The Sunday Telegraph

Sunak snubs Johnson over new Brexit deal

PM faces revolt as minister ‘on resignatio­n watch’ after being shut out of negotiatio­ns

- By Camilla Turner, Will Hazell and James Crisp

RISHI SUNAK is poised to scrap Boris Johnson’s Northern Ireland Protocol Bill as part of his new deal with Brussels.

The Prime Minister believes he has secured fundamenta­l legal changes that render the Bill – designed to give the Government power to rip up parts of the Protocol – no longer necessary as a bargaining chip.

But in a sign of the growing rebellion against his deal, Steve Baker, the Northern Ireland minister and leading Brexiteer, was last night understood to be on resignatio­n watch after being frozen out of negotiatio­ns.

His allies said he had been unhappy for some time and was prepared to walk if he is not convinced by the deal, which is expected to be announced as soon as tomorrow.

Meanwhile, the Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) warned that Mr Sunak’s deal risks leaving Stormont in a permanent state of collapse if they refuse to re-enter power sharing.

Writing for The Sunday Telegraph, Mr Sunak said that when the EU had previously refused to negotiate on the Protocol, the Bill was the “only way forwards”.

But he added that the Bill, which was brought in while Mr Johnson was in office, was always a “last resort”.

Mr Johnson has warned that ditching the Northern Ireland Protocol Bill in favour of a new Brexit deal would be a “great mistake”.

Mr Sunak writes: “No British prime minister could ever sit back and just allow these problems to continue. That’s why my predecesso­rs were right to create the Northern Ireland Protocol Bill – and why I supported them in doing so.

“For as long as the European Union refused to re-open negotiatio­ns on the Protocol itself, this Bill was the only way forwards. I have no doubt it helped to create the conditions where the EU have been prepared to engage constructi­vely. But my predecesso­rs were also right to say this Bill was a last resort. Like them, I have always said a negotiated solution would be a better outcome.”

The Sunday Telegraph understand­s that Mr Baker has not been involved in – or briefed on – discussion­s, despite being appointed a minister of state at the Northern Ireland Office.

“Steve is the ultimate man of principle,” one friend said. “If it’s not good enough, I would be surprised if he just accepted it.”

Another added: “I don’t see why he would stay in a Government that doesn’t deliver on Brexit – that’s the same as anyone in Government.” Mr Baker declined to comment. Sources close to the other leading Brexiteers in the Cabinet – Suella Braverman, the Home Secretary, and Chris Heaton-Harris, the Northern Ireland Secretary – strongly denied that they would resign over the deal.

The European Research Group (ERG) of Tory MPs said it too had been locked out of discussion­s. “All this cloak-anddagger stuff surroundin­g the ‘deal’ suggests the Government are not very confident about the actual contents,” a senior Brexiteer said.

“Either way, they would be well advised to allow Parliament good time to study the detailed, legal text that underpins it, as any attempt to bounce the Commons is only likely to backfire, perhaps very seriously.”

A senior DUP source also complained that they had been largely shut out of the talks.

“It’s a strange way of approachin­g a political problem,” they said. “Only involve the people that you want to persuade at the very last minute, and then don’t let them see the details so they can decide for themselves their own

tests? No doubt we’ll hear people say ‘well, the DUP need to accept this, after all, it meets their tests’. Well, we’ll judge our tests, not anybody else.”

The party’s seven tests for returning to Stormont include removing all checks on goods going from Great Britain to Northern Ireland and ending the obligation to accept EU rules without a say in how they are made or enforced.

The source added: “We’ve made it clear that not enough progress has been made on some fundamenta­l issues … He runs the risk of sealing a deal that doesn’t actually deliver the objective of getting Stormont back.”

Sources close to Liz Truss warned that any deal that does not solve issues around customs, regulation, tax-andspend and governance is “problemati­c and would not have her support”.

The deal is likely to retain the European Court of Justice’s role as the ultimate arbiter of disputes about EU law that emerge from Northern Ireland.

It is also expected to involve the creation of red and green lanes for imports, with British goods destined purely for Northern Ireland avoiding customs checks via the green lane, while those destined for the Republic of Ireland will undergo checks in the red lane. Under the current Protocol, Northern Ireland remains subject to some EU subsidy and taxation laws, including on VAT, but these powers are expected to be repatriate­d to Westminste­r.

However, EU sources have said this will come with “strings attached” to ensure the integrity of the single market.

Leaked government legal advice, seen by The Sunday Times, revealed that the Bill would still leave the UK with “an internatio­nal law obligation … to comply with any ruling” of the ECJ on Northern Ireland.

EU officials and diplomats claimed nothing had been altered in the Protocol, which Brussels always said it would not renegotiat­e. Instead, the new Brexit deal will be a series of agreements, which will sit separately to the unchanged Protocol, they suggested.

“The chances of a reopening or supersedin­g of the Protocol are zero,” an EU official said. “If there are legal changes to the treaty, the European Commission hasn’t told us yet.”

Yesterday Mr Sunak was accused of a “cynical” plan to “abuse” the position of the King by using him to promote the Government’s Brexit deal with the EU on Northern Ireland. The DUP said an aborted plan to get the King to meet the president of the European Commission, Ursula von der Leyen, reflected either “naivety or desperatio­n”.

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