Leo Varadkar, Ireland’s Prime Minister stated that U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s new Brexit plans “fall short.”
According to The Irish Times, Varadkar on Thursday said that he doesn’t understand how Johnson’s plans would deal with the custom checks along the border between the State and Northern Ireland.
“I don’t fully understand how we can have Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland in a separate customs union and somehow avoid there being tariffs and checks and customs posts between North and South,” he said. “So we need to tease that through.”
Varadkar commented shortly after he met with the Swedish prime minister, announcing the Irish government would not be able to support a Brexit plan that placed custom checks at the border, according to the Irish newspaper.
The prime minister said he would rather have no deal reached by the Oct. 31 deadline than instilling checks at the border. He also emphasized that he wanted the majority of Irish people to agree with the solution that’s enacted.
“Having to do that for a period of time while we negotiate a deal or while we pursue other solutions is very different to an Irish Government actually signing up in an international treaty putting in place checks between North and South and that is something that we can not contemplate,” The Irish Times reported he said.
Johnson proposed his “final offer” for the Brexit Wednesday, which he celebrated as “a compromise for both sides.”
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