Meanwhile, the head of the legal branch of government resigned after the Prime Minister’s adjustments to the Brexit divorce bill.
The Financial Times reports that Jonathan Jones leaves office due to a dispute with Johnson over his goal of undermining the retirement agreement signed in January under the Northern Ireland Protocol.
Hours earlier, Downing Street suggested that Brussels “become a reality” as Brexit negotiations resume as time runs out to conclude an agreement.
Lord Frost, the UK’s negotiating leader with the EU, said the two sides “can no longer cross the beaten track” in the slit.
Follow our Brexit blog for the latest news and updates. . .
LEWIS TELLS MINISTERS THAT UK PROPOSALS ON EU DEAL COULD ‘BREAK INTERNATIONAL LAW’
A cabinet minister said he hoped the UK would “break the law” with his proposals to replace the operation of a key agreement with the EU.
Northern Ireland Secretary Brandon Lewis told MPs that this would be “in a very express and limited way,” adding that there are “clear precedents” for the UK and other countries that will have to take into account their external obligations as cases change.
His Labour counterpart, Louise Haigh, described admission as “absolutely astonishing” and warned that it would “seriously undermine” the UK’s authority on stage.
The government will introduce the Internal Market Bill on Wednesday, which aims to ensure that Northern Ireland’s products remain unrestricted in the UK market, while specifying that EU state aid regulations, which will continue to apply in Northern Ireland, will not apply. to the rest of the UK.
Concerns have been expressed that the key to the withdrawal agreement, which sealed the UK’s exit from the EU in January, is being annulled by legislation.
BRITISH BREXIT NEGOTIATOR TAKES OFFICE AT LORDS’ HOUSE AMID WITHDRAWAL AGREEMENT
The UK’s Brexit negotiating leader has taken his seat in the House of Lords amid a developing dispute over accusations that the government will cancel parts of the EU withdrawal agreement.
Lord Frost was taken to the upper house before complicated talks with his Brussels counterpart, Michel Barnier, to negotiate a long-term industrial agreement.
However, a dispute has broken out amid considerations about the advice the Prime Minister gave to opposing parts of Northern Ireland’s withdrawal agreement.
Downing Street said the government proposed “limited clarifications” of the law so that certain ministers could maintain the achievements of the Good Friday Agreement in the event of no agreement.
However, the EU has warned that the UK will not oppose its previous commitments if it needs to succeed in a flexible industrial agreement.
Former Prime Minister THERESA CAN TRUST
Former Conservative Prime Minister Theresa May has expressed her considerations in the Commons about trust.
She said: “The UK has signed the withdrawal agreement with the Northern Ireland Protocol, this Parliament voted on this withdrawal agreement in UK law.
“The government is lately converting the works of this agreement.
“Given this, how can the government assure long-term foreign partners that the UK can accept as true the legal obligations of the agreements it signs?”Northern Ireland Secretary Brandon Lewis replied: “We have worked with the EU in a spirit of religion and I know that we will continue to do so, with either party operating in a spirit of intelligent religion to ensure that we put into force agreements that respect the basic principles underlying the protocol and, of course, our first priority remains to reach agreement on the Joint Committee Protocol and the broader industrial agreement.
TORY SENIOR CALLS THE PM TO ACCEPT THE WITHDRAWAL AGREEMENT IF THE EU IS ‘UNREASONABLE’
Conservative MP Sir Bernard Jenkin has asked Boris Johnson to refuse to settle for the Brexit (WA) withdrawal agreement if the EU insists on an “unreasonable” interpretation of its provisions.
Sir Bernard, who chairs the guidance organisation of the European studies organisation pro-Brexit, said that if there is no agreement with Brussels, the UK has to assert its own interpretation of the AO.
“If the EU refuses to succeed in an agreement with us, there are two options: the first is to enact a national law that will largely nullify the direct effect and direct applicability of EU law. We have the mandate and most to do it, then, ” he said in a statement.
“Secondly, if the EU insists on an unreasonable interpretation of the withdrawal agreement, the UK will have to be in a position to repudiate it.
“I hope it is not necessary, but it is the only path to the prosperity of the United Kingdom and the kind of sovereign independence that is the democratic right of any country identified in the Charter of the United Nations, so be it. other countries would respect us for that.
