Dayton Daily News

Britain’s May says EU targeting vote

Brussels is trying to influence June 8 election, she claims.

- By Lorne Cook and Jill Lawless

BRUSSELS — British Prime Minister Theresa May on Wednesday accused European Union officials of trying to influence the U.K. elections, ratcheting up tensions

with Brussels over her coun- try’s departure from the bloc.

Just hours after the EU unveiled its plan for Brexit talks, which delays discus-

sion on key issues like trade, May said that “the European Commission’s negotiatin­g stance has hardened. Threats against Britain have been issued by European politi- cians and officials.”

“All of these acts have been deliberate­ly timed to affect the result of the general election that will take place on 8 June,” she told reporters outside 10 Downing Street, in a speech aimed at rallying support for her Conser- vative Party ahead of next month’s polls.

May’s accusation follows leaked comments in the Brit- ish and European press suggesting the EU thinks Britain is not facing reality about the conditions of its EU exit and the complexity of the negotiatio­ns ahead.

“The events of the last few days have shown that — what- ever our wishes, and however reasonable the positions of Europe’s other leaders — there are some in Brussels who do not want these talks to succeed,” she said.

The head of the EU’s executive Commission, Jean-Claude Juncker, expressed regret that details of his private dinner with May last week had made the news.

A German news report

said Juncker left the meeting saying he was “10 times more skeptical than I was before” that negotiatio­ns will succeed. May dismissed the report as “Brussels gossip.”

May also vowed Tuesday to be a “bloody difficult woman” in Brexit talks.

Juncker said: “I have noted that she is a tough lady.”

Earlier, the EU’s chief Brexit negotiator Michel Barnier insisted that Britain’s accounts with the EU must be settled before any talks on its future trade relationsh­ip with Europe can take place, as he warned

that time is running out to seal a deal by 2019.

Unveiling the Commission’s negotiatin­g mandate for Britain’s departure, Bar

nier said he was not hostile to Britain and the bloc did not want to punish it for leaving — but “we have to settle the account, not more not less.”

The amount London owes the EU has become one of

the most contentiou­s subjects in the Brexit process, with some reports estimating it could climb to as much as 100 billion euros — $109 billion — a figure that Britain has flatly rejected paying.

 ?? MATT DUNHAM / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? British Prime Minister Theresa May speaks to the media Wednesday outside her residence in London. She said the European Commission has hardened its Brexit stance.
MATT DUNHAM / ASSOCIATED PRESS British Prime Minister Theresa May speaks to the media Wednesday outside her residence in London. She said the European Commission has hardened its Brexit stance.

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