back the £1bn given to Northern Ireland if the agreement
ended, Mr Wilson said: “No, I don’t think so, because don’t forget we’ve already delivered over nearly a two-year period now on what the Government needed.
“If you look at our voting record, 50% of the votes that were required to get the Withdrawal Bill through relied on our support.
“Twenty percent of domestic legislation wouldn’t have got through had it not been for our support, so we’ve already actually delivered for the Government on this and it was only a two-year deal we had with them.”
Under the terms of the deal, agreed after Mrs May lost her Commons majority in last year’s general election, the DUP is supposed to back the Government on budget matters and on confidence
votes. But the East Antrim MP accused the Government of being at fault if the agreement were to break, and said his party’s stance was “absolutely” worth the potential fallout.
“The deal that she’s got at present is on terms of such enormity that either the UK as a whole has to stay in the EU in the worst possible terms or else the UK has to accept to free themselves from those terms, they’ve got to allow the break-up of the union,” he added.
“Now neither of those two
choices to me are choices which any government should contemplate taking.”
The East Antrim MP also criticised Mrs May — claiming she is “a woman who doesn’t listen” — but refused to be drawn on who he would rather see leading the Tories.
“She wouldn’t be in this pickle if she’d listened to us, because we warned her ... that if she persisted down this road of the backstop that, one, she was going to lose our support and, secondly, she’d be held to ransom by the EU,” Mr Wilson said.
The DUP MP added: “It was never in our interest to sour relationships with the Government, but that souring of relationships has been brought about by the way in which she has behaved.”
❝ She wouldn’t be in this pickle if she’d listened ... we warned her she was going to lose our support