Taoiseach not expecting Stormont breakthrough by September

ireland
Taoiseach Not Expecting Stormont Breakthrough By September
Leo Varadkar said progress in restoring the North's power-sharing institutions has been "very, very slow" . Photo: PA Images
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Taoiseach Leo Varadkar said he does not expect a breakthrough in talks to restore Northern Ireland's devolved government by September and urged the British government to work much more closely with Dublin to end the impasse.

The Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) collapsed the devolved executive 17 months ago in protest over the Northern Ireland Protocol and then rejected a fresh deal, the Windsor Framework, struck in February.

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The DUP said last week that there had been no meaningful action from the British government on its demand for further measures to protect trade between the North and Britain.

"I certainly do hope that we can have the institutions up and running in September. I think it's fair to say it's not an expectation at this stage, any progress that has been made has been very, very slow," Mr Varadkar, who had raised the prospect of a September breakthrough last month, told reporters.

"One thing I'm saying very strongly to the British government is that we need to have a common strategy on this and we haven't really had that approach for quite some time, and I regret that we don't.

"I continue to say to our UK counterparts that the right way forward is an agreed strategy."

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He added that if the deadlock was allowed to drift into next year, there is a risk the opportunity for agreement could be lost until after a British general election, expected to be held in 2024.

The British government has pledged to introduce laws to further protect trade with Northern Ireland and placate the DUP, but has not yet tabled any proposals.

Mr Varadkar said his Government has repeatedly received assurances from London that any such move would not result in changes to the revised EU-UK trade deal or undermine the Good Friday Agreement. -Reuters

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