- A guarantee there will no physical border checks reintroduced between Northern Ireland and the Republic
- A backstop to avoid a hard border that would come into force after a mooted transition period in December 2020 - and last 'unless and until' another solution is put in place
- Brussels is said to have dropped its demand to create a border in the Irish Sea
- But instead the customs union would apply indefinitely to the whole of the UK and Britain could not be able to walk away from the arrangement without approval from an 'independent panel' made up of civil servants from the EU and Britain
- There could also be enhanced regulatory checks between mainland Britain and Northern Ireland
- Commitments to ensure a 'level playing field' during the backstop including accepting EU rules on environmental and labour standards and state aid
- A review due to be held in July 2020, towards the end of the transition period, will decide whether the backstop needs to come into force
- The three million EU citizens living in the UK and one million British citizens living in the EU will keep all their existing rights post-Brexit
- A divorce bill of between £39billion and £46billion will be paid to Brussels
Leave a comment: