‘No renegotiating’ EU-UK Brexit deal, Heaton-Harris tells DUP

Windsor Framework will be formally adopted by UK and EU on Friday and become international law

Northern Ireland Secretary Chris Heaton-Harris speaking to the media at Hillsborough Castle on Thursday after his meetings with Stormont leaders over Brexit and the Windsor Framework. Photograph: Brian Lawless/PA

Northern Ireland Secretary Chris Heaton-Harris has warned the DUP that there can be “no renegotiating” of Rishi Sunak’s new Brexit deal with Brussels, despite the party’s demand for changes.

Following talks with Northern Ireland party leaders, Mr Heaton-Harris confirmed the Windsor Framework agreement will be formally adopted by the UK and EU on Friday and will become international law shortly afterwards.

It follows Wednesday’s Commons vote when MPs overwhelmingly backed regulations to implement a key plank of the framework – which covers post-Brexit trading arrangements for Northern Ireland – by 515 votes to 29.

The DUP however opposes the agreement and is refusing to return to powersharing at Stormont unless there are further changes.

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Following his meeting with Mr Heaton-Harris at Hillsborough Castle, the Northern Ireland Secretary’s official residence, DUP leader Jeffrey Donaldson said it remained no more than a “sticking plaster” solution.

However Mr Heaton-Harris told reporters that the Government was committed to the new arrangements and to making them work with the EU.

“There is no renegotiating of that deal,” he said.

“The two sides to those negotiations which have concluded, the UK Government and the European Union, are going to make the framework work.

“So there is nothing more to get out of that conversation. It is done.”

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Mr Donaldson nevertheless insisted that he would be seeking further talks with Mr Sunak and foreign secretary James Cleverly.

“I am not interested in sticking plasters, they don’t work and I’m afraid there is in the Windsor Framework an element of the sticking plaster,” he said.

“It won’t work, it will not deliver the long-term stability and prosperity that Northern Ireland needs.”

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The continuing stand-off suggests the prospects for a return to powersharing at Stormont in time for the 25th anniversary next month of the Good Friday Agreement remain bleak.

The executive and the Assembly have been suspended since the DUP walked out last year in protest at the way the Northern Ireland Protocol negotiated by Boris Johnson was operating.

Mr Sunak has insisted the framework deal “fixes” the problems with the protocol but Mr Donaldson has said “fundamental” issues remain.

The framework will be formally adopted by Mr Cleverly and European Commission vice-president Maroš Šefčovič at a meeting in London of the Withdrawal Agreement Joint Committee. - PA