Soros says Brexit talks
could last five years, risks distracting EU
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[June 01, 2017]
BUDAPEST
(Reuters) - Billionaire financier George Soros warned the European Union
on Thursday that it was facing an "existential crisis", saying the bloc
should not let protracted Brexit talks distract it from making vital
reforms.
Soros, a liberal philanthropist, wrote in an article published by
Project Syndicate that Europe needed to radically reinvent itself.
"Negotiating the separation with Britain will divert the EU's attention
from its own existential crisis, and the talks are bound to last longer
than the two years allotted to them," he said. "Five years seems more
likely."
Soros said the EU should approach the Brexit negotiations in a
"constructive spirit" and at the same time should make itself attractive
again to people, especially younger generations.
British Prime Minister Theresa May, who faces elections on June 8, said
earlier this week that Britain would leave the EU without an agreement
if it was unable to achieve a satisfactory agreement with the bloc.
While stressing the need for a constructive attitude to talks with
Britain, Soros said the EU had become an organization in which the euro
zone constitutes the inner core and the other members are relegated to
an inferior position.
"Replacing a 'multi-speed' Europe with a 'multi-track' Europe that
allows member states a wider variety of democratic choices would have a
far-reaching beneficial effect," he said.
"As it stands, member states want to reassert their sovereignty, rather
than surrendering more of it."
He urged steps by the EU in three areas: territorial disintegration,
exemplified by Brexit; the refugee crisis; and the lack of adequate
economic growth.
But Soros said he was hopeful that after Emmanuel Macron, the only
pro-European candidate, won presidential elections in France, and
upcoming German elections could lead to a growing pro-Europe momentum
which "may then be strong enough to overcome the biggest threat: a
banking and migration crisis in Italy."
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Business magnate George Soros arrives to speak at the Open Russia
Club in London, Britain June 20, 2016. REUTERS/Luke MacGregor
Soros,
who has been portrayed by Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban as a financial
speculator who supported mass inflow of migrants into Europe, said he welcomed
the EU's recent tough words on Hungary and Poland, two countries which critics
say are on an authoritarian track.
"I admire the courageous way Hungarians have resisted the deception and
corruption of the mafia state Orban has established, and I am encouraged by the
European institutions' energetic response to the challenges emanating from
Poland and Hungary," Soros said.
A Hungarian government spokesman said Soros had a clear political agenda, and
the organizations funded by him were pursuing this.
"It has become quite clear now...that Soros wants to be the political opposition
of the Hungarian government along with his organizations," Zoltan Kovacs said in
a reply to Reuters.
(Reporting by Krisztina Than; Editing by Toby Chopra)
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