Irish Daily Mirror

Any Brexit deal better than none

- LORD HENRY

SOMETIMES in life it is important to restate the blindingly obvious. A no-deal Brexit would cause deeply significan­t damage to Ireland. Theresa May won the no confidence vote but nothing has really changed. There is still no majority in the House of Commons for her deal and arguably she has been weakened.

The backstop is the major stumbling block. I have said before I don’t know why the British agreed to it because it was bound to cause trouble.

From the Irish perspectiv­e there has been an element of triumphali­sm swirling around this – Leo burnishing his macho image and continuing his cosying up to Sinn Fein.

This is in preparatio­n for a possible Sinn Fein-fine Gael coalition after the next election.

In any negotiatio­n you must always keep your eye on the big picture. In this case it is a deal that inflicts the least damage on the Irish economy. In fact, it should be an imperative.

The Good Friday Agreement was a stunning achievemen­t and a credit to all those involved including the government­s of both the UK and

Varadkar & May must find a compromise soon Ireland. Keeping in mind the backstop is primarily a problem for our two government­s, it would seem eminently sensible for them to try and find some compromise that could be acceptable to both parties and then recommend it to the EU.

Everybody involved seems happy to throw the Good Friday Agreement into the equation but seems reluctant to use the same imaginativ­e thinking that brought about the result.

What the UK needs is some kind of legal fudge to convince a sufficient number of MPS there is no reason for the UK to be permanentl­y locked into the single market.

Is it really beyond the wit of the finest legal minds in both states to come up with some kind of fudge to resolve this problem?

Fudge, after all, is an EU speciality. Therefore, the two most important figures in all of this are the Taoiseach and Theresa May. They must show willingnes­s to do a deal. From long experience in such matters flexibilit­y is often the key. They need to get this through the gate.

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