/Brexit news – live: Chaos spreads to meat industry as government blames empty shelves on Covid

Brexit news – live: Chaos spreads to meat industry as government blames empty shelves on Covid

Boris Johnson blames seafood exporters ‘not filling in the right forms’ for post-Brexit sales crash

Boris Johnson’s government has been warned that meat worth hundreds of thousands of pounds is going to waste at EU ports, as British exporters continue to get caught up in post-Brexit red tape problems.

The British Meat Processors Association said new customs systems remain “convoluted” and “badly implemented”. It comes as Northern Ireland secretary Brandon Lewis claimed that empty shelves in Northern Ireland were due to coronavirus “challenges” – and not because of Brexit.

Meanwhile, the largest political group in the European parliament has urged EU chiefs to come up with a “master plan” to move crucial financial services out of London after Brexit. The European People’s Party (EPP) doesn’t want Brussels dependent on “third countries” like the UK.

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Anas Sarwar frontrunner to lead Scottish Labour

The nominations to succeed Richard Leonard as the next leader of the Scottish Labour Party have closed – and MSP Anas Sarwar would appear the clear frontrunner. He received nominations from 16 MSPs and one MP, while Monica Lennon got the nod from five MSPs.  

It means Sarwar and Lennon will be on the ballot – which opens for members to vote on 9 February and closes on 26 February.

Adam Forrest19 January 2021 12:18

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Europe’s biggest fish market now ‘ghost town’

James Withers, the chief executive of the Scotland Food and Drink body, has shared images of the deserted fish market in Peterhead, near Aberdeen – the biggest anywhere in the continent. “What a sad sight. Europe’s biggest fish market in Peterhead like a ghost town.”

Long delays sorting out customs problems has meant EU buyers rejecting produce. Prices were reported to have dropped 80 per cent at Peterhead last week, and desperate Scottish fishing vessels have headed to Denmark to flog their produce.

Adam Forrest19 January 2021 11:51

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Labour gain new poll lead

Labour have gained a narrow lead over the Conservatives in the latest YouGov survey. Keir Starmer’s party stays on 39 per cent, while Boris Johnson’s party falls one point to 38 per cent. At the weekend an Opinion poll showed Labour opening up a four-point lead on the Tories.

Adam Forrest19 January 2021 11:43

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Minister grilled on climate targets – follow live

Alok Sharma is currently facing questions from MPs at the business and energy committee – who are grilling him on the COP26 climate summit and the government’s net zero targets.

Last week, No 10 appointed Sharma full-time president in charge of the vital summit in Glasgow this November.

You can watch live here on Independent TV.

Ministers questioned on net zero targets and climate summits

Adam Forrest19 January 2021 11:26

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Eurostar situation ‘critical’, warns rail chief

The head of Eurostar has sounded alarm over the future rail company. The cross-Channel train service has been hurt badly by a lack of travel during the coronavirus pandemic as well as Brexit.

Jean-Pierre Farandou, the CEO of French state-owner company SNCF – which owns 55 per cent of Eurostar – told France Inter radio that ‘the situation is very critical for Eurostar”.

It follows a warning from UK business leaders calling for Boris Johnson’s government to help rescue the operator. London First wrote to the Treasury at the weekend urging it not to let Eurostar “fall between the cracks of support” offered to domestic railways.

The UK government sold its stake in Eurostar to private companies in 2015 for around £750m.

Eurostar train at London St Pancras

Eurostar train at London St Pancras

(Getty Images)

Adam Forrest19 January 2021 11:18

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‘Never did we foresee what we’ve got in front of us’

The AFP agency has shared some interviews with fishermen from Scotland who staged protests over significant customs problems at Westminster on Monday. Allan Miller, owner of AM Shellfish in Aberdeen, said: “We always knew there would be problems, but never did we foresee what we’ve got in front of us.”

It’s not only Scottish fishing chiefs. Industry leaders from the south-west of England have written to the government claiming customs problems “could be the final straw for many businesses”.

Boris Johnson has blamed some of the problems on incorrect paperwork. But Mark Moore, manager of the Dartmouth Crab Company, said “it’s not about the increased documentation per se” – claiming that new customs systems weren’t allowing things to happen quickly enough.

He added: “It’s the volume required and the timeframe in which to produce it, which doesn’t lend itself to live shellfish and fish generally.”

Adam Forrest19 January 2021 10:59

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‘No reason’ for blocked lorries, says minister

So how seriously is the government taking Brexit supply problems? Brandon Lewis denied empty shelves were anything to do with Brexit – and also said there was no reason for lorries in Northern Ireland to return empty from Great Britain without expected goods due to excessive customs paperwork.  

“Even on foodstuffs, there’s no reason for that to be the case,” the Northern Ireland secretary told Radio 4’s Today programme. Yet Lewis also suggested UK officials were working EU counterparts to get a “permanent resolution” to post-Brexit problems.

Some supermarket shelves were depleted this month as suppliers grappled with new rules surrounding sending goods from GB to NI. The protocol means Northern Ireland follows the EU’s rules on matters like animal product standards.

Strangely, Lewis also told Today that the complex arrangements which have created an Irish Sea border give NI the “ability to trade as part of the EU single market”, giving it “a competitive advantage over pretty much any other country in the world”.  

Empty supermarket shelves

(Michael Drummond/PA)

Adam Forrest19 January 2021 10:39

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Tory rebels could block post-Brexit trade deal with China

Tory MPs are being urged to “vote with their consciences” when Labour attempts to reverse some of the post-Brexit rollover trade deals the UK has made with countries that are committing genocide.

Ministers want to reverse key amendments to the Trade Bill, recently passed by the House of Lords, when it returns to the Commons on Tuesday – including one which would force the government to withdraw from any free trade agreement with countries the High Court rules are carrying out any form of genocide.

Labour has highlighted “the situation in Xinjiang”, where there is a “growing body of evidence of systemic human rights abuses being committed by the Chinese government against the Muslim Uigher people”.  

Iain Duncan Smith is among the Tory MPs backing the amendment. A rebellion of around 40 Conservative in the Commons could put the government at risk of defeat – and jeopardise a trade deal with China.

Adam Forrest19 January 2021 10:14

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Tax rises may not be needed, says Treasury minister

Treasury minister Jesse Norman has said “it is not absolutely obvious” that taxes will need to be raised in the UK, providing the economy recovers from the Covid pandemic.  

Speaking before the Treasury Select Committee, Norman said he had been “struck by remarks” made by “experts” presuming tax hikes lie head.

It comes as a senior Whitehall source told The Times chancellor Rishi Sunak saw corporation tax as the most reasonable way to raise revenues because only UK businesses who have made profits would be hit.  

Adam Forrest19 January 2021 09:51

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Matt Hancock self-isolating at home

Health secretary Matt Hancock said he is self-isolating after receiving an alert through the NHS Covid-19 app. In a video posted on Twitter, he said: “Last night I was pinged by the NHS coronavirus app, so that means I’ll be self-isolating at home, not leaving the house at all until Sunday.”

Adam Forrest19 January 2021 09:41