May to seek binding changes to Irish backstop: Boris Johnson
[LONDON] British Prime Minister Theresa May will seek legally binding changes to the Irish backstop from the European Union in an attempt to break the deadlock over Brexit, lawmaker Boris Johnson wrote in The Telegraph on Sunday, citing senior government sources.
The PM is looking to change the text of the agreement to insert either a sunset clause or a mechanism for the UK to escape without reference to the EU, Boris Johnson said in The Telegraph.
The contentious backstop arrangement is designed to prevent a hard border between Ireland and the UK province of Northern Ireland by requiring Britain to keep some EU rules if it was unable to agree a trade deal with the bloc.
Ireland said earlier on Sunday it would not accept any changes to the backstop agreement.
REUTERS
BT is now on Telegram!
For daily updates on weekdays and specially selected content for the weekend. Subscribe to t.me/BizTimes
International
Magnitude 6.0 quake strikes Philippines, aftershocks and damage expected
Indonesia to permanently relocate 10,000 people after Ruang volcano eruptions
Bank Indonesia confident rupiah will strengthen until year-end
Hong Kong March retail sales down 7%, snapping 15 months of growth
UK public sector productivity goes from bad to worse, ONS data shows
Indonesia central bank says SRBI auction will be held twice a week to attract more inflow