Truss insists move to scrap parts of post-Brexit deal cannot be delayed
The EU has threatened to retaliate if the UK proceeds with new legislation overwriting sections of the Northern Ireland Protocol.
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Your support makes all the difference.The Foreign Secretary has defended controversial plans to scrap parts of the post-Brexit deal on Northern Ireland, insisting the action toĀ address the āvery severeā situation in the region cannot be delayed.
The EU has threatened to retaliate with āall measures at its disposalā if the UK proceeds with new legislation overwriting sections of the Northern Ireland Protocol, as announced on Tuesday.
Liz Truss told the Commons she intends to bring forward the Bill within weeks, in an effort to reduce āunnecessary bureaucracyā and protect the Good Friday Agreement.
Asked about the move on Wednesday, she said it would be āvery positiveā if the UK and EU could negotiate a solution in parallel to the Billās progression through Parliament, and write this into the legislation.
But she said the plans to rewrite parts of the deal to address the āvery severeā situation in the region cannot be delayed.
She told Times Radio: āIām absolutely clear that we canāt delay ā¦ delivering a solution in Northern Ireland. The situation is very severe.
āThe Executive hasnāt been formed since February. And weāre only going to be able to get it back up and running, to get the Belfast (Good Friday) Agreement working again, by delivering this solution.
āNow, if while weāre putting this legislation through we can get a negotiated solution with the EU, that would be very positive ā weād be able to put that into the legislation.
āBut weāre certainly not delaying the legislative process because it is urgent that we deliver for the people of Northern Ireland.ā
Ms Truss has insisted the proposals to reform the deal are āconsistent with our obligations in international lawā.
Asked how certain she is of this point, she said: āWeāre very clear that this proposal, this Bill, is in line with international law and weāll be setting out a statement in due course on that.
āOf course the Government always respects the rule of law.ā
The Foreign Secretary stressed the importance of making āsensible, pragmatic changesā to the protocol.
She told Sky News: āThe reality is it isnāt working on the ground. It has created political instability in Northern Ireland.
āWe havenāt seen the Executive form since February. So we do need to make these changes. And these changes will ā¦ make it better for everyone.ā
She said she wants the EU to ācome to the negotiating tableā so a āpragmatic solutionā can be agreed together.
āBut if that doesnāt happen we do need to move ahead delivering this solution for the people of Northern Ireland,ā she said.
The UK is planning unilateral action to introduce separate āgreenā and āredā lanes for goods travelling between Great Britain and Northern Ireland, drawing a line between those destined to stay within the UK and those heading to the Republic of Ireland and beyond.
There will be no crossover between the channels, it is understood, with goods filtering through one or the other, depending on their intended destination.
This will override the current arrangements, whereby Northern Ireland is effectively kept in the EUās single market for goods, with a hard border down the Irish Sea.
Shadow chancellor Rachel Reeves accused the EU of being āoverzealousā over checks on goods destined to stay within the UK, but said the way to solve the problem is not through āmegaphone diplomacyā.
She told Times Radio: āI think the EU are being overzealous in the checks.
āThere are goods that are destined for market in Northern Ireland,Ā never going to leave Northern Ireland, never going to get into the single market, which is what the EU say is their worry.
āFor those goods that are just moving into Northern Ireland then I just donāt think we need the level of checks the EU are pursuing.
āBut the way to resolve this is not through megaphone diplomacy, itās not unilaterally ripping up the protocol, itās by working in partnership to resolve these very real issues that do exist.ā
On Tuesday, European Commission vice-president Maros Sefcovic criticised the Foreign Secretaryās plan and warned that Brussels could retaliate.
Should the UK proceed with the Bill, the EU will respond with āall measures at its disposalā, he said.
The row over the treaty has created an impasse in efforts to form a devolved government administration in Belfast, with the Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) refusing to join an Executive unless its concerns over the situation are addressed.
DUP leader Sir Jeffrey Donaldson said Tuesdayās move was āwelcome if overdueā, and a āsignificantā step towards getting power-sharing in Northern Ireland back up and running.
He told the Commons his party will take a āgraduated and cautious approachā as the legislation progresses.
More details about the UKās plans are expected to be set out in the coming weeks.