The Jerusalem Post

EU eyes Irish border compromise

- • By GABRIELA BACZYNSKA

BRUSSELS (Reuters) – EU negotiator­s see the outline of a compromise on the Irish border which is holding up Brexit talks, EU sources said Thursday, raising hopes a new British offer could unlock a deal.

Prime Minister Theresa May has promised new proposals and sketchy details seen so far have found a tentative welcome in Brussels as the sides push for a deal with 176 days to Brexit.

“This is a step in the right direction,” said one EU source. “It makes finding a compromise possible.”

A second source said EU negotiator Michel Barnier was looking at where the bloc could make improvemen­ts to what it has offered London before a high-stakes EU summit on October 17-18.

“To agree to any deal, we need to have a legally sound backstop solution for Ireland and Northern Ireland,” Barnier said after meeting Irish Prime Minister Leo Varadkar.

The UK has yet to formally deliver its new ideas, he said, notably about a fall-back option to keep the whole of the UK in a customs union with the EU.

Varadkar said Dublin was open in principle to anything that helps escape extensive Irish border checks but voiced caution on an all-UK customs union, which the EU has once rejected before.

The EU is insisting on a “backstop” clause in any withdrawal treaty to avoid erecting border posts between the British province of Northern Ireland and EU member Ireland if London and Brussels cannot agree a trade pact for the future. A seamless border is part of the settlement that largely ended decades of violence in the province.

Signals that the EU was willing to engage with the new plan taking shape in London sent the pound rising against the dollar.

Varadkar also met EU summit chair Donald Tusk in Brussels. Tusk urged May to put a round of angry rhetoric behind and get down to sealing an agreement that would preserve peace in Ireland and open the way to a post-Brexit relationsh­ip he called “Canada+++” – combining free trade deal like the one agreed with Canada with close security, global affairs, research and other cooperatio­n.

EU diplomats and officials described an emerging new proposal under which Britain would agree to an indefinite border backstop solution, a commitment missing in London’s previous proposal rejected by the remaining 27 EU states last June.

But Britain would stick to its line that, if the backstop was triggered, the whole of the United Kingdom would stay in a customs union with the EU. That would mean having the same external tariff on some goods, as the EU currently has with Turkey, and curb Britain’s ability to strike trade deals with other countries.

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