Joe Biden claims he visited Ireland to ensure 'Brits didn't screw around' with Brexit
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The US president made the state visit to mark the Good Friday Agreement anniversary
Joe Biden has said he travelled to Ireland last month to ensure “the Brits didn’t screw around” and “walk away” from their commitments in the Good Friday Agreement.
His comments were made during a fund-raising speech in New York on Wednesday night.
Biden undertook a four-day visit to Ireland to mark 25 years since the Good Friday Agreement in April.
His trip also focused on his Irish ancestry with the majority of his time spent in the Republic of Ireland.
Biden undertook a four-day visit to Ireland to mark 25 years since the Good Friday Agreement in April
Reuters
On Wednesday he said: "I got to go back to Ireland for the Irish Accords, to make sure they weren't, the Brits didn't screw around, and Northern Ireland didn't walk away from their commitments."
Prior to his visit to Belfast, the president said his priority was to "keep the peace" in Northern Ireland.
He and other senior democrats saw Brexit as a threat to the peace process because it risked a return to a hard border on the island of Ireland.
The president previously warned Britain it discard a UK-US trade deal if it carried out its threat to ruin the Irish Sea border treaty with the EU.
The White House confirmed that both leaders "reaffirmed their shared commitment" to the Good Friday Agreement.
In 1998, the deal brought an end to the Troubles - the decades-long violent conflict in Northern Ireland in which thousands of people were killed.
While in Belfast, Biden urged the DUP to back Rishi Sunak’s new Brexit deal for Northern Ireland and hinted at the prospect of billions of US investment if they ended their boycott of Stormont.
After leaving Northern Ireland he was accused of hating Britain by senior DUP politicians.
In response to President Biden's comments, a Downing Street spokesperson said: "the UK priority was always protecting the Good Friday Agreement".
Joe Biden rebuked Rishi Sunak for not working closely enough with Dublin to get Stormont back up and running
"We are pleased between the UK and EU we have reached an agreement that works," they added.
During his visit in April, Biden said: "Effective devolved government that reflects the people of Northern Ireland, and is accountable to them, that works to find ways to face hard problems together will grow greater opportunities for the region."
During his speech he said the 25th anniversary of the Good Friday Agreement was a reminder of "what you can accomplish when we work together in common cause".
In response to his comments, National Security Council spokesman Adam Hodge told the Daily Mail: “As the President said in Belfast, he deeply appreciates Prime Minister Sunak's leadership in reaching an agreement with the EU on the Windsor Framework and preserving the gains of the Belfast/Good Friday Agreement.”