The Scotsman

May pushes for interim customs

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not party to the EU treaties”. The plan could run into resistance­inbrussels­wherenegot­iators could question why Britain should enjoy the benefits of the customs union while standing outside it.

Josh Hardie, the CBI’S deputy director-general, said: “It is encouragin­g to see these papers propose a time-limited interim period and a customs system that is as barrierfre­e as possible.

“We at the CBI have always been clear that new ideas on crucial issues like this should be brought to the table quickly.”

Sir Vince Cable, the Liberal Democrat leader, said: “The only way to guarantee ‘free and frictionle­ss’ trade with the EU is to stay in the customs union and single market.

“Anything else risks creating more red tape for business, longer queues at our borders and higher prices for consumers.”

The Labour MP Chris Leslie, of the Open Britain campaign group, accused ministers of “wishful thinking”.

He said: “It looks like the new unified position in the Cabinet is to return the Government to the territory of wanting to have their cake and eat it.

“Ministers claim we can leave the Customs Union and yet still achieve ‘the most frictionle­ss customs agreement anywhere in the world’, but with absolutely no detail about how such a miraculous new system will be achieved.”

Adam Marshall, director general of the British Chambers of Commerce, said most businesses were more concerned about future customs arrangemen­ts with the EU than future trade deals.

He added: “At this stage, it is critically important to keep a number of different options open in order to achieve this goal.

“While we await the detail of the government’s customs position paper, and the reactions of EU negotiator­s, business is clear that a smooth transition to new arrangemen­ts is needed, and multiple adjustment costs must be avoided.

“In the long term, we should aim to avoid imports and exports being subjected to two sets of customs checks, and to ensuring the smoothest possible future trade relationsh­ip between the UK and EU.”

A position paper on the fraught issue of the border between Northern Ireland and the Republic will published tomorrow, ahead of the third round of Brexit negotiatio­ns in Brussels at the end of the month.

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