Prime Minister Boris Johnson has presented his new Brexit proposal to European leaders on Wednesday.
His goal is to ditch the “Irish backstop.”
That’s the part of the Brexit agreement meant to prevent the reintroduction of a hard border between Northern Ireland, a part of the UK, and the Republic of Ireland, which will remain an EU member after Brexit.
Instead of the backstop, Johnson is proposing the following:
Northern Ireland to remain part of a regulatory union with Ireland.
What this means: If regulation is the same on both sides, there won’t be a need for regulatory checks on goods traded across the border.
The UK, including Northern Ireland, to leave the EU’s customs union.
What this means: Leaving the customs bloc is necessary if the UK wants to be able to strike its own trade deals. It also satisfies the Northern Irish DUP party, which wants to preserve the unity of the UK.
Any necessary checks to happen away from the border, on decentralized basis, for example at traders’ premises, or “along the supply chain”.
What this means: The sticking point. Johnson conceded on Wednesday that if there is a customs union border in Ireland, a “very small number of physical checks” will be needed. He argues that these can happen away from the border, bypassing the need for any new infrastructure. However, Ireland (backed by the whole EU), has previously insisted that border checks are border checks, regardless of where they take place.