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Taoiseach wants Brexit put on the agenda of EU leaders meeting in September

Theresa May has convened her Cabinet today in desperate bid to quell rebellion within her party.

TAOISEACH LEO VARADKAR has asked for Brexit to be put on the agenda of a meeting of EU leaders in Salzburg this September.

Reacting to events in London yesterday, where UK Prime Minister Theresa May lost Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson and Brexit minister David Davis from her Cabinet, Varadkar said in the Dáil this afternoon that it is very much an “internal matter” for the British Government.

Varadkar said he discussed the possibility of upgrading the Austrian summit in September to a formal summit on Article 50 with the Austrian chancellor Sebastian Kurz when he was here last weekend.

Varadkar said the 28 heads of State are meeting in Salzburg on 20 September, which would be an opportune time to discuss Irish border issues. However, he said a decision will be made closer to the time.

He said he looks forward to reading the UK government’s White Paper which May is due to publish this week. He understands it will run to about 100-pages long, and said it will provide the much-wanted detail on how the UK sees its relationship with Europe working in the future.

Eager for there to be progress made, the Taoiseach said:

“If the United Kingdom was able to relax from some of its red lines, then the European Union could be flexible too. I think we are now entering into that space.”

He added:

I have always said the best option and the best way for us to avoid a hard border on the island of Ireland is through what we have been calling for quite some time option A, which is the future relationship, rather than option C, which is the backstop.
It has always been our view that the best solution is one that would be an all-encompassing solution involving the United Kingdom staying very close to the European Union and, therefore, Ireland and, therefore, negating the need or even possibility of a hard border on our island.
Nonetheless we will still need a backstop.  It will not be possible to negotiate the final stages treaty, that is the new treaty between the UK and the EU, by October.  At best we will have a political declaration.  That treaty will have to be ratified not just by this Parliament but by the Parliament of every member state in the European Union.

Reacting to the news that Johnson had resigned from the UK Cabinet in protest, Sinn Féin’s Mary Lou McDonald said Boris Johnson is now running away from the mess that he helped create, adding that he will be “no great loss”.

Conservative Party fall-out

Today, May convened her cabinet in an attempt to keep control of her Conservative party in the wake of the high level resignations from the party yesterday.

Johnson warned in his letter of resignation to May that Britain was headed for the “status of colony” of the EU after it leaves in March, and said the Brexit “dream is dying”.

May responded that she was “sorry and a little surprised” by his decision but said she accepted it was necessary “if you are not able to provide the support we need to secure this deal in the interests of the United Kingdom”.

She replaced him with Health Minister Jeremy Hunt, a Japanese-speaking former entrepreneur who unlike Johnson voted for Britain to stay in the EU in the 2016 referendum.

Johnson’s dramatic resignation followed those of Davis and his deputy Steve Baker overnight over May’s plans to keep Britain economically close to the bloc.

Two parliamentary private secretaries — MPs who act as assistants to ministers — also quit their posts.

The departures, hailed by eurosceptic MPs in the ruling Conservative party, triggered speculation that May could face an imminent leadership contest.

But, appearing in the House of Commons, a confident-sounding Maydefended her Brexit proposals.

“This is not a betrayal,” she responded to one of several eurosceptic Conservative MPs who complained, insisting it was “the right Brexit deal for Britain”.

She later spoke to Conservative MPs in a closed-door meeting at which she reportedly received broad support.

Jacob Rees-Mogg, an influential Brexit hardliner, was quoted as saying that he would vote against May’s proposals but would support her in any confidence vote.

Rees-Mogg said he expected May to remain in office at least until the official date of Brexit next year.

But another Conservative MP Andrea Jenkyns said she believed May’s time as prime minister was “over”.

Davis himself said it would be “wrong” for his departure to trigger a major party rebellion against May.

‘Giving too much away’

May announced on Friday that her cabinet had finally agreed to a plan to follow EU rules for trade in goods, raising hopes that long-stalled talks with the bloc could progress.

The truce did not last the weekend after Davis quit on Sunday night, warning that Britain was “giving too much away too easily” in Brexit talks.

On Monday, when Johnson was supposed to be hosting a summit on the Western Balkans, Downing Street announced he had also gone.

The timing could not be worse, as Britain faces a fresh diplomatic row with Russia over a nerve agent attack, and ahead of US President Donald Trump’s visit this week.

Brexit negotiations with Brussels are also expected to resume next week.

Downing Street swiftly appointed eurosceptic housing minister Dominic Raab to Davis’s job, and then later named Hunt as Johnson’s successor.

May said she now wanted to advance the Brexit talks, saying she had briefed EU leaders on her plan in recent days and received a “positive reaction”.

May has been balancing competing factions in her party for years, but with the clock ticking down to Brexit, had to make a choice.

Britain Brexit Pro-EU supporter Steve Bray holds placards on Abingdon Green across the road from the Houses of Parliament in London, Monday. Matt Dunham Matt Dunham

Her proposal would see Britain adopt EU rules for trade in goods after Brexit, but maintain flexibility for its key services sector and end freedom of movement.

