David Frost seeks to blame predecessors for Brexit issues in Northern Ireland
Lord Frost (Aaron Chown/PA)
UK Brexit minister David Frost has blamed negotiators under Theresa May as being responsible to a âvery large degreeâ for issues with the Northern Ireland Protocol.
The Conservative peer was grilled in person by assembly members on Stormontâs Executive Office Committee, which is scrutinising issues arising from Brexit, on Friday.
Mr Frost argued that the problems with the post-Brexit agreement that has caused a trade barrier in the Irish Sea are largely down to the EUâs implementation of the deal he helped broker.
But he argued that the Protocol could have been better negotiated if it were not for the work done by the team of Boris Johnsonâs predecessor as prime minister.
DUP member Christopher Stalford quoted Mrs Mayâs former chief of staff, Gavin Barwell, who has claimed the Mr Johnsonâs Government âknew it was a bad dealâ but intended to âwriggle out of it laterâ.
Mr Stalford said that Mr Frost had inherited âa dogâs breakfast of a deal, adding: âYouâve been left to clean up the mess havenât you?â
Mr Frost responded: âWe intend to implement what we signed up to but itâs the fact of implementation thatâs causing the problem.
âI would say that it was the inheritance that we inherited from the previous Government and from the previous negotiating team that has been a significant part of the difficulty and the reason the Protocol is shaped as it is is because we had a particular inheritance from the previous team who could not get their deal, rightly in my view, through Parliament.
âUnfortunately we were not able to go back to scratch and do things in a different way and I think the previous team are to a very large degree responsible for some of the infelicities in this Protocol and the Withdrawal Agreement that we might be better without but unfortunately we are where we are.â
Mr Frost argued that it is unreasonable to describe the Protocol as a âdefinitive textâ with no further discussions around it required.
âI donât think itâs right to look at the Protocol as a sort of definitive text that was there in October 2019 and thereâs nothing more to say. Itâs very clear from reading the text that thatâs not the case,â he said.
âFor example, the whole concept of goods at risk, which is obviously at the core of some of the problems in movements between GB and Northern Ireland.
âItâs not reasonable to say, given that the situation has changed in various ways and given that parts of the Protocol remained to be worked out, that it is a definitive text and as of October 2019 thatâs it and thereâs nothing more to say.â





