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  • Boris Johnson is reeling from defeat to defeat in the courts

  • and in parliament.

  • But it's probably too soon to write him off.

  • Here with me is Robert Shrimsley,

  • our political commentator, to talk about what might be billed

  • as the 'Great Escape'.

  • Well, as you say, it's too soon to be confident,

  • but what is very clear and what's

  • become very clear in the last few days

  • is that there are sort of two Downing Street operations going

  • on.

  • There's the one that everyone's hearing about and talking

  • about.

  • Dominic Cummings, his chief strategist,

  • all of the noise and all of the standing firm

  • and playing tough.

  • Then there's the other thing, which is going on a little bit

  • below the waterline which is the efforts

  • to see if there is a deal to be done with the European Union.

  • And that deal is to be done around

  • whether you can create a Northern Ireland

  • only backstop or something that falls a little bit short

  • of that.

  • You remember that obviously Theresa May's deal

  • had a backstop that caught the whole of the United Kingdom

  • in its web.

  • What Boris Johnson is looking at is

  • to see whether he can carve out a Northern Ireland

  • only solution.

  • And that's what's going on.

  • Right.

  • So we'll look at that in a bit more detail, but the really

  • interesting thing you've said there is that we've

  • got a two-tier Downing Street.

  • We've got Dominic Cummings, who's

  • this Svengali figure who's attracting all the publicity,

  • but there's something much more serious and less noisy

  • going on, which is really quite serious

  • - all hands to the deck to try and get a deal.

  • Yeah.

  • I don't think the two sides are in conflict with each other

  • necessarily, but I think that a lot of reporting,

  • the eyes of the reporting world, have

  • been drawn by this very interesting strategist who's

  • very newsworthy and very reportable.

  • And what's been going on quietly is somewhere else.

  • And I think that's what we're seeing

  • is a lot of the diplomatic work beginning below the waterline.

  • Now, how serious it is we're not yet sure.

  • There's a long, long way to go.

  • And there's 27-plus countries and parliaments that

  • have to ratify any future deal.

  • Yeah.

  • But again, the key is that the main obstacle to an agreement

  • is this question of Northern Ireland.

  • It's not the divorce bill, 40bn euros, 39bn euros.

  • It's not about illegal issues on EU citizens, right?

  • Yeah, that's right.

  • And the fundamental problem with the all-UK backstop

  • was that the whole of the United Kingdom

  • could be caught forever under the EU purview.

  • Caught in a customs unit, in particular,

  • for all of the rules that it would have to obey.

  • Boris Johnson couldn't stomach that.

  • He talked about a vassal state.

  • Exactly.

  • What he's looking at is whether he can come up

  • with a special arrangement for Northern Ireland which,

  • it's worth remembering, is what the European Union proposed

  • in the first place.

  • And Theresa May said no, I'm not going

  • to have the union broken up.

  • I'm not going to have a line in the union drawn

  • along the Irish Sea, and Northern Ireland

  • on the other side of it.

  • Now, I don't think Boris Johnson is

  • ready to countenance a full Northern Ireland being treated

  • entirely differently from the rest of the UK,

  • entirely subject to the rulings of the European Court.

  • But what he is prepared to look at

  • is some kind of compromise where, in some areas,

  • it might be.

  • And the most obvious one, the one

  • where he's clearly prepared to move,

  • is on agri-products, what's known

  • as the sanitary and phytosanitary area,

  • which, interestingly, although people

  • say it only accounts for 30 per cent

  • to 40 per cent of the value of trade between Northern

  • Ireland and the republic, it's 80 per cent of the volume.

  • So if you can get something done on that,

  • if you can have freedom of movement

  • for agricultural products, that's

  • a big chunk of the puzzle taken care of.

  • It's not all of it, by any stretch of the imagination.

  • There are lots of other issues.

  • But it's a starting point.

  • Now, you know I don't like putting you

  • on the spot, penalty spot, or any other football metaphor,

  • but here's the big question.

  • Is Brussels, Paris, Berlin prepared

  • to allow Boris the 'Great Escape' and strike a deal?

  • Well, I think they will, in large part,

  • take their lead from Ireland on this matter.

  • But what's been proposed so far is not enough.

  • That's clear to me.

  • What Boris Johnson is talking about so far

  • isn't enough, because you've got issues of tariffs, VAT,

  • regulatory controls, governance, dispute mechanisms, lots

  • of other things that aren't settled.

  • The question is how far he's prepared to move.

  • And if they sense he's prepared to move quite a long way

  • on this might they be prepared to give him

  • a little bit of wiggle room.

  • So I don't know is the answer to your question,

  • but what I do know is that the conversations are happening

  • and it's not impossible.

  • And chapter two...

  • There's very little time.

  • Yeah.

  • And obviously, he's then got to win a parliamentary vote with

  • the backing of the...

  • Well, the political side...

  • ...hardliners...

  • ...of it is a whole other area of...

  • And we're going to come to that.

  • He's had six votes that he's lost so far, six out of six.

  • It's a flawless record.

  • But don't write him off just yet.

  • Thank you, Robert Shrimsley.

Boris Johnson is reeling from defeat to defeat in the courts

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