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Tánaiste Leo Varadkar speaking to the media in Newry, Northern Ireland today Brian Lawless via PA Images

Donaldson tells Varadkar NI Protocol is ‘causing damage to political stability’

The Tanaiste met with Jeffrey Donaldson to assess post-Brexit arrangements and Covid recovery.

LAST UPDATE | 2 Sep 2021

THE IRISH GOVERNMENT needs to recognise the damage that the Northern Ireland Protocol is causing to political stability in Northern Ireland, the DUP leader has told the Tánaiste.

Leo Varadkar was meeting with Jeffrey Donaldson today to assess the post-Brexit arrangements and Covid recovery.

The Fine Gael leader said Donaldson “didn’t mince his words” about the DUP’s assessment of the difficulties created by the controversial post-Brexit agreement.

The protocol, part of the Brexit divorce deal agreed by the UK and Brussels, effectively keeps Northern Ireland in the EU’s single market for goods.

This means checks on goods being sent from Great Britain into the single market, and in some cases could result in prohibitions on certain products that do not comply with EU rules.

The protocol was put in place to ensure there would be no hard border with Ireland, but it has instead effectively placed a trade barrier in the Irish Sea and is deeply unpopular with unionists, who have insisted it should be removed.

Donaldson said: “I made absolutely clear that the protocol is harming our relationship with the rest of the United Kingdom.

“It has undermined that relationship, it has contravened the Belfast Agreement, it has contravened the Act of Union, it is damaging to political progress in Northern Ireland.

“It has the capacity to so undermine the political progress here that it drags us backwards.”

He continued: “I made clear, as I made clear to the Irish Prime Minister last week that this situation is not sustainable. The protocol, the Irish Sea border, has to go.

“So we were very clear to Leo Varadkar that the Irish Government needs to very quickly recognise the damage that this protocol is doing to political stability in Northern Ireland.”

Varadkar said: “I had a very good meeting with Jeffrey and his team and he was very frank, he didn’t mince his words about their assessment of the protocol and the difficulties they feel it’s creating.”

Mr Varadkar also met with business representatives during his two-day visit to Northern Ireland.

“I think in many ways there are two sides to the protocol and two sides to the coin and I think in fairness to Jeffrey, he acknowledged that too,” Varadkar said.

“A lot of business people are saying to me that it has resulted in a major increase in north/south trade, going in both directions, and that has been beneficial to them,” he said.

“It’s also led to an increase in enquiries in investment in Northern Ireland because of the unique position that Northern Ireland now has with access to the European single market and the Great British market,” the Tánaiste added.

“I would argue that is something that no other territory has, but at the same time, the real practical difficulties businesses have in terms of the forms they have to fill in, additional costs which will get worse at the end of the grace period, so there is very much two sides to that coin.”

He said that the Republic and England had also been affected by trade disruption.

“We know in England where Nando’s are having trouble getting staff, McDonald’s are having trouble getting milkshakes, there is trouble getting hauliers, and the protocol doesn’t apply to England, yet they are having those problems too,” he added.

“I think some of the problems put down to the protocol are actually problems related to Brexit, that are experienced in the Republic and in England as well.”

He said that the Irish Government and the EU never wanted trade barriers between the two islands.

Varadkar also said he would not object to extending the grace periods, but said it would not solve the underlying difficulties.

“It puts things off and in my impression, from Jeffrey Donaldson is that wouldn’t be an acceptable outcome from them anyway,” the Fine Gael leader said.

“It would be preferable to come to an agreement but if more time is needed to find time to ratify any agreement, that would be reasonable to do.”

When it was put to Varadkar that he was a “hate figure” in unionism over his role in the Brexit negotiations, he said there were a lot of people who saw him as the “architect” of the protocol.

“For me, the protocol was only ever a means to an end,” he said.

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