Issued on: 09/09/2020 – 16:27
France and Germany vowed to maintain a united front in talks with Britain as the UK unveiled its new Brexit bill on Wednesday, a day after admitting that it might be violating international law with its EU withdrawal treaty.
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British Prime Minister Boris Johnson was accused Wednesday of presiding over a "rogue state" as his government introduced legislation that intentionally breaches its EU withdrawal treaty in the messy countdown to a full Brexit divorce.
Johnson defended the government's approach after its extraordinary admission that the new bill governing post-Brexit trade in Britain and Northern Ireland breaks international law.
Asked why the British public at large should respect any laws now, the prime minister told parliament: "We expect everybody in this country to obey the law."
In a bad-tempered exchange with Scottish nationalist MP Ian Blackford, Johnson insisted the bill was about "protecting jobs, protecting growth, ensuring the fluidity and safety of our UK internal market".
"My job is to uphold the integrity of the UK but also to protect the Northern Ireland peace process and the Good Friday Agreement," he added, calling the new bill a "legal safety net" if the EU makes an "irrational interpretation" of post-Brexit arrangements.
The government maintains that its new UK Internal Market Bill is needed to smooth trade between England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland, and help power a recovery from the coronavirus pandemic, once a post-Brexit transition ends this year.
But under its EU Withdrawal Agreement, Britain is meant to liaise with Brussels on any arrangements for Northern Ireland, which saw three decades of bloodshed until the 1998 Good Friday Agreement, and will become the UK's only land border with the EU.
'Breaking international law not acceptable'
The EU on Wednesday warned Britain that even the most minor breach of the EU Withdrawal Agreement would undermine what little trust is left between the two sides in already fragile trade talks.
“Breaking international law is not acceptable and does not create the confidence we need to build our future relationship,” European Council President Charles Michel said.
European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said the age-old diplomatic cornerstone that “agreements must be kept” was “the foundation of prosperous future relations”.
Britain has agreed to meet the EU after Brussels called for a meeting to swiftly clarify "strong concerns" over the new bill.
Germany and France pledged Wednesday to maintain a strong united front in talks with Britain on its future relationship with the EU. After Britain's bombshell announcement a day earlier that it may violate international law with its EU withdrawal treaty, the Franco-German duo said it was on the same page.
"The French position is also the German position – that is, namely, the EU position," Germany's state minister for European affairs, Michael Roth, said in a joint interview with his visiting French counterpart Clement Beaune.
Since Germany took over the presidency of the EU on July 1, Chancellor Angela Merkel has repeatedly warned that the bloc must prepare for the possibility that talks could collapse.
The likelihood of failure increased dramatically this week when the British government admitted its new bill governing post-Brexit trade in Britain and Northern Ireland breaks international law albeit in a "limited" way.
'Parcel of rogues are creating a rogue state'
During the parliamentary session, Blackford argued the new bill was a power grab by London from the devolved administrations in Edinburgh, Cardiff and Belfast.
He also gave a withering assessment after NortherRead More – Source