The Guardian (USA)

The Guardian view on Boris Johnson’s Brexit lies: reality demands a rewrite

- Editorial

Boris Johnson’s proposal to rewrite the Northern Ireland protocol he signed in 2019 suggests that he has still not come to terms with the implicatio­ns of his red lines on Brexit. Mr Johnson’s delusions on the issue run deep. In October 2019, the prime minister repeatedly told MPs that “there will be no checks between Great Britain and Northern Ireland” despite his own government’s impact assessment saying precisely the opposite. These hurdles, Mr Johnson knew full well, would not be insignific­ant, as shoppers in Northern Ireland are now finding out. They are the predictabl­e consequenc­es of customs and regulatory deviations between the UK and the EU. Divergence required a border somewhere; the extra bureaucrac­y was baked into the protocol.

Mr Johnson needed a deal for political reasons ahead of the 2019 general election. He now wants to dump it because it’s bad for Britain. This has much to do with his government’s own behaviour, which has often been lazy, surly and chaotic. What has kept the show on the road has been grace periods, accepted by the EU, where rules of the deal are not applied. These are coming to an end. Without a breakthrou­gh after months of talks behind closed doors, Mr Johnson has decided to conduct negotiatio­ns with Brussels in public.

The result is a proposal for a further “standstill” on existing arrangemen­ts, which Lord Frost, the cabinet minister responsibl­e, says would allow for negotiatio­ns “without further cliff edges, and to provide a genuine signal of good intent”. This would require generosity from the EU for a refined deal with uncertain prospects. Such goodwill is hardly engendered by the UK government dressing up its demands in Brexiter tropes of meddling European courts and British “honesty” boxes. An ultimatum that London could unilateral­ly suspend parts of the Brexit deal doesn’t help much. The EU is unlikely to be cowed into submission by a smaller trade partner which faces retaliator­y countermea­sures. Threats just lower trust.

There is a real problem here. Shoppers in Northern Ireland say shipping online goods has become prohibitiv­ely expensive. Supermarke­ts warn there might be empty shelves in the region by Christmas. Manufactur­ers worry the “rules of origin” barriers mean tariffs being applied to goods circulatin­g in Great Britain if they are sold on to Northern Ireland. Little wonder then that post-Brexit trading rules have contribute­d to a feeling for some in the unionist community that they are drifting away from the UK. It’s true that the Democratic Unionist party, which is on its third leader in as many months, has only itself to blame. The DUP labours under the fantasy that the protocol can be wished away. It cannot. However, the violence on streets has its roots in a real anger at what is going on. There is a danger in making people in Northern Ireland feel like pawns in a chess game heading towards a desperate stalemate.

The EU is a rules-based organisati­on. It wants, quite reasonably, to apply the protocol Mr Johnson negotiated, not the one he wished he’d negotiated. The European Commission­er Maroš Šefčovič pointedly said in response to Lord Frost that “respecting internatio­nal legal obligation­s is of paramount importance”. However, Brussels can find flexible, practical approaches to an imperfect arrangemen­t. So must the UK government. We have been here before. Last summer Britain backed down in a “food blockade” row with Brussels after agreeing to work transparen­tly with the EU. What’s happening across the Irish Sea is a taste of things to come for mainland shoppers: in January most goods will need full customs declaratio­ns at the time of import from the EU to Britain. Unless something is done, a rude awakening awaits British voters who, in many ways, are yet to feel the cost of Mr Johnson’s Brexit.

 ??  ?? UK chief negotiator David Frost looks on as Boris Johnson poses for a picture after signing the Brexit trade deal with the EU on 30 December 2020. Photograph: Reuters
UK chief negotiator David Frost looks on as Boris Johnson poses for a picture after signing the Brexit trade deal with the EU on 30 December 2020. Photograph: Reuters

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