United Kingdom
Related: About this forumBoris Johnson yet to make a phone call to Irish PM Leo Varadkar
Four days after becoming prime minister, Boris Johnson has yet to make a phone call to his Irish counterpart. The Irish prime minister, Leo Varadkar, appears to have been pushed back in the queue with no arrangements yet in place for the conventional call that takes place when new leaders assume office in Ireland and the UK.
Johnson has already spoken to five leaders around the world including Donald Trump on Friday, who later revealed he talked about doing a trade deal five times the size of existing arrangements with the UK. Also on Friday, Johnson contacted the Canadian president, Justin Trudeau, to discuss a Brexit transition and in his first two days of office he spoke to Angela Merkel, Emmanuel Macron and Jean-Claude Juncker.
The lack of contact with the taoiseach will add to the existing strains in Anglo-Irish relations since Johnson assumed power, with new tensions over remarks on the risks to Northern Irelands place in the United Kingdom. Varadkar said on Friday evening that more and more people in Northern Ireland will come to question the union if the UK crashed out of the EU, putting the region, which voted to remain, into a new historical chapter with the rest of the island of Ireland.
People who you might describe as moderate nationalists, or moderate Catholics, who are more or less happy with the status quo, will look towards a united Ireland. And I think increasingly you see liberal Protestants and unionists who will start to ask where they feel more at home, he said.
https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2019/jul/27/boris-johnson-yet-to-make-a-phone-call-to-irish-pm-leo-varadkar
MaryMagdaline
(7,911 posts)Haggis for Breakfast
(6,831 posts)Has Boris pissed off the Scots yet too ?
I can see another "Free Scotland" referendum on the horizon. My family is still angry over the manipulation and dis-information campaign of that vote, and are chaffing at the bit to see another vote held. This is an issue that is not going to go away. The up and coming generations of Scots will soon get their time in government. It's only a matter of time before the inevitable.
LeftishBrit
(41,307 posts)I can't blame anyone for wanting out.