Boris Johnson ‘strikes compromise deal with Tory rebels on Brexit’
[ad_1]
Boris Johnson has agreed a compromise deal with Tory rebels over his controversial plans to tear up parts of the Brexit divorce deal, it was claimed today, as the Prime Minister accused the EU of negotiating in bad faith.
The PM met with Conservative backbenchers who are concerned about his proposals to override the Withdrawal Agreement in his House of Commons office this afternoon.
The BBC said a deal has now been reached between the Government and the rebels so that Parliament gets a say on any move by the PM to try to move away from what was agreed in the accord struck with the EU last year.
However, The Telegraph said while progress had been made at the showdown no formal compromise had yet been agreed but both sides are optimistic a deal can be done.
Meanwhile, Mr Johnson told the Liaison Committee he does not believe Brussels has been negotiating in good faith but he hopes the bloc will ‘prove my suspicions wrong’.
Ministers admitted last week the PM’s proposals would break international law, sparking a revolt by Conservative backbenchers.
The rebels, led by Justice Select Committee chairman Sir Bob Neill, want Parliament to have the ability to veto any move by Mr Johnson to override the divorce deal – a so-called ‘parliamentary lock’.
It is not yet clear what the Government may have proposed to the rebels but Downing Street confirmed Mr Johnson has spoken to Sir Bob and ‘conversations with MPs will continue’.
Justice Secretary Robert Buckland this morning hinted ministers were prepared to move on the issue. He said he believed the original plans could be made ‘acceptable to all Conservative colleagues’.
Michael Gove, the Minister for the Cabinet Office, had appeared to open the door to a compromise on Monday when he said the rebels were ‘on to something’.
It came as Ursula von der Leyen warned hopes of the EU and UK agreeing a trade deal are fading with every passing day as tensions continued to grow over Mr Johnson’s Brexit plans.
The President of the European Commission hit out and said the accord struck last year ‘cannot be unilaterally changed, disregarded or dis-applied’.
The EU has given Mr Johnson until the end of the month to withdraw his plans, with Brussels warning that a failure to do so risks the total collapse of trade talks.
‘With every day that passes, the chances of a timely agreement do start to fade,’ Ms von der Leyen told the European Parliament this morning.
Her comments came amid claims that Michel Barnier, the EU’s top negotiator, said Mr Johnson had sparked the Brexit row in order to distract from the Government’s handling of the coronavirus crisis.
He made the comments at a private meeting of European ambassadors on Monday this week, according to Politico.
Boris Johnson is said to have reached a compromise agreement with Tory rebels over his Brexit plans
Ursula von der Leyen, the President of the European Commission pictured in Brussels today, warned hopes of the EU striking a ‘timely’ trade deal with the UK are fading
Michel Barnier, the EU’s chief negotiator, is said to have told European ambassadors that Mr Johnson sparked the latest Brexit row in order to distract from the Government’s coronavirus chaos
The Government sparked a furious row with the EU after it published its UK Internal Market Bill last week.
The legislation will enable the UK to unilaterally make decisions on key issues, like customs arrangements between mainland Britain and Northern Ireland, contained within the Withdrawal Agreement.
Brussels is adamant that the decisions must be made by a joint committee made up of people from both sides – as set out in the treaty.
But the Government argues its proposals are necessary in order to protect the integrity of the UK should the two sides be unable to agree terms.
Mr Johnson was grilled during an appearance in front of the Liaison Committee over whether he believes the EU has been negotiating in good faith during trade talks.
He said: ‘We had an opportunity for them to lift this issue of third country listings and they could have said of course, under no circumstances will we blockade, stop agricultural products going from you to us, that is clearly absurd.
‘And yet they have singularly failed to do that.’
Asked again by Labour’s Hilary Benn whether he believes the EU is negotiating in good faith, Mr Johnson replied: ‘I don’t believe they are.’
Northern Ireland Secretary Brandon Lewis had earlier told the Northern Ireland Affairs Select Committee that he believed the bloc was negotiating in good faith.
When this was pointed out to Mr Johnson, he replied: ‘It is always possible that I am mistaken and perhaps they will prove my suspicions wrong and perhaps they will agree in the joint committee to withdraw some of the extreme suggestions that I have heard and all will be well.’
Ms von der Leyen said this morning that the disagreement was a ‘matter of law and trust and good faith’ as she said the UK could not simply decide to unilaterally ditch parts of the Withdrawal Agreement.
Delivering her State of the Union address to the European Parliament in Brussels this morning, Ms von der Leyen said: ‘This Withdrawal Agreement took three years to negotiate and we worked relentlessly on it line-by-line, word-by-word, and together we succeeded.
‘The European Union and the UK jointly agreed that it was the best and only way for ensuring peace on the island of Ireland and we will never backtrack on that.
