The Scotsman

New ‘ backstop’ plan to stop hard border in Ireland as May denies delay to Brexit

● UK will leave customs union as planned, PM insists

- By PARIS GOURTSOYAN­NIS Westminste­r Correspond­ent pgou rt soy ann is@ scots man. com

The UK will draw up a new plan to avoid a hard border in Ireland after Brexit, Prime Minister Theresa May confirmed, amid growing speculatio­n she could be forced to delay delivery of her pledge to leave the EU customs union.

Following meetings with the Taoiseach and European Union leaders at a summit in Bulgaria, Mrs May insisted the UK would leave the customs union as planned and would be free to sign its own trade deals in 2021, following the 21- month transition.

However, she admitted that the UK would be drawing up a new “backstop” proposal to avoid a hard border between Northern Ireland and the Republic if the UK fails to strike a comprehens­ive trade deal with the EU that ensures goods continue to flow freely.

Reports yesterday suggested the new backstop would effectivel­y keep the UK tied to the customs union beyond 2021, although this was denied by Downing Street.

Customs arrangemen­ts remain the biggest obstacle to agreeing the UK’S B rex it terms by an October deadline, with the Cabinet still divided over the government’ s two proposed models, neither of which are acceptable to Brussels in their current form.

Number 10 sources insisted “there was not a proposal discussed or agreed that would see us staying in the customs union beyond the implementa­tion period”, which is due to expire at the end of 2020.

Arriving at the EU Western Balkans summit in theBulgari­an capital, Sofia, Mrs May denied report sofa climbdown, but following talks with Leo Varadkar, Europe - an Council president Donald Tusk and European Commission president Jean-Claude Juncker, she confirmed that the UK’S alternativ­e“backstop” proposal would be produced “in due course”.

Mrs May said :“The Commission published a fall back option which was not acceptable to us and we will be bring- ing forward our own proposal for that fallback option in due course.”

Controvers­y surrounds the existing“back stop ”, which would require “alignment” on customs rules between Northern Ireland and the Republic, risking a border in the Irish Sea that has raised fears about a weakening of the Union.

Arriving at the Sofia summit, Mr Varadkar had warned: “If we are not making real and substantia­l progress by June then we need to seriously question whether we’re going to have a Withdrawal Agreement at all.”

Euro sceptics responded with dismay to the suggestion the UK could remain closely aligned to Brussels.

Tory backbenche­r Jacob Rees-Mogg, leader of the European Research Group, said: “The risk of the government using all its mental energy on the fall back position is that they create a position that is more attractive than a permanent deal.

“We have gone from a clear end point, to an extension, to a proposed further extension with no end point.”

But former cabinet minis te rD am ian Green, who backed Remain in the referendum, said he was ready to accept a “small delay” to Brexit to ensure customs arrangemen­ts work effectivel­y.

He said :“Surely the point about a new customs arrangemen­t is that it needs to work smoothly from day one, or we will have chaos on the roads, especially in Kent.”

“The Commission published a fallback option which was not acceptable to us and we will be bringing forward our own proposal”

THERESA MAY

 ??  ?? 0 French president Emmanuel Macron, Theresa May and German Chancellor Angela Merkel speak following a meeting on the sidelines of the EU- Western Balkans Summit
0 French president Emmanuel Macron, Theresa May and German Chancellor Angela Merkel speak following a meeting on the sidelines of the EU- Western Balkans Summit

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