Business Day

PM woos leaders to buy his Brexit plan

The British prime minister faces a crunch week in parliament, but after a meeting with Ireland’s leader EU negotiator­s believe he may yet pull it off

- Anthony Deutsch, Gabriela Baczynska, Padraic Halpin and Elizabeth Piper Brussels/Dublin/London

In 90 days, British Prime Minister Boris Johnson has been humiliated in parliament, drawn mass street protests, tasted heavy defeat in the courts and suffered departures from his government, including his own brother.

In 90 days, British Prime Minister Boris Johnson has been humiliated in parliament, drawn mass street protests, tasted heavy defeat in the courts and suffered significan­t departures from his government, including his own brother. At home, he and his Brexit strategy remain under siege this week as his 11th-hour divorce agreement with the EU hangs in the balance in a parliament outside his control.

There is one place, however, where he has earned grudging respect over the past few weeks: Brussels. On the other side of the English Channel, EU negotiator­s who once dismissed him as “a clown” now take him seriously and believe he may yet pull it off.

“He’s closer than they have ever been,” an EU diplomat said after a weekend of high drama in the British parliament, where Johnson on Monday was pushing for a vote on his deal on Saturday.

“If there is anyone who can do it in the House of Commons, it’s him. If not, we will be back to square one in a few days or weeks,” the diplomat said.

Johnson’s ability to overcome deep European scepticism and salvage the stranded negotiatin­g process was forged during an off-therecord countrysid­e stroll with Ireland’s leader, Leo Varadkar, on October 10. Insiders on both sides of the talks said Johnson’s turnaround came after the process was on the verge of collapse on October 8.

Just a week earlier, the European side had rejected Johnson’s latest proposal outright to resolve the persistent sticking point of how to deal with the border between Northern Ireland, part of the UK, and Ireland, part of the EU, after Brexit without upsetting a decades-old peace deal.

Johnson’s suggestion­s were vague and lacked legal foundation, the EU side had said.

The crisis over the so-called Irish backstop, intended to prevent a hard border on the island, seemed insurmount­able three weeks before Britain was set to crash out without a deal.

The low point came during an acrimoniou­s phone call earlier on October 8, when German Chancellor Angela Merkel bluntly told Johnson the EU would not accept customs checks on the island of Ireland.

Details of the confidenti­al call quickly leaked from a source at 10 Downing Street, upsetting the Germans. Fuming at Merkel’s suggestion, Johnson’s aides unleashed their fury, breaking every diplomatic code in the book and texting reporters:

“They aren’t engaging or negotiatin­g seriously.”

Another Downing Street source said a deal was “essentiall­y impossible”.

By lunchtime that day, a taunting tweet from European Council president added a sense of peril: “At stake is the future of Europe and the UK as well as the security and interests of our people. You don’t want a deal, you don’t want an extension, you don’t want to revoke, quo vadis?”

Tusk was telling Johnson he was marching into the disaster of a split without an agreement.

At that precise moment, Johnson broke from the orthodox Brexit playbook his predecesso­r Theresa May had stuck to unsuccessf­ully for more than two years. That evening, after the Merkel call that one EU diplomatic source called Johnson’s “rendezvous with reality”, he rang Varadkar to set up a meeting.

It “came out of the wreckage of the Merkel call”, one UK source familiar with the conversati­on said. “We were in the last roll of the dice territory at that stage.”

It turned out to be a political masterstro­ke from the same man who had been on a path of brinkmansh­ip just days before.

“Johnson left the call feeling the way to a deal was through Varadkar’s heart. But time was running out and he decided clearly to do the impossible — reopen the backstop, get a deal and campaign on a platform of having delivered an orderly Brexit,” said an EU official directly involved in Brexit talks.

They agreed to meet at Thornton Manor, a rustic Elizabetha­n house near Liverpool in northwest England, where the two strolled side by side down a grassy, tree-lined path among artistical­ly manicured gardens.

“They spent at last half of the three-hour meeting one-onone,” one Irish source said. “Boris emerged looking for coffee after about 45 minutes and went back in again.”

It was here that Johnson and Varadkar discussed a way to resolve the dreaded Irish backstop, the red line between Britain and the EU no-one had been able to bridge.

“The deal really became possible the minute Johnson dropped the idea of customs checks on the island of Ireland,” another EU diplomat said. “That happened in his meeting with Varadkar in the manor house. It unlocked the whole thing.”

Any doubts on the Irish side about Johnson’s intentions had been virtually erased, with Varadkar coming away saying “that he was certain that the prime minister wanted a deal”.

Johnson used his jovial character to disarm European leaders, who in the end saw past his early diplomatic gaffes and spoke of an affable man of substance. Video footage showed Johnson embracing and laughing with counterpar­ts at the European Council on Thursday, a sharp contrast with May’s awkward and solitary appearance in the chamber just months earlier, when she was also left to eat alone while leaders sat down for an hourslong dinner together.

Once seen as a jester — who put his foot on the table at France’s Elysee Palace ahead of a meeting with French President Emmanuel Macron and abandoned a media conference with Luxembourg’s leader to avoid heckling protesters — Johnson had won credibilit­y.

“It proves you can be both a clown and a statesman at the same time,” another EU diplomat said.

The man who likened himself to the cartoon character The Incredible Hulk breaking the shackles of EU imprisonme­nt had been underestim­ated, as Macron put it on Friday at the close of an EU summit in Brussels where the deal was approved by European leaders.

“He may be colourful sometimes but we all are at times,” said Macron. “He’ sa character, but he’s a leader with a real strategic vision. Those who didn’t take him seriously were wrong.”

 ?? /AFP ?? Getting along fine: Britain’s Prime Minister Boris Johnson, left, poses with French President Emmanuel Macron on the sidelines of a bi-lateral EU meeting in Brussels on October 17.
/AFP Getting along fine: Britain’s Prime Minister Boris Johnson, left, poses with French President Emmanuel Macron on the sidelines of a bi-lateral EU meeting in Brussels on October 17.

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