DUP Seeks Changes to UK-EU Deal on N. Ireland Trade After Brexit

Democratic Unionist Party leader Jeffrey Donaldson called for “clarification, re-working and change” to parts of the Windsor agreement between the UK and the European Union on Northern Ireland’s post-Brexit arrangements.

(Bloomberg) — Democratic Unionist Party leader Jeffrey Donaldson called for “clarification, re-working and change” to parts of the Windsor agreement between the UK and the European Union on Northern Ireland’s post-Brexit arrangements.

In his first detailed response to the deal announced in February by UK Prime Minister Rishi Sunak and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, Donaldson said the agreement made “significant progress” on perceived problems caused by the Northern Ireland Protocol, which has governed the region’s trade rules since the UK left the EU.

However, Donaldson said: “It is my current assessment that there remains key areas of concern which require further clarification, re-working and change as well as seeing further legal text.”

The DUP’s position is significant as the UK hopes that if the unionist party supports the deal it will agree to restore power-sharing at Northern Ireland’s Stormont assembly.

Divergence Fear

Speaking on a trip to the US, Donaldson said the proposals “do not in themselves adequately remedy” unionist concerns over Northern Ireland’s place in the UK and its ability to trade with Great Britain.

@lizzzburden he hopes the DUP will give the Windsor Framework “full-throated support”The UK had a “very close eye” on concerns of unionists when negotiating the deal, he says https://t.co/RHrFVwahTr pic.twitter.com/SlkhBDgyJP

— Bloomberg UK (@BloombergUK) March 14, 2023

 

Donaldson previously said he would take time to consider the Windsor deal in detail. However, his latest comments cast doubt on whether the DUP would back the new arrangements.

He called for “greater clarity” on how EU laws would affect Northern Irish businesses, and said the proposal for a “Stormont brake” — to give Northern Irish politicians a chance to object to new EU laws — needed to be “effective in law.”

“We cannot have a situation where Northern Ireland diverges from its most important market that being the rest of the United Kingdom,” Donaldson said. 

Discussions have already begun with the UK government, and engagement would continue “to ensure we get an outcome that works,” Donaldson said.

–With assistance from Morwenna Coniam.

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