Theresa May has STILL not called Arlene Foster on Brexit

Theresa May and Arlene Foster have still not spoken to hammer out an agreed position on the Brexit talks, it emerged today.

Despite the Prime Minister having just days to patch up an agreement that paves the way for trade talks, she has still not been able to speak directly to the DUP leader. 

Downing Street was this morning unable to say when the call would take place.  The DUP said there were ‘no plans today’. 

Mrs Foster signalled last night there will be no quick fix to the crisis which has engulfed the Brexit talks since she told Mrs May her draft deal – that apparently promised Northern Ireland would match EU rules after Brexit, separately from Britain – was unacceptable on Monday.

Tory chief whip Julian Smith and DUP Westminster leader Nigel Dodds have been tasked with agreeing a UK position on the UK-Ireland border. 

Mrs May must then find a way to ensure that agreement is acceptable in Brussels and Dublin. A deal must be done by the end of the week to avoid further delay.

The impasse is also making Tory Brexiteers uneasy and could encourage them to demand Mrs May abandons negotiations with the EU altogether.  

DUP leader Arlene Foster (pictured in Belfast tonight) refused to back down in a row over Brexit tonight insisting she was just as ‘unequivocal’ as Dublin about the terms of the Irish border.

The Prime Minister (pictured in Downing Street today) is scrambling to get negotiations with the EU back on track after an humiliating day in Brussels

The Prime Minister (pictured in Downing Street today) is scrambling to get negotiations with the EU back on track after an humiliating day in Brussels

DUP Westminster leader Nigel Dodds defended his party's decision to torpedo the deal Theresa May had painstakingly assembled in the EU yesterday

DUP Westminster leader Nigel Dodds defended his party’s decision to torpedo the deal Theresa May had painstakingly assembled in the EU yesterday

Mrs May and Mrs Foster had been due to speak by telephone last night but the call was postponed amid continued division.  

Irish Premier Leo Varadkar has claimed Mrs May was ready to sign before the DUP intervention and insisted the contested language was drafted by Britain.  

The DUP leader told Irish broadcaster RTE that it was a ‘big shock’ when the document was finally handed on Monday over after five weeks of the party demanding to see what was on the table.

She blamed Dublin for stopping the Tories sharing the details earlier. 

Speaking in Belfast last night, Mrs Foster warned she was in no mood to give in to Mr Varadkar’s demands, insisting: ‘He can be as unequivocal as he likes. We’re equally unequivocal.’

In a round of interviews, Mrs Foster said: ‘We hadn’t seen any text, despite asking for text for nearly five weeks now, we haven’t been in receipt of any text and the text only came through to us late yesterday morning.

‘And obviously once we saw the text we knew it wasn’t going to be acceptable.’

She told Sky News: ‘We realised that in no way could we sign up to that text because essentially it was making a red line down the Irish Sea.’

Summoned to answer questions in the Commons, Brexit Secretary David Davis (pictured at the Despatch Box this afternoon) dismissed claims the government was putting the union at risk or that the 'DUP tail was wagging the government dog'

Summoned to answer questions in the Commons, Brexit Secretary David Davis (pictured at the Despatch Box this afternoon) dismissed claims the government was putting the union at risk or that the ‘DUP tail was wagging the government dog’

Tory MP Jacob Rees-Mogg in the Commons today

DUP Westminster chief Nigel Dodds said it would take time to undo the 'damage' caused by the aggressive Irish government

In the Commons today (pictured) Tory Jacob Rees-Mogg (left) revealed his ‘gratitude to the DUP for helping the government stick to its own red lines’ while DUP Westminster chief Nigel Dodds said it would take time to undo the ‘damage’ caused by the aggressive Irish government

UK COULD FOLLOW EU RULES ON ENERGY AND AGRICULTURE 

The Brexit divorce deal plans are yet to be spelled out in detail.

But it appears they could see the whole UK could accept abiding by some EU regulations in order to neutralise the Irish border issue.

According to David Davis, the move would not mean having ‘exactly the same rules’. 

‘It is sometimes having mutually recognised rules,’ he said. 

The areas covered would be those considered essential to maintain the soft border between Northern Ireland and the Republic, such as agriculture, energy and transport.

It would mean livestock and people could continue to move freely, while the common energy market on the island of Ireland would be facilitated.

If a wider EU trade deal was signed, it would almost inevitably go much wider and deeper than the areas covered in this agreement.

But Mr Davis’s comments quickly triggered gloating from Eurocrats that Mr Davis had effectively agreed to ‘make the UK kind of a regulatory protectorate of Brussels’.

The Government in Westminster has scrambled yesterday to insist any arrangement for Northern Ireland will be matched across the UK, meaning in some areas rules after Brexit will still follow EU terms.

Brexit Secretary David Davis flatly denied that the government was prepared to sign up to terms that would risk Northern Ireland’s future, vowing that the ‘integrity of the UK comes first’.

