Positions on the Irish border United Kingdom The UK government has said that Brexit will not mean a return of the hard border. According to statements in 2016 by the then
UK Prime Minister Theresa May and
Irish Taoiseach Enda Kenny, it is intended to maintain this arrangement after the United Kingdom leaves the EU. In September 2016, the (then) UK
Brexit Secretary,
David Davis, stated that the UK government would not seek a return to a hard border between the UK and the Republic of Ireland. In October 2016,
The Guardian reported that British proposals to avoid a hard border, by 'seeking to shift the frontline of [British] immigration controls to Ireland's ports and airports', had received "signals [of] support" by some members of
Enda Kenny's government. However, by 2017, a spokesperson for the new Irish government, under Leo Varadkar, stated that these reports had been "misinformed", and that there was "no question of UK officials acting as border agents in Ireland". In its
white paper on Brexit, the United Kingdom government reiterated its commitment to the
Good Friday Agreement. With regard to Northern Ireland's status, it said that the UK government's "clearly-stated preference is to retain Northern Ireland's current constitutional position: as part of the UK, but with strong links to Ireland".
Republic of Ireland The Irish Government's position has been to reduce public mention of border checks to avoid confrontation with opposition parties in the
Dáil and to calm nationalist and unionist concerns in Northern Ireland. Repeated statements have been made by senior politicians in government denying plans are being made for a hard border. Concerns have been raised by opposition parties that the government is not being forthright about the risk of, and planning for, a hard border. A private admonishment by
Tánaiste Simon Coveney of Minister for Transport
Shane Ross in the wake of a press conference was caught on the live microphones. In reference to border checks, Coveney stated, "We can’t get into where they’ll be at this stage. They could be in the sea. They could be...but once you start talking about checks anywhere near the border people will start delving into that and all of a sudden we’ll be the Government that re-introduced a physical border on the island of Ireland". In a February 2019 Sky Data poll, 79% of respondents supported the Irish government holding out for a legal guarantee that there will be no hard border, even if it risks a no-deal Brexit on 29 March. In the same poll, 81% supported cutting economic ties with the UK if forced to choose, with 19% supporting cutting ties with the EU in favour of the UK to maintain the open border.
Northern Ireland demonstrations against a hard border. Post-Brexit
border controls are a controversial issue. There have been worries among
unionists that the Irish government's position is a covert attempt to gain more power over the region in order to promote a
united Ireland, a position the Irish government has denied. The
Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) opposes a
hard Irish border and wishes to maintain the
Common Travel Area. The DUP was the only major party of Northern Ireland to oppose the
Good Friday Agreement. A referendum on the reunification of Ireland was suggested by the
Sinn Féin leader
Martin McGuinness immediately after the Brexit referendum results were announced, a stance reiterated by the new party leader
Mary Lou McDonald in 2018. A week after the Brexit referendum the then
First Minister of Northern Ireland, the DUP's
Arlene Foster and
Deputy First Minister Martin McGuinness issued a joint letter in which they said that the border must not become a catalyst for illegal activity or create an incentive for those who wish to undermine the peace process.
European Union In April 2017, the
European Council agreed that, in the event of a
united Ireland, Northern Ireland could rejoin the EU under Ireland's existing membership. In January 2019, German foreign minister
Heiko Maas urged British MPs not to let the UK leave the EU without a deal, saying that "some people call us stubborn, but the truth is avoiding a hard border in Ireland is a fundamental concern for the EU, a union that more than anything else serves one purpose – to build and maintain peace in Europe". Nevertheless, the
European Commission's chief spokesman
Margaritis Schinas stated on 23 January that it is "obvious" that there would be a hard border were the United Kingdom to leave the EU without a deal. In April 2019, former WTO director-general and European trade commissioner
Pascal Lamy said that "staying in a customs union after Brexit won't resolve the Irish border issue... Leaving the single market reintroduces a border – the thickness of which depends on the degree of regulatory divergence."
Effect on the withdrawal negotiations In the withdrawal negotiations, the Irish border issue was one of three areas that required a dedicated negotiation stream so as to achieve the withdrawal agreement that is required before the future relationship between the UK and EU can be agreed. The Irish and UK governments, as well as EU representatives, have stated that they do not wish for a hard border in Ireland, taking into account the historical and social "sensitivities" that permeate the island.
EU negotiating stance Michel Barnier, the EU chief negotiator, indicated that he would look to the United Kingdom and Ireland for "solutions" to threats posed to Ireland's trading links, the Common Travel Area, and the Good Friday Agreement. Denying UK media reports that Ireland expects the effective border to become the
Irish Sea, Irish Minister for Foreign Affairs
Simon Coveney said that "the onus was on British officials to come up with an imaginative solution but [the Irish Government] would not support a proposal which would see a hard border return on Ireland".
Backstop proposal The Irish backstop was a
protocol in the (rejected)
2018 draft of the Withdrawal Agreement, that would have kept the United Kingdom (in general) in the
European Union Customs Union and Northern Ireland (in particular) in some aspects of the
European Single Market, until a solution is found to prevent a hard border. Its purpose was so as not to compromise the
Good Friday Agreement and to maintain the integrity of the European Single Market. This would have come into operation only if there were no other solutions by the end of the (agreed) transition period, and would remain in place until such solutions were found and agreed to be practical. This proposal would have avoided the need for customs controls between Great Britain and Northern Ireland or between Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland (in other words, between the UK and the EU). The Irish government supported the proposal. It had been strongly opposed by the
Democratic Unionist Party as weakening Northern Ireland's place within the United Kingdom and is regarded as the main reason why Theresa May's withdrawal agreement was never approved by the British Parliament. The UK Parliament had already rejected
an earlier proposal. After further negotiations in autumn of 2019, an alternative model, the
Ireland/Northern Ireland Protocol of the final Brexit withdrawal agreement was agreed between the UK and the EU. A brief summary of the later protocol is given
below.
Resolution In October 2019, the UK and the EU negotiators reached agreement on a revised protocol (see
below) which resolved many of these issues by having Northern Ireland leave the EU
de jure but with a
de facto border between islands (
Ireland and
Great Britain) nicknamed the "
Irish Sea border". In February 2022, the
Stormont Executive collapsed when the Democratic Unionist Party walked out in protest against these post-Brexit trade arrangements for Northern Ireland. In February 2024, Stormont resumed, after the DUP and the British Conservative Parties agreed that there would be no "routine" checks on goods between the UK and NI, but that there would still be spot checks, and that when UK government ministers are introducing new legislation, they will be compelled to tell Parliament if their Bill will have "significant adverse implications for Northern Ireland's place in the UK internal market". Further, they agreed that changes to EU law will no longer automatically apply in Northern Ireland. Before the deal, it would have taken at least half of the Assembly members to object before EU law could be scrutinised. (In 2023, a post-Brexit negotiation resulted in the
Windsor Framework, which the DUP accepted.) ==Policy areas==