Kwasi Kwarteng plays down chances of bitter EU trade war over Northern Ireland Protocol row

Britain is ‘absolutely right’ to scrap post-Brexit rules for Northern Ireland and there is little chance of the EU launching a ‘self-defeating’ trade war in response, Business Secretary Kwasi Kwarteng said today.

The Government is poised to unilaterally set aside the Northern Ireland Protocol as part of a long-running dispute with Brussels over the Brexit agreement, with expectations that Boris Johnson could announce action within days.

The move would come amid a political crisis in Northern Ireland, with the DUP refusing to re-enter a power-sharing executive at Stormont without ‘decisive action’ from British ministers on the Protocol.

The unionist party have also ramped up pressure on the Prime Minister to act by blocking the establishment of a functioning Northern Ireland Assembly in the wake of recent elections.

Senior Brussels figures have warned, if Britain does take unilateral action on the Protocol, it could lead to retaliatory measures such as trade sanctions and even the collapse of the UK-EU post-Brexit trade deal.

There are fears this would exacerbate the cost-of-living crisis being suffered by Britons.

Ireland’s foreign minister Simon Coveney hit out at ‘aggressive’ briefings from London of impending action on the Protocol, as he urged Britain not to walk away from talks with the EU and act alone.

Despite the escalating row, Mr Kwarteng played down the prospect of the dispute ending in a bitter trade war between London and Brussels.

The Business Secretary said it would take ‘a very long time’ for any new EU trade tariffs to be approved.

He told Sky News’ Sophy Ridge on Sunday show: ‘Political stability in Northern Ireland is our number one priority. We should be able to act in a sovereign way.

‘Northern Ireland is as much of the UK as England, Cornwall, the South East, and we are responsible for that.

‘Any tariff situation would have to go to arbitrators. It is not something they can do willy nilly, arbitrarily.’

Mr Kwarteng also claimed that EU retaliation through tariffs would be ‘completely self-defeating’ and branded talk of a trade war as ‘irresponsible’.

‘There has been a lot of talk, a lot of threats, about what the EU will or won’t do. That is up to them,’ he told the BBC’s Sunday Morning programme.

‘As far as I am concerned, our primary duty as the British Government is to look after political stability in Northern Ireland. If that means relooking at the Protocol, we absolutely have to do that.

‘I think this talk of a trade war is irresponsible and I think it is completely getting ahead of ourselves.

‘It is up to the EU. We think it would be completely self-defeating if they went into a trade war, but that is up to them.’

Mr Kwarteng insisted the UK would be ‘absolutely right’ to take unilateral action on the Protocol and scrap parts of the agreement without EU approval.

The Business Secretary repeatedly pointed to how Article 16 of the Protocol allowed for unilateral action.

‘We have got ultimately to be prepared to invoke it,’ he added.

The Protocol was designed to prevent a hard border on the island of Ireland after Brexit and imposed checks on goods moving from Great Britain to Northern Ireland.

But the EU’s ‘dogmatic’ and ‘rigid’ implementation of the Protocol has been blamed by British ministers for causing significant trade disruption.

The DUP and other unionists are also concerned the agreement has been detrimental to Northern Ireland’s status within the UK.

Share on Facebook «||» Share on Twitter «||» Share on Reddit «||» Share on LinkedIn