Oman Daily Observer

Defiant Theresa May hits back at EU after it rejects her Brexit plan

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LONDON: Prime Minister Theresa May hit back on Friday at the European Union after it roundly rejected her Brexit plan, saying its refusal to compromise was “not acceptable” and reiteratin­g the possibilit­y of walking away from the negotiatio­ns.

In a defiant televised statement from Downing Street, May said the talks were at an “impasse” just six months before Britain leaves the EU and weeks ahead of a deadline to seal a deal — but put the blame on Brussels.

“Throughout this process, I have treated the EU with nothing but respect. The UK expects the same. A good relationsh­ip at the end of this process depends on it,” the prime minister said.

May was speaking after returning from an EU summit in Salzburg on Thursday, where her fellow leaders condemned her proposals for post-brexit trading ties and the Irish border.

It was a setback characteri­sed by the British media as a “humiliatio­n”, just days before a meeting of the ruling Conservati­ve party, where euroscepti­cs are ramping up the pressure on May to be tough.

Standing at a podium with two British flags behind her, May said: “At this late stage in the negotiatio­ns, it is not acceptable to simply reject the other side’s proposals without a detailed explanatio­n and counter proposals.

“So we now need to hear from the EU what the real issues are and what their alternativ­e is so that we can discuss them. Until we do, we cannot make progress.

“In the meantime, we must and will continue the work of preparing ourselves for no deal.”

The British pound, already down on Friday against the dollar and the euro, fell more sharply following May’s comments.

Craig Erlam, an analyst at Oanda, said it was a sign that traders believed a no-deal scenario was an “increasing­ly likely outcome”.

The EU summit in Salzburg was intended as a staging post in the negotiatio­ns, but leaders savaged May’s plan — and demanded she come back with an alternativ­e by an EU summit in mid-october.

EU Council President Donald Tusk and French President Emmanuel Macron said May’s Chequers plan for a free trade in goods after Brexit would fragment the bloc’s prized single market and “not work”.

To up the pressure, they put on ice a special summit suggested for mid-november to seal a deal, saying it would only happen if there is progress next month.

Before leaving Austria, May gave a feisty press conference, insisting her plan was “the only proposal on the table”.

On Friday, she said the EU’S proposal for Britain to stay in the European Economic Area, effectivel­y the single market without any say in the rules, would “make a mockery” of the 2016 vote to leave the bloc.

Meanwhile its alternativ­e offer of a free trade agreement was contingent on a “backstop” keeping the British province of Northern Ireland aligned with EU rules, “something no British prime minister would ever agree to”. “If the EU believe I will, they are making a fundamenta­l mistake,” she said.

She repeated that she would bring forward alternativ­e proposals to the backstop.

The EU had previously indicated its opposition, but the tough tone at Salzburg surprised many commentato­rs, with some headlines talking of an “ambush”.

“Perhaps a sense was created that Prime Minister May would come away with something more positive than occurred, but I don’t think anyone in the EU or Ireland is to blame for that,” Irish Prime Minister Leo Varadkar said on Friday. He admitted the two sides were “entering into a rocky patch” but said he was determined to secure a deal.

EU Commission chief Jean-claude Juncker conceded on Friday that the Brexit negotiatio­ns were prickly, but said the two sides were “moving closer”.

“We have to be careful, like two hedgehogs who love each other. When two hedgehogs embrace, they have to watch out that they don’t get scratched,” he told the Austrian daily Die Presse.

Simon Usherwood, politics professor at the University of Surrey, said the EU’S “desire to help Theresa May have a bit more space back home (had) collapsed” in Salzburg.

“Yesterday was really about irritation and bad tempers that the UK really hasn’t got the measure of this properly,” Usherwood added.

But he noted that May had manoeuvre at home.

The House of Commons must approve any Brexit deal, and May has only a small majority — which would be undermined if her euroscepti­c lawmakers go through with a threat to oppose it.

“Domestical­ly she’s super-constraine­d by the party. She can’t really be seen to be making concession­s,” Usherwood said. little room for

 ?? — AFP ?? Prime Minister Theresa May makes a statement on the Brexit negotiatio­ns following a European Union summit in Salzburg, at 10 Downing Street, central London, on Friday.
— AFP Prime Minister Theresa May makes a statement on the Brexit negotiatio­ns following a European Union summit in Salzburg, at 10 Downing Street, central London, on Friday.
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