Boris, his “dear donald” letter and the backstop | thearticle

Thearticle

Boris, his “dear donald” letter and the backstop | thearticle"


Play all audios:

Loading...

Once more unto the border, dear friends — the Northern Irish one, that is. The Prime Minister has written a four-page letter to the President of the European Council which is surely destined


to enter history as Boris’s “Dear Donald” letter. Its cordial form of greeting is, however, the only friendly thing about it. For this letter is a declaration of war on the backstop — or,


to put it another way, a declaration of independence from the European Union. Its animating idea, which recurs several times in slightly different words, is that the backstop is


anti-democratic and inconsistent with British sovereignty. The letter argues that the UK would be bound, “potentially indefinitely”, into an international treaty from which there would be


“no sovereign means of exiting unilaterally” and which “affords the people of Northern Ireland no influence over the legislation which applies to them”. Both these propositions are true; but


both apply, more or less, to all member states of the EU. The only legal means of exiting the EU is by invoking Article 50 of the Treaty of Lisbon, which has existed for just 10 of the 62


years since the Treaty of Rome. The Brexit process is testing the practicality of leaving the EU to destruction. Nor do the 508 million people who live in the 28 member states have any


appreciable influence over the EU legislation that governs them. Unusually, last May more than half of the electorate voted in elections for the European Parliament, but the politicians and


officials who really matter in Europe are not accountable to it. Nobody in Brussels believes that there is much to be done about this “democratic deficit” — which is why nothing much has


ever been done about it. So the “Dear Donald” letter is really throwing down the gauntlet to the EU. What is unacceptable for the people of Northern Ireland is unacceptable for the rest of


the UK and, by implication, for the rest of Europe. For Brussels to accept that the backstop violated British sovereignty and was anti-democratic would be tantamount to admitting that the EU


suffered from the same defects. And that, as Boris Johnson knows, Donald Tusk will never do. The letter also raises two further objections to the backstop. It is said to be inconsistent


with “a sustainable long-term relationship with the EU”, because it forces the British to choose between keeping the whole UK inside the customs union or “seeing Northern Ireland gradually


detached from the UK economy”. Neither outcome is acceptable. Finally, the letter argues that the backstop risks undermining the Belfast or Good Friday Agreement, on which peace in Northern


Ireland depends. Instead, it proposes that both the UK and the EU should make a legally binding commitment not to impose a hard border, but to work towards a different “solution” during the


two year transition period envisaged if a withdrawal agreement can be reached.   Leo Varadkar, the Irish Taoiseach, has apparently already dismissed the solution proposed by the “Dear Donald


letter” in an hour-long phone conversation with Boris Johnson. The backstop was, after all, Varadkar’s brainchild and he won’t abandon it lightly. But other politicians in the Republic lack


his paternal attachment to it. If the price of clinging to this totem is a no-deal Brexit and EU tariffs that threaten to damage trade across the Irish Sea, then opposition to the backstop


in the Dail is bound to emerge. Henri Quatre may have said that Paris was worth a Mass, but not everyone in Dublin thinks Belfast is worth a slump. The real question is: do EU leaders


genuinely care about peace and prosperity on the island of Ireland? Or is it really more concerned to make an example of the UK, not merely by imposing Carthaginian terms for Brexit, but by


undoing the fragile basis of the Good Friday agreement, safe in the knowledge that the British will be blamed? If the answer is the former, then Chancellor Merkel and President Macron will


be ready to discuss the “Dear Donald” letter with the Prime Minister this week. If it is the latter, they will refuse. Let nobody doubt, however, that if Donald really wanted to avoid a


no-deal Brexit, he would shut Angela, Emmanuel and Leo with Boris into his hotel suite in Biarritz, lock the door and demand that they come up with an alternative to the backstop. It isn’t


solutions that are lacking, but the will to compromise.


Trending News

5 joker backstories that could be a part of the character’s on-screen origin - scoopwhoop

The DC Universe’s “Clown Prince of Crime” is arguably the most iconic big bad in the comic-book world. And even though J...

The emperor’s new clothes: inflation and the psychology of money - part two | thearticle

Part One discussed three possible paths to higher inflation: _cost-pus_h when the price of an important input ratchets u...

Reporter's notebook: ppp recipients, miles of path and more - saportareport

Happy birthday to the late, great Richard W. Penniman, better known as Little Richard. The architect of rock n’ roll was...

'bonnie and clyde' couple arrested after rooftop siege refused bail

* COUPLE DUBBED 'BONNIE AND CLYDE' FACED IPSWICH MAGISTRATES COURT ON MONDAY   * BILLY BAKER, 23, AND TAYLA GR...

Mps call for return to headage payments - farmers weekly

HEADAGE PAYMENTS SHOULD BE RECONSIDERED AS A WAY OF HELPING HILL FARMERS TO STAY IN BUSINESS, A REPORT BY A CROSS-PARTY ...

Latests News

Boris, his “dear donald” letter and the backstop | thearticle

Once more unto the border, dear friends — the Northern Irish one, that is. The Prime Minister has written a four-page le...

Attention Required! | Cloudflare

Please enable cookies. Sorry, you have been blocked You are unable to access defatoonline.com.br Why have I been blocked...

Ice spice looks utterly confused at super bowl 2024 with taylor swift: ‘no idea what is going on’

EXPLORE MORE Like, damn, she in ha confused mood. Social media users roasted Ice Spice over her puzzled expression as sh...

Pgy-2 population health management and data analytics residents | veterans affairs

PAST RESIDENTS 2023-2024 JULIE BEAUCHAMP, PHARM.D. Graduate of Western University of Health Sciences, Pomona, CA PGY-1 P...

Cauliflower bolognese: a flavorful veggie twist

Makes 4 servings It is impossible to not fall in love with pasta alla Bolognese, the classic dreamy ragù made from slowl...

Top