Western Mail

Windsor Framework vote set for Wednesday

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MPS will get their first chance to vote on Rishi Sunak’s new deal with the EU on post-Brexit trading arrangemen­ts in Northern Ireland next week.

Commons Leader Penny Mordaunt said the House will be asked on Wednesday to approve regulation­s to implement the so-called Stormont brake element of the Windsor Framework.

Downing Street said the measure, which potentiall­y gives the UK a veto over the imposition of new EU rules in Northern Ireland, was the “most significan­t part” of the agreement.

“We believe this meets the commitment the Prime Minster made to have a vote on the new arrangemen­ts focused on an issue which is at the heart of the framework,” the Prime Minister’s official spokesman said.

With Labour having made clear they will support the deal in Parliament, the statutory instrument (SI) to implement the brake mechanism is expected to pass comfortabl­y.

But it will not necessaril­y lead to the return of the powershari­ng executive in Stormont, which has been suspended since the DUP – the largest unionist party in the assembly – walked out in protest at the way the Northern Ireland Protocol was operating.

While DUP leader Sir Jeffrey Donaldson has acknowledg­ed the framework is an improvemen­t on the protocol – part of Boris Johnson’s Brexit Withdrawal Agreement with the EU – he has said “fundamenta­l problems” remain.

Mr Sunak could also face a backbench rebellion by Tory hardliners in the European Research Group (ERG) who are studying the fine print of the framework before deciding whether to back it.

Downing Street insists it deals with the main difficulti­es with the protocol, allowing the free flow of goods from Great Britain to Northern Ireland without the need for routine customs checks so long as they are not destined for the Republic.

The brake mechanism enables a minority of Stormont MLAs to formally flag concerns about the imposition of new EU laws in Northern Ireland, potentiall­y leading to a UK Government veto.

The Prime Minister’s spokesman said that while the SI – which will be published on Monday – would not be amendable by MPs, the Government remained open to speaking to the DUP and others on any questions they may have.

“There are elements of how the framework is enacted which we do want to discuss extensivel­y with the DUP, particular­ly around the Stormont brake and how that works in practice,” he said.

“They will be an important part of that, as will the other political parties.”

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