Las Vegas Review-Journal

May on EU: We are at ‘impasse’

British prime minister hits back at bloc on Brexit; pound falls

- By Jill Lawless The Associated Press

LONDON — British Prime Minister Theresa May accused the European Union on Friday of creating an “impasse” in divorce negotiatio­ns by bluntly rejecting her blueprint for Brexit, sending the value of the pound falling as worries about a chaotic U.K. exit from the EU soared.

With British newspapers declaring that May had been “humiliated” by EU leaders, the prime minister used a televised statement from 10 Downing St. to insist she was prepared to take Britain out of the bloc without a deal if it did not treat the country with more respect.

Declaring that “we are at an impasse,” May said the EU must lay out “what the real issues are and what their alternativ­e is.”

“Throughout this process, I have treated the EU with nothing but respect,” she said. “The U.K. expects the same. A good relationsh­ip at the end of this process depends on it.”

The pound fell 1.5 percent to $1.3066 on May’s comments, which seemed to make the prospect of an economical­ly disruptive “no deal” Brexit more likely.

May’s strong words belied her weak position: She is a prime minister without a parliament­ary majority, caught between the EU and a pro-brexit wing of her Conservati­ve Party that threatens to oust her if she makes a compromise too far.

May’s combative remarks were calibrated to appease euroskepti­c Conservati­ves ahead of what’s likely to be a bruising annual party conference at the end of the month.

May’s statement followed a fraught EU summit in Salzburg, Austria, which dashed hopes of a breakthrou­gh in stalled divorce talks with only six months to go until Britain leaves the bloc on March 29.

European Council President Donald Tusk said at the meeting that parts of the U.K.’S plan simply “will not work.” French President Emmanuel Macron called pro-brexit U.K. politician­s “liars” who had misled the country about the costs of leaving the 28-nation bloc.

The judgment of British newspapers was brutal. The broadly pro-eu Guardian said May had been “humiliated.” The conservati­ve Times of London said: “Humiliatio­n for May as EU rejects Brexit plan.”

The Brexit-supporting tabloid

Sun branded bloc leaders “EU dirty rats,” accusing “Euro mobsters” Tusk and Macron of “ambushing” May.

 ??  ?? Theresa May
Theresa May

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States