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TAOISEACH LEO VARADKAR has said today’s Windsor Framework was reached today as trust had been built upon and Europe made concessions.
When asked by reporters at Government Building this evening how UK Prime Minister Rishi Sunak’s approach to the negotiations made a difference in reaching a deal, Varadkar said “a lot of trust has been built up between the [European] Commission and Prime Minister Sunak and his team”.
Varadkar said the fact that things this time around were done “very quietly behind the scenes” and that negotiations were “kept confidential” has resulted in a deal being done.
“It was done in a way that I think builds confidence and builds trust,” he added.
He said the sharing of data also played a role, reiterating the importance of having Britain as a strong security partner.
“There was more willingness on the European side to make concessions as well,” said Varadkar.
DUP support
The Taoiseach also said he hopes the DUP will be “able to give their full support” to the Windsor Framework after they have had time to carefully review of the agreement.
Speaking to reporters outside Government Buildings this evening, he said hopes it will lead to an early restoration of the Assembly and Executive in Northern Ireland.
“I firmly believe that people in Northern Ireland do not want to return to divisions of the past. They want to make progress together. A shared future.
“Like people everywhere, they want political institutions to sort out the issues that matter in their daily lives – healthcare, the cost of living, housing, the economy.
“The agreement also paves the way for new and more positive relations between the UK and the EU and between the UK and Ireland,” he said.
Varadkar said it is “time of great trouble in the world”.
“We need to be partners and friends. There is so much more that unites us than divides us. We who have so much in common, so many shared interests and values, should be working together on the great challenges of our age – the war in Ukraine, inflation, climate action, defending democracy,” he added.
“This agreement also helps to restore and strengthen relations between Ireland and Great Britain,” said Varadkar.
Following the announcement by UK Prime Minister Rishi Sunak and European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen at a press conference this afternoon, DUP leader Sir Jeffrey Donaldson said that “significant progress” has been made, but that “there remain key issues of concern”.
“There can be no disguising the fact that in some sectors of our economy EU law remains applicable in Northern Ireland,” a DUP statement said.
The party is now going to assess the proposed outcomes and arrangements against its ‘seven tests’ to see if it passes them and “restores Northern Ireland’s place within the United Kingdom”.
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The party added in its statement:
“Our judgement and our principled position in opposing the Protocol in Parliament and at Stormont has been vindicated. Undoubtedly it is now recognised that the Protocol does not work. When others said there would be no re-negotiation and no change our determination has proved what can be achieved.”
Speaking to Sky News, Donaldson said that the DUP would not be “rushed” into a “hasty decision”. He added that a key question would be determining which EU laws apply, in what circumstances do they apply, and why do they apply.
Taoiseach Leo Varadkar before speaking to the media at Government Buildings in Dublin. PA
PA
When asked what might happen if the DUP do not agree to the framework, Varadkar said he didn’t want to speculate on that.
He said it is important to hear the view of the DUP and other parties in Northern Ireland, as well as the business community.
Ultimately, he said it is an agreement between the EU including Ireland on the one hand, and the UK Government on the other, and would not go into whether the agreement could be reopened if there is disagreement.
“What I can say with confidence is that agreement was hard won and took a huge amount of work on both sides to get to this point,” he said, adding that it is something that would be very hard to reopen.
Today’s announcement of the positive outcome in negotiations on the Protocol between the EU and the UK is most welcome. It is the result of a long and difficult process to find joint solutions.
Varadkar said he is “always hopeful” that the Executive and Assembly could be up and running soon.
Good Friday Agreement anniversary
When asked if he thought they could be restored in time for the 25th anniversary of the Good Friday Agreement in April and if this might pave the way for a visit from US President Joe Biden, as has been widely speculated, Varadkar said:
“The Good Friday Agreement anniversary is an anniversary work marking no matter what happens – 25 years of peace in our island is a wonderful thing.
