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Shadow minister sorry for calling Good Friday agreement a shibboleth Labour MP Barry Gardiner: party's Brexit tests are 'bollocks'
(35 minutes later)
Barry Gardiner, the shadow international trade secretary, has apologised for suggesting that the Good Friday agreement is “outdated or unimportant”. Barry Gardiner, the shadow international trade secretary, has been recorded saying Labour’s six tests for Brexit are “bollocks”.
As dignitaries gathered in Northern Ireland on Tuesday to mark the peace deal’s 20th anniversary, Gardiner said sorry for remarks that provoked angry protests from Labour colleagues and politicians in the Irish Republic. The tape has emerged hours after he was forced to apologise for suggesting that the Good Friday agreement was outdated, a suggestion made at the same event in Germany last month.
On the recording he can be heard condemning the pledge to achieve the same benefits in any new relationship with the EU.
“It’s bollocks. Always has been bollocks and it remains it …”
He criticised the party strategy that Sir Keir Starmer, the shadow Brexit secretary, has been putting forward for the past two years.
“We know very well that we cannot have the exact same benefits. And actually it would have made sense, because it was the Tories who said they were going to secure the exact same benefits, and our position should have been precisely to say: ‘They have said they will secure the exact same benefits and we are going to hold them to that standard’, not that we think we can secure the exact same benefits as well.”
The remarks will further stoke the anger in the party that arose after the Guardian reported that he had criticised the Good Friday agreement.
As dignitaries gathered in Northern Ireland on Tuesday to mark the peace deal’s 20th anniversary, Gardiner said sorry for remarks that provoked protests from Labour colleagues and from politicians in the Irish Republic.
“I am deeply sorry that my informal remarks in a meeting last month have led to misunderstanding,” Gardiner said.“I am deeply sorry that my informal remarks in a meeting last month have led to misunderstanding,” Gardiner said.
He apologised in particular for the use of the word “shibboleth”, which he acknowledged “gave the impression that I thought the Good Friday aagreement was in any way outdated or unimportant. I absolutely do not.”He apologised in particular for the use of the word “shibboleth”, which he acknowledged “gave the impression that I thought the Good Friday aagreement was in any way outdated or unimportant. I absolutely do not.”
The Labour leader, Jeremy Corbyn, was also forced to repeat his commitment to ensuring there is no hard border. “There must be no return to a hard border between north and south, and no return to the horrors of the Troubles. All of us on both sides of the Irish Sea have a responsibility to maintain hope for the future.” The Labour leader, Jeremy Corbyn, was also forced to repeat his commitment to ensuring there was no hard border. “There must be no return to a hard border between north and south, and no return to the horrors of the Troubles. All of us on both sides of the Irish Sea have a responsibility to maintain hope for the future.”
Marking the anniversary, Corbyn paid tribute to the architects of the agreement, which he called “a defining moment in Irish history which allowed peace to prevail”.Marking the anniversary, Corbyn paid tribute to the architects of the agreement, which he called “a defining moment in Irish history which allowed peace to prevail”.
“It was a great achievement and I pay tribute to the work done by Tony Blair, Mo Mowlam and Paul Murphy, as well as those on all sides in Ireland, north and south, in achieving the crucial breakthrough of the peace process.”“It was a great achievement and I pay tribute to the work done by Tony Blair, Mo Mowlam and Paul Murphy, as well as those on all sides in Ireland, north and south, in achieving the crucial breakthrough of the peace process.”
Labour insiders were furious at the breach of the hard-won agreement that Labour policy should be to remain in a customs union with the EU, which was agreed and set out in Corbyn’s Coventry speech in February to protect the Good Friday agreement. Labour insiders were furious at Gardiner’s apparent breach of the hard-won agreement that Labour policy should be to remain in a customs union with the EU, which was agreed and set out in Corbyn’s Coventry speech in February to protect the Good Friday agreement.
“Barry’s remarks certainly weren’t agreed policy, and they were very unhelpful. Barry’s on the Brexit subcommittee and he was in the room when Jeremy’s Coventry speech was drafted, and that’s the policy now, ” one source said.“Barry’s remarks certainly weren’t agreed policy, and they were very unhelpful. Barry’s on the Brexit subcommittee and he was in the room when Jeremy’s Coventry speech was drafted, and that’s the policy now, ” one source said.
