barney wrote: 30 Nov 2018, 10:18
The question one Tory asked was the same as the one I've been questioning.
If no deal, WHO will construct a border ?
The answer is nobody will and the whole fiasco is a red herring.
The 'backstop' is about giving the EU a veto on the decision of when to leave the customs union and single market
As Gill has said a few times - BRINO
I can't believe that the suckers are swallowing this rubbish.
What happens at the Irish border if there’s no Brexit deal?
At face value, it seems straightforward — the EU’s land frontier with Britain would need to be policed to uphold the rules of the single market. Yet, Irish Prime Minister Leo Varadkar seems to take a different view. Speaking in Brussels on Thursday, he told reporters there are no preparations to install checks, and has consistently said Ireland won’t build a border.
“The U.K. has said they won’t do it,” Varadkar said in an interview with broadcaster TV3 this month. “And I’ve made it very clear to other European prime ministers and presidents that’s something Ireland will never do.”
It’s a position that puzzles some in Brussels.
Speaking privately, one senior European official suggested the Irish should take a more measured approach or risk embarrassment if talks collapsed. Speaking on condition of anonymity,
the EU official said there while there would be sympathy for Ireland in the event of the U.K. crashing out of the bloc without a deal, controls would eventually have to be implemented.
The border conundrum — how to keep the frontier open after Northern Ireland leaves the bloc with the rest of the U.K. and the Republic of Ireland remains in the EU — is the main stumbling block to an orderly Brexit agreement. But if talks break down without a deal, the border also risks prompting political turmoil on the island of Ireland and tensions at the heart of the EU.
Ireland would be given time to organize a border, and some leaks and smuggling may initially be tolerated, according to the EU official.
But ultimately a border would probably have to be erected by the EU, the official said.
France is among countries most concerned about protecting the single market and any failure to adequately police the frontier in the event of a no-deal Brexit would create major problems with the European Commission and other member states, officials said.
One possible way to square the circle. If there’s no deal with Britain,
the bloc could invoke a so-called frontier traffic exception to declare the whole territory of Northern Ireland as a border region to the EU, citing a never-before used clause linked to the General Agreement of Trade and Tariffs.