“And I think we need to mark that and celebrate that whether or not the Assembly or Executive is formed by then. And of course, President Biden is welcome in Ireland at anytime, whether it’s on that occasion or later in the year.”
The Minister of State for European Affairs, Peter Burke TD, also welcomed the news, describing it as “very positive that both sides have listened and followed through on their commitments to reach sustainable joint solutions for people and businesses in Northern Ireland”.
He said the framework “addresses the real-life concerns raised in Northern Ireland about the movement of goods”.
“I believe we now have a real opportunity for us all to move into a new and more positive phase of EU-UK relations, and to face into global challenges as partners,” he added.
Ibec said the framework will be welcomed by businesses across the all-island economy. Ibec CEO Danny McCoy said: “As economic challenges continue to impact business sentiment, today’s announcement will bring much needed certainty for businesses across the all-island economy. It must now be supported through close collaboration between business and government in Northern Ireland, Ireland, Britain and the European Union.
“The island of Ireland faces several economic headwinds but is positioned to successfully navigate them, and today’s announcement will further help this,” he said.
With reporting by Christina Finn
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There are, unfortunately, always going to be issues of concern for the DUP that will allow them to say no. The idea of calling it the Windsor agreement and getting defacto Royal approval is a clever stroke, essentially playing the DUP at their own game, but they will still find a reason to say either a flat out no, or a maybe followed by a no on further reflection…
@David Van-Standen: We all know what the DUP will do say a big NO. So as both UK and EU leaders kept saying this is about the people living in the North. So put it to the people in the North in a referendum just like it was with the GFA.
@Joe Johnson: That will do absolutely zero to address the primary issue of the Northern Ireland assembly, because anyone that actually knows anything about Northern Ireland politics, knows that the objections to the protocol are merely a means to an end for the DUP to avoid entering into the assembly with Sinn Fein holding the role of first minister.
The DUP would have issue’s of concern if there was a Moat built around the 6 Counties. If it’s not acceptable to them, they need to be left behind in the 19th Century where they seem to be stuck in.
Sunak signed a deal that Johnson would have jumped at to sign, only he’s not going to admit it. It’s now been made abundantly clear that there are no more practical reasons for opposition – only political and foolishly ideological ones. The DUP and the ERG have been exhaustively exposed.
Looks like Sunak has the ERG and the DUP by the short and curlies so he’ll be non committal and give it space to see if he can sell this deal.
The hardliners have nowhere else to run now..
The DUP will drag their feet for months before they respond and say No again. In the meantime there will be no functioning government in Stormont as even if they got everything they wanted they would never serve under a Sinn Fein first minister. So the stalemate will continue.
The Protocol agreement is good for relations not only for the UK and 3 EUROPEAN Union but it could start a trade agreement between the UK and the USA.
@Joe Lynch: It could but it probably won’t under this govt. The GFA anniversary is April 10, but there’s NI council elections on May 18. The anniversary could be pushed to the into-effect date which is December 2 2024, but that’s about a week before the latest possible UK general election. And that’s also after the next US election, so the stars aren’t exactly aligned.
When it comes to a vote in the House of Commons it will easily pass and be ratified. It will be interesting to see how many Conservative MP’s vote against it. The ERG don’t have the support they once and if Rishi Sunak threatens to call a snap general election with the Tory party floundering in the polls they will tow the line as they know they will lose their seats if an election is called.
If the DUP wrote the agreement the.mselves, they would probably disagree with it. Little Ian Paisley, him, of the free family holidays in Sri Lanka, has already come out and said that ”It doesn’t cut the mustard” but yet they have not told us what they want. The DUP have already formed an alliance with the ERG, the extreme right-wing group of the Con Party and Boris, last week, as much as threatened Sunak, that if the bill were published he would oust him. I am beginning to pity the Unionist community for voting for people who don’t even represent their everyday concerns. It is all a bit Trumpian! I don’t think I will be voting for a UNITED IRELAND, anytime soon. Barrycelona says NO, NO, NO.
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