Stormont return: UK sets out new trade rules agreed with DUP to restore powersharing

ireland
Stormont Return: Uk Sets Out New Trade Rules Agreed With Dup To Restore Powersharing
Northern Ireland Secretary Chris Heaton-Harris makes a statement on the restoration of the Northern Ireland Assembly. Photo: UK parliament/PA
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Elizabeth Piper and Sarah Young, Reuters

The British government has unveiled a package of post-Brexit trading measures for Northern Ireland, a move welcomed by Northern politicians who are now expected to restore a power-sharing government.

After almost two years of a power vacuum in the North, the regional government might be within days of returning, restoring a key part of 1998 Good Friday Agreement.

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Introducing the measures to the British parliament, Northern Ireland Secretary Chris Heaton-Harris described the package as a "comprehensive deal" for all sides to settle the concerns among unionists over the post-Brexit settlement.

"The result ... is a deal that, taken as a whole, is the right one for Northern Ireland and for the union," Mr Heaton-Harris told the British parliament in Westminster.

"With this package, it's now time for elected representatives in Northern Ireland to come together to end the two years of impasse and start work again in the interest of the people who elected them."

Mr Heaton-Harris said parliament would debate to approve the proposed new measures on Thursday.

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The most important step in resuming the power-sharing government in Stormont had been to win over the Democratic Unionist Party (DUP), the largest unionist party.

It had argued that London's Brexit deal with the European Union undermined the North's place in the UK by demanding checks on some goods coming from Britain, a move, the DUP said, that had put up a border in the Irish Sea.

By saying it would introduce legislation to "copper-fasten Northern Ireland's political and constitutional place in the Union", alongside a £3.3 billion (€3.8 billion) financial package, the British government won most of the DUP over.

Criticism

In the early hours of Tuesday, the DUP said it had endorsed the proposals after the party had spent months holding out for a better deal from the London government.

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"I believe this package of measures together will safeguard our place in the union, will restore our place in the United Kingdom and its internal market and will get Stormont working again for the people of Northern Ireland," Jeffrey Donaldson, leader of the DUP, told BBC Radio Ulster.

"The border in the Irish Sea is removed."

But there were some who felt the new measures did not go far enough. Sammy Wilson, a DUP MP, said there would still be "EU-manned border posts" in Northern Ireland.

"This is a result of this spineless, weak-kneed, Brexit-betraying government refusing to take on the EU and its interference in Northern Ireland," he told parliament.

Such views appeared unlikely to derail the restoration of the power-sharing government, which the DUP says can take place after the legislation is passed.

The proposed measures include eliminating any physical checks when goods move within the so-called UK internal market system, meaning Britain and Northern Ireland, and that more than 80 per cent of all freight movements from Britain to Northern Ireland would be treated as 'not at risk'.

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