The Daily Telegraph

Iain Duncan Smith:

If the Tories now become the party of no deal, it will be because of Europe’s refusal to treat us fairly

- Iain Duncan Smith Iain Duncan Smith MP is a former Conservati­ve Party leader

We are entering the end game of the Brexit talks, the final realisatio­n that the EU has been negotiatin­g in bad faith right from the start. It is clearer than ever that Brussels’s objective all along has been to keep the UK bootstrapp­ed to the EU. They will only have themselves to blame if the result now is that we leave without a deal.

Who can forget Theresa May’s deplorable withdrawal agreement, among whose many sins the worst was the Irish backstop? It was a trap made possible by Dublin’s demand that there be no hard border on the island of Ireland: the EU have long believed that this was the anvil upon which they could smash Brexit. And it was entrapment by design. Enda Kenny, the predecesso­r of the current Taoiseach Leo Varadkar, started work to mitigate the need for a hard border. After taking office, however, Varadkar scrapped that work and insisted on the backstop – even though it had been clear for many months that alternativ­e arrangemen­ts could be effective.

We know this because Varadkar and the EU have previously said that in the event of no deal there need not be a hard border on the EU’S side. I happened to meet Michel Barnier shortly after. I asked him to explain how he would achieve that open border. At first, he refused to answer, but after some pressing his assistant said that they would have any checks away from the border. I responded that he was simply describing what had been proposed by the UK side. He replied that what the EU did on their side was none of our business and what we did wasn’t any of theirs.

This wilfully destructiv­e attitude continues to pervade everything. Instead of genuine engagement with Boris Johnson’s proposals, Varadkar has dismissed them out of hand. Now sadly, we see that Angela Merkel has followed suit by indicating that she doesn’t see any hope of a deal unless the UK surrenders to the EU’S terms.

Varadkar, Merkel and the others appear to believe that nothing less than the UK abandoning its sovereign territory of Northern Ireland in the customs union will do. That much is apparent from the conversati­on between Merkel and our PM yesterday. EU leaders seem to wish us either to ostracise a vital part of our nation or for the whole of the UK to remain in the customs union, preventing us from striking new trade deals. And all this for the convenienc­e of Irish exporters. This is an astonishin­gly arrogant ultimatum to lay at the door of any nation.

Boris’s new plan is an enormous compromise. He has worked hard to find ways of reaching common ground. One reason why the EU has hardly even tried to meet him there has been the behaviour of Remainers in Westminste­r. Too many of those people in Parliament who say they want a deal then supported the Benn Act which, by leaving the EU under no pressure to strike agreements, has made a deal pretty much impossible.

But the EU’S behaviour is worrying on its own terms. Even if they sign up to Boris’s plan and a political declaratio­n which stipulates that both sides will work towards a free-trade agreement, how can we trust people who have shown every sign of wanting to punish us for the crime of delivering on a democratic vote? The terms of the transition phase suit them nicely, with the UK trapped with no voting rights or veto, so what’s to say they won’t keep forcing us to extend it, particular­ly as we still pay them billions of pounds?

It is beyond obvious now that the only way for the UK to strike a deal with the EU is from the outside. By testing the patience of the public and the Government, that is where the EU’S intransige­nce and bad faith have left us. And perhaps that will be better for all sides. A free-trade deal is in everyone’s interests, but we can do one more quickly and more equitably when we are not at the mercy of an EU that wishes to hamstring our competitiv­e ability. Tariff and regulatory arrangemen­ts can be made immediatel­y after we have left. And the EU might finally see the need to compromise, if they are to get help with their budget and are to protect their industry from a tariff war.

The bottom line is: we have to leave the EU on October 31, and my party must do whatever it takes to achieve it.

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