London and Brussels reach agreement on Northern Ireland

British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen reached an agreement on Monday to end more than a year of dispute over post-Brexit arrangements in Northern Ireland.

The announcement of a compromise to change the Northern Irish protocol was reported by British media citing a British government source, then confirmed by a European source, just an hour after Ms von der Leyen arrived in Windsor, in West London where she was greeted by Mr Sunak.

After months of difficult negotiations, the two leaders met in a hotel in Windsor for what they had presented as “final” discussions on this file, at the origin of the blockage of the institutions of the province but also of stir within the Conservative majority in London. They are to hold a joint press conference around 3:30 p.m. local time.

Political blockage

Signed in 2020, the Northern Ireland Protocol, negotiated after Brexit by former Prime Minister Boris Johnson, regulates the movement of goods between the rest of the United Kingdom and Northern Ireland, which has the only land border with the European Union.

This protocol wanted to avoid a land border between Ireland and Northern Ireland which would risk weakening the peace concluded in 1998 after three bloody decades, while protecting the single European market.

But it posed practical problems by imposing customs controls on goods from Great Britain arriving in Northern Ireland, even if they are intended to remain in the British province.

The protocol thus generated tensions between the European Union and London but also became an internal problem for Rishi Sunak, faced with the opposition of Brexit hardliners and that of the unionists of the Democratic Unionist Party (DUP), opposed to any calling into question the membership of Northern Ireland in the United Kingdom.

The latter refuse any de facto application of European law in the British province and have blocked the functioning of the local executive for a year.

Meeting with the King

“We need things to pick up. We have to solve this problem,” Vincent Ward, a 53-year-old Northern Irishman from Newry, in the south-east of the province, told AFP on Monday.

“People need to know what awaits them,” said Joe O’Hanlan, a sixty-year-old living in this border town with Ireland. “The way it’s going now, it’s ruined people’s lives and caused a lot of problems.”

To calm the Unionists, London threatened last spring to unilaterally reconsider the agreement, angering Dublin and Brussels, which then raised the specter of a trade war. The agreement reached on Monday should therefore make it possible to relaunch the often acrimonious relations in recent years between the British government and the 27.

On the British side, the turmoil is not necessarily over. The DUP “will take the time to study the details and assess the agreement,” DUP leader Jeffrey Donaldson tweeted.

After his press conference with Ursula von der Leyen, Mr Sunak is due to return to London to address MPs in the House of Commons.

His explanations promise to be delicate: he must avoid a revolt which would affect his authority after four months in power. Some of his majority’s hardline Eurosceptics have already criticized a compromise that improves the protocol without undermining its principle of keeping some European rules in Northern Ireland.

Meanwhile, Ursula von der Leyen will meet Charles III, a visit criticized by some who lament that the king finds himself embroiled in such contentious political discussions.

“The King is happy to meet any foreign leader visiting the UK and it is the government’s advice that he do so,” Buckingham Palace said in a statement.

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