The Scotsman

Brexit pushed down agenda at EU summit as UK sticks to rejected plans

- By PARIS GOURTSOYAN­NIS

Brexit is set to fall down the agenda at a crucial EU summit later this week as the UK government insisted it was sticking to Theresa May’s preferred solution to the Irish border impasse despite Brussels ruling it out.

In talks at Downing Street last night, the Prime Minister told EU Council president Donald Tusk that a white paper setting out what the UK wants in its future relations with the EU would come after this week’s meeting.

Cabinet members continue to disagree over post-brexit customs arrangemen­ts between the UK and the EU, with minister set to hold an “away day” at Chequers to debate the future of trade and the Irish border ahead of the summit. A spokesman for Mrs May said the Prime Minister believed the EU Council meeting in Brussels “would be an opportunit­y to discuss a number of important issues, including migration, security and defence”.

Downing Street insisted that a plan for a “customs partnershi­p” between the UK and EU remains on the table, despite being dismissed by a senior Cabinet member as “bureaucrat­ic, unwieldy and impractica­l”.

Andrea Leadsom, the Euroscepti­c Leader of the Commons, told the Daily Telegraph that the “customs partnershi­p” model might lead to more “red tape” for businesses.

Brexiteers such as Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson oppose a customs partnershi­p with the EU, which would see the UK collect tariffs set by the EU customs union on goods entering the country on behalf of the bloc.

Their “max fac” alternativ­e would, rather than scrapping customs checks, use technology to minimise the need for them. Both systems have been dismissed by the EU.

Mrs Leadsom said: “I think the customs partnershi­p looks quite bureaucrat­ic and unwieldy, it has implicatio­ns for needing to keep alignment with a lot of EU product regulation­s and so on.

“That is potentiall­y a less attractive option for businesses themselves.”

Ms Leadsom’s interventi­on came as government ministers clashed over their responses to business warnings about the impact of Brexit uncertaint­y.

Defence minister Guto Bebb said warnings from firms including Airbus about the cost of failing to reach a Brexit deal with the EU could not be dismissed,andaccused“multimilli­onaire” members of the Cabinet of putting their leadership ambitions ahead of business concerns.

On Sunday, Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt accused the multinatio­nal plane manufactur­er, which employs 14,000 people in the UK, of making “completely inappropri­ate” threats and underminin­g Mrs May’s negotiatin­g position in Brussels.

0 Prime Minister Theresa May welcomes European Council president Donald Tusk to No10

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