Ireland sticks boot into Johnson over Brexit deal

Bloomberg

The UK has displayed “bad faith” in how it has approached the part of the Brexit treaty dealing with Northern Ireland, Irish Prime Minister Micheal Martin said.
“It is perfectly reasonable to look for ways to improve the operation of the Protocol — but unfortunately what we have seen are bad-faith efforts to undermine a treaty freely entered into,” Martin said in an address to the European parliament.
“Instead of trying to create a constructive atmosphere for all to engage, we have actually seen efforts to block agreements or introduce new problems.”
The UK government has long been pushing to rewrite the Northern Ireland Protocol, which keeps the region in the EU’s single market while creating a customs border with the rest of the UK.
Prime Minister Boris Johnson plans to introduce legislation as soon as Thursday to give ministers the power to override parts of the deal, although the timing could slip, according to people familiar with the matter.
Officials signalled last month the government was eyeing the fortnight following June 6 to introduce the legislation. A delay beyond that would bolster the impression that legislating has been made much more difficult by Johnson’s narrow victory in a confidence vote, which laid bare the strength of opposition to him within the party.
The EU has urged Johnson to continue negotiating over ways to amend the Protocol, rather than scrap it. The bloc proposed a set of possible changes last fall it said would help smooth out problems for people in Northern Ireland.
The protocol has angered unionists in Northern Ireland because it treats the region differently to the rest of the UK, but the EU notes that the deal grants Northern Ireland unique access to both the EU common market and the UK. EU member states and senior US politicians have warned unilateral efforts to scuttle parts of the arrangement risk jeopardising hard-won peace and stability in the region.
“The UK government is not giving due consideration to the totality of what’s involved in the Good Friday Agreement,” Martin said, referring to the political agreement on how Northern Ireland is governed and largely brought an end to sectarian violence.
Unilateral action from the UK risks a retaliatory move by the EU, potentially disrupting trade and raising prices.
The EU will likely consider unfreezing its infringement
procedure against London, suspending its trade agreement, freezing the privileged access UK companies have to the bloc’s single market and halting talks over the status of Gibraltar, according to a person familiar with the matter.
Martin reiterated that he believes solutions can be found to issues surrounding the Protocol, but only with partnership from the UK.
“Unilateral action to set aside a solemn agreement would be deeply damaging,” he said.
“It would mark a historic low-point signaling a disregard for essential principles of laws which are the foundation of international relations. And it would — quite literally — be to the benefit of absolutely no one.”

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