Britain on Tuesday announced that it would continue with the abolition of the Brexit international legal clause after the UK and the European Union (EU) reached an agreement on how to manage the Northern Ireland border.
Michael Gove, one of Prime Minister Boris Johnson's key ministers, announced that the two sides had reached an agreement on policy issues related to the protocol on Ireland and Northern Ireland.
The deal would drop what was a barrier and a point of contention between Britain and the European Union. At the same time, Brussels warned that their party would not tolerate if London continued to threaten to vote ‘no deal’.
The sterling currency strengthened again after falling by 1% against the US dollar experienced yesterday. The GBP has now managed to strengthen even at a weak level against the US dollar which is down 0.19% as of 10.00 p.m.
A separate agreement from the trade negotiations will ensure that the UK Migration Agreement comes into force on 1 January as stated by European Commission Vice President Maros Sefcovic.
Britain will now withdraw clauses 44, 45 and 47 of the UK Internal Market Bill and so far has not introduced new clauses to replace those clauses.