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British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak Ben Stansall/PA Images

Protocol stand-off: Sunak faces resignation threats ahead of high stakes Cabinet

The Times reported some ministers could be prepared to resign if Sunak’s solution risks the place of the North within the UK.

BRITISH PRIME MINISTER Rishi Sunak will hold a Cabinet meeting today amid growing anticipation that the UK and the EU could be on the verge of agreeing a deal on Northern Ireland Protocol.

But Sunak is facing up to a potential battle with members of his own party as he seeks to satisfy the demands of both Conservative MPs and the DUP over any agreement.

The European Research Group (ERG), a band of Eurosceptic Conservative MPs, are expected to meet for talks later today even as Downing Street insisted that a final deal had not yet been struck.

As pressure builds on the British Prime Minister, who is also facing calls to allow MPs a vote on any final deal, the Times newspaper reported that some ministers could be prepared to resign if Sunak’s solution to the protocol risks the place of Northern Ireland within the UK.

A No 10 source told PA news agency that central to Sunak’s focus was safeguarding Northern Ireland’s place in the Union.

There are hopes that a fresh settlement on post-Brexit arrangements in Northern Ireland will be able to secure the return of powersharing at the Stormont Assembly, after the DUP walked out in protest at the protocol last February.

Yesterday, UK Foreign Secretary James Cleverly and the EU’s Maros Sefcovic agreed to hold a face-to-face meeting in the coming days after a “productive” video discussion.

Sources in Brussels welcomed the move to schedule in-person talks as a positive step, but said a location had not been set.

Focus has also turned to the fate of the Northern Ireland Protocol Bill, which is currently stalled in the Lords and would allow ministers to override parts of the protocol, after Boris Johnson called on ministers to press on with legislation enabling them to override parts of the protocol.

The intervention by the former British prime minister, who negotiated the protocol but whose Government also tabled the Bill at Westminster after unionist outcry at the deal, was a sign that some backbenchers may try to scupper any agreement brokered by Sunak if it fails to address longstanding gripes about the settlement in Northern Ireland.

UK Home Secretary Suella Braverman yesterday described the Bill as “one of the biggest tools that we have in solving the problem on the Irish Sea”.

Braverman, a longstanding Eurosceptic, argued that Sunak is right to be “committed to finding a pragmatic solution to resolve these issues”.

Labour leader Keir Starmer has urged the British Prime Minister to allow the House of Commons to have its say on any final deal, offering his party’s support to secure the approval of any new agreement in the event of any Tory rebellion.

It comes as former Northern Ireland secretary Brandon Lewis threw his weight behind calls to reform some of the post-Good Friday Agreement architecture in Northern Ireland, arguing that it was failing to reflect the changed electoral landscape in the region.

“The growth in the vote for the Alliance Party underlines the feeling that many more people now want to vote on issues, not on sectarian lines.

“That should be embraced as the greatest success of the Belfast/Good Friday Agreement. But if the Agreement does not evolve further, under current rules, if Alliance and its vote share continues to grow, it will never have the right to nominate the First or Deputy First Minister.

“Democracy cannot succeed when it is set in tram lines that can never cross,” Lewis wrote in the Telegraph newspaper.

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    Mute Big Haus
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    Oct 18th 2023, 10:52 PM

    Under paid defence soldiers to the rescue, no overtime, no thanks, and then the moners we don’t need an army/aircorps not until something goes wrong, great work all

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    Mute Simon Sterne
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    Oct 18th 2023, 11:37 PM

    @Big Haus: Civil Defence were there (as usual) and they do what they do for free…. makes your moan about being underpaid and no overtime look a bit stupid!

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    Mute George Vladisavljevic
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    Oct 19th 2023, 8:45 AM

    @Simon Sterne: It is not a competition. The Civil Defence are also volunteers and come when available, whereas, the military are there 24/7.

    We do however make a great team when we work together, along with other agencies.

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    Mute Corey Dalton
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    Oct 19th 2023, 2:06 AM

    Comments allowed on this local issue, important to the local people but hardly life threatening. Meanwhile a country in the Middle East is pursuing the Final Solution against a defenceless population.

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    Mute Tommy Haze
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    Oct 18th 2023, 11:49 PM

    That little child will always have memories of taking a dinghy ride during the flooding in 23′
    The river is a symbol of life, time and death.

    55
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    Mute Gary
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    Oct 19th 2023, 6:38 AM

    Midleton is my local town and Castlemartyr just up the road. This is devastating and the impact on some businesses in Midleton is going to be terrible. And to think this is just after mid October is very worrying. Having lived in the area for a decade January is usually the worst time for these floods here.

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    Mute Willie Marty
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    Oct 19th 2023, 6:43 AM

    Lived in Midleton many years ago as a farm apprentice.Nice people nice town.Had a great county councillor called Noel Collins who did wonderfull work at a time when councillors werent paid .

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    Mute Thomas O'Donnell
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    Oct 19th 2023, 7:51 AM

    Well the good thing is the Government will announce at least €16million this morning to help in the clean up and repair works. That the least you’d expect. they sent €16m to Gaza yesterday that no one asked them for. The EU, which we are supposed to be a part of, was already coordinating an aid package. Obviously not good enough for our guys.

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    Mute John Brennan
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    Oct 18th 2023, 11:16 PM

    I’m too early for the Israel/Palestine comments.

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    Mute
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    Oct 19th 2023, 12:50 AM

    @John Brennan: From the river to the sea Midleton Rare is going free!

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    Mute Ní neart go cur le chéile.
    Favourite Ní neart go cur le chéile.
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    Oct 19th 2023, 1:51 AM

    Salut!

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    Mute Willie Marty
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    Oct 19th 2023, 6:45 AM

    Sorry i muted Garys comments by mistake.

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