But he risked Eurosceptic fury by giving the clearest sign yet that all of Britain would ‘align’ with EU rules in crucial areas such as agriculture, energy and transport in order to secure a close relationship with the bloc.

The comments quickly triggered gloating from Eurocrats that Mr Davis had effectively agreed to ‘make the UK kind of a regulatory protectorate of Brussels’. 

Tory Eurosceptics hailed the DUP move for having ‘saved Brexit’ and urged a tougher line against Irish demands over the border.

But Labour said it showed the ‘DUP tail was wagging the government dog’ as Mrs May depends on their 10 MPs to cling to power. 

Senior Brexiteers thanked the DUP leader for standing up to Dublin, which selectively leaked parts of the agreement prompting suggesting Northern Ireland would effectively be left behind after Brexit following EU rules. 

Jacob Rees-Mogg revealed his ‘gratitude to the DUP for helping the government stick to its own red lines’, tweeting that the party had ‘saved Brexit’. 

Mr Dodds (pictured centre with his DUP MPs today) confirmed he and party leader Arlene Foster only saw a draft of Theresa May's deal late yesterday morning and declared the 'ambiguous' wording was immediately unacceptable

Mr Dodds (pictured centre with his DUP MPs today) confirmed he and party leader Arlene Foster only saw a draft of Theresa May’s deal late yesterday morning and declared the ‘ambiguous’ wording was immediately unacceptable

Former cabinet minister Owen Paterson telling Mr Davis: ‘We are going to leave the single market and the customs union.

‘Will he confirm that this week the integrity of the United Kingdom comes first and, if necessary, no deal is better than a bad deal?’

Mr Davis said Mr Paterson had made his point ‘well’ and he had already confirmed the ‘integrity’ of the UK comes first. 

Mr Dodds used the Commons debate to lash the Irish government for its ‘aggressive and anti-unionist’ behaviour and warned the leaks from Dublin which triggered the breakdown had caused ‘damage’ that ‘is going to take a long time to repair’.  

During the urgent question (pictured), Mr Davis faced repeated calls from Remain-backing MPs for the Uk to stay inside the single market after Brexit

During the urgent question (pictured), Mr Davis faced repeated calls from Remain-backing MPs for the Uk to stay inside the single market after Brexit

Q&A: The Brexit deal derailment explained

What prevented a deal?

The thorny issue of what happens to the border between Northern Ireland and the Republic after Brexit. It combines the intractable politics of the peace process, the delicate Conservative/DUP coalition and the complexity of Brexit. The EU has accepted Mrs May’s offer on money and a deal is close on the rights of EU nationals in the UK. But all three issues must be agreed by December 14 if the talks are to move on to trade.

Why is the border a problem?

After Brexit, Northern Ireland will have the only land border between the UK and the EU. With Britain leaving the single market and the customs union – but the Republic staying inside both – there are questions about how to move goods over the 300 crossing points along the 310-mile frontier.

What does each side want?

Dublin – backed by the EU – says there must be no ‘hard border’ involving customs checks for fear of undermining peace accords. Irish ministers have suggested Northern Ireland should stay inside the customs union. But Mrs May – and the DUP – could never agree, as it amounts to breaking up the integrity of the United Kingdom.

How far apart were the sides?

Government sources played down the prospect of a deal after Mrs May arrived for talks with Brussels chiefs yesterday, describing the meeting as a ‘staging post’. But EU officials briefed that a deal was imminent, in what was seen as an attempt by to ‘bounce’ Mrs May into an agreement.

What went wrong?

At just after 11am, details of a draft deal were leaked to Irish media. They were interpreted as suggesting the UK would agree to single market and customs union rules north of the border and that Mrs May had capitulated. They were seized upon by SNP leader Nicola Sturgeon and London mayor Sadiq Khan, who demanded separate deals for Scotland and the capital.

What did the DUP say?

DUP leader Arlene Foster denounced any deal that ‘separates Northern Ireland economically or politically from the rest of the UK’. ‘The economic and constitutional integrity of the United Kingdom will not be compromised in any way’, she said.

The Prime Minister was forced to leave a lunch meeting to speak to Mrs Foster who – it soon became clear – had not agreed the wording of the draft deal. Tory MPs insisted the UK’s integrity must not be undermined in a sign of deep disquiet that Mrs May appeared ready to agree the proposal.

What does No10 say?

Officials dispute the Irish interpretation of the text. They argue that the suggestion of aligning regulations would only have applied to specific aspects of the Good Friday Agreement, including energy, agriculture and transport. The language appears designed to be palatable to both sides until trade is on the table and a detailed agreement is possible. But the way the story emerged has hardened positions in Belfast and among Tory MPs.

What happens next?

Mrs May is expected to talk to the DUP today and return to Brussels on Wednesday.      



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