The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

EU standing firm on calls for changes to Brexit Bill

Brussels demands withdrawal agreement in spite of PM’s compromise

- HARRIET LINE

Brussels is standing firm on its demand for the UK to abandon plans to override key elements of the Brexit Withdrawal Agreement, despite ministers agreeing a compromise with Tory rebels.

Boris Johnson was forced to agree to table an amendment to the UK Internal Market Bill, giving MPs a vote before the government can use powers which would breach the deal brokered with the EU last year.

Brussels yesterday said it still wanted the clauses to be withdrawn from the legislatio­n by the end of the month.

Eric Mamer, chief spokesman for the European Commission, told a press briefing: “We have as you know set out a position extremely clearly, it is in our statement, and it relates to those clauses being withdrawn from the law.

“That position has not changed and we have asked the UK to do this at the earliest possible convenienc­e, and by the end of September at the latest. That has not changed.”

The spokesman also insisted the EU carries out negotiatio­ns in “good faith”, after the prime minister told MPs on Wednesday he did not believe they had acted as such in the Brexit talks.

It came as US presidenti­al election frontrunne­r Joe Biden insisted the Good Friday peace deal in Northern Ireland cannot become a “casualty” of Brexit.

The Democratic Party nominee for the White House tweeted: “Any trade deal between the US and UK must be contingent upon respect for the Agreement and preventing the return of a hard border. Period.”

In response, Downing Street said the government was working with US politician­s to make sure people understood its position.

“We continue to remain absolutely committed to no hard border and no border infrastruc­ture between the Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland,” a Number 10 spokesman said.

Asked if Mr Biden was wrong, the spokesman said: “We will continue to work with our US partners to ensure our position is understood, but the whole point of this, as the PM has set out, is to make sure the Belfast/Good Friday Agreement is upheld.”

Meanwhile, Daniel Ferrie, a European Commission spokesman, said the EU is “not threatenin­g food supply to Northern Ireland”.

He tweeted: “We are committed to the faithful implementa­tion of the Protocol.

“EU rules will continue to apply to food imports into NI. This avoids a hard border on the island of Ireland. The UK agreed to this.”

It comes amid government concerns that food imports may be blocked from Britain to Northern Ireland.

 ?? Pictures: Xinhua/ Shuttersto­ck; AP. ?? Boris Johnson, above, is under pressure from the EU and, below, US presidenti­al election frontrunne­r Joe Biden.
Pictures: Xinhua/ Shuttersto­ck; AP. Boris Johnson, above, is under pressure from the EU and, below, US presidenti­al election frontrunne­r Joe Biden.
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