The Chronicle

Tusk blasts Hunt for ‘unwise insult’

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THE European Council President has branded Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt’s comparison of the EU and Soviet Union as an unwise insult.

Donald Tusk demanded greater respect from the UK Government, saying “unacceptab­le comments” were achieving nothing other than to raise the temperatur­e of the Brexit negotiatio­ns.

Mr Tusk also rejected any suggestion that the EU had not respected the dignity of the UK at the recent meeting of European leaders at Salzburg.

The European Council president – a former prime minister of Poland who was imprisoned as a young man living behind the Iron Curtain – made a clear reference to Mr Hunt’s controvers­ial remarks after meeting with Irish premier Leo Varadkar in Brussels.

“In respecting our partners, we expect the same in return,” he said.

“Comparing the EU to the Soviet Union is as unwise as it is insulting.

“The Soviet Union was about prisons and gulags, borders and walls, violence against citizens and neighbours.

“The European Union is about freedom and human rights, prosperity and peace, life without fear, it is about democracy and pluralism – a continent without internal borders and walls. As the President of the European Council and someone who spent half his life in the Soviet bloc, I know what I am talking about.”

Mr Tusk added: “Unacceptab­le remarks that raise the temperatur­e will achieve nothing except wasting more time.”

Asked if Mr Hunt should resign over his comments at the Conservati­ve Party conference, Mr Tusk replied: “That’s not my problem.”

The key EU figure did however suggest that the Tory conference had served as a distractio­n to the negotiatio­ns.

“I was party leader myself for 15 years and I know what the rules of party politics are,” he said.

“But now the Tory party conference is over we should get down to business.”

In an apparent reference to claims Prime Minister Theresa May and her Chequers plan for a future trade deal were not shown sufficient respect in Salzburg, Mr Tusk added: “Telling the truth, even if difficult and unpleasant, is the best way of showing respect for partners, that’s how it was in Salzburg and that’s also how it will work in the coming days.”

He added: “Emotional arguments that stress the issue of dignity sound attractive but they do not facilitate agreement.

“Let us remember that every actor in this process has their dignity and confrontat­ion in this field will not lead to anything good.”

Mr Tusk also referenced the less comprehens­ive Canada-style trading deal as advocated by Brexiteers like Boris Johnson and David Davis.

He said the EU was offering a “Canada plus, plus, plus deal”, stressing the European desire for as close a relationsh­ip as possible with the UK after Brexit.

 ??  ?? Donald Tusk, President of the European Council
Donald Tusk, President of the European Council

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