San Francisco Chronicle

BRITAIN Party conference exposes internal Brexit tensions

- By Jill Lawless

BIRMINGHAM, England — Britain’s Brexit chief appealed for Conservati­ve Party unity on Monday, as he warned the European Union that the U.K. will leave the bloc without a divorce deal rather than accept one that makes Britain follow too many EU rules.

Brexit Secretary Dominic Raab’s call to “come together, because this is a moment for the optimists” fell largely on deaf ears at the Conservati­ve conference in Birmingham. Instead, pro-Brexit politician­s took potshots at the EU, proEU Conservati­ves battled to stop the U.K.’s exit from the bloc — and British Prime Minister Theresa May was caught in the middle, trying to cling to power.

The Conservati­ves are holding their annual meeting in the central English city 10 days after EU leaders told May that her proposed divorce terms were unacceptab­le. That rejection has sparking an impasse in Brexit negotiatio­ns and a crisis for Britain’s leader, with less than six months to go until Britain leaves the 28-nation bloc on March 29.

Raab accused the EU of casting “jibes” at Britain and having a “theologica­l approach (that) allows no room for serious compromise.”

Raab said that if the EU tried to “lock us in via the back door” — by keeping Britain in the bloc’s single market or customs union — “then we will be left with no choice but to leave without a deal.”

Raab’s combative comments followed Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt’s remark on Sunday that the EU should not try to prevent a smooth departure by Britain because “it was the Soviet Union that stopped people leaving.” His comparison of a bloc that includes several former Communist countries to the USSR drew a rebuke from the EU.

“We would all benefit, and in particular foreign affairs ministers, from opening a history book from time to time,” said European Commission spokesman Margaritis Schinas.

May, meanwhile, faces a growing threat to her leadership amid deepening opposition to her Brexit plan, which would keep Britain in the EU single market for goods — in return for following EU regulation­s — while leaving it free to make its own rules on services.

Advocates of “hard Brexit” argue that would make the U.K. a “vassal” of the EU, whereas a clean break with the bloc would let Britain strike new trade deals around the world.

Former Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson, a rival of May’s who is a likely future contender for her job, has called the prime minister’s plan “prepostero­us” and “deranged.” Johnson will address delegates on Tuesday, a day before May’s keynote speech to the conference.

On May’s other flank are pro-EU ministers such as Treasury chief Philip Hammond, who called Johnson’s claims about Brexit “fantasy land.” Hammond used his own conference speech to stress that the Conservati­ve Party “is, and always will be, the party of business.”

It’s a sign of how Brexit has upended British politics that the party of free-market former Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher needs to make such an assurance. But many British businesses are anxious about Brexit, fearing barriers to trade and recruiting workers could hammer the U.K. economy.

May is sticking to her proposal. But with Brexit day looming on March 29, chances are rising that the U.K. could find itself crashing out of the bloc without a deal. The government has acknowledg­ed that could leave planes grounded and trucks backed up at British ports.

 ?? Oli Scarff / AFP / Getty Images ?? Demonstrat­ors opposed to the United Kingdom leaving the European Union carry EU flags on the sidelines of the Conservati­ve Party Conference taking place this week in Birmingham.
Oli Scarff / AFP / Getty Images Demonstrat­ors opposed to the United Kingdom leaving the European Union carry EU flags on the sidelines of the Conservati­ve Party Conference taking place this week in Birmingham.

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