MINISTER SAYS INTERNAL MARKET BILL WILL BE IN LINE WITH BREXIT DIVORCE DEAL
Northern Ireland’s Minister Brandon Lewis said the UK government would honour its external commitments and that a UK domestic market bill would be in line with the divorce agreement signed with the European Union this year.
“The UK domestic market law we will introduce this week is in line with our commitment to legislate for unrestricted access, which Northern Ireland has constantly asked us to do,” Lewis told parliament.
“It is the delivery of the protocol in all circumstances. “
JAPAN WANTS TO WIN AN OFFER THIS WEEK
The Japanese government hopes to reach broad consensus with the UK on industry this week.
The country’s ruling party will decide next week a new leader to succeed Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, who has to resign on fitness grounds.
His successor will be the next prime minister and will form a new cabinet.
Political changes, which can lead to a new foreign minister succeeding Toshimitsu Motegi, want either country to push the industry negotiations, the official said.
“We need to succeed in broad agreement on industry negotiations with Britain this week under the leadership of Foreign Minister Motegi,” said the official, an opinion shared through the government official.
LEGAL HEAD OF GOVERNMENT ” ON BREXIT ABOLITION PLANS ‘
The head of the legal branch of government resigned out of anger on Boris Johnson’s advice to annul the Brexit withdrawal agreement.
Sir Jonathan Jones’ departure has been demonstrated through the Attorney General’s office, who refused to comment on the explanation of why the most recent departure in a series of resignations by senior officials.
The Financial Times reported today that Sir Jonathan resigned as permanent branch secretary due to a dispute with Downing Street.
Two Whitehall officials reportedly told the newspaper that he was leaving the considerations the prime minister was looking for in opposite parts of northern Ireland’s Brexit agreement.
A spokesman for the Attorney General’s Office said: “I can verify that Sir Jonathan has resigned, but I cannot say any more. “
AIRLINE GROUP IAG GETS APPROVAL TO CONTINUE FLYING IF A FREE TRADE AGREEMENT IS NOT REACHED
The airline organization IAG said on Tuesday that it had received mandatory approvals to continue flying if a flexible industrial agreement between Britain and the European Union was not reached.
“In accordance with European Union connectivity regulations, last year our airlines presented their ownership and plans to the respective national regulators in Spain and Ireland,” said President Antonio Vázquez at the group’s AGM in Madrid, which was broadcast live.
“We are very pleased to announce that regulators have shown that these plans on the occasion of a Brexit are in line with EU connectivity regulations. “
THE ATTORNEY’S GENERAL STATEMENT CONFIRMS DEPARTURE FROM THE LEGAL HEAD OF GOVERNMENT
Sir Jonathan Jones resigned as permanent secretary of the government’s legal department, said the attorney general, in the last departure of a senior official.
The Financial Times reported that Sir Jonathan would resign over a dispute with Downing Street over leads that would challenge parts of the Brexit withdrawal agreement.
A spokesman for the Attorney General’s Office said: “I can verify that Sir Jonathan has resigned, but I cannot say any more. “
BREXIT FISHING TALKS DISSRUPTION CLAIM REJECTED BY SCOTTISH CABINET MINISTER
A Scottish government minister has denied undermining the Brexit negotiations by urging both to engage with the fisheries sector.
Business leaders in the UK government are said to be furious with the Scottish government for their intervention in stalled negotiations, this had made negotiations difficult.
Regular talks are taking place, separate from the Brexit negotiations, between Scottish Prime Minister Nicola Sturgeon, government ministers and EU Brexit negotiating leader Michel Barnier.
According to a Times report, the resources in Westminster said they had “arrested” their Holyrood counterparts in an official meeting between the Scottish and UK governments for allegedly saying that “both sides want to move a bit. “
A UK government source told the newspaper: “This behavior is not only undermining the UK government, but is undermining Scotland and its fishermen by preventing the UK from speaking with one voice to say that we need an independent coastal state again. “
TARGETING THE OFFENSIVE ART TIM MARTIN PLACED IN THE DORSET WETHERSPOON PUB
An offensive portrait of Wetherspoon founder Tim Martin, featured in one of the president’s own commercials.
The image, showing a photo of Mr. Martin composed of the word ‘c ***’, at a demonstration at the William Henry Wetherspoon in Weymouth, Dorset on Sunday [6 September]
The guilty artist, known as Better of Dead (BOD), says he hung the art in the restaurant’s bathroom to protest the “horrible” remedy of staff through Martin at the beginning of the lockdown.