Brussels has repeatedly warned it will not accept “cherry-picking” of elements of its single market and it remains to be seen what the response will be in Brussels.

Following Monday’s resignations, EU President Donald Tusk tweeted: “Politicians come and go but the problems they have created for people remain.”

“I can only regret that the idea of Brexit has not left with Davis and Johnson. But… who knows?,” he added, wondering if Britain might reject the divorce.

‘Reluctant conscript’

But many eurosceptic MPs are outraged at May’s plan, and Davis’s resignation letter was also scathing.

May’s proposals for a “common rulebook” on goods “hands control of large swathes of our economy to the EU”, he said.

Davis said his job required “an enthusiastic believer in your approach, and not merely a reluctant conscript”.

Speaking to BBC radio on Monday, he said he hoped Britain would “resist very strongly any attempt to get any further concessions”.

As head of the Brexit ministry, Davis was the public face of Britain’s negotiating team but in reality has been overshadowed for months by Mayand her aides.

Opposition Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn said the cabinet ministers had “jumped the sinking ship”.

“For the good of this country and its people, the government needs to get its act together and do it quickly and if it can’t, make way for those who can,” he said.

© – AFP, 2018 with reporting by Christina Finn

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    Mute Derek hutchings
    Favourite Derek hutchings
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    Oct 4th 2018, 9:42 PM

    Love to know what sat nav he was using as Grafton street has been pedestrian since the 80′s

    541
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    Mute Dave Byrne
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    Oct 4th 2018, 10:24 PM

    @Derek hutchings: Depends what time late night early morning it is opened to delivery vans and trucks.

    86
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    Mute James O'Brien
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    Oct 5th 2018, 12:58 AM

    @Derek hutchings: probably Google because its hopeless.

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    Mute Diaspora'd
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    Oct 5th 2018, 3:14 AM

    @James O’Brien: i am not making excuses for this driver. It just reminded me I was visiting Brussels a few years ago and used my Garmin sat nav to get around on foot, you can set it for “pedestrian mode” so it will navigate you to your destination down pedestrian only areas. The next day I was using the same sat nav in the rental car and I forgot to reset the setting for “car mode”….it took me a while to realize why it was telling me to get off every motorway and use minor roads and telling me to go down pedestrian only alleys etc. GPS/Sat Navs are really great but it doesn’t mean you have to suspend your common sense and just blindly follow a device like that.

    72
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    Mute Diddles Daffy
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    Oct 5th 2018, 7:28 AM

    @James O’Brien: sat nav sent me towards a one way. I didn’t follow instructions as I knew the street. Both iPhone and google sat navs are unreliable regularly

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    Mute Remington
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    Oct 5th 2018, 1:13 PM

    @Diddles Daffy: they are only unreliable if you follow them without looking at road sings.

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    Mute Brendan Geoghegan
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    Oct 4th 2018, 9:41 PM

    Thought there were barriers to stop random drivers taking to Grafton St.

    157
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    Mute Roy Dowling
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    Oct 4th 2018, 9:44 PM

    @Brendan Geoghegan: Best hope the Ones who want to “kill” us all don’t read this article.

    205
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    Mute Gulliver Foyle
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    Oct 4th 2018, 11:12 PM

    @Brendan Geoghegan: I was just looking at these this week… big boxes with a huge gap on either side big enough to fit an arctic down. luckily we only have satnav related issues, and not something bigger.

    50
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    Mute WoodlandBard
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    Oct 4th 2018, 9:57 PM

    The ‘sat nav’ was probably an old Ordnance Survey Map with compass-

    66
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    Mute Bob Frapples
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    Oct 4th 2018, 10:58 PM

    A tweet and 4 sentences, where the 4 sentences repeat exactly what the tweet says but even more impressive, the first and last sentence repeat each other.

    54
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    Mute Randal McNally
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    Oct 5th 2018, 1:09 AM

    What’s new. There are unaccompanied Learner Drivers everywhere including on the motorways. No enforcement unless in s bizarre instance like this, and the insurance continue to give them 3rd party cover so as to collect the huge premiums they can charge them

    50
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    Mute Shane Buckley
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    Oct 5th 2018, 1:09 PM

    @Randal McNally: Insurance is nullified if you don’t have a full licenced driver with you on a learner permit I think, so they were also uninsured..

    7
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    Mute Sean O' Donovan
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    Oct 4th 2018, 9:47 PM

    I hope they impounded that pesky satnav to be sent to the crusher.

    50
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    Mute shane campion
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    Oct 4th 2018, 10:16 PM

    Spud picker no doubt lol

    37
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    Mute Ronan Sexton
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    Oct 5th 2018, 5:34 AM

    @shane campion: or perhaps an Abbey St smackie local.

    38
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    Mute Jordan Kearney
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    Oct 5th 2018, 6:45 AM

    You’d think with the terror threat that all heavy pedestrianised streets would be protected by Barriers and bollards to prevent vehicles travelling down them.

    38
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    Mute Michael Kavanagh
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    Oct 5th 2018, 7:24 AM

    @Jordan Kearney:
    That’s what buskers are for!

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    Mute Jonathan Power
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    Oct 5th 2018, 5:07 AM

    I was in college in Wexford about 10 years ago and a girl and her BF drove to Dublin for the first time with his Dads sat nav.

