Sefcovic: GB-Northern Ireland checks agreement possible in weeks with political will
Maros Sefcovic has suggested that UK-EU agreement on checks between Great Britain and Northern Ireland could happen within weeks, with the right “political will”.
He said he felt the EU and UK were not "worlds apart" on a deal.
He said that both sides should work “constructively and intensively” for a joint solution to the row over the post-Brexit arrangements in the region while praising the work of Foreign Secretary James Cleverly in recent weeks after talks restarted.
“This is important as the UK had not engaged in any meaningful discussions with us since February,” he told politicians.
“I believe that our respective positions are not worlds apart,” he said.
He stressed the need to “genuinely explore the EU’s robust proposals aimed at facilitating and simplifying trade between east and west while ensuring no hard border north and south on the island of Ireland”. It comes as Rishi Sunak and Ursula von der Leyen agreed to “work together” to end the row over the Northern Ireland Protocol, when they met for the first time at Cop27 in Egypt.
Mr Sefcovic, the European Commission vice-president and Brexit negotiator, made the comments in Westminster during a meeting of British and European parliamentarians.
He said: “This is the area where we do not seek any political victory. We just want to solve the problem.”
Discussing EU proposals to reduce checks, he said: “Is it too much to do this? Can we not find pragmatic, technical solutions to make this thing work?
“I believe it could be done, if there is political will, I’m sure that we can sort it out really within a couple of weeks because really both sides of our negotiating teams we know these topics from all angles.”
In Egypt, the new prime minister met the European Commission president as both attended the Cop27 climate conference on Monday, with Mr Sunak stressing the need to “find solutions” to the “very real problems” caused by the post-Brexit arrangements in the region.
Mr Sunak inherits from his predecessors Liz Truss and Boris Johnson the problem of the Northern Ireland Protocol, which is vocally opposed by unionists who claim it cuts off the region from the rest of the UK.
The post-Brexit solution, designed to avoid a hard border on the island of Ireland, is cited as the Democratic Unionist Party’s main reason for refusing to return to power sharing.
The instability in Northern Ireland has raised concerns in Dublin, Brussels and Washington, and the row between the UK and the EU shows few signs of coming to a rapid conclusion, despite indications of a more positive tone from the British side in recent weeks.
Ms von der Leyen called it a “good first meeting”.
“We face many common challenges, from tackling climate change and the energy transition to Russia’s war against Ukraine,” she tweeted.
She said she looked forward to “constructive co-operation” between the two countries.
In London, Europe Minister Leo Docherty spoke for the Government at a meeting of the UK-EU parliamentary partnership assembly and told a roomful of European and British politicians that it remained the UK’s “preference to resolve this through talks”.
“We are engaging in constructive dialogue to find solutions,” he said.
There, he hit out at the EU’s decision to deny British access to research programmes such as Horizon, accusing the bloc of failing to fulfil its part of the agreement.
“It brings no conceivable disadvantage to the EU or its member states, but the EU has politicised scientific co-operation by linking it with the Northern Ireland Protocol,” he said.
“Putting politics in the way of scientific collaboration constrains human potential and hurts everybody.”
On the Northern Ireland Protocol Bill, which would tear up the Northern Ireland Protocol and is currently in the House of Lords, Mr Docherty said: “We are not expediting the progress of that Bill. Many of you will know that laws, like sausages, take time to be made and they are quite slow.
“It is going through its normal course through the legislative procedure.”
“We’re not expediting it, but we’re not halting it. We’re just letting it go forward as it would.”
Meanwhile, Downing Street said it had no specific timeline in mind for talks on the Northern Ireland Protocol, after Maros Sefcovic suggested agreement could come in weeks.
The Prime Minister's official spokesman said: "We're not working to a set timeline on those sorts of discussions.
"Obviously we do want to come up with a negotiated solution, we do think the issue is urgent and needs resolving, and obviously we would welcome any progress made."
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