Arab Times

PM keeping Brexit plan secret

Leaks, EU diplomats suggest there’s no strategy

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LONDON, Dec 14, (RTRS): If Prime Minister Theresa May has a detailed Brexit plan, it is very secret.

Since the June 23 referendum, May has been clear only that the United Kingdom will leave the European Union and that she will formally trigger exit talks by the end of March 2017.

May says it would be foolish to reveal her cards before one of the most complicate­d negotiatio­ns in postWorld War Two European history that could decide the fate of both her premiershi­p and the world’s fifth largest economy.

“It is absolutely right that we do not set out at this stage every single detail of our proposed negotiatin­g strategy, because that would be the best way to get the worst possible deal for Britain,” May told parliament when asked whether she had a coherent plan.

May attends an EU summit in Brussels on Thursday but she has not been invited to a dinner where leaders of the other 27 EU member states will discuss their approach to Brexit.

Britons’ vote to leave the bloc has opened a huge number of questions including whether exporters will keep tariff-free access to the single European market and British-based banks will still be able to serve continenta­l clients, not to mention immigratio­n and the future rights of the many EU citizens already living in the United Kingdom.

Demands

Brexiteers say there is little point laying out detailed demands as, with France and Germany due to hold elections next year and the future of a new Italian government uncertain, it is still unclear who will be in power in Paris, Berlin and Rome.

Another unknown is how Donald Trump, who once said Brexit was wonderful, could affect the divorce proceeding­s after he becomes US president next month.

Behind the secrecy, though, there are signs of muddle.

When May pushed for informal negotiatio­ns with German Chancellor Angela Merkel at a Nov. 18 meeting in Berlin, Europe’s most powerful leader blocked the attempt, according to people involved with the negotiatio­ns.

After months of refusing to speculate about Britain’s negotiatin­g position, Brexit Secretary David Davis told parliament this month – almost in passing – that he would consider making payments to the EU to get access to markets, a move that sent sterling up almost 2 cents on the day.

The government fought and lost a legal challenge in the High Court over whether May could trigger Brexit without parliament’s approval. It then appealed to the Supreme Court. A decision is due next month.

May has dismissed public discussion of different variants of Brexit, insisting that she will get the right deal for Britain. Speaking on the BBC this month, she said only that it would reflect the colours of the British flag.

Another document, photograph­ed by reporters as a Conservati­ve Party official carried it into Downing Street, said: “What’s the model? Have cake and eat it”.

After so many leaks, the top civil servant sent a warning to officials threatenin­g them with dismissal if they made sensitive Brexit details public. That memo was itself promptly leaked to the media.

At least five executives of major British companies told Reuters they had sought clarity but been given none by the government.

Foreign diplomats say there is no unified British position on Brexit but rather a host of different utterances, both public and private, from various government ministers.

“I simply do not know what the Brits want: they seem to want access to the single market and limits to immigratio­n,” a senior diplomat from an EU member said on condition of anonymity. “Beyond that, I am unsure. It is all unclear. Perhaps it is a great cynical strategy to be unclear but I am not convinced.”

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