    Well I couldn’t stop laughing for days later !!!! The sat nav brought them into Dublin up the old coast road through Wicklow they didn’t know there was a better road like the N11 and M50 !!!!

    24
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    Mute Reg
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    Oct 4th 2018, 9:48 PM

    Off to the crushers with it.

    22
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    Mute Maureen
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    Oct 4th 2018, 10:04 PM

    @Reg: Surprised to see a Ford Focus been driven up Grafton St without breaking down. One of the worst cars on the road. It would be no loss if it was crushed!

    52
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    Mute Radioska
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    Oct 4th 2018, 10:50 PM

    @Maureen: I just traded in a Ford Focus, had it 4 years, drove 80,000km. Never had as much as a puncture. Just saying.

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    Mute brendan H
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    Oct 4th 2018, 11:00 PM

    @Maureen: Ignorant comment, ford focus is one of the best selling cars for over 20 years, if they were that bad they wouldn’t be around.

    64
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    Mute Jonathan Power
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    Oct 5th 2018, 3:29 AM

    @brendan H: friend had an usual 1.9 Gia Focus Saloon Diesel 120 BHP absolute dynamite beautiful car never gave trouble except heavy on suspension parts.

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    Mute Scottyal
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    Oct 4th 2018, 9:52 PM

    Why is it when Idiots act the Idiot and when they are caught its usually no Insurance ,NCT , and no driving licence

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    Mute Peter Cavey
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    Oct 4th 2018, 10:04 PM

    @Scottyal: because, only idiots drive without tax, insurance or NCT!

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    Mute Scottyal
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    Oct 4th 2018, 10:16 PM

    @Peter Cavey: Yes we already know that But to draw attention to yourself

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    Mute Siobhán Ni Mhurchú
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    Oct 4th 2018, 10:18 PM

    You’d imagine that because of all that ,they’d at least try not to bring attention onto themselves

    23
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    Mute Mark Plunkett
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    Oct 5th 2018, 12:51 PM

    @Scottyal: because they are allowed to do it,guards couldn’t give a toss now who is on the road.legal or not.

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    Mute Stephen Duffy
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    Oct 5th 2018, 7:55 AM

    Nobody should blindly follow a satnav.. if road signs say something and the satnav says something else then go with the road sign. The satnav will recalculate, but there will be no recalculation of the fine or the penalty points…!!

    17
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    Mute Dave Harris
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    Oct 5th 2018, 6:24 PM

    @Stephen Duffy: me thinks the sat nav had nothing to do with this one though

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    Mute Barra O Brien
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    Oct 5th 2018, 12:56 AM

    Typical motorist, won’t be long before he’s doing hit and runs

    12
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    Mute Dave Harris
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    Oct 4th 2018, 11:16 PM

    At least he wasnt one of those idiots driving with an L AND a N plate – by himself. Why are the Garda letting off people who display L plates who are alone in their cars? Do we have to wait for them to do something stupid to stop them?

    43
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    Mute Michael Kavanagh
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    Oct 4th 2018, 11:32 PM

    @Dave Harris:
    The lone drivers may be the fully licenced and insured ‘accompianist” in some cases.

    38
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    Mute I get things wrong
    Favourite I get things wrong
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    Oct 5th 2018, 3:00 AM

    @Dave Harris: what if they have a licensed split personality?

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    Mute GClare
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    Oct 5th 2018, 6:15 AM

    @Michael Kavanagh: the plates are only supposed to be up when th e car is being used by the learner or novice, they are not permanent.

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    Mute Mark Plunkett
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    Oct 5th 2018, 6:16 AM

    @Dave Harris: L DRIVERS driving on their own is against the law now,but still they ignore the law,guards couldn’t be bothered enforcing it anyway,it’s no wonder they are still doing it.

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    Mute Michael Kavanagh
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    Oct 5th 2018, 7:23 AM

    @GClare:
    Its not easy to get the usual vinyl types off and impossible to get them back in right.

    7
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    Mute Dave Harris
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    Oct 5th 2018, 6:28 PM

    @Michael Kavanagh: so why have they got L plates on the car?
    L plates are to tell others a learner is driving.
    They’re not hard to take off and put back on when a learner is actually driving

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    Mute Roy Keating Sr.
    Favourite Roy Keating Sr.
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    Oct 5th 2018, 8:59 AM

    Ford. A great car, had one for 10 years no trouble

    5
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    Mute eastsmer
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    Oct 5th 2018, 1:31 PM

    @Roy Keating Sr.: I had a rental one recently – found it to be a very heavy vehicle with the requirement for a petrol tanker driving behind you, but then I was waiting on my efficient diesel to be repaired

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    Mute bmul
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    Oct 4th 2018, 9:40 PM

    Idiot

    70
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    Mute Diane Walsh
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    Oct 5th 2018, 10:20 PM

    My sat nav on my phone samsung s7 did the same from Harcourt street

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    Mute Jakub Modzelewski
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    Oct 5th 2018, 9:31 PM

    I hope his driving license will be revoked for life.

    1
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