Brexit extension unavoidable if MPs reject deal, says Merkel
Angela Merkel has told EU leaders a Brexit extension
would be unavoidable if British MPs vote down the deal agreed with Boris
Johnson.
During private talks at the EU summit, the German
chancellor told her fellow leaders they could not pretend an extension would
not be offered to the UK if it was requested, according to a source familiar
with the discussions.
Merkel framed Brexit as a historic issue weighing on
the EU and said leaders had a responsibility not to push the UK out without a
deal if there was a request for further delay.
Her remarks contrast with the public statement of
Jean-Claude Juncker, the European commission president, who said he was “ruling
out” an extension. Although he has no power to veto any delay, he said: “If we
have a deal, we have a deal, and there is no need for prolongation.”
In reality, the positions of Juncker and Merkel are
much closer. Juncker, who has previously favoured long Brexit extensions, told
EU leaders that talk of an extension was not helpful.
The conversation took place on Thursday, shortly
before EU leaders announced their unanimous backing for the new deal with
Johnson.
Merkel told Johnson not to tell the British public
that EU leaders had ruled out an extension. While EU leaders are anxious for
the Brexit deal to pass, they do not wish to be drawn into the vortex of
British politics.
During a 25-minute meeting with EU leaders, Johnson
expressed confidence he could get a majority for his Brexit deal in a rare
Saturday sitting of the Commons.
Boris Johnson confident parliament will back his new
Brexit deal – video
Thanking the EU for the deal, the prime minister
made a short, upbeat statement in which he referred to his school days in
Brussels. Johnson attended the European school in Uccle, which educates the
children of EU officials.
Johnson also touched on the UK’s long relationship
with Europe, suggesting Britain had never been truly European but always half
in, half out. It was a businesslike meeting that made some think of the
unemotional signing of divorce papers.
Once he had left the room, EU leaders discussed how
to respond to any rejection of the deal by the Commons. Some EU leaders, such
as Luxembourg’s Xavier Bettel and Malta’s Joseph Muscat, voiced frustration at
the idea of another extension.
Donald Tusk, the president of the European council,
agreed with Merkel. He later told journalists he would consult EU leaders if
there was a request for an extension. But he did not organise a detailed
discussion on extension.
“We have not
been focusing on the question today, if or when,” Merkel later told
journalists. “It’s a free decision to be taken by the British parliament.”
With the vote in the Commons on a knife-edge, EU
leaders are also thinking about the future relationship with the UK. Merkel
said the EU now had a clearer idea of the kind of future relationship the UK
was seeking, in contrast to the picture sketched out by Theresa May.
“At the time [under May] it wasn’t clear what the
future relationship should look like, whether there would be a membership in
the single market or not,” she said.
Merkel, who has recently described the UK as a
“potential competitor”, said it was clear the UK would be a “third country”, ie
completely outside the EU’s economic system, “and we will quickly begin
negotiating a free-trade agreement with that third country, Great Britain.”