Global Times

World: May tours EU in bid to save teetering Brexit

▶ PM seeks concession­s but Juncker says pact is ‘only deal possible’

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Embattled British Prime Minister Theresa May launched a tour of European capitals on Tuesday in a desperate bid to salvage her Brexit deal, a day after delaying a parliament­ary vote on the text to avoid a crushing defeat.

May held talks in The Hague with Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte before heading to Berlin to meet Chancellor Angela Merkel as she struggles to unite British lawmakers behind her faltering plan.

She was then to see EU President Donald Tusk and European Commission chief JeanClaude Juncker in Brussels.

“I’m surprised because we had reached an agreement on the 25th of November” at the last EU summit, Juncker told the European Parliament in Strasbourg on Tuesday, dubbing Brexit a “surprise guest” at this week’s summit.

“The deal we have achieved is the best deal possible, it’s the only deal possible. There is no room whatsoever for renegotiat­ion but of course there is room, if used intelligen­tly, to give further clarificat­ion and further interpreta­tions,” he said.

Tusk said the other 27 EU leaders would discuss Brexit at a special meeting on Thursday, at the start of a pre-planned summit in Brussels which May will attend.

Irish Foreign Minister Simon Coveney told national broadcaste­r RTE that Dublin ruled out changes to the wording of the withdrawal agreement but said there could be “a political declaratio­n coming from a European Council.”

“The Irish government doesn’t have an issue with providing reassuranc­e if that’s helpful,” he said.

The embattled May is facing a rebellion in her own party and from parliament­ary allies over a clause in the deal relating to Northern Ireland that is threatenin­g to sink both the agreement and her leadership.

“I will now do everything I possibly can to secure further assurances,” May told mutinous MPs Monday on her dash to Europe ahead of the EU summit.

If no deal is secured, Britain will still have to leave the EU on March 29 with the government warning a no-deal Brexit will be hugely damaging to the economy.

Anand Menon, European politics professor at King’s College, London, said May needed Brussels to make it “absolutely clear” no major concession­s are on offer – no matter who is prime minister.

“What they might do is add some language to the political declaratio­n, not the withdrawal agreement,” he added. “I imagine they’ll add some language saying that both sides remain convinced that we’ll never need to use the backstop.”

MPs had been due to vote on Tuesday on the deal with Brussels, which covers the terms of Britain’s withdrawal from the European Union after 46 years.

But facing a huge rebellion of her own Tory MPs, primarily over the backstop clause designed to keep open Britain’s border with Ireland, May conceded she expected to lose and delayed it.

The decision sent the pound plunging and both sides said they would step up preparatio­ns for a no-deal Brexit.

May suffered a barrage of scathing headlines on Tuesday, with the Sun calling her move a “Brexmas Turkey” while the Guardian called it “desperate.”

The right-leaning Daily Telegraph carried the headline “the lady is for turning,” an uncomplime­ntary comparison to former leader Margaret Thatcher.

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