Theresa May rejects EU's draft option for Northern Ireland

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Media caption,

May: I'll make opposition to plans 'crystal clear' to EU

An EU proposal for the Northern Ireland border threatens the "constitutional integrity" of the United Kingdom, Theresa May has said.

The EU's draft legal agreement, external proposes a "common regulatory area" after Brexit on the island of Ireland - in effect keeping Northern Ireland in a customs union - if no other solution is found.

Mrs May said "no UK prime minister could ever agree" to this.

The EU says the "backstop" option is not intended to "provoke" the UK.

Unveiling the draft agreement on what has proved to be a busy day for Brexit news, EU chief negotiator Michel Barnier called on the UK to come up with alternatives.

He said the text was "no surprise" and was just a legally-worded assessment of what had been agreed in the negotiations so far.

What the EU's draft document says

The EU's 120-page paper covers the issues which have been negotiated so far - including the UK's financial settlement, citizens' rights and the future of the border between Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland - which is a member of the EU - after Brexit.

On how to avoid border checks in Northern Ireland, the EU says a "backstop" is needed in case neither of the UK's preferred solutions can be found.

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Michel Barnier: I'm not trying to provoke anyone

This would involve an "area without internal borders in which the free movement of goods is ensured", covering customs, VAT, energy, agriculture, goods and other sectors, across the island of Ireland.

"The territory of Northern Ireland... shall be considered to be part of the customs territory of the Union," the document says.

Other options - a UK-EU deal that means checks are not needed and technological solutions for a "virtual" border - will also be explored.

Mr Barnier said the document contained "concrete and realistic solutions".

Theresa May won't accept it

The idea of separate customs arrangements for Northern Ireland has provoked an angry reaction from the Democratic Unionist Party and some Conservative MPs who say it would effectively create a new border in the Irish Sea.

Speaking at Prime Minister's Questions, Mrs May said she would be making her opposition to it "crystal clear" to the EU commission.

"The draft legal text the commission have published would, if implemented, undermine the UK common market and threaten the constitutional integrity of the UK by creating a customs and regulatory border down the Irish Sea, and no UK prime minster could ever agree to it," she said.

Media caption,

Will the bridge that unites the two villages be used to divide them?

The prime minister was responding to a question from David Simpson of the DUP, the party that gives the government the Commons support it needs to win key votes in the House of Commons.

Earlier the DUP's Westminster leader Nigel Dodds said his reaction to the publication was one of "amazement" that the EU thought it "could possibly fly with either us or the British government".

"We did not leave the European Union to oversee the breakup of the United Kingdom," he told the BBC, adding that it would be "catastrophic" for Northern Ireland to be "cut off" from UK markets.

Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson suggested the row over the border was being used to keep the UK inside the customs union.

But Labour said the EU-UK government "war of words" needs to end.

"Theresa May's failure to offer any viable solution to the border in Northern Ireland has come back to haunt her," said shadow Brexit Secretary Sir Kier Starmer.

Wasn't all this agreed last year?

In December both sides came up with an agreement that Downing Street hailed as a "breakthrough" and meant the EU agreed to move talks on to the next phase.

It included a promise to avoid a "hard border" between Northern Ireland and the Republic.

But the EU says that the next phase of negotiations - which includes drawing up a post-Brexit transition and opening trade talks on permanent post-Brexit relations - can only progress if December's agreement is "translated faithfully into legal terms as quickly as possible".

And doing this has reopened the debate about the Northern Ireland border.

Media caption,

Would you notice if you crossed the Irish border? (Video from 2017)

Downing Street said that overall the negotiations were "progressing well", adding that "it would be surprising at this point if we did agree on everything".

The Irish government said the publication was "another important step in the Brexit negotiations".

Ireland's foreign affairs minister Simon Coveney said the "backstop" option was "very much a default and would only apply should it prove necessary".

Labour says it would solve the Irish border question by entering into a new customs union with the EU, meaning checks are not needed as people and goods pass between Northern Ireland and the Republic.

EU court and citizens' rights

As well as the Irish border, another area of contention is the role of the European Court of Justice (ECJ).

The UK has said it will leave the ECJ's jurisdiction and regain control of its laws after Brexit.

According to the EU's draft document, disputes over the Brexit agreement in future years would be settled by a "joint committee" made up of representatives from both sides.

But the EU proposes that this committee would be able to refer to the European Court of Justice for a binding ruling - with the EU's court having the power to levy a fine or suspend parts of the Brexit treaty.

The EU is also insisting that EU citizens who arrive in Britain during the transition period have the same right to stay in the country as those who arrived before Brexit - the UK has said these people should be treated differently as their "expectations" will be different.

In a new policy paper, external, the UK said people arriving during transition would be able to apply for indefinite leave to remain in the UK - with their rights subject to UK law.

What happens next

Mr Barnier stressed that the document was a draft and would now be circulated among the 27 other EU nations and the European Parliament's Brexit steering group for revision and agreement before being placed on the negotiating table.

UK negotiators will work with the EU to see how December's commitments can be translated into legal form, Theresa May said.

Attention will then soon turn to Friday, when the prime minister is to make a speech setting out the UK's strategy for the next phase of negotiations.

Key to this will be how closely the UK seeks to stay to EU rules in order to maintain a close trading relationship.

John Major weighs in

Former Prime Minister Sir John Major has, meanwhile, said Conservative MPs must vote with their "own conscience" on whether to accept the final deal reached between the UK and the EU.

In a speech in London, he said they could decide on a new referendum.

Sir John said "both democracy and prudence" suggest that parties should not dictate to their MPs how to vote.

Image source, Getty Images

"Brexit is a unique decision," he added. "It will affect the lives of the British nation for generations to come. If it flops - there will be the most terrible backlash.

But Eurosceptic MPs were not impressed with his suggestion. Former Tory leader Iain Duncan Smith - who rebelled on EU votes during Sir John's time in Downing Street - told the BBC: "He was not a prime minister who was too keen on free votes when he was there."

Backbench MP Jacob Rees-Mogg said Sir John had been wrong on Europe in the past "and he is getting it wrong again".