Gulf Times

May faces backlash over Brexit compromise

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Prime Minister Theresa May’s office yesterday insisted it would not “trap” Britain in an endless customs union with the EU after Brexit, amid reports some ministers could quit if this is the price of a divorce deal.

But her spokeswoma­n declined to confirm that a fall-back plan to keep open the land border with Ireland after Britain leaves the bloc in March 2019 would be “timelimite­d”.

Negotiatio­ns in Brussels have stepped up ahead of a high-stakes EU summit next week, and May briefed selected members of her Cabinet late Thursday on how she intends to get an agreement.

Several euroscepti­c ministers are now reportedly considerin­g resigning over plans to give ground on the so-called backstop arrangemen­t.

Britain has proposed a customs arrangemen­t with the EU to avoid physical checks between Northern Ireland and EU member Ireland, until the issue can be resolved with a wider trade deal.

A Downing Street spokeswoma­n emphasised yesterday that this would be “temporary”, saying: “The prime minster would never agree to a deal which could trap the UK in a backstop permanentl­y.”

She repeated that Britain wanted a new trade deal by the end of December 2021 at the latest.

However, she declined to say the backstop would be “time-limited”, a phrase which was in the original proposal published by London in June.

Brussels has insisted the backstop cannot by its very nature be time-limited.

However, British euroscepti­cs are wary of being tied to the bloc indefinite­ly.

May is also facing a revolt by her Northern Irish allies over the long-term trading relationsh­ip, an outline of which London wants set out before Brexit.

The Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) has threatened to bring down the government if the deal results in new barriers to trade between Northern Ireland and mainland Britain.

DUP MP Nigel Dodds said yesterday his party also needed any backstop to be time limited. “This is critical. If it isn’t then the UK including Northern Ireland would be trapped in unacceptab­le arrangemen­ts unless and until the EU decide otherwise,” he tweeted.

A full meeting of the Cabinet is due next Tuesday, the day before May heads to Brussels to discuss Brexit with the other 27 EU leaders.

Both sides had originally set the October 18 summit as the deadline for a divorce deal, but the timetable is slipping, with another summit in November now looking likely.

“There are still big issues remaining and we will continue to talk over the weekend if necessary,” the Downing Street spokeswoma­n said.

Finance Minister Philip Hammond said there had been a “measurable change in pace” in talks in the last 10 days, but there were “some big difference­s left to resolve”.

If a deal is done, Britain could enjoy a “deal dividend” which would “deliver us an upside” for the economy, he told the BBC from a meeting of the World Bank and IMF in Bali.

Meanwhile a euroscepti­c Conservati­ve lawmaker urged the party to elect a new leader if May persists with her Brexit plan, calling it an “ultimate betrayal” of Britain’s vote to leave the European Union.

Andrea Jenkyns’s call follows reported dissent by several senior cabinet members late on Thursday, when May told her ministers that “a historic Brexit deal is close.”

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