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Jonathan Jones’s decision to resign as the Government’s top lawyer will surprise anyone who believes the Government’s account of what is going on this week. A new bill is planned, which will
give Britain the right to decide how to apply the UK-EU Withdrawal Agreement in relation to Northern Ireland. Ministers have been saying, and the media reporting, that what is planned is
nothing more than a tidying up of some ambiguous technical details: Britain’s commitment to the Withdrawal Agreement (we are told) is as strong as ever. This is nonsense, as Jones clearly
realises. Moreover, the nonsense is easily exposed. For example, Here is what the Northern Ireland protocol of the Withdrawal Agreement says about trade between Northern Ireland and the rest
of the UK: _A good brought into Northern Ireland from outside the Union shall be considered to be at risk of subsequently being moved into the Union unless it is established that that good:
_ _(a) will not be subject to commercial processing in Northern Ireland; and _ _(b) fulfils the criteria established by the Joint Committee in accordance with the fourth subparagraph of
this paragraph_ _…_ _Before the end of the transition period, the Joint Committee shall by decision establish the criteria for considering that a good brought into Northern Ireland from
outside the Union is not at risk of subsequently being moved into the Union._ So detailed decisions about the enforcement of trade between mainland Britain and Northern Ireland should be
made by the “Joint Committee”. This is to be run jointly by the UK and EU, co-chaired by both together. What Boris Johnson’s Government now proposes is, in essence, that if the Joint
Committee cannot agree on what goods are “not at risk”, and hence not subject to strict regulation and detailed paperwork, then Britain alone can decide where to draw the line between goods
that are, and are not, liable to enter the EU through Ireland. That is not tidying up the Withdrawal Agreement: that is defying it. The Agreement makes clear that the default position is
that all goods exported to Northern Ireland across the Irish Sea shall be considered at risk of being sold into the EU. The list of exempt goods needs the specific agreement of the Joint
Committee if traders are to avoid the regulatory burdens that apply to post-Brexit trade with the EU. Similar arguments apply to the issue of state aid and UK companies operating in Northern
Ireland. The Withdrawal Agreement does not allow Britain to be judge and jury in its own cause. Seldom has a legal argument been so open-and-shut. It is hard to imagine any competent lawyer
supporting the Government’s case. Jonathan Jones has taken the only honourable route open to him.