Government agrees 'legally binding' Brexit deal changes after PM’s last-minute Strasbourg dash

Following late night meetings in Strasbourg, prime minister says the government has strengthened agreement to make clear the UK can’t remain in Irish backstop indefinitely


PA

By Matt Foster

12 Mar 2019

PM Theresa May returning to Downing Street after making a statement on Brexit at the European Parliament in Strasbourg. Photo PA

Theresa May has secured "legally binding" changes to her Brexit deal – just hours before MPs will vote to approve the agreement in the Commons.

Following a last-minute dash to Strasbourg, the prime minister said she had secured the alterations to the withdrawal agreement demanded by MPs after they overwhelmingly rejected her deal in January.

May – who will chair a meeting of her cabinet this morning – now faces an anxious wait to see if the new-look deal has won the backing of the DUP and Tory Brexiteer backbenchers.

They have been demanding that the agreement does not keep the UK locked in the Irish backstop – an insurance policy to guarantee no return to a hard border in Ireland – indefinitely.


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Speaking at a late night press conference in Strasbourg following talks with EU Commission president Jean-Claude Juncker, May said: "The deal that MPs voted on in January was not strong enough in making that clear – and legally binding changes were needed to set that right.

"Today we have agreed them."

The UK and the EU have now signed off on two documents designed to bolster the Brexit withdrawal agreement and accompanying political declaration on Britain's future.

The first is a "joint legally binding instrument" which May said had "comparable legal weight" to the Brexit agreement itself and would "guarantee that the EU cannot act with the intent of applying the backstop indefinitely".

"If they do, it can be challenged through arbitration and if they are found to be in breach the UK can suspend the backstop," the prime minister said.

"The joint instrument also gives a legal commitment that whatever replaces the backstop does not need to replicate it."

The two sides have also published a "joint statement" which commits to replacing the backstop with "alternative arrangements" by the end of December 2020.

"There will be a specific negotiating track on alternative arrangements from the very start of the next phase of negotiations," May promised.

"It will consider facilitations and technologies – both those currently ready and emerging."

May also promised a "Unilateral Declaration" from the UK government, saying that ministers believe "there would be nothing to prevent the UK instigating measures that would ultimately dis-apply the backstop" if talks with the EU break down.

“Political crisis”

Speaking in the House of Commons as May announced the agreement, Cabinet Office minister and her de-facto deputy David Lidington said MPs would face a "fundamental choice” later today "to vote for the improved deal or to plunge this country into a political crisis".

"If we vote for the improved deal we will both end the current uncertainty and deliver Brexit," he said.

"The House was clear on the need for legally binding changes to the backstop. Today, we have secured those changes.

"Now is the time to come together to back this improved Brexit deal and to deliver on the instruction of the British people."

A DUP spokesman said: "We note the prime minister’s latest statement and update on our EU exit negotiations.  These publications need careful analysis. We will be taking appropriate advice, scrutinising the text line by line and forming our own judgement.

"We will measure this latest text against the Brady amendment and the commitments made by the prime minister on 29 January."

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