Gardiner’s “shibboleth” comment came at the end of last month during a Q&A session after a speech he gave at a German conference organised by European parties and trade unions. In his speech he kept strictly to the Labour party line, but afterwards suggested the agreement was being exploited by people anxious to prevent a hard border.Gardiner’s “shibboleth” comment came at the end of last month during a Q&A session after a speech he gave at a German conference organised by European parties and trade unions. In his speech he kept strictly to the Labour party line, but afterwards suggested the agreement was being exploited by people anxious to prevent a hard border.
On Monday the Guardian, which had obtained a recording of his remarks, repeatedly tried to reach Gardiner for a comment.On Monday the Guardian, which had obtained a recording of his remarks, repeatedly tried to reach Gardiner for a comment.
On Tuesday morning, Gardiner restated his support for party policy. “The Good Friday agreement is a vital and essential part of the relationship between the UK and the Republic of Ireland, and has been central to the two decades of peace it has brought about,” he said.On Tuesday morning, Gardiner restated his support for party policy. “The Good Friday agreement is a vital and essential part of the relationship between the UK and the Republic of Ireland, and has been central to the two decades of peace it has brought about,” he said.
“Labour is completely committed to the agreement and opposed to any return of a hard border between north and south. We are committed to negotiating a new customs union between the UK and Ireland as part of a final Brexit settlement, which would play a key role in ensuring there is no hard border.”“Labour is completely committed to the agreement and opposed to any return of a hard border between north and south. We are committed to negotiating a new customs union between the UK and Ireland as part of a final Brexit settlement, which would play a key role in ensuring there is no hard border.”
Shortly before the apology was released, Keir Starmer, the shadow Brexit secretary, tweeted: “Labour fully supports the Good Friday agreement in all its aspects, including no hard border. Crucial this is fully respected in the Brexit negotiations and beyond.” Shortly before the apology was released, Starmer tweeted: “Labour fully supports the Good Friday agreement in all its aspects, including no hard border. Crucial this is fully respected in the Brexit negotiations and beyond.”
Starmer intends to try to amend the Brexit legislation to ensure that no hard border can be created. Starmer intends to try to amend the Brexit legislation to ensure no hard border can be created.
Days after Gardiner’s remarks in March, the shadow Northern Ireland secretary, Owen Smith, was sacked from Labour’s frontbench for writing an article in the Guardian that supported a second referendum on the terms of the Brexit deal.Days after Gardiner’s remarks in March, the shadow Northern Ireland secretary, Owen Smith, was sacked from Labour’s frontbench for writing an article in the Guardian that supported a second referendum on the terms of the Brexit deal.
Smith described Gardiner’s remarks as “reckless and plain wrong”.Smith described Gardiner’s remarks as “reckless and plain wrong”.
“On the Good Friday Agreement’s 20th anniversary, Labour should be defending and sustaining it, not joining the Tory Brexiteers in downplaying its importance and the risks of a hard border,” Smith wrote in a tweet.“On the Good Friday Agreement’s 20th anniversary, Labour should be defending and sustaining it, not joining the Tory Brexiteers in downplaying its importance and the risks of a hard border,” Smith wrote in a tweet.
The former Labour prime minister Tony Blair, who is credited with getting the peace deal over the line through an exhaustive series of face-to-face and late-night meetings in Northern Ireland with Sinn Féin and Unionists, said he could not believe what Gardiner had said. The former Labour prime minister Tony Blair said he could not believe what Gardiner had said.
“I don’t know how anyone can say that. It is the only basis upon which you are going to have peace. “It is the only basis upon which you are going to have peace,” he told the BBC Radio 4 Today programme. “That’s [the deal on peace] not a shibboleth that’s had its time, that’s absolutely fundamental to keeping the peace.”
“That’s [the deal on peace] not a shibboleth that’s had its time, that’s absolutely fundamental to keeping the peace,” Blair told the BBC Radio 4 Today programme.
A Fine Gael Brexit spokesman, senator Neale Richmond, said he expected remarks such as Gardiner’s to come from “militant extremists”, not members of the Labour party.A Fine Gael Brexit spokesman, senator Neale Richmond, said he expected remarks such as Gardiner’s to come from “militant extremists”, not members of the Labour party.
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