Brexit talks 'may break down over Ireland'

The UK's former chief negotiator on Northern Ireland, Jonathan Powell, says Theresa May has boxed herself in on the Brexit issue of the Irish border.

The People's Vote campaign wants a referendum so the public can ratify or reject the final Brexit agreement.

The People's Vote campaign wants a referendum so the public can ratify or reject the final Brexit agreement. Source: AAP

The British prime minister's handling of the Irish border question could bring Brexit negotiations "crashing down", according to the government's former chief negotiator on Northern Ireland.

Jonathan Powell said Theresa May has committed "the worst possible sin a negotiator can commit" - having "boxed herself in", in an article for The Independent.

It comes as the EU and the UK said no agreement had been reached on the approach to avoid a hard border on the frontier between Northern Ireland and the Republic.

Powell said the government's proposal of enjoying "the benefits of the single market in the areas we choose without taking on the obligations it requires" is at the centre of the problem.

Tony Blair's former chief of staff warned that a return to "huge concrete slabs" and "checkpoints on the main roads" could "force Northern Ireland back into identity politics".

"She will be faced by the alternative of accepting the current EU draft and losing the support of the 10 DUP MPs who sustain her government, or alternatively accepting that the whole of the UK remains in the single market and the customs union, in which case she will lose the support of the 62 backbench Brexit Tories," the former diplomat wrote.

He argued that May had been able to "fudge" the issue until now but that strategy "doesn't work any more".

"Theresa May's speech may have temporarily united the Tory party, but it has not solved the substantive problems," Powell added.

"Indeed, her problems on Brexit may only just have begun and it may turn out that the insoluble problem of the Northern Ireland border is the issue that finally brings the entire negotiation crashing down."


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Source: AAP



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