No Chance of US Trade Deal If Irish Accord Hit – Pelosi
A US-UK
trade deal will not get through Congress if Brexit undermines the Good Friday
Agreement, the Speaker of the US House of Representatives has said.
Democrat
Nancy Pelosi, whose party controls the House, said the UK's exit from the EU
could not be allowed to endanger the Irish peace deal.
Her comments
came after the US national security adviser said the UK would be "first in
line" for a trade deal.
John Bolton
spoke after meeting Prime Minister Boris Johnson in London.
The
reimposition of frontier controls between Northern Ireland and the Republic of
Ireland if the UK leaves the EU without mutual agreement on 31 October - a
so-called "hard Brexit" - is seen as a threat to the 1998 Good Friday
Agreement, which ended decades of bloodshed in Northern Ireland.
"Whatever
form it takes, Brexit cannot be allowed to imperil the Good Friday Agreement,
including the seamless border between the Irish Republic and Northern
Ireland," Ms Pelosi said in a statement on Wednesday.
Mr Bolton
said on Tuesday that the Trump administration supported a no-deal Brexit, and
added Washington would propose an accelerated series of trade deals in the
event of one.
He said
these could be done on a "sector-by-sector" basis, with an agreement
on manufacturing made first. A trade deal for financial services and
agriculture would not be the first to be agreed, he added.
Asked
whether his proposed plan would follow World Trade Organization (WTO) rules, Mr
Bolton said "our trade negotiators seem to think it is".
He said
there would be enthusiastic bipartisan support in Congress for speedy
ratification at each stage.
Mr Johnson
said there were "all sorts" of opportunities for UK business in the
US, particularly service companies, but the negotiations will be a "tough
old haggle".
However,
critics warn that the UK will have to give in to some US demands in return for
any trade agreement.
Former UK
Foreign Secretary Jack Straw, who served under a Labour government, described
Mr Bolton as "dangerously bellicose".
He suggested
the UK would have to agree to some US demands, for example allowing imports of
US chlorine-washed chicken.
"This
is a highly transactional administration… you don't get something for
nothing," he told BBC Radio 4's Today programme.
Lewis
Lukens, a former deputy chief of mission at the US embassy in London and former
acting US ambassador, said Mr Bolton was aligned to President Trump's
"America first agenda" and would be making "strong demands"
on the UK to back the US position on issues like China, Iran and Chinese tech
giant Huawei.
Mr Johnson
is expected to have his first face-to-face meeting as prime minister with Mr
Trump later this month at the G7 summit in France.
FROM bbc.com/news/world-us-canada
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