The
plan the British Prime Minister sent to Brussels today, regarding a withdrawal
agreement with the EU, is a construction in the air. It’s not grounded on
realistic operational premises, meaning, it is unclear in terms of its day-to-day
implementation. And it plays with words and images, basically to show to the
British voters this plan is different from the one Theresa May had agreed upon. It is not about substance and cooperation, it is about personal ambition and party politics in the UK.
The
EU leaders are not convinced. However, they played smart in their reactions to Boris
Johnson’s proposal. They said they would look at it with the required
attention. That’s a diplomatic way of saying we are not convinced but do not
want to kill hope right away. Brussels does not want to give the British PM any chance that would allow him to blame the EU for a No Deal situation. It is true he will blame in any case, but without any definitive proof.
Besides
the confusing lines, the plan was presented almost like an ultimatum from the
British side to the European one. That is not very smart. Key leaders in Europe
will take such approach as an affront. Politically, Boris Johnson's tone calls for a response
that might further complicate the Brexit issue. This is no time for “take it or
leave it”, as the PM is saying. That is unwise, but not surprising as Boris Johnson is more
interested in impressing the British nationalists than in finding a solution to
his country’s future relationship with Europe. He is already campaigning. The bizarre
Brexit plan he submitted today is part and parcel of his electoral strategy. Not
much more than that.
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