Merkel
Interrupts May, Juncker Calls EU Talks 'Nebulous' – Reports
14
December, 2018
Brexit
was one of the main subjects at the EU Council meeting that took
place on 13 December. Reports say that the discussion was marked by a
showdown among the world’s two most powerful women (according to
Forbes’ list), as well as the European Commission president.
The
mood was “very bad” as the bloc’s heads of state
argued about Brexit during the Brussels summit,
the German outlet Welt reports, citing sources in EU circles.
The newspaper claims that German Chancellor Angela Merkel interrupted
her UK counterpart, Prime Minister Theresa May, several times
during her speech and insisted that she clarify her position.
The German website Focus
reported that Merkel had refused to accept May’s proposal
to set a specific deadline for striking a free-trade
agreement that could resolve the Northern Ireland issue instead of a
backstop date. The outlet cites the EU insiders as saying that
the UK prime minister suggested it was December, 2021.
Merkel reportedly
rebuffed her claims, pointing out that it "always depends
on two sides" whether a free trade agreement exists.
“If reinsurance
is necessary because we have not found enough regulation for the
transition phase, then we want to quickly overcome this
backstop. And we will do our utmost to do that”, she said.
At the same time, she
emphasized that the preparations for Britain's unregulated exit,
which would be the case if the UK Parliament does not agree on the
deal, would continue. She pointed out that their "desire is
to have an agreement".
Netizens followed the
meltdown with delight.
European
Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker also called out the
British government, stating that he needs clarification as to
what exactly it expects from Brussels. He slammed the discussion
as "sometimes nebulous and imprecise".
“I do find it
uncomfortable that there’s an impression perhaps in the UK
that it is for the EU to propose solutions. It is for the
UK leaving the EU and I would have thought that it was rather more
for the British government”, he said at a press
conference.
At the same time, Juncker
announced that the EU would intensify its preparations for a UK
exit without agreement. He stated that the commission would
present guidelines for a hard Brexit.
Upon her arrival at the
EU Council meeting this Thursday, UK Prime Minister Theresa May
declared that she had come "to get legal and political
assurances to assuage the concerns of my fellow MPs
in Westminster".
May
toured some European capitals this week, including The Hague and
Berlin, to convince European leaders to give her a bit more
leeway so that she does not come home from the
Brussels summit empty-handed.
The single market
for goods and services was part of the discussion, since –
under the Brexit agreement – the United Kingdom would
effectively remain within the EU customs union. This is
precisely why the "Brexiteers" refuse to accept her
plan, deemed too weak and allowing the bloc to determine the
United Kingdom's economic future.
May's vision of Brexit
was put to the test on Wednesday night when the governing
Conservative Party voted 200-117 to declare confidence in the
prime minister.
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