News

Brexit deal depends on border agreement, Juncker reminds May

Prime Minister Theresa May prepares her keynote speech in her hotel room, during the Conservative Party annual conference at the International Convention Centre, Birmingham PICTURE: Stefan Rousseau/PA
Prime Minister Theresa May prepares her keynote speech in her hotel room, during the Conservative Party annual conference at the International Convention Centre, Birmingham PICTURE: Stefan Rousseau/PA Prime Minister Theresa May prepares her keynote speech in her hotel room, during the Conservative Party annual conference at the International Convention Centre, Birmingham PICTURE: Stefan Rousseau/PA

EUROPEAN Commission president Jean-Claude Juncker has issued a fresh warning to Theresa May that there must be agreement on the Irish border if she wants a Brexit deal.

Despite the rejection of key elements of Mrs May's Chequers blueprint for Brexit at last month's informal summit in Salzburg, Mr Juncker insisted the EU still wanted an agreement.

However, addressing the European Parliament in Strasbourg ahead of the next EU summit in Brussels later this month, he stressed the EU would not compromise on key principles.

"We will have an interesting meeting as far as Brexit is concerned. We want to have a deal. Those who think a no-deal would be a better solution are not aware of the difficulties such a scenario would imply," he said.

"When it comes to the border between the Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland, we are sticking to the point of view we have expressed so many times - Ireland first."

The European Parliament's Brexit co-ordinator Guy Verhofstadt said the EU would never compromise its core principles to rescue a Conservative Government from the "mess of Brexit".

He rejected a reported call by Boris Johnson for an extension to the Article 50 negotiations and dismissed Home Secretary Sajid Javid's plan for new migration controls after Britain has left the EU.

"We will never accept discrimination based on skills and nationality, as Javid this morning proposed," he said.

"We will never give in and undermine the principles of our union. We will never undermine the principles of union, the European project, to rescue a political party in Britain who is not even capable to find a common line on the exit of the mess Brexit."

The summit on October 18 to 19 has been billed as the "moment of truth" when it will become clear whether it is possible for the two sides to do a deal.

Mrs May has said the Government is working on new proposals to resolve the issue of the Irish border - ensuring there is no need for the return of "hard border" controls - although it is unclear whether they will be ready in time for the Brussels meeting.

The parliament also heard renewed criticism of Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt over his comparison of the EU to the former Soviet Union.

Manfred Weber, the leader of the main centre right grouping in the parliament, said Mr Hunt needed to apologise for his comments.

"Now we experience a new level of populism when the foreign minister of Great Britain, Hunt, is comparing the European Union with the Soviet Union," he said.

He quoted Polish former foreign minister Radoslaw Sikorski who said: "Please Mr Hunt, show us the gulag, please Mr Hunt show us the Soviet Union army troops in your country, please show us the Stasi system in your country."

He added: "So Sikorski is right. Mr Hunt, you should apologise for what you have said."

Mr Hunt's comments were welcomed by former Ukip leader Nigel Farage, who said the Foreign Secretary had been echoing a view he had expressed for years.

"For a decade here I have noticed that that centralising authoritarian tone began to sound very much like the old Soviet Union," he told the parliament.

"To see the British Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt now using that language means we have shifted the centre of gravity, we have shifted this debate."

The Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) MEP Diane Dodds - whose party props up Mrs May's Government at Westminster - warned they would never accept the "impossible demands" of the EU for a "backstop" which would see the imposition of customs controls between Northern Ireland and the rest of the UK if the two sides failed to reach a wider agreement on trade.

"The idea, as proposed in the backstop, that we would allow Northern Ireland to become some sort of semi-detached part of the United Kingdom is both offensive and outrageous," she said.

"Protecting the constitutional and economic integrity of the United Kingdom is a red line that cannot be broken or bent.

"When it comes to the stability of the United Kingdom and the security of Northern Ireland's place in it – mark my words, we are not bluffing."