Social media users responded with fun after BOD shared images of the portrait on site some time later.
One user wrote: “You, father, have won the Internet for today! Well done, again!”, While the user, Ronny Baggs, added: “Real art”.
HEAD OF GOVERNMENT LEGAL DEPARTMENT ABANDONS BREXIT PLANS
The head of the legal branch of the UK government resigned after Prime Minister Boris Johnson threatened to cancel the Brexit divorce settlement with the European Union, the Financial Times reports.
The newspaper said Jonathan Jones left office due to a dispute with Johnson’s workplace over his goal of undermining the retirement treaty signed in January in connection with the Northern Ireland Protocol.
GERMAN FINANCE MINISTER SAYS ‘PROBLEMATIC’ BREXIT TO DETAIL DISASTER FOR UK
A messy Brexit would be a crisis for Britain and its citizens, German Finance Minister Olaf Scholz told Reuters, adding that London’s latest signals “do not raise hope for an agreement. “
“One thing is clear: a complicated Brexit would be smart for Europe, it would be a real crisis for Britain and its citizens,” Scholz said in an interview at the helm of Brexit Trade Negotiations on Tuesday.
The European Union told Britain on Monday that there would be no agreement with the industry if it tried to play with the Brexit divorce treaty, raising the possibility of a tumultuous end of the year for the saga.
EU caution came after the Financial Times reported that Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s government could simply undermine the withdrawal agreement signed in January.
BREXIT EXPLAINED
Brexit talks are on edge, as Boris Johnson threatened last night to lose hope of an industry deal if there is no deal in five weeks.
The main problems related to problems such as State aid and fisheries rights have paralyzed discussions with Brussels: this is what has happened so far and what will happen next.
Find out in our explanation.
GAUKE SAYS THE GOVERNMENT ‘TRIED TO REWRITE THE TREATY’ TO REFLECT ‘WHAT PM SAYS’
David Gauke says Boris Johnson seeks to reconcile the deal he sold to the public he signed with.
In statements to Sky News, Gauke said: “The government is going to unilaterally rewrite the content of the treaty to be consistent with what the Prime Minister has said.
“But this is not in line with what the treaty that was agreed by both sides last year and implemented through Parliament this year means.
“And if that’s what happens, it’s obviously going to undermine eu-UK acceptance. “
“The EU will see this as an act of bad religion on the part of the UK and, frankly, with some justification. “
FORMER MINISTER PRO-REMAIN SAYS BREXIT’S GOVERNMENT’S STANCE MEANS THAT ONLY A ”FINE AGREEMENT” IS POSSIBLE
Former pro-Remain minister David Gauke criticized the government for its stance on Brexit.
According to the Telegraph, he said: “Of course, it is still imaginable that an agreement will be reached. It would not be a very comprehensive agreement, it would not be very complete, but it is imaginable a weak agreement.
“But there doesn’t seem to be a willingness to compromise. “
PROREMAIN PARTIES DEMAND THAT NORTHERN IRELAND’S PROTOCOL BE HONORED
The key elements of brexit’s withdrawal agreement would amount to a serious betrayal of a foreign treaty, the pro-Remain parts of Northern Ireland warned.
Sinn Fein, SDLP, Alliance Party and Green Party NI have expressed their fear at the prospect of the UK government introduced a national law to update parts of the Northern Ireland MOU governing aid to state and customs agreements.
In response to a Financial Times report describing Boris Johnson’s obvious intention, the parties wrote a joint letter to the EU and it was not easy for the terms of the treaty to be respected.
Under the protocol negotiated in the withdrawal agreement, Northern Ireland will continue to comply with market regulations for singles goods and administer the EU customs code at its ports.
It was designed to avoid a hard border on the island of Ireland, but industry trade unionists vehemently opposed it, insisting that it instead create an economic border between Northern Ireland and the rest of the UK.
THE NEW BREXIT CUSTOMS LAW WILL NOT START THE EXISTING TREATY
The government will introduce a new law that could replace post-Brexit customs plans with the EU.
But No. 10 denied “scamming” the existing treaty. The UK domestic market bill will be published on Wednesday.
The two sides agreed in 2019 on the terms of the UK’s departure, adding long-term industry in Northern Ireland.
Reports warned that a new law could simply “replace” the legal force of the agreement: the withdrawal agreement.
