MANCHESTER, England: Prime Minister Boris Johnson will shortly present the European Union with proposals for an amended Brexit agreement, including new ideas that remove the contested insurance policy for the Irish border that Britain previously signed up to.
More than three years since the 2016 referendum, the United Kingdom is heading toward an Oct. 31 exit date without a clear understanding of whether it will leave with a deal, without a deal or even leave by that deadline.
Even before the proposals were formally made, Ireland dismissed the ideas that had been previously floated with Foreign Minister Simon Coveney quipping: âNon-Starter.â
âWeâve made a very good offer, weâre going to make a very good offer, weâre going to be tabling it formally very soon,â Johnson, a Brexiter who helped lead the Out campaign in the referendum, told the BBC.
âWe do think thereâs a good way forward, we do think thereâs a good solution. I very much hope that our European, EU friends in Brussels, in Dublin, in Germany as well will want to take it forward.â
Johnson said he wanted to get rid of the hotly contested element of the Brexit divorce agreement â the Irish border backstop â and that there was no point in leaving the EU if one stayed locked in an EU customs union.
âWhat we want to do is to get rid of the backstop, that is the most important thing,â Johnson said.
âGetting rid of the backstop is a fantastic thing because what that does is it enables the UK genuinely to take back control of our regulatory framework, our tariffs, our customs and commercial policy and it allows us to go forward with a new and exciting relationship, not just with the EU but also with the rest of the world,â he said.
The backstop is an insurance policy to prevent the return of border infrastructure between the British province of Northern Ireland and the Irish Republic.
Johnson brushed away criticism of leaked plans to manage the Irish border after Brexit, saying comments from Brussels and Dublin were not aimed at Britainâs final proposals.
âAs far as I can make out from what Iâve seen from the response from Brussels and I think Dublin, theyâre not talking about the proposals that weâre actually going to be taking, theyâre talking about some stuff that went in previously,â Johnson told the BBC.
UK PM Johnson to submit Brexit grand bargain but Ireland skeptical
Updated 01 October 2019
UK PM Johnson to submit Brexit grand bargain but Ireland skeptical

- The UK is heading toward an Oct. 31 exit date without a clear understanding of what happens next
- âWhat we want to do is to get rid of the backstop, that is the most important thingâ