Weekend Herald

European leaders are ready to help but have lost faith in Theresa May

- Ian Wishart analysis

Theresa May’s European counterpar­ts have lost faith in her just when she needed them most.

As she fights in London and Brussels to avoid a catastroph­ic crash out of the European Union in just six days, European officials find themselves asking in private whether Britains prospects might have looked a lot less perilous with someone else in charge.

Just this week, May blindsided her European partners with mixed messages about extending the Brexit process.

EU officials, speaking privately, said it was yet another example of the unreliabil­ity that has steadily eroded the trust between the two sides.

That makes them nervous as they head into the final days, and means they can’t rule out a no-deal exit, no matter how determined they are to avoid it.

This week her de facto deputy, David Lidington, told EU officials on Tuesday that she would send a letter requesting a flexible Brexit delay that would involve a potentiall­y long postponeme­nt, according to people familiar with the situation. The EU pencilled in an offer of between nine and 15 months. On Wednesday, word reached Brussels that May wouldn’t in fact be sending a letter but would appeal to leaders directly at today’s summit. Later in the day, British officials told Brussels the request would be for a three-week delay. Then on Thursday a letter arrived. May, who had come under pressure from Brexit hardliners in her Cabinet, was asking for three months.

Her position on the extension — hugely contentiou­s at home — changed as often as the British weather, one EU diplomat closely involved in the Brexit process remarked.

Since the deal between Britain and the EU was finally struck in November, European officials have been irritated that May hasn’t defended it as she promised to — and as she asked them to. Within days, she was requesting more concession­s in a failed bid to win over pro-Brexit politician­s in her own party and Northern Ireland’s Democratic Unionists.

Her chief-of-staff, Gavin Barwell, also told the EU that May planned to allow Parliament to hold nonbinding votes if her deal failed, in order to gauge what kind of relationsh­ip lawmakers might support, a senior diplomat said.

That hasn’t happened, though May has indicated Parliament will have a chance on Monday.

European officials say she’s putting the interests of her Conservati­ve party before the interests of the country and suspect that she could find cross-party support for a closer post-Brexit relationsh­ip with the EU, but shies away from it for fear of creating a fatal rift within her own tribe.

EU diplomats are also angry that she hasn’t been able to put to rest suspicions at home that a better leader would have got a better deal. The irony, EU diplomats say, is that she got a good deal, but she just hasn’t been able to sell it.

May frequently tells Parliament that the agreement she got is the only one on offer, but she enraged the EU when she backed an amendment drafted by a rank-andfile lawmaker that sought to rip it up in the interests of party unity.

Despite it all though, EU leaders still want to help May get the Brexit deal over the line. They don’t want to have to start all over again with someone else.

When EU President Donald Tusk on Wednesday suggested the options were May’s deal or no-deal, that was intended to give her ammunition. What he didn’t mention, because it doesn’t help her cause, is what would happen if her deal doesn’t pass next week.

Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte, who said he admired May and never got frustrated with her, also declined to say what would happen if she fails next week. “I don’t help her by going into that speculatio­n.”

 ?? Photo / AP ?? Theresa May has sent European leaders mixed messages about extending the Brexit process.
Photo / AP Theresa May has sent European leaders mixed messages about extending the Brexit process.

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