Western Morning News

PM wins backing of Brexiteers for new EU trade deal

- HARRIET LINE

BORIS JOHNSON’S post-Brexit trade deal with the European Union has won the backing of the Brexiteer backbenche­rs, who have said the agreement “preserves the UK’s sovereignt­y”.

A self-styled “star chamber” of lawyers – led by senior Tory Sir Bill Cash – was assembled by the European Research Group (ERG) to examine the 1,246-page text of the agreement.

They concluded that the agreement “preserves the UK’s sovereignt­y as a matter of law and fully respects the norms of internatio­nal sovereign-tosovereig­n treaties”.

In a statement, they said: “The ‘level playing field’ clauses go further than in comparable trade agreements, but their impact on the practical exercise of sovereignt­y is likely to be limited if addressed by a robust government.

“In any event they do not prevent the UK from changing its laws as it sees fit at a risk of tariff countermea­sures, and if those were unacceptab­le the Agreement could be terminated on 12 months’ notice.”

The ERG’s legal advisory committee included Sir Bill, Martin Howe QC, Barnabas Reynolds, Christophe­r Howarth, Emily Law and the MP David Jones.

On fisheries, they said that the agreement “temporaril­y limits the exercise of the UK’s sovereign rights over its waters that would apply in the absence of the Agreement”.

But they said that at the end of the fishing transition period the UK “will have the legal right to take full control of its waters” and therefore the “question of practical sovereignt­y” is “dependent on the preparedne­ss and robustness of the UK Government’s response at that time, which we are confident they will achieve”.

The backing of the ERG will be welcomed by the Prime Minister, who could have faced a rebellion on his backbenche­s without their support. But, if they had failed to back the deal, it would likely have still passed comfortabl­y today, with Labour support.

Labour is alone among the opposition parties in saying it will support the deal – the SNP and the Liberal Democrats have said they will vote against it.

But Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer faces a revolt over his decision to back the agreement. Former shadow chancellor John McDonnell and ex-cabinet minister Ben Bradshaw are among the signatorie­s to a statement calling on opposition parties not to support the “rotten” agreement.

The DUP, which backed Brexit, also said it will oppose the deal because the Brexit divorce settlement imposes customs checks between Northern Ireland and the rest of the UK.

MPs and peers will debate and vote on the EU (Future Relationsh­ip) Bill today, with the legislatio­n being rushed through in a day ahead of the end of the transition period at 11pm tomorrow. The Commons is set to spend five hours scrutinisi­ng the 80-page Bill, though peers will likely sit late into the evening debating the legislatio­n.

Today, the deal will be signed in Brussels by EU chiefs before being flown by an RAF plane to London for Mr Johnson to sign.

 ?? Leon Neal/Getty Images ?? Brexit campaigner Bill Cash MP
Leon Neal/Getty Images Brexit campaigner Bill Cash MP

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