Northern Ireland’s First Minister has voiced her concern that the Brexit negotiations “don’t appear to be going particularly well”.
With just months to go until the extension period runs out at the end of the year, Arlene Foster said she wants to see a trade deal agreed.
“We need to make sure that both sides understand that it’s to both sides benefit, and that’s something I think the European Union often didn’t get in the negotiations from 2016 onwards,” she told the BBC Radio 4’s Political Thinking With Nick Robinson podcast.
“And for both our sakes I hope that we do get to a situation where we get a deal because that’s what we need in Northern Ireland.”
Mrs Foster pledged to work to keep post-Brexit checks on goods crossing the Irish Sea minimal.
“In term of Northern Ireland to Great Britain, unfettered access has very much been stated again in the command paper. I suppose the concern we are focused on is the transport of goods from Great Britain to Northern Ireland because the whole issue is about the risk of those goods going into the Republic of Ireland and into the single market,” she said.
“We would say that is a very minimal risk when you look at the size of the single market of the European Union, so it’s very important that we continue to work with the UK government in making sure those are minimal checks.
“Of course we have had checks for many years in terms of live animals, SPS checks, to make sure there is no disease coming into the island of Ireland and those will continue but we need to make sure the rest of the administrative checks are kept to a minimal.”
Mrs Foster insisted she has a very good relationship with British Prime Minister Boris Johnson.
“But we have to make sure we protect Northern Ireland. He knows that,” she said.
Asked if she worried about the impact of Brexit on Northern Ireland’s place in the UK, Mrs Foster said she thinks most would prefer to remain in the UK.
“After this crisis abates we will see the impact that being part of the European Union will have on the Republic of Ireland. They have borrowed very heavily in terms of what they have been able to do over Covid so the implications of that will come home,” she said.
“In the past the Republic of Ireland was a gainer of being part of the European Union, they were always getting money for roads and all of those kind of things that has brought the Republic of Ireland up to be a modern democratic state.
“They are now net contributors to the European Union and that will have an impact.
“But we have a very good relationship with our neighbors, I think that that is a mature way to be.”
