'No time to waste on Brexit': EU uneasy about Truss as UK leader
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[September 02, 2022]
By Michel Rose, Andrew MacAskill and Andreas Rinke
PARIS/LONDON/BERLIN (Reuters) - Europe is
anticipating the prospect of Liz Truss as Britain's next prime minister
with a mixture of irritation and unease: diplomats say that with the war
in Ukraine and rampant inflation, the last thing they need is another
Brexit battle.
Frontrunner in a ruling Conservative party contest to succeed Boris
Johnson, Truss has few admirers across the 27-nation European Union to
start with.
As foreign minister, she championed legislation that would unilaterally
tear up part of Britain's divorce deal with the EU and has promised, as
prime minister, to get it passed - a move that would put London on a
collision course with Brussels. [L4N3082Y2]
Her rhetoric during the leadership campaign, while aimed at members of
her party who enjoy some bad-mouthing of France and the EU in general,
will have done little to help.
Asked last month whether French President Emmanuel Macron was a "friend
or foe" of Britain, she replied: "The jury's out".
"In the current context, it's baffling she thinks she can afford to make
remarks like this," one Brussels-based diplomat said. "We're focused
200% on the war in Ukraine, widespread inflation. We have no time to
waste on this."
Truss campaign officials said the comments were a "joke" and unlikely to
have a lasting impact on Franco-British relations.
Still, a French government source said the comments underlined the lack
of trust between Paris and London, which has been stoked by accusations
that Macron has not done enough to stem the flow of migrants crossing by
boat to English shores.
BRACING FOR A ROUGH RIDE
In Germany, members of the ruling coalition have not been impressed by
Truss and bemoan what they see as EU-bashing to distract from mounting
British domestic issues.
"One must also give the new prime minister a chance," said Nils Schmid,
foreign policy spokesperson for the ruling Social Democrat party. "But
anyone who believed that things could not get any worse after Johnson is
being proved wrong. Many of Mrs. Truss' statements are unfortunate or
wrong."
EU diplomats say that although Truss was originally opposed to Britain's
exit from the bloc ahead of the 2016 Brexit referendum, she
wholeheartedly backed it as a member of Johnson's cabinet, and so is
unlikely to bring a more conciliatory approach to thorny post-Brexit
issues.
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Conservative leadership candidate Liz
Truss attends a hustings event, part of the Conservative party
leadership campaign, in London, Britain August 31, 2022.
REUTERS/Hannah McKay/File Photo
Britain left the bloc on Jan. 31, 2020, but has been mired since
then in a dispute over the rules it had agreed to on trading
arrangements for the province of Northern Ireland.
Under the Brexit deal's Northern Ireland Protocol, the province
remained in the EU single market for goods and customs union,
preserving its open border with EU member Ireland.
Britain says that arrangement, which effectively puts a customs
border in the Irish Sea, is unworkable and the bill now going
through parliament would tear it apart.
The EU has already launched legal proceedings for breaches of what
it maintains is a binding treaty.
However, Truss appears determined to press on with the bill and -
according to some reports - could trigger a so-called "Article 16"
emergency provision to take unilateral action on Northern Ireland
within days of taking office next week.
That would ramp up tensions with the EU's executive, the European
Commission, and could ultimately lead to a trade war, with the EU
imposing tariffs on British goods.
"The Commission will be on the frontline and would have a very firm
response," the Brussels-based diplomat said. "Europeans are all on
the same firm line."
A Truss campaign team member said she was hoping that a change of
government would bring a reset with Europe, but while she would
prefer a negotiated settlement of the Northern Ireland impasse,
taking the "Article 16" route was an option.
"This will not be the default option, but we won't shy away from
taking difficult decisions," the official said.
One veteran Brussels ambassador said Europeans were bracing for a
rough ride: "It's going to be rock and roll," he said.
(Reporting by Michel Rose and Elizabeth Pineau in Paris; Andrew
MacAskill in London; Andreas Rinke in Berlin; Belen Carreno in
Madrid; Editing by John Chalmers)
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