‘This agreement has been ratified by this house and the House of Commons. It cannot be unilaterally changed, disregarded, disapplied.
‘This is a matter of law and trust and good faith.’
Ms von der Leyen said Margaret Thatcher had always insisted the UK honoured its treaty commitments.
She quoted the former prime minister as saying: ‘Britain does not break treaties. It would be bad for Britain, bad for relations with the rest of the world and bad for any future treaty on trade.’
Mrs von der Leyen added: ‘This was true then and this is true today. Trust is the foundation of any strong partnership.’
The Brexit transition period is due to end in December and trade talks between the two sides remain ongoing.
However, the latest row has delivered a significant blow to already low hopes of an agreement being reached.
As well as prompting anger in Brussels, the Government’s plans have also sparked considerable concern among Conservative MPs.
Tory rebels have put forward an amendment to the legislation which would create a ‘parliamentary lock’ on any attempt by the Government to try to depart from the Brexit divorce deal.
A vote on the amendment is scheduled to take place next Tuesday but Mr Buckland today suggested the Government could move on the issue in order to stop the rebellion.
He told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme: ‘I think that the issue is this. We want to make sure that if we hit a situation where we have this sort of dislocation, this sort of crisis if you like, that we can act swiftly to bring in to power the necessary regulations.
‘I think that whilst actually we have got parliamentary procedures to allow secondary legislation to come into force with debate and scrutiny, we have got to get the balance right.
‘We want to make sure that we are fleet of foot when it comes to the crunch but at the same time to make sure that MPs have their say.
‘That is what the Prime Minister wants, that is what he said in parliament and I am sure we will find a way to do that in a manner that is acceptable to all Conservative colleagues.’
Mr Buckland also stressed the provisions within the UK Internal Market Bill which would allow Britain to override the Withdrawal Agreement and breach international law would only be used if the EU breached its Brexit obligations first.
He told Sky News: ‘If we reach that stage, the reason for it is because we judge that sadly, despite everybody’s best efforts, the EU is in a position where we think they are actually breaching their obligations to us.’
He said the controversial powers were effectively a ‘break glass in case of emergency provision’ and would only be used in the event that other arbitration mechanisms failed to resolve disagreements between the UK and EU.
He did not deny that he has held talks with Tory rebel leader Bob Neill, the chairman of the Justice Select Committee.
‘I don’t think it would be right of me to start talking about private conversations,’ he said.
The tone of Mr Buckland’s comments was in stark contrast to Northern Ireland Secretary Brandon Lewis’s blunt admission last week that the Government’s plans will ‘break international law in a very specific and limited way’.
Mr Lewis joined Mr Buckland in hinting there could be a compromise as he gave evidence to the Northern Ireland Affairs Select Committee this morning.
Justice Secretary Robert Buckland today hinted the Government could compromise on its Brexit plans to win over Tory rebels
Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab is in Washington today for talks with US counterpart Mike Pompeo and US Speaker Nancy Pelosi with Brexit expected to feature heavily
He said debate on the Bill is ‘ongoing’ and it would be ‘wrong of me to presuppose what the outcome will be’.
Mr Lewis refused to guarantee the Government would abide by decisions made by a UK/EU arbitration panel on disputes as he said it was ‘dangerous’ to get into ‘hypotheticals’.
The Northern Ireland Secretary also dismissed claims made by Lord Keen of Elie, the Advocate General for Scotland, that Mr Lewis had ‘answered the wrong question’ last week when he said the Bill does break international law.
Mr Lewis told the Committee: ‘I have spoken to Lord Keen and I have to say… looking at the specific question my honourable friend asked me last week, he agrees the answer I gave was the correct answer.’
Reports this afternoon claimed that Lord Keen had offered his resignation to the Prime Minister over the plans to depart from the Withdrawal Agreement.
It came as Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab prepares to meet US Speaker Nancy Pelosi in Washington to assuage her Brexit concerns.
The Foreign Secretary is due to meet with Ms Pelosi as well as his US counterpart Mike Pompeo.
Last week Ms Pelosi warned the UK there would be no trade deal with Washington if Britain undermined the Good Friday Agreement.
She said: ‘If the UK violates that international treaty and Brexit undermines the Good Friday accord, there will be absolutely no chance of a US-UK trade agreement passing the Congress.’
Meanwhile, four senior US congressmen, led by chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee Eliot Engel, have written to Mr Johnson urging the Government to respect its open border and peace process with Northern Ireland.
The letter, which was also signed by Mr Engel’s fellow Democrats Richard Neal and William Keating as well as Republican Peter King, urged the PM to ‘abandon any and all legally questionable and unfair efforts to flout the Northern Ireland protocol of the Withdrawal Agreement’.
[ad_2]
Source link