The EU Commission Vice-President said Britain’s plans to override the Brexit Northern Ireland Protocol with new domestic legislation will “damage mutual trust” and cause more uncertainty for the bloc.
After a phone call between the pair, Mr Sefcovic tweeted: “Spoke to Liz Truss earlier where she informed me of UK legislation to unilaterally disapply the Protocol.
“The EU has always paid utmost attention to the impact Brexit has on NI, offering workable solutions.
“Unilateral action is damaging to mutual trust & a formula for uncertainty.”
The UK International Trade minister also spoke to Irish Foreign Affairs minister Simon Coveney who echoed Mr Sefcovic’s sentiment.
A spokesman for the Irish politician said: “Minister Coveney said publishing legislation that would breach the UK’s commitments under international law is deeply damaging to relationships on these islands and between the U.K. and EU.
“Minister Coveney said it marks a particular low point in the UK’s approach to Brexit… The UK’s unilateral approach is not in the best interest of Northern Ireland. Far from fixing problems, this legislation will create a whole new set of uncertainties and damage.”
Ms Truss will set out plans to override some rules that govern post-Brexit trade with Northern Ireland in a move that is inflaming tensions with the European Union and could spark a trade war.
Britain has been threatening for months to rip up the Northern Ireland Protocol, an agreement for the British-run region struck by Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s government in order to secure a Brexit divorce and wider trade deal between Brussels and London.
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Tensions have been simmering for months between London and Brussels over the protocol, with British ministers accusing the EU of imposing rules that have snarled goods in red tape and threatened political stability in Northern Ireland.
Critics of London’s plan, including representatives of the province’s dairy, manufacturing and logistics industries, say its unilateral action will damage business and introduce new uncertainty.
Brussels believes any unilateral change may breach international law and it could respond with legal action and the imposition of tariffs – a risk at a time when British inflation is set to hit 10 percent and the economy is shrinking.
Britain’s Northern Ireland minister Brandon Lewis insisted on Sunday the legislation complied with the law.
It is expected to propose a “green channel” for goods moving from Britain to Northern Ireland, scrapping rules that prevent the province from benefiting from tax assistance and ending the role of the European Court of Justice as sole arbiter, according to reports.
The plan will be a test of Boris Johnson’s authority after four in ten of his lawmakers opposed him in a confidence vote last week.