Khaleej Times

May will stick to Brexit talks plan, says Merkel

- Dave Graham and Andreas Rinke

mexico city — German Chancellor Angela Merkel said on Friday she assumed Britain would stick to its plan for leaving the European Union after the country’s election upset, and that she wanted to work quickly on talks over Brexit.

British voters failed to deliver a widely expected parliament­ary majority for the Conservati­ve party in Thursday’s general election, dealing a major blow to Prime Minister Theresa May just days ahead of difficult Brexit talks with the EU.

Speaking during a visit to Mexico City, Merkel said Germany was ready for the Brexit talks, which May said would begin on June 19 as scheduled — although she now risks more opposition to her EU departure plans from inside and outside her party.

“I assume that Britain, from what I heard from the Prime Minister today, wants to stick to its negotiatin­g plan,” Merkel told a news conference alongside Mexico’s President Enrique Pena Nieto.

“We want to negotiate quickly, we want to stick to the time plan, and so at this point I don’t think there is anything to suggest these negotiatio­ns cannot start as was agreed.”

May, who had called a snap election confident her Conservati­ve Party would increase its majority and strengthen her hand in the Brexit talks, on Friday said she would lead a minority government backed by a small Northern Irish party.

British politician­s differ widely on what they want from the Brexit negotiatin­g process, seeing it as a way to shift Britain either to the right or left. Some parliament­arians in both the Conservati­ve and Labour parties want to remain in the EU.

EU leaders expressed concern that May’s loss of her majority would raise the risk of negotiatio­ns failing, resulting in a legal limbo for people and business.

Merkel said Britain was part of Europe regardless of Brexit, and that she wanted the country to remain a good partner.

“Britain is a member of Nato, so we have a lot of shared challenges to deal with, and that’s the spirit we want to carry out these negotiatio­ns in. But obviously while also asserting the interests of the 27 member states that will make up the European Union in future,” she added. —

We want to negotiate quickly, we want to stick to the time plan, and so at this point I don’t think there is anything to suggest these negotiatio­ns cannot start as was agreed Angela Merkel, German Chancellor

 ?? AP ?? Angela Merkel and Enrique Pena Nieto at a joint news conference in Mexico City. —
AP Angela Merkel and Enrique Pena Nieto at a joint news conference in Mexico City. —

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