The Scotsman

Special Ireland deal would unravel UK says Davidson

●Davis backtracks by declaring Brexit terms would apply to whole country

- By PARIS GOURTSOYAN­NIS Westminste­r Correspond­ent

Scottish Conservati­ve leader Ruth Davidson has warned that special Brexit terms for Northern Ireland “could have unravelled the entire United Kingdom”.

The UK government backtracke­d on its strategy of earlier in the week when Brexit Secretary David Davis told the House of Commons yesterday that any “regulatory alignment” in order to prevent a hard border in Ireland would apply to the whole of the UK, in a bid to ease concerns from the DUP and Scottish Conservati­ves about a separate deal in Ireland underminin­g the Union. Prime Minister Theresa May was forced to abandon carefully choreograp­hed plans to sign off on the first stage of Brexit talks on Monday after DUP leader Arlene Foster rejected a planned text committing Northern Ireland to match regulation­s in the Republic across a number of areas.

A leak of the draft agreement prompted calls from First Minister Nicola Sturgeon for Scotland to be allowed to remain in the European single market and customs union, a demand echoed by the Welsh First Minister and London mayor.

Writing in The Scotsman today,

“Neither I nor the 13 Scottish Conservati­ve MPS at Westminste­r could support such an arrangemen­t”

RUTH DAVIDSON ‘In the name of God, stop this nonsense because it is causing disaster’

Paris Gourtsoyan­nis

Ms Davidson says: “A markedly separate deal for Northern Ireland – perhaps with membership of the single market – could have unravelled the entire United Kingdom; indeed, the alacrity with which Nicola Sturgeon spotted a political opportunit­y on Tuesday only served to demonstrat­e as much.

“That is why I made clear to the Prime Minister yesterday that neither I nor the 13 Scottish Conservati­ve MPS at Westminste­r could support such an arrangemen­t. It was why I was pleased to see David Davis and fellow UK ministers reiterate this was not what was going to happen.”

It emerged that Ms Davidson spoke to the Prime Minister and the DUP leader yesterday as the government scrambled to put together a new compromise to unlock trade talks between the UK and the EU.

However, a spokesman for Ms Sturgeon dismissed the Scottish Conservati­ve leader’s interventi­on, saying Ms Davidson had “close to zero credibilit­y” on Brexit.

The First Minister’s spokesman said of Ms Davidson: “She flip-flops on this issue constantly and has done since before the EU referendum.

“She’s held every position under the sun on this. So her comments today should be taken in that context.

“And I’m not even sure what her comments mean. Maybe they’re designed deliberate­ly to be woolly and ambiguous.

“If she’s got something to say, she should say it unambiguou­sly and clearly. Does she believe Scotland should remain in the single market – yes or no? And stop playing silly games.”

Last night Ms Foster said the draft text, which the EU and Ireland said had already been agreed by the Prime Minister, came as a “big shock” and would have “allowed a border in the Irish Sea” between Great Britain and Northern Ireland.

DUP deputy leader Nigel Dodds revealed the party was not shown the draft text of the proposed agreement on the Irish border until the “late morning” on Monday, shortly before Mrs May was expected to sign off on it in a lunchtime meeting with European Commission president Jeanclaude Juncker.

He said they immediatel­y informed the government that it was “clearly unacceptab­le”.

But addressing MPS, Mr Davis said any suggestion that the draft agreement would have meant Northern Ireland staying in the single market was a “falsehood”.

“That is, emphatical­ly, not something the government is considerin­g,” Mr Davis said.

“So when the First Minister of Wales complains about it, or the First Minister of Scotland says it’s a reason to start banging the tattered drum of independen­ce, or the mayor of London says it justifies a hard border round the M25, I say they are making a foolish mistake. No UK government would allow such a thing, let alone a Conservati­ve and Unionist one.”

Mrs May was expected to speak to Ms Foster and Sinn Fein Michelle O’neill last night, and is due to visit Brussels again later this week to try to finalise a divorce deal which would allow leaders of the 27 remaining EU states to give the green light to trade talks next week.

But Downing Street suggested that negotiatio­ns could go right up to the wire at the leaders’ summit in the Belgian capital on 14 December.

Irish premier Leo Varadkar said that “the ball is now in London’s court” after the previous attempt to clear the deadlock in Brexit talks collapsed into disarray.

The Taoiseach told Irish MPS that the draft text included the commitment to “regulatory alignment” as a ‘backstop’ in case the UK fails to agree a comprehens­ive trade deal in the next stage of negotiatio­ns with Brussels.

Mr Varadkar’s deputy, Simon Coveney, said Dublin was ready to work with the UK on “presentati­onal issues”, but insisted it would not budge on the issues, saying: “We don’t want to give the impression that the Irish government is going to reverse away from the deal we felt we had in place and agreed yesterday.”

The government could face further opposition to its latest stance on the Irish border from its own Brexit-supporting MPS over suggestion­s that EU regulation­s will continue to apply after the UK leaves.

In the Commons, Mr Davis sidesteppe­d a demand from prominent Brexiteer Jacob Rees-mogg to make it an “indelible red line” that the UK should be able to diverge from EU rules and regulation­s after withdrawal, telling him only: “The red line for me is delivering the best Brexit for Britain.”

The Brexit secretary stressed that “alignment” did not mean full harmonisat­ion with EU regulation­s, telling MPS: “It’s sometimes having mutually recognised rules, mutually recognised inspection, all of that sort of thing as well – and that’s what we are aiming at.”

He added: “There are areas where we want the same outcome but by different regulatory methods.” The Scottish Government’s Brexit minister has been involved in an extraordin­ary television spat, exchanging insults with his former UK counterpar­t as they blamed one another for the failure to resolve the two government­s’ difference­s.

Michael Russell and David Jones were negotiatin­g with one another as recently as June, when Mr Jones was sacked as minister in the Brexit department.

But they did not hide their mutual dislike during an appearance on the BBC’S Victoria Derbyshire programme.

Tempers flared after the Scottish Government minister interrupte­d Mr Jones when he claimed the UK couldn’t stay in the EU single market and customs union after Brexit.

“David, you don’t know much about this, you were so extreme they got rid of you,” Mr Russell said. Mr Jones replied: “Your customary rudeness doesn’t help on this occasion.”

Later, Mr Russell went on: “I suffered David Jones for a year on the Joint Ministeria­l Committee. He doesn’t know what he’s talking about, he’s making a mess of it, so are the people around him.

“In the name of God, stop this nonsense

because it is causing disaster, and being led to disaster by people like David Jones.”

The Conservati­ve MP claimed Mr Russell “was probably the biggest impediment to the negotiatio­ns between the British government and the devolved administra­tions and frankly he’s just displayed admirably why he’s a danger to the whole process of Brexit.”

But Mr Russell had the last word, saying: “We’re getting on fine without you, I have to say, thank goodness.”

Speaking in Holyrood later, Mr Russell called on MSPS to issue a joint demand for the UK to remain in single market and customs union.

“If this Chamber were to speak with one voice on membership of the single market and the customs union, I think it would be very effective indeed,” he told colleagues.

 ??  ?? Democratic Unionist Party deputy leader Nigel Dodds speaks to journalist­s outside the Houses of Parliament yesterday as demonstrat­ors wave the Union Jack and European Union flags behind
Democratic Unionist Party deputy leader Nigel Dodds speaks to journalist­s outside the Houses of Parliament yesterday as demonstrat­ors wave the Union Jack and European Union flags behind
 ??  ?? 0 Mike Russell had the last word in a televised spat
0 Mike Russell had the last word in a televised spat
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom