Selasa, 10 September 2019

Ireland 'highly skeptical' of UK ideas for contentious Brexit backstop issue - CNBC

Ireland's finance minister warned that the country's government remains "highly skeptical" about proposals advocated by Britain's prime minister to avoid the need for infrastructure on the U.K.'s border with Ireland after Brexit.

U.K. premier Boris Johnson had visited Dublin Monday for talks with his Irish counterpart, Leo Varadkar, and insisted that trusted trader schemes and electronic pre-clearances of goods were areas in which there was "a lot that can be done" to resolve a problem that bedevilled his predecessor Theresa May: how to reconcile an open border between the Republic of Ireland and the U.K., while allowing Britain to strike independent trade deals in the future.

But Varadkar's finance minister Paschal Donohoe, speaking to CNBC at Ireland's U.K. embassy after a day of investor meetings in the City of London, argued that the British leader's suggestions do not respond to the "unique needs of the Irish border," and that was why the Irish government has "stood so firmly behind the principle of regulatory alignment, and the backstop."

The so-called "Irish backstop" forms an element of Theresa May's negotiated exit deal with Brussels, and is designed to protect the continued openness of the border between the Republic of Ireland in the south and the separate nation, Northern Ireland, that forms part of the United Kingdom, in case further talks between the U.K. and EU do not find a long-term, operable resolution to the issue.

The open border and freedom of movement between the two countries were key tenets of a 1998 peace deal that heralded the end of ongoing violence in the region.

The backstop

But the European Union's rules that are designed to protect the integrity of its single market do not allow for goods, services or people to travel frictionlessly into its territory outside the framework of a trade agreement. The regulatory requirements contained in those kinds of agreements can make it difficult for a third country like the U.K., under such a regime, to operate the kind of fully independent trade policy that the current British leader considers a crucial benefit to be derived from Brexit.

To make that possible, the U.K. would typically need goods to be checked at Britain's frontier with Europe. But Johnson in Dublin insisted this was not an acceptable consequence.

"The U.K. will never, ever institute checks at the border, and I hope our friends in the EU would say the same," Johnson told Varadkar.

But the British leader has said previously he is confident about his ability to win from EU leaders certain concessions that might avoid the need for the contentious insurance policy altogether. He has vowed the U.K. will then be able to discard — or "bin" — the backstop, which was a major reason many lawmakers in his Conservative Party previously refused to endorse May's deal in three separate parliamentary votes.

Johnson voted against the deal twice before voting for it on the third occasion.

The current prime minister's critics say his government has failed to provide specific alternatives to the Irish backstop in the weeks since he took office. And speaking outside the Irish leader's residence Farmleigh House on Monday morning, Johnson continued to be coy about the particulars.

"There are an abundance of proposals that we have, but I don't think it's entirely reasonable to share them with you today," he told assembled journalists.

In response Donohoe, during his interview with CNBC, backed Varadkar's earlier stated position that Ireland was not prepared to "replace a legal guarantee with a promise."

The finance chief said the Irish would listen to new proposals, but these kinds of alternative arrangements had been previously examined and found wanting.

"If anyone does believe that there are ideas that could take the place of the backstop then of course we are open to engaging with those ideas."

Donohoe reiterated an oft-stated Irish government view that if proponents of the "alternative arrangements" Johnson mentioned Monday were so confident in their operability, then they should first ratify the backstop and the withdrawal agreement, then push for them during that transition period, rather than risk the entire agreement by insisting on them now.

Theresa May's withdrawal agreement negotiated with the EU had included a lengthy transition period during which the U.K. would continue to operate under EU rules. The intention of negotiators on both sides was for that period to offer businesses some continuity and to provide the U.K. and Irish governments more time to find workable solutions to the border challenges.

British politicians in favor of a swift Brexit dislike the idea that the U.K. will have to abide by EU rules after Brexit, and could be forced to rely too heavily on European goodwill to allow the introduction of new arrangements that would automatically render the backstop unnecessary.

But internal government documents leaked to the website Politico earlier this month and written by U.K. technical advisory groups tasked with examining "alternative arrangements" to the Irish backstop found that "trusted trader schemes" — whereby firms get pre-approval to move goods back and forth across the border without checks — had proven to be a "popular facilitation" among surveyed businesses, but would likely still require some form of border infrastructure in order to work.

The same government technical advisors acknowledged there were various options that might address individual challenges stemming from the border's necessarily open status, but that "every facilitation has concerns and issues" and that the "complexity of combining them into something more systemic and as part of one package is a key missing factor at present."

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson welcomes Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu (not pictured) outside 10 Downing Street ahead of bilateral talks on 05 September 2019 in London, England.

WIktor Szymanowicz | NurPhoto | Getty Images

One solution that Irish and European government officials posited in the past would have required Northern Ireland to submit to a different regulatory environment to the rest of the U.K.; a backstop specific to Northern Ireland alone. But Theresa May's government had categorically refused to allow this because of its implications for U.K. unity, and had negotiated hard to make the backstop applicable to the entire U.K. in the face of fierce EU opposition.

May had relied on votes from a small Northern Irish political party, the Democratic Unionists, to maintain a parliamentary majority after she lost ground in a 2017 election. But Johnson no longer enjoys that majority, and lost six out of six parliamentary votes in the past week before the legislature was suspended for five weeks on Monday night.

Some senior government ministers have hinted publicly that a backstop that only applies to Northern Ireland may now be the best option left open to Downing Street, if Johnson is to fulfil his promise of leaving the world's largest trading bloc by Oct. 31.

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https://www.cnbc.com/2019/09/10/ireland-highly-skeptical-of-uk-ideas-for-contentious-brexit-backstop-issue.html

2019-09-10 07:05:17Z
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Senin, 09 September 2019

British Airways' cargo operations grounded as strike goes ahead - Air Cargo News

There is major disruption to British Airways’ bellyhold cargo operations as the airline’s pilots carry out strike action today and tomorrow.

The strike is the result of an ongoing dispute about pay between British Airways and the pilots’ union BALPA.

The industrial action is the largest ever carried out by British airways with some 1,700 passenger flights being cancelled, thereby grounding bellyhold cargo, which is managed by IAG Cargo.

A statement released today by British Airways, explained: “Unfortunately, with no detail from BALPA on which pilots would strike, we had no way of predicting how many would come to work or which aircraft they are qualified to fly, so we had no option but to cancel nearly 100 per cent our flights.

“We remain ready and willing to return to talks with BALPA.”

Another statement released by IAG Cargo last week said: “BALPA’s unjustifiable strike action does affect parts of our cargo operations.

“Our British Airways schedules have been updated and are now reflected on ba.com. We are working on limiting the operational impact this unacceptable action will have, and we will continue to keep customers updated with the latest information.”

If the dispute is not resolved in future talks – which are as yet unplanned – between British Airways and BALPA, then pilots plan to strike again on September 27.

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https://www.aircargonews.net/airlines/british-airways-cargo-operations-grounded-as-strike-goes-ahead/

2019-09-09 09:13:50Z
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British Airways pilots ground planes in unprecedented 48-hour strike - CNBC

British Airways BA BAW SHT SHUTTLE is the flag carrier of the United Kingdom, owned by IAG International Airline Group IAG and member of Oneworld aviation alliance.

Nicolas Economou | NurPhoto | Getty Images

British Airways pilots began a 48-hour strike on Monday, grounding nearly all its flights and disrupting thousands the plans of travelers in unprecedented industrial action over a pay dispute.

The British Airline Pilots Association (BALPA) last month gave the airline notice of three days of industrial action in September, in the first ever strike by BA pilots.

"We understand the frustration and disruption BALPA's strike action has caused our customers. After many months of trying to resolve the pay dispute, we are extremely sorry that it has come to this," BA said in a statement.

"Unfortunately, with no detail from BALPA on which pilots would strike, we had no way of predicting how many would come to work or which aircraft they are qualified to fly, so we had no option but to cancel nearly 100% of our flights."

Following strikes on Monday and Tuesday, another day of industrial action is scheduled for Sept. 27.

Both sides say they are willing to hold further talks.

BALPA has said British Airways (BA) should share more of its profits with its pilots. BA has said the strike action is unjustifiable as its pay offer was fair.

Thousands of customers have had to seek alternative travel arrangements, and the airline has come in for criticism over how it handled communications with passengers before the strikes.

"We hope we can find a way of resolving this dispute. We've been trying very hard to do so for the best part of nine months now but here we are now sadly having to take industrial action," BALPA General Secretary Brian Strutton told BBC radio.

He said they were willing to compromise but BA were not prepared to "budge".

The airline dismissed a new offer by BALPA last week as an "eleventh hour inflated proposal" that was not made in good faith. BALPA had said it would have called off the strikes this week if BA had engaged with the offer.

A spokeswoman for Prime Minister Boris Johnson has urged both sides to end the dispute.

The UK Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) is investigating the airline after it enraged some travelers by wrongly telling them their flights had been cancelled.

The regulator also reminded the airline to tell customers their rights.

During the strikes, BA must offer passengers reimbursement for cancelled flights, alternate travel arrangements under comparable conditions or a new flight at a later date.

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https://www.cnbc.com/2019/09/09/ba-british-airways-pilots-ground-planes-in-48-hour-strike.html

2019-09-09 06:55:13Z
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Editorial: Boris Johnson can barely lead his own government, let alone the country - The Independent

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  1. Editorial: Boris Johnson can barely lead his own government, let alone the country  The Independent
  2. ‘The Trumpization of U.K. politics’: Boris Johnson is busting political norms  The Washington Post
  3. Brexit extension: PM to 'test law to limit' to avoid delay  BBC News
  4. U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson under fire as Brexit reality hits  NBCNews.com
  5. Brexit Brings Britain to a Brand-New Low: Theme of the Week  Bloomberg
  6. View full coverage on Google News

https://www.independent.co.uk/voices/editorials/brexit-boris-johnson-amber-rudd-resign-election-a9096681.html

2019-09-08 23:00:02Z
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Minggu, 08 September 2019

UK PM's leadership under fire over Brexit crisis - Aljazeera.com

The Brexit crisis has thrown the UK's Conservative Party into turmoil, with growing questions being raised inside the party about the leadership qualities of Prime Minister Boris Johnson.

Johnson drew particular criticism inside his own party this week for sacking a number of high-ranking Conservative MPs including Sir Nicholas Soames, the grandson of the wartime leader, Sir Winston Churchill.

Al Jazeera's Laurence Lee reports from London on what direction the Conservative Party has taken under Johnson and what Churchill might have made of it.

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https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2019/09/uk-pms-leadership-fire-brexit-crisis-190908115238837.html

2019-09-08 11:52:00Z
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Sabtu, 07 September 2019

Britain NOT ‘first in line’ for US trade deal, White House warns after Remainer MPs wreck Boris Johnson’s Brex - The Sun

BRITAIN is no longer "first in line" for a US trade deal after Parliament wrecked Boris Johnson's Brexit plans, a top White House official warned yesterday.

Larry Kudlow - Donald Trump's top economic aide - said "hurdles" stand in the way of a post-Brexit pact after Remainer MPs sparked chaos in Westminster this week.

 Larry Kudlow, President Trump's chief economics adviser, said the top White House trade priority is with Canada and Mexico - not Britain

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Larry Kudlow, President Trump's chief economics adviser, said the top White House trade priority is with Canada and Mexico - not BritainCredit: Reuters
 Boris Johnson and Donald Trump agreed last month that a speedy trade deal would be thrashed out after Brexit

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Boris Johnson and Donald Trump agreed last month that a speedy trade deal would be thrashed out after BrexitCredit: Getty - Pool

He said: "Regarding Great Britain, the president has said that we would love to do a trade deal with the United Kingdom - but they've got some hurdles.

"But our desire and our goal is to get a deal with the United Kingdom."

The comments from the US National Economic Council Director to Dailymail.com mark a shift from the sunny tone struck by other Trump officials earlier.

John Bolton, the president's National Security Adviser, said last month the UK would be "first in line" for a deal after Brexit.

And the Prime Minister said President Trump agreed to an aggressive one-year timeline for a trade deal when they met at the G7 in France.

'BIG FAN OF BORIS'

Mr Kudlow reassured that the president is a "big fan" of Boris - who Trump yesterday praised as a "fighter" amid his ongoing Brexit battle.

But the aide added that a trade agreement with Mexico and Canada - dubbed USMCA - is the president's number one legislative priority.

Addressing reporters outside the West Wing, he said: "It's not a tomorrow question.

"The most important trade deal is the USMCA.

"That is our top legislative priority."

WESTMINSTER CHAOS

Boris' ambitions to see Britain leave the EU on the "do or die" deadline of October 31 were dealt a series of blows this week as MPs sought to make him cow to Brussels.

Twenty-one Tory rebels joined Opposition parties to seize the Commons agenda and push through a bill delaying Brexit to at least January.

The treacherous MPs - including former chancellor Phillip Hammond and Sir Nicolas Soames, grandson of Sir Winston Churchill - were booted out of the party as warned.

TORY PURGE

That purge of anti-Brexit rebels left the PM without a majority in Parliament and essentially unable to govern.

But yellow-bellied Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn became the first Opposition chief in history to turn down the offer of a General Election.

He called on his MPs to abstain a vote that would have triggered a snap election - which Boris had hoped to take place on October 15.

The Prime Minister - riding high in opinion polls because of his strong Brexit stance - hopes for a pro-Brexit Tory landslide in a quick poll.

That would give him a fresh mandate to storm a crunch EU summit in Brussels on October 17 to hammer out a last-minute Brexit deal.

We'd be happy to get to work with a United Kingdom [free trade agreement]. We just have to get a greenlight from their side, with respect to their parliamentary activities and their discussions with the EU

Larry KudlowPresident Trump's chief economic adviser

If a new favourable deal is not reached, Boris has vowed to go ahead with a No Deal Brexit to finally take us out of the EU on October 31.

He hammered the point home on Thursday when the PM said he'd rather "die in a ditch" than see another "pointless" Brexit delay.

In a nod to the confusion in Parliament, Mr Kudlow added: "We'd be happy to get to work with a United Kingdom [free trade agreement].

"We just have to get a green light from their side, with respect to their parliamentary activities and their discussions with the EU."

FREE TRADE PLEDGE

Vice President Mike Pence said during a visit to the UK on Thursday that the US still remains committed to a swift deal with Brexit Britain.

He said President Trump asked him to "convey that the United States of America is ready, willing, and able to do a free trade agreement with the UK immediately upon the completion of Brexit."

Mr Pence added: "As I told Prime Minister Johnson today, we believe a free trade agreement between the United States and the United Kingdom could increase trade between our two countries three or four times.

"And we’re already going to work on that free trade agreement.

"When you’re ready, we’ll be ready."

He later vowed: "Our message is clear: The minute the UK is out, America is in."

 Vice President Mike Pence recommitted the US pledge for a fast post-Brexit trade deal during his visit to the UK this week

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Vice President Mike Pence recommitted the US pledge for a fast post-Brexit trade deal during his visit to the UK this weekCredit: EPA
 John Bolton meeting the Chancellor Sajid Javid last month, where the US National Security Adviser said the UK was 'first in line' for a trade deal with the US

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John Bolton meeting the Chancellor Sajid Javid last month, where the US National Security Adviser said the UK was 'first in line' for a trade deal with the USCredit: AFP or licensors
PM Boris Johnson 'would rather be dead in a ditch' than ask EU for another Brexit delay


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https://www.thesun.co.uk/news/9881248/britain-trade-deal-us-brexit-boris-johnson-mps/

2019-09-07 01:31:00Z
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U.K. House of Lords Approves Measure Blocking No-Deal Brexit - National Review

Brexit posters in Westminster in London, England, May 23, 2019. (Kevin Coombs/Reuters)

The British House of Lords on Friday passed a measure barring the United Kingdom from divorcing the European Union without a deal between the two sides, ensuring that the measure will become law after the House of Commons passed it earlier this week.

The law requires Prime Minister Boris Johnson to request an extension of the current October 31 Brexit deadline from the EU if the two sides have not reached a deal on the terms of Britain’s withdrawal by October 19.

Johnson has vowed that he will not ask the EU for an extension but will keep Brexit on track despite the lack of an agreement, saying Thursday that he would “rather be dead in a ditch” than delay.

“There are no circumstances in which I could accept anything like it,” Johnson said. “We promised the people we would get Brexit done. Enough is enough. The country wants this done.”

Nevertheless, the measure will become law as soon as it gets formal royal approval.

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https://www.nationalreview.com/news/u-k-house-of-lords-approves-measure-blocking-no-deal-brexit/

2019-09-06 15:37:00Z
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