But Downing Street said it would make “minor clarifications in incredibly fast areas. “
THE EU COMMISSIONER RELIES ON THE GOVERNMENT TO “IMPLEMENT THE WITHDRAWAL AGREEMENT;
Ursula von der Leyen tweeted that he asked the British government to “implement the withdrawal agreement. “
The European Commissioner tweeted him on Monday night, before the critical talks in Brussels today.
Ms Von der Leyen said: “I accept as true with the British government to put into force the withdrawal agreement, a legal responsibility under foreign law and a precondition for any long-term partnership.
“The Protocol of Ireland/Northern Ireland is essential for peace and stability on the island and the integrity of the singles market. “
– Ursula von der Leyen (@vonderleyen) 7 September 2020
THE DUP ” WELCOMES GOVERNMENT SPECULATION BY IMPLEMENTING RETURN MEASURES
The DUP welcomed the “broadly speaking” hypothesis that the elements of brexit’s withdrawal agreement could be replaced.
On Monday night, the party said, “We note the hypothesis that the government will seek withdrawal measures under the Internal Market Act to protect Northern Ireland’s interests if no agreement is reached that mitigates the risk of the NI protocol. “
“We will need to see the main points and the most precise clauses related to that, and we will examine them carefully.
“We welcome them in general terms as far as they go, but the government will have to continue working to eliminate any inconvenience caused to Northern Ireland through the signing of the protocol. “
UK CALLS FOR ‘MORE REALISM’ FROM BRUSSELS
Progress will need to be made in this week’s close negotiations to negotiate an agreement in time by the end of the Brexit transition period, the UK negotiating leader warned his EU counterpart.
Lord Frost called for “more realism” in the Brussels component, saying that neither party “can continue to cross the beaten path” in the impasse of the talks.
The negotiator’s words preceded his assembly with his European counterpart Michel Barnier for tuesday’s eighth circular of negotiations in London.
Downing Street has tried to generate tension in Brussels, and Prime Minister Boris Johnson set a five-week deadline for industry talks to end in time for the end of the transition on 31 December.
PM MUST CALL THE WITHDRAWAL AGREEMENT ”CONTRADICTORY’
British Prime Minister Boris Johnson is about to tell the European Union in today’s talks that the Brexit divorce agreement is “contradictory” to Northern Ireland, the Telegraph reports.
The newspaper said the prime minister’s idea of the WITHDRAWAL agreement between the UK and the EU was legally ambiguous and would leave Northern Ireland away from the rest of the UK.
PM IRISH: BREXIT TALKS ” NULL AND NEST ‘ IF THE DIVORCE ACTION IS NOT APPLIED
British industry negotiations with the EU would be “null and void” if the Brexit withdrawal agreement it signed is fully implemented, says Irish Prime Minister Micheal Martin.
The EU warned Britain on Monday that there would be no agreement with industry if a Financial Times claimed that London was in danger of endangering the divorce treaty signed in January.
The agreement included special arrangements for a hard border between Northern Ireland and British-dominated Ireland.
“The Withdrawal Agreement is a foreign treaty and we expect the UK government to put into force and comply with the agreement.
“We accept as true with them to do so, otherwise they would nullify and void the negotiation procedure,” Martin told the Irish Examiner.
JENRICK: UK TO BE LEFT WITHOUT OFFER THAT EU MAKES FLEXIBILITY
The housing minister said Tuesday that unless the European Union begins to show more flexibility in concluding a flexible industrial agreement in favour of Canada, the government would be happy to leave the bloc without an agreement.
When asked if he was seeking a no-deal Brexit, Housing Secretary Robert Jenrick told Sky News: “We have to go with a flexible industry deal that is pro-Canadians, that’s our preference, and we believe that it is still possible. ” .
“But . . . if they don’t show the degree of flexibility and realism we need them to do . . . then we’ll go out with the kind of industrial agreements that Australia and other countries have and we think it’s also a good idea. arrangement for the future. “
”THE EU MUST BE GENUINE IN BREXIT’
Downing Street has suggested that Brussels “become real” as the Brexit negotiations restart, as time runs out to succeed in an agreement.
Lord Frost, the UK’s negotiating leader with the EU, said the two sides “can no longer cross the beaten track” in stalled talks.
He said: “We want to see more realism in the EU component in terms of our standing as an independent country. “
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