Interesting take on the Windsor agreement.
If this analysis is correct it sounds like a big dud
https://facts4eu.org/news/2023_feb_circ ... _overnight
This show must not go on
Foreign (EU) law continues to apply in a sovereign part of the United Kingdom
The 'Windsor Framework' is not a legal agreement, merely a 'political agreement in principle'
EU's product labelling demands are so onerous and expensive, many companies will not be able to supply NI
Physical checks on products between GB and NI are still demanded
Medicines will have to have expensive NI-only packaging to be available in NI
Parcels - only large companies like DHL will be able to afford to takes parcels to NI
EU has imposed restrictions on UK's ability to apply the same lower VAT in NI as in GB
The 'Stormont brake' can only be used "in the most exceptional circumstances"
State Aid : Windsor Framework doesn't "modify the substance of Article 10(1) nor restrict its application"
EU will only drop its seven legal proceedings against the UK when the UK has complied with all the EU's demands