Brexit news: PM accused of ‘dereliction of duty’ on NI as trade from Ireland to GB slumps 50%
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Your support makes all the difference.Boris Johnson was accused of not doing enough to address Irish Sea trade disruption amid the continued fallout from the European Union’s botched move to invoke a mechanism to suspend elements of the new trading arrangements.
Arlene Foster, Northern Ireland’s first minister, said it was "patronising and offensive" to describe the problems encountered by Northern Ireland businesses and consumers in the wake of Brexit as "teething problems" and she called on the prime minister to act immediately to deploy Article 16.
It comes after the EU tried to unilaterally suspend part of the Northern Ireland Protocol to prevent the region being used as backdoor to move vaccines from the bloc into the UK.
Earlier, the prime minister said he was “very confident” in the security of the UK’s coronavirus vaccine supplies regardless of what happens in the European Union.
"You will have seen all this stuff in the papers about our friends across the Channel and disputes with them," the prime minister said.
"All I would say is whatever the toings and froings there, we're very confident in our security of supply.
"We will continue to take steps to protect the UK's security of supply and also to ensure that we ramp up our own manufacturing."
The prime minister’s first public comments since Brussels briefly overrode part of the Brexit deal on Northern Ireland to impose export controls on jabs came after ministers agreed to a “reset” in relations with the EU.
Meanwhile, the Irish government revealed that trade between the Republic and Great Britain has fallen by 50 per cent on this time last year, with the government saying some businesses were experiencing “severe difficulty” adapting to the new controls since the UK left the EU’s single market and customs union at the end of the transition period.
Security minister discharged from hospital following lung surgery
Government minister James Brokenshire has been discharged from hospital following surgery to remove his "somewhat troublesome" right lung.
Mr Brokenshire had a recurrence of a tumour on the organ and was admitted to hospital in January for the operation.
The security minister said he was keeping "positive and upbeat" as he prepared for the process of rehabilitation and recovery after leaving hospital.
The Old Bexley and Sidcup MP thanked the NHS for the "utterly outstanding" care he had received.
Trade slumps by 50% on Ireland to Great Britain routes in first month of post-Brexit rules
Trade between the Republic of Ireland and Great Britain routes has fallen by 50 per cent on this time last year, according to new figures by the Irish government highlighting the impact of the post-Brexit rules, political correspondent Ashley Cowburn reports.
The government said some businesses were experiencing “severe difficulty” adapting to the new controls since the UK left the EU’s single market and customs union at the end of the transition period.
Trade slumps by 50% on Ireland to Great Britain routes in first month of post-Brexit rules
Some businesses experiencing ‘severe difficulty’ adapting to new rules
PM accused of ‘dereliction of duty’ over NI Protocol
Arlene Foster has accused Boris Johnson of a dereliction of duty after accusing him of not doing enough to address Irish Sea trade disruption.
Northern Ireland's first minister demanded action from the prime minister amid the continued fallout from the EU's botched move to invoke a mechanism to suspend elements of the new trading arrangements.The European Commission was forced into an embarrassing U-turn on Friday when it backtracked on an attempt to restrict the free flow of goods across the Irish border.try to unilaterally suspend part of Brexit's Northern Ireland Protocol to prevent the region being used as backdoor to move vaccines from the bloc into the UK.
The European Commission was forced into an embarrassing U-turn on Friday when it backtracked on an attempt to restrict the free flow of goods across the Irish border by trying to suspend part of Brexit's Northern Ireland Protocol to prevent the region being used as backdoor to move vaccines from the bloc into the UK.
Ms Foster said the EU had "lowered the bar" for triggering suspension, which is done by invoking Article 16 of the protocol.
The DUP leader said she did not accept that the Commission's initial move on Friday was a mistake.
"It was absolutely an act of hostility and actually they have not ruled out using it again," she told BBC Radio Ulster.
Ms Foster said it was "patronising and offensive" to described the problems encountered by Northern Ireland businesses and consumers as "teething problems" and she called on Mr Johnson to act and move immediately to deploy Article 16.
"I have to say directly to the prime minister and to the UK government that it is a dereliction of duty for a prime minister of the United Kingdom to stand by and allow United Kingdom citizens to suffer and that is what he is allowing to do at present, so therefore action is absolutely needed," she said.
While Article 16 suspends aspects of the protocol to facilitate negotiations on resolving the issues of concern, the first minister said she wants the protocol binned altogether. "There's nothing positive to come from protocol," she added.
EU’s Northern Ireland vaccine intervention ‘should not have happened’, says Ireland foreign minister
Simon Coveney, Ireland's foreign minister, said the EU's bid to override part of the Northern Ireland protocol on Friday in an attempt to control the distribution of vaccines "was a mistake that everybody recognises should not have happened".
“I mean in simple terms, you do not touch the protocol on Ireland and Northern Ireland without full consultation with the people who are most impacted by it," the Fine Gael minister told Ireland’s RTE earlier.
“The Irish government, the British government and, perhaps most importantly, political leaders in Northern Ireland.
“That's what happened on Friday, which should not have happened. And I think lessons have been learned as a result of that, and it certainly won't happen again.”
Government’s pandemic handling worsening regional inequality, says Labour
Labour has accused the government of worsening regional inequality through its handling of public finances during the coronavirus pandemic.
Speaking after the release of regional GDP figures from the Office for National Statistics, Anneliese Dodds, the shadow chancellor, said: “These figures confirm what we already know: the pandemic, and the government’s handling of it, is worsening regional inequality.
“We need a responsible approach to secure our economy and bring jobs to every village, town and city.
“Instead, the chancellor is hitting families with a triple hammer blow of cuts to Universal Credit, a massive hike in council tax and a pay freeze for millions of key workers. It’s economically illiterate.”
Schools return a ‘major, major’ priority, says Boris Johnson
Boris Johnson suggested education was more of a concern for the government than the economy when considering the impacts of the pandemic.
On a visit to Batley in West Yorkshire, the prime minister said he thought the economy could "bounce back" before turning to education: "The thing that really concerns me at the moment is education and the deficit in our children's education that we have run up as a result of these lockdowns.
“That for me is one of the major, major priorities for us - making sure that we ameliorate and repair the loss of time in the classroom, the loss of educational opportunities.”
Ministers have promised schools will be the first to leave lockdown and the prime minister said the return of pupils would be "the first sign of normality beginning to return".
UK issues sanctions against Zimbabwe officials over killing of protesters
The UK has imposed sanctions on four Zimbabwean security officials over human rights violations, notably the killing of protesters, the foreign secretary has announced.
The sanctions include a ban on travel to the UK and the freezing of assets, and are the first to be targeted at individuals under the recently launched Zimbabwe autonomous sanctions regime, which the British government said aims to encourage the Mnangagwa government to "respect democratic principles and institutions".
The government said the officials targeted, including Owen Ncube, Zimbabwe's security minister, are responsible for the deaths of 17 people in protests against a fuel hike in 2019 and the deaths of six protesters in violence in the wake of President Mnangagwa’s rise to power.
Matt Hancock, the health secretary, will lead a press conference from No 10 at 5pm this evening, alongside Stephen Powis of NHS England and Susan Hopkins of Public Health England, Downing Street has announced.
Johnson ‘optimistic’ about summer holidays
Boris Johnson has said he is "optimistic" people will be able to enjoy a summer holiday this year, provided the disease can be kept under control.
"I don't want to give too much concrete by way of dates for our summer holidays. I am optimistic - I understand the reasons for being optimistic - but some things have got to go right," he said during a visit to Batley, West Yorkshire.
"The vaccine programme has got to continue to be successful. We have got to make sure we don't get thrown off course by new variants, we have got to make sure that we continue to keep the disease under control and the level of infections come down."
The prime minister said the rollout of the vaccination programme has been "phenomenal" but declined to be drawn on whether the government would meet its targets.
"I think it would be unwise to speculate at the moment. I think the NHS, the pharmacies, the volunteers, helped by the Army, they have done an outstanding job," he said.
"The rollout has been phenomenal so far but it is still, relatively speaking, early days."
Starmer calls on government to end agony of people still trapped in cladded buildings so long after Grenfell tragedy
Keir Starmer has been on Channel 4’s ‘Steph’s Packed Lunch’ programme, making the case for the government to end the agony of people still trapped in cladded buildings – so long after the Grenfell tragedy – before a Commons vote later.
“I honestly can't believe, three and a half years after Grenfell, we're even having this conversation,” the Labour leader said.
His attempts at some light-hearted knockabout almost backfired when he said, of his struggles to home-school his kids in maths and English: “I’m scratching my head to try to help the children.”
Steph McGovern, the presenter, asked: “Obviously. there's a lot of figures involved in your job. Do you think, as prime minister, you'd be alright if you weren't that good at maths?”
Sir Keir quickly made clear that he did not mean he couldn’t do maths himself – it was just the teaching of it that presented a challenge, apparently.
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