Steve Bell: EU’s Ursula von der Leyen meets King Charles – cartoon
THE GUARDIAN
King Charles’ first political row is about Brexit
because of course it is
Brexiteers take aim at Downing Street over British
monarch’s meeting with the EU chief.
BY MATT
HONEYCOMBE-FOSTER AND ANDREW MCDONALD
FEBRUARY
27, 2023 5:33 PM CET
https://www.politico.eu/article/king-charles-first-political-row-brexit/
LONDON —
Less than six months into his reign, King Charles is at the center of a Brexity
political storm.
The U.K.
monarch’s meeting Monday with European Commission President Ursula von der
Leyen — on the day a long-awaited deal to put months of wrangling over
post-Brexit trade was struck — sparked swift fury among Euroskeptic
politicians, who saw it as a crude attempt to bump them into backing an
agreement.
“I cannot
quite believe that No10 would ask HM the King to become involved in the
finalising of a deal as controversial as this one,” tweeted Northern Ireland’s
former First Minister Arlene Foster. The “crass” move would, she said, “go down
very badly” in Northern Ireland.
The U.K.
sovereign is, according to the unwritten British constitution, meant to
represent the whole country and steer well clear of politics (although as
prince of Wales, Charles was seen to have sailed close to the wind).
Both No. 10
Downing Street and the European Commission stressed that von der Leyen’s visit
was separate from talks on the Northern Ireland protocol. The BBC and the Daily
Mail both reported that the pair, who have met before, would discuss climate
change and the war in Ukraine. A European Commission spokesperson said von der
Leyen’s meeting with the king was “not part” of the Brexit protocol talks, and
instead on “separate tracks of discussion.”
But the
move came on a day of highly-choreographed political theater, including a joint
press conference between Prime Minister Rishi Sunak and von der Leyen in Windsor,
home to royal residence Windsor Palace. Brexiteers were quick to make what they
saw as a link, and trained their fire on No. 10.
“I think
the sovereign should only be involved when things have been completed and
accepted,” Jacob Rees-Mogg, a former Cabinet minister, told broadcaster GB News
on Monday morning.
He added:
“The king gives assent to acts of parliament when parliament has agreed; he
doesn’t express his view on acts of parliament when they are going through the
process. I think the same applies, that his majesty should not be involved
until there is full support for this agreement.”
Nigel
Farage, the former Brexit Party leader and ex-MEP, said it was “absolutely
disgraceful” to “even ask the king to get involved in something that is overtly
political in every way.”
Before an
official announcement came, Democratic Unionist Party MP Sammy Wilson branded
the idea — first reported by Sky News on Friday evening — a “cynical use, or
abuse of the king” that would only raise the temperature in Northern Ireland.
Conflicting
accounts about the genesis of the meeting were flying on Monday as the
face-to-face was confirmed.
A palace
spokesman said the king was “pleased to meet any world leader if they are
visiting Britain,” and stressed it is “the government’s advice that he should
do so.”
Downing
Street pointed to the palace. Sunak’s official spokesman said Monday that
meeting von der Leyen was “fundamentally” a decision for Buckingham Palace, but
declined to say who had requested the sit-down.
The prime
minister “firmly believes it’s for the king to make those decisions,” the
spokesman told reporters at the daily No. 10 press briefing.
“It’s not
uncommon for his majesty to accept invitations to meet certain leaders,” he
added, pointing to Charles’ recent audiences with the presidents of Poland and
Ukraine.
Former
Cabinet minister — and close ally of ex-Prime Minister Boris Johnson — Nadine
Dorries wasn’t buying it. “Either No10 is lying or Buckingham Palace,” she
tweeted. “I know which one my money is on.”
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