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‘The bottom line is that the DUP cannot countenance any change that would involve border checks between Great Britain and Northern Ireland.’Protesters line a road holding placards near a new anti-Brexit mural, erected by Republican party Sinn Féin, in west Belfast.
‘The bottom line is that the DUP cannot countenance any change that would involve border checks between Great Britain and Northern Ireland.’ Photograph: Paul Faith/AFP/Getty Images
‘The bottom line is that the DUP cannot countenance any change that would involve border checks between Great Britain and Northern Ireland.’ Photograph: Paul Faith/AFP/Getty Images

For the DUP, the border question is raw identity politics

This article is more than 6 years old
The British government must have been aware of the DUP red lines around an Irish border as its raison d’etre is to keep the UK together

The whole point of the DUP is to safeguard Northern Ireland’s position within the UK. As unionists, they believe in the nation state and see the UK as the rock on which our prosperity, security and identity is built. It is unsurprising that these views have lead them into a strongly pro-Brexit stance, though even then there is a pragmatism to their politics that is sometimes missed. The government would have known what the DUP’s red lines were before the latest round of talks hit the buffers.

The Irish government denies the charge that it asked that Monday’s Brexit paper be kept from the DUP, but the reality is that the DUP had received only an emollient verbal briefing and had been asking for days to see a paper. It was passed to them only as Theresa May was going to lunch in Brussels; the frantic phone calls that followed stopped the deal in its tracks.

The important point now is whether the deal can be put back on track by a focus on precise detail rather than vague phrases.

The issue of the Irish border is important, but not as challenging as the Irish government has made it. Irish ministers say they were offended by the lack of attention to their concerns during the referendum, but later accepted that the UK government was taking steps to make the border as light as humanly possible.

They also knew that the DUP wanted much the same as them, in terms of its practical functioning. No one in Northern Ireland wanted to be stopped at the border on their way to catch a plane in Dublin for Marbella. Until last June the Irish prime minister, Enda Kenny, had fully cooperated with the authorities in Northern Ireland. Quiet meetings on Brexit took place between civil servants in Ireland and Northern Ireland. Constructive work took place in preparation for an electronic border.

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Why is the Irish border a stumbling block for Brexit?

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Counties and customs

Inside the EU, both Ireland and Northern Ireland are part of the single market and customs union so share the same regulations and standards, allowing a soft or invisible border between the two.

Britain’s exit from the EU – taking Northern Ireland with it – risks a return to a hard or policed border. The only way to avoid this post-Brexit is for regulations on both sides to remain more or less the same in key areas including food, animal welfare, medicines and product safety.

The 'backstop' in Theresa May's Withdrawal Agreement was intended to address this - stating that if no future trade agreement could be reached between the EU and the UK, then rules and regulations would stay as they are. This has been rejected by Brexit supporters as a 'trap' to keep the UK in the EU's customs union, which would prevent the UK striking its own independent trade deals. 

There are an estimated 72m road vehicle crossings a year between Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland, and about 14% of those crossings are consignments of goods, some of which may cross the border several times before they reach a consumer. Brexit supporters say this can be managed by doing checks on goods away from the border, but critics say it will be difficult to police this without any physical infrastructure like border posts or cameras, which could raise tensions in the divided communities of Ireland. 


Interactive: A typical hour in the life of the Irish border

Photograph: Design Pics Inc/Design Pics RF
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When the new taoiseach, Leo Varadkar took over in June all of this stopped, and a harder line emerged from Dublin. Brexit was viewed as the UK’s responsibility, and Ireland would play no part in agreeing any border, no matter how light. The Irish government even appears to have entertained the notion that it could nudge the UK, or at least Northern Ireland, into remaining within the single market and customs union, and was prepared to veto a move to Brexit trade talks to achieve this aim.

The DUP is a party of seasoned negotiators and, in my experience, they react calmly and logically to such difficulties. If they sometimes seem over-sensitive about maintaining the UK union it is because they feel that the Irish government will undercut their position at every opportunity. Only last week the Irish deputy prime minister, Simon Coveney, stated that he wanted to achieve a united Ireland in his political lifetime. The DUP’s weakness, however, is that it fails to give priority to explaining itself to a wider UK and EU public opinion. As a result, the weak Irish arguments that Brexit somehow endangers the peace process or undermines the Good Friday agreement have been allowed to take hold. Neither argument bears much examination, but importantly they have received minimal examination – and have been repeated unthinkingly in the British media.

The UK government’s position paper in August laid out practical ways to make the border virtually invisible. No one is talking about stopping individuals at the border. Nor is it necessary to stop lorries since customs clearing by computer and electronic number plate-recognition technology are all available.

The Irish are not interested in any of this because the issue, much as it is to the DUP, is to them one of national identity. A Northern Ireland outside the EU makes it feel more detached from Ireland. To the Irish government this is unacceptable. End of story.

Strangely, the Irish government is not talking about border tariffs, and perhaps it expects a UK-EU free trade deal to be agreed later. They demand instead that EU regulations be preserved in Northern Ireland. This demand was met on Monday by a British offer to “align” regulations, mainly in agriculture and energy. Since Northern Ireland’s important food producers need to meet EU regulations to export into Ireland and the rest of the EU, it is easy to imagine that such regulation is possible. Standards are already world class and will not be dropped. Such proposals need, though, to be much more carefully thought through than was the case on Monday.

The bottom line is that the DUP cannot countenance any change that would involve border checks between Great Britain and Northern Ireland. As the UK has become a looser union, it has permitted such things as differing tax rates in Scotland and Northern Ireland, but internal border controls are, to coin a phrase, the final frontier. An agreement can probably now be finessed, without the DUP threatening to bring down the government, something they would prefer to avoid at all costs. Either way, much better communication is obviously needed.

Graham Gudgin is chief economic adviser at Policy Exchange and a former special adviser to the first minister of Northern Ireland

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