Amongst
the many problems which the Brexiteers never really thought through is the
question of the arrangements for the border between the UK and the Irish
republic. If the UK were willing to
consider remaining in the single market and customs union, then the problem
would be greatly diminished, but given the outright refusal of both the
government and most of the main opposition party even to consider such an
option, the issue could end up becoming one of the major obstacles to progress.
Initially,
some in the UK Government seemed to be suggesting that the Irish Republic could
carry out UK border checks in its ports and airports, seemingly insensitive to
the way in which treating the Republic as being somehow ‘part of the UK’ for
customs purposes would be received by an independent state. Subsequently the UK Government has suggested some sort of ‘hi-tech’ land
border across Ireland, a suggestion which has not gone down well in Dublin,
which sees any reintroduction of a land border as being in danger of re-opening
past divisions and damaging both parts of the island. Their response
has been to propose that the Irish Sea should become the border.
Unsurprisingly,
the idea of imposing customs and passport checks between one part of the UK and
another (effectively treating the north as part of the Republic for customs purposes)
has not gone down terribly well with the DUP in the north of Ireland. One of their responses
has been to suggest that there are only two options – there will either be a
hard land border, or the Republic will have to follow the UK out of the EU. As an exercise in cold logic, it’s hard to
fault that, although as an understanding of political reality it fails
miserably, and would lead inexorably to the imposition of a hard border.
But
it also underscores the underlying attitude of many Brexiteers from the outset
on two points in particular. The first is
that Brexit only ever made any sense at all as a precursor to breaking up the
EU, and the second is that the problems caused by Brexit are somebody else’s –
in this case, the Republic of Ireland. It’s
another example of the UK’s sense of entitlement and exceptionalism that the
problems should all be resolved by others bending down before the might of
Britannia.
2 comments:
Then, there is Gibraltar!
Then there is Wales!
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