Written answers
Thursday, 19 January 2017
Department of Finance
Ministerial Meetings
Niall Collins (Limerick County, Fianna Fail)
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96. To ask the Minister for Finance the bilateral meetings he has had with his European counterparts, outside of Council of Europe meetings, since the UK referendum to leave the EU took place, in which the issue of Brexit and the unique challenges faced by the island of Ireland was discussed, including the name of each European Government ministerial counterpart, the meeting location and the date of each meeting, in tabular form; and if he will make a statement on the matter. [2518/17]
Michael Noonan (Limerick City, Fine Gael)
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Since the UK referendum outcome, I have met with my EU counterparts at the monthly Ecofin and Eurogroup meetings, most recently at the December meetings which took place on 5-6 December last.
In addition, in relation to specific individual meetings where Brexit has been discussed, the following have taken place:
Bilateral Meetings | Location | Date |
---|---|---|
Philip Hammond, UK Chancellor of the Exchequer | London, UK | 22 September 2016 |
Peter Ka imír, Slovak Minister for Finance | Bratislava, Slovak Republic | 28 October 2016 |
Edward Scicluna, Maltese Minister for Finance | Brussels, Belgium | 7 November 2016 |
Philip Hammond, UK Chancellor of the Exchequer | Dublin, Ireland | 9 January 2017 |
The meetings with Chancellor Hammond have provided the opportunity to engage constructively on the strong relationship between our countries, the importance of trade between the two economies, and on the many areas of common interest shared by Ireland and the UK. I have reiterated to the Chancellor that the Irish Government's headline priorities concerning Brexit remain the economy, Northern Ireland, the Common Travel Area and the future of the EU itself. Chancellor Hammond is aware that Ireland remains a committed EU Member State and will be part of the EU 27 team during the forthcoming negotiations. We want negotiations to be constructive and believe that a close and positive future relationship between the UK and the EU post-departure is of benefit to all.
While Brexit issues were not central to the discussions which took place with Ministers Ka imir and Scicluna, where EU Presidency issues were the main topics, I have taken the opportunity, in exchanges with EU partners, to underline Ireland's unique relationship with the UK. As the Deputy will be aware, the key issues for Ireland, associated with the referendum outcome, including our close economic relationship with the UK, have been articulated on numerous occasions by me and other members of the Government.
The Government and I will continue to meet and engage with our EU counterparts over coming weeks to emphasise Ireland's concerns and to ensure that they are fully reflected in the EU position once negotiations commence.
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