Eu's 'blunder eroding trust' after claim ireland could abandon bloc

Eu's 'blunder eroding trust' after claim ireland could abandon bloc


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BREXIT: EU IS PLAYING ‘HARDBALL’ WITH NORTHERN IRELAND SAYS HOEY The European Union’s threat to impose a vaccine border between Northern Ireland and the Republic has reignited one of


Brexit’s most bitter disputes. At the end of January, the EU said it would be triggering an emergency provision in the Brexit deal to control COVID-19 vaccine exports, including the possible


introduction of checks at the border of Ireland and Northern Ireland to prevent shipments entering the UK. The move was immediately met with fierce condemnation from London, Belfast, and


Dublin and the EU performed a swift U-turn. RELATED ARTICLES However, Cabinet Office Minister Michael Gove has warned that the aborted decision to trigger Article 16 of the Northern Ireland


Protocol has opened a "Pandora's Box" regarding post-Brexit arrangements. He told MPs an urgent "reset" was needed to the Northern Ireland protocol governing checks


on GB-NI trade. Most importantly, though, Mr Gove described the move as "a moment when trust was eroded". In an exclusive interview with Express.co.uk, Prime Minister Boris


Johnson's trade adviser Shanker Singham also warned that despite the about-turn, the level of trust between Ireland and Brussels will never be the same. Mr Singham explained: "It


was a spectacular blunder. It is quite hard to imagine doing anything worse than this. "And the speed, in which they said they can under certain circumstances put a border on the island


without consulting anyone... EU told 'quarantined' Ireland could have left bloc in act of revenge (Image: GETTY) "Well, it has without a doubt affected their relationship


with Ireland significantly." The trade expert added: "The Irish government must be highly suspicious of anything the EU is doing or saying now. "Because if I were them, I


wouldn't think the EU has necessarily my best interests at heart. "Obviously, the EU has 27 member states with their own interests... so the notion that they would privilege the


Irish has never made much sense. "But it has now made the Irish understand they are not a priority in respect to the EU." This sentiment could arguably lead to new speculation


about a possible Irish EU exit. Not too long ago, many believed the potentially negative effect of Brexit on the Irish economy could have sparked "Irexit". JUST IN: SUNAK TOLD TO


INVEST MORE MONEY IN POST-BREXIT BOOM  Cabinet Office Minister Michael Gove (Image: GETTY) Trade expert Shanker Singham (Image: EXPRESS.CO.UK) After the 2016 EU referendum, Cliff Taylor of


the Irish Times said that the question arose because Ireland's participation in the single market is "vital" to the economy but also that Ireland's interactions with the


British economy is similarly "vital". Moreover, a 2017 report by Dublin-based Hibernia Forum said the Republic could have left the bloc as revenge for its treatment during the


financial crisis. Co-founder of the think tank Keith Redmond said the country had been “quarantined” and forced to take on “toxic banking debt”. Mr Redmond, who at the time was a councillor


on the Fingal County Council, told Express.co.uk other factors, such as a growing loss of sovereignty, could have led to an Irish EU exit. When asked whether euroscepticism was growing, he


said: “For sure. There is definitely a support for stopping what seems to be an unstoppable march to EU integration, EU super state, whatever you want to call it.” He said a growing distrust


of Brussels was centred on three concerns: a lack of accountability from those in power, a loss of sovereignty in Ireland and the EU’s treatment of the country during the banking crisis. Mr


Redmond noted: “Ireland as an island was quarantined for the toxic banking debt of the EU. They basically shafted us.” DON'T MISS: EU INSIDER PRAISES BREXIT AS UK 'WILL REBOOT


ECONOMY FASTER’ [INSIGHT] FRANCE'S PLOT TO TAKE NATO LEADERSHIP ROLE FROM BREXIT BRITAIN EXPOSED [REVEALED] EU'S 'VACCINE TACTICS TO PUSH EVERYONE INTO POVERTY' 


[EXCLUSIVE] Irish border (Image: GETTY) Irish Taoiseach Micheál Martin (Image: GETTY) RELATED ARTICLES He said leaving the EU was preferable to its inevitable chaotic collapse. He said:


“People were concerned in Ireland about the uncertainty that may follow [Brexit], the upheaval. “That’s all true, but it is necessary upheaval. “Otherwise we are faced ultimately with


calamity, a total collapse. But we can make it a planned collapse.” In September 2018, the Irish Freedom Party – also known as "Irexit Freedom to Prosper" – was formed to campaign


for an Irish exit from the EU and to field candidates in the 2019 European Parliament election. Its two candidates were party leader Hermann Kelly, who received 2,441 first preference votes


(0.67 percent) in the Dublin constituency, and chairperson Professor Delores Cahill, who polled with 1.47 percent of first preference votes in the South constituency. A Eurobarometer poll


conducted across the EU in March 2019 showed that if a referendum on EU membership were held tomorrow, 83 percent of people in Ireland would vote to remain.