Prime Minister's statement on Brexit
With permission Mr Speaker, I would like to update the House ahead
of this week's European Council. We are entering the
final stages of these negotiations. This is the time for
cool, calm heads to prevail. And it is the time for a
clear-eyed focus on the few remaining but critical issues that are
still to be agreed. Yesterday the Secretary of State for
Exiting the European Union went to Brussels for further talks
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With permission Mr Speaker, I would like to update the House
ahead of this week's European Council.
We are entering the final stages of these negotiations.
This is the time for cool, calm heads to prevail.
And it is the time for a clear-eyed focus on the few remaining
but critical issues that are still to be agreed.
Yesterday the Secretary of State for Exiting the European Union
went to Brussels for further talks with Michel Barnier.
There has inevitably been a great deal of inaccurate
speculation.
So I want to set out clearly for the House the facts as they
stand.
First, we have made real progress in recent weeks on both the
withdrawal agreement and the political declaration on our future
relationship.
And I want to pay tribute to both negotiating teams for the many,
many hours of hard work that have got us to this point.
In March we agreed legal text around the Implementation Period,
citizens' rights and the financial settlement.
And we have now made good progress on text concerning the
majority of the outstanding issues.
Taken together, the shape of a deal across the vast majority of
the withdrawal agreement - the terms of our exit - are now clear.
We also have broad agreement on the structure and scope of the
framework for our future relationship, with progress on issues
like security, transport and services.
And perhaps, most significantly, we have made progress on
Northern Ireland – where Mr Speaker, the EU have been working
with us to respond to the very real concerns we had on their
original proposals.
Mr Speaker, let me remind the House why this is so
important.
Both the UK and the EU share a profound responsibility to ensure
the preservation of the Belfast Good Friday Agreement, protecting
the hard won peace and stability in Northern Ireland and ensuring
that life continues essentially as it does now.
We agree that our future economic partnership should provide for
solutions to the unique circumstances in Northern Ireland in the
long term.
And, while we are both committed to ensuring that this future
relationship is in place by the end of the implementation period,
we accept that there is a chance that there may be a gap between
the two.
This is what creates the need for a backstop to ensure that if
such a temporary gap were ever to arise, there would be no hard
border between Northern Ireland and Ireland – or indeed anything
that would threaten the integrity of our precious union.
So this backstop is intended to be an insurance policy for people
of Northern Ireland and Ireland.
Previously the European Union had proposed a backstop that would
see Northern Ireland carved off in the EU’s customs union and
parts of the single market, separated through a border in the
Irish Sea from the UK’s own internal market.
As I have said many times, I could never accept that, no matter
how unlikely such a scenario may be.
Creating any form of customs border between Northern Ireland and
the rest of the UK would mean a fundamental change in the
day-to-day experience for businesses in Northern Ireland – with
the potential to affect jobs and investment.
We published our proposals on customs in the backstop in June and
after Salzburg I said we would bring forward our own further
proposals – and that is what we have done in these negotiations.
And the European Union have responded positively by agreeing to
explore a UK-wide customs solution to this backstop.
But Mr Speaker, two problems remain.
First, the EU says there is not time to work out the detail
of this UK-wide solution in the next few weeks.
So even with the progress we have made, the EU still requires a
“backstop to the backstop” – effectively an insurance policy for
the insurance policy.
And they want this to be the Northern Ireland-only solution that
they had previously proposed.
We have been clear that we cannot agree to anything that
threatens the integrity of our United Kingdom.
And I am sure the whole House shares the government’s view on
this.
Indeed the House of Commons set out its view when agreeing
unanimously part 6, section 55 of the Taxation (Cross-border
Trade Act) on a Single United Kingdom customs territory.
This states:
“It shall be unlawful for Her Majesty's Government to enter
into arrangements under which Northern Ireland forms part of a
separate customs territory to Great Britain.”
So, Mr Speaker, this message is clear – not just from this
government, but from this whole House.
Second, Mr Speaker, I need to be able to look the British people
in the eye and say this backstop is a temporary
solution.
People are rightly concerned that what is only meant to be
temporary could become a permanent limbo – with no new
relationship between the UK and the EU ever agreed.
I am clear we are not going to be trapped permanently in a single
customs territory unable to do meaningful trade deals.
So it must be the case, first, that the backstop should not need
to come into force.
Second, that if it does, it must be temporary.
And third – while I do not believe this will be the case - if the
EU were not to co-operate on our future relationship, we must be
able to ensure that we cannot be kept in this backstop
arrangement indefinitely.
I would not expect this House to agree to a deal unless we have
the reassurance that the UK, as a sovereign nation, has this say
over our arrangements with the EU.
Mr Speaker, I do not believe the UK and the EU are far
apart.
We both agree that Article 50 cannot provide the legal basis for
a permanent relationship.
And we both agree this backstop must be temporary.
So we must now work together to give effect to that agreement.
Mr Speaker, so much of these negotiations are necessarily
technical.
But the reason this all matters is because it affects the future
of our country.
It affects jobs and livelihoods in every community. It is about
what kind of country we are and about our faith in our democracy.
Of course, it is frustrating that almost all of the remaining
points of disagreement are focused on how we manage a scenario
which both sides hope should never come to pass – and which if it
does, will only be temporary.
We cannot let this disagreement derail the prospects of a good
deal and leave us with the no deal outcome that no-one wants.
I continue to believe that a negotiated deal is the best outcome
for the UK and for the European Union.
I continue to believe that such a deal is achievable.
And that is the spirit in which I will continue to work with our
European partners.
And I commend this Statement to the House.
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