The Mercury

Top European socialist candidate urges UK to reverse Brexit stance

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But Gregoire said more parts of the city were affected by the violence than before, as the protest was more spread out. Paris could not face this type of danger once a week, and the government and Macron needed to deliver answers now to stop the crisis, he said.

Macron was expected to address the nation early this week. Prime Minister Edouard Philippe said the president would propose measures to “nurture” dialogue.

Workers in Paris cleared streets of broken glass and towed away burntout cars. Across the city, bank branch offices, toy shops, opticians and other retail outlets had boarded up storefront­s smashed by protesters and walls and windows were covered in anti-Macron slogans. Gregory Caray, owner of two furniture shops in the heart of Paris, said he was relieved to see that his shop had not been vandalised. “It has been three weekends in a row now. Look around you, everything is broken, damaged.”

Named after the fluorescen­t safety vests that French motorists must carry, the “yellow vest” protests erupted on November 17, when nearly 300 000 demonstrat­ors nationwide took to the streets to denounce high living costs and Macron’s economic reforms.

The government cancelled a planned rise in taxes on petrol and diesel in a bid to defuse the situation but the protests have morphed into a broader anti-Macron rebellion.

Macron’s last major address to the nation was on November 27, when he said he would not be bounced into changing policy by “thugs”, but following last week’s riots, the government offered a string of concession­s to try and soothe public anger. FRANS Timmermans of the Netherland­s, who was selected as the lead candidate in the 2019 European elections for The Party of European Socialists (PES) on Saturday, has invited Britain to reverse its Brexit stance by remaining in the EU.

Speaking during a PES conference in Lisbon, Timmermans, now a vice-president of the European Commission but with ambitions to succeed president Jean-Claude Juncker in May next year, said: “The UK is always more than welcome to stay.”

Addressing Britain directly, Timmermans said there is “one political family in Europe that wants you to stay: please think about that.”

He also laid out his ambitions were he to succeed Juncker in the EU’s top job, saying that he would push for better salaries, better protection of small service providers and fair taxation of large digital corporatio­ns and the super-rich.

“These elections are about the soul of Europe,” Timmermans said.

Voters were deciding between democracy and rule of law on the one hand and the politics of power on the other, he said.

He was elected via acclamatio­n on Saturday by the approximat­ely 1 000 delegates attending the conference. His closest rival, conservati­ve Manfred Weber, for the centre-right European People’s Party, is also hoping to become the commission’s head.

Meanwhile, former British foreign minister Boris Johnson said yesterday that British Prime Minister Theresa May could stay on as prime minister and go back to Brussels and renegotiat­e the divorce agreement if she loses a crucial parliament­ary vote tomorrow on her Brexit deal.

Johnson, a leading Brexit campaigner who is seen as a possible successor to May, said Brussels would listen if she asked for the removal from the deal of the Irish “backstop”, an insurance policy designed to prevent a post-Brexit hard border between EU member Ireland and British-ruled Northern Ireland.

Asked if she could stay on as leader and go back to the EU to renegotiat­e the deal if she loses the vote, Johnson told the BBC: “Of course, that is exactly what needs to happen.

“What people want to hear now is not stuff about leadership elections and personalit­ies.

“What they want to hear is that there a plan to get out of this mess,” he said.

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Reuters ?? WORKMEN place a wooden panel to protect a broken window on a clothing store the day after clashes during a national day of protest in Paris yesterday.
| Reuters WORKMEN place a wooden panel to protect a broken window on a clothing store the day after clashes during a national day of protest in Paris yesterday.

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