Donaldson welcomes Truss post-Brexit talks pledge to suspend parts of Northern Ireland Protocol

File photo dated 21/12/21 of Foreign Secretary Liz Truss who has issued a fresh call to Russia to end its "malign activity" towards Ukraine amid concerns in the West that Moscow is planning to invade its neighbour. Issue date: Friday January 7, 2022.
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Foreign Secretary Liz Truss. Credit: PA Wire/PA Images

The DUP's leader has welcomed a pledge from Foreign Secretary Liz Truss to suspend parts of the post-Brexit deal if agreement cannot be reached with the European Union.

Sir Jeffrey Donaldson is due to meet Ms Truss this week, and welcomed her latest statement on the Northern Ireland Protocol.

Talks are continuing between the UK and EU over the Protocol, which is fiercely opposed by unionists.

They regard the slew of checks at Northern Ireland’s ports while the region effectively remains within the EU single market, to avoid a hard border with the Republic of Ireland, as instead constituting a border in the Irish Sea.

Ms Truss said she will suggest “constructive proposals” to her EU counterpart, Maros Sefcovic, during talks on Thursday.

But she said she is “willing” to invoke Article 16, which would suspend parts of the Northern Ireland Protocol, if a deal cannot be struck.

It comes after Sir Jeffrey reiterated his threat to withdraw his ministers from the Stormont Executive if progress is not made on the protocol.

“She is right that unionists do not consent to the protocol and we need the Government to follow through on their commitment to safeguard the Union and protect Northern Ireland’s place in the UK Internal Market,” he tweeted.

Ulster Unionist leader Doug Beattie also welcomed Ms Truss’s latest comments as a “way forward in dealing with trade issues with the EU”.

Democratic Unionist Party leader Sir Jeffrey Donaldson Credit: PA

“It is perfectly reasonable that goods from Great Britain which are destined to stay in Northern Ireland should not be subject to checks, and those goods destined for the EU market can be checked at our ports. We have already recommended legislation to make this workable as far back as 2019,” he said.

“It would go a long way to easing a difficult situation and should form the basis for constructive talks with Maros Sefcovic this coming week.

“Multiple engagements with businesses and business representative bodies see this as a pragmatic and sensible solution. Common sense is needed to de-escalate this issue.”

UUP leader Doug Beattie said Liz Truss’s comments offer a ‘way forward in dealing with trade issues’ Credit: Liam McBurney/PA

However, he was critical of Sir Jeffrey’s threats to withdraw his ministers from the Executive.

“Further engagement and negotiations are the way forward. We do not need threats to pull down the Stormont institutions in the middle of a pandemic, but instead we need sensible, clear thinking,” he said.

“Constructive engagement will always work better than megaphone diplomacy.”

TUV leader Jim Allister gave a more wary response, and said strong words need to be met with action.

“If Liz Truss means what she said in the Sunday Telegraph – namely ‘I will not sign up to anything … which still sees goods moving within our own country being subject to checks’ – then she must extract us from the EU’s single market for goods, customs code and VAT regime and end our subjection to EU laws and court,” he said.

“This is what is required to end all checks on inter-UK trade.

“My major problem with the Foreign Secretary’s words is that they jar with what her Government has been arguing for months in response to the judicial review challenge in which I and others are involved.

“Through their senior counsel, HMG has defended the very arrangements she now verbally disavows and in doing so has blithely and approvingly spoken of the protocol subjugating the Acts of Union.

“So, if HMG now accepts the folly of the protocol in all its parts, then get on with its demolition.

“Strong words are fine, but they need to be matched by actions. Empty rhetoric, like empty threats from some in unionism, only buy more time for the Union-dismantling protocol to bed in further.”