May's Brexit plan goes pop after
'humiliation' by EU, British media says
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[September 21, 2018]
By Guy Faulconbridge
LONDON (Reuters) - Prime Minister Theresa
May's Brexit proposals were declared dead by the British media on Friday
after what they cast as a humiliation at the hands of European Union
leaders during a summit in Austria.
After a dinner of Wiener schnitzel in Salzburg, the EU leaders said they
would push for a Brexit deal next month but rejected May's proposal.
For the British media, the message was clear.
"Your Brexit's broken," the Daily Mirror newspaper said.
Newspapers led their front pages with a Reuters picture showing May,
dressed in a red jacket, standing apparently aloof and alone from a mass
of suited male EU leaders.
"May humiliated," The Guardian said. "Humiliation for May," said The
Times on its front page.
"May's Salzburg hopes dashed as EU leaders reject Chequers deal," said
the Financial Times, which has strongly supported Britain's EU
membership. The BBC said: "Embarrassing rebuff for PM in Salzburg."
Few diplomats expected any breakthrough from the Salzburg summit as the
EU has repeatedly made clear that May must rework her "Chequers"
proposals which she insisted were the only serious plan.
However, the leaders warned May that if she does not give ground on
trade and arrangements for the UK border with Ireland by November, they
are ready to cope with Britain crashing out.
The tone of some of their comments, particularly the irony of European
Council President Donald Tusk, left May exposed at home as she heads
into what is expected to be a tumultuous annual conference of her
Conservative Party from Sept. 30.
The British pound fell to $1.3218, from the two-month highs of $1.3295
hit on Thursday.
The negative headlines indicate the extent of the divergence in
perceptions on Brexit between London and the capitals of the EU's other
27 members.
An EU official said there may have been a slightly firmer tone than
intended. This was because an article that May published in German
newspapers was tougher than expected and some EU leaders were annoyed by
British efforts to bypass chief negotiator Michel Barnier.
"This was basically badly played by the Brits," said the official.
The Sun, Britain's best-selling newspaper, said the British public who
should brace for a "no-deal" exit.
"EU Dirty Rats - Euro mobsters ambush May," it said alongside a mocked
up picture of French President Emmanuel Macron and Tusk cast as American
gangsters with guns.
Macron bluntly said May's Brexit proposals, named after the Chequers
country house where they were agreed by the British cabinet in July,
were unacceptable.
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Britain's Prime Minister Theresa May holds a news conference after
the informal meeting of European Union leaders in Salzburg, Austria,
September 20, 2018. REUTERS/Leonhard Foeger
"CHEQUERS GOES POP"
Tusk was criticized for posting a picture of him offering May a
choice of delicate cakes beside a message: "Sorry, no cherries."
That is a reference to what EU leaders cast as British attempts to
cherry pick elements of EU membership.
European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker tried to calm any
hurt feelings but called for caution, comparing Britain and the EU
with two loving hedgehogs. "When two hedgehogs hug each other, you
have to be careful that there will be no scratches," he told
Austrian newspapers.
Britain is due to leave the EU on March 29, yet there is still no
divorce deal. Rivals to May are circling and some rebels have vowed
to vote down a possible Brexit deal in parliament.
"May will emerge as unique in the annals of history if she survives
as PM much longer in the face of setbacks on this scale," British
journalist Robert Peston wrote of the Salzburg summit, under the
headline "Chequers goes pop".
May's former Brexit minister David Davis has said up to 40 lawmakers
from the Conservative Party will vote against her Brexit plans.
If a possible deal were rejected by the British parliament, Britain
would face leaving the EU without an agreement, delaying Brexit or
calling another referendum.
"If all conventional roads lead to a hard no-deal Brexit, the notion
of Parliament exerting control and forcing another referendum on us
would begin to look not wholly fanciful," Peston wrote in the
Spectator.
(Reporting by Guy Faulconbridge; Additional reporting by Alastair
MacDonald; Editing by Peter Graff and David Stamp)
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