Johnson
humiliated by Luxembourg PM at 'empty chair' press conference
Xavier
Bettel gesticulates at empty podium as British PM skips press conference amid
loud protests
Daniel
Boffey in Luxembourg
Mon 16 Sep
2019 18.52 BSTFirst published on Mon 16 Sep 2019 17.06 BST
Boris
Johnson was left humiliated and his claims of progress in the Brexit
negotiations in tatters after a chaotic visit to Luxembourg ended in the prime
minister being mocked by a fellow European leader for cancelling a press
appearance to avoid protesters.
Johnson was
booed and jeered as he left a working lunch with the European commission
president, Jean-Claude Juncker, before opting out of plans to speak alongside
Luxembourg’s prime minister, Xavier Bettel, after being targeted by a larger
crowd.
The
cancellation left Johnson scuttling past the waiting lecterns in a courtyard
outside the prime minister’s office to chants of “bollocks to Brexit” and “bog
off Boris” by protesters a few metres away.
As the
chaotic scenes were played out, the European commission issued a statement
disclosing that Juncker had told the prime minister that it was his
responsibility to come forward with legally operational solutions and that
“such proposals have not yet been made”, in contradiction of the government’s
recent claims.
The prime
minister’s dash to Luxembourg was supposed to have been a key moment for him to
illustrate that Brexit talks were moving towards a deal, with Downing Street
briefing after the meeting with Juncker that negotiations in Brussels would
move from being bi-weekly to daily.
But the
anger from Britons living in Luxembourg, and the exasperation of the EU leaders
spilled over as Johnson moved between meetings.
Bettel, who
gave a wave to the crowds and offered a defence of their right to demonstrate
after Johnson’s decision to leave, did not mince his words as he took the
lectern next to the one left empty by the British prime minister’s no-show,
with the union flag still in position.
He mocked
the varying suggestions in recent weeks from Johnson that there had been good
progress in the Brexit talks and that it would take the strength of the comic
hero, the Incredible Hulk, to leave the EU with a deal.
Bettel
said: “I asked also Mr Johnson: I read in the papers a few days ago that it
goes from ‘big progress’, to Hulk, to David Cameron proposing a second Brexit
[referendum]. And Mr Johnson said there won’t be a second referendum, because I
asked him: wouldn’t that be a solution to get out of the situation?”
Bettel said
the UK government needed to lay out on paper an alternative to the Irish
backstop, and appeared to suggest that party political considerations might be
standing in the way.
EU
officials have long believed that Johnson is unlikely to table any ideas until
after the Conservative party conference in two weeks but they fear that this
will not allow enough time for a deal to be agreed given the gap between the
two sides.
A
government source confirmed that the UK would not be putting forward any formal
text for at least another week. No 10 maintains that progress is being made and
that a deal is still possible in the time remaining. Johnson told the BBC he
was “cautiously optimistic” because EU leaders had had “a bellyful of all this
stuff”.
But Bettel
said: “People need to know what is going to happen to them in six weeks time.
They need certainty and they need stability. You cannot hold their future
hostage for party political gain.” Gesticulating to the empty lectern, he added:
“So now it is on Mr Johnson.”
Bettel
raised his voice in frustration when asked by reporters whether Downing Street
may be pursuing a sham negotiation in order to pin the blame on the EU for a
no-deal Brexit: “I told him, ‘I hear a lot but I don’t read a lot’. If they
want to discuss anything we need to have it written [down] … Don’t put the
blame on us because they don’t know how to get out of the situation they put
themselves in.”
Asked about
the suggestion that Johnson would break the law to avoid extending article 50,
Bettel said: “This wouldn’t happen in Luxembourg.”
It is
understood Downing Street had asked that the scheduled press conference with
Bettel be moved inside away from a crowd of around 75 noisy protesters but that
the Luxembourg government rejected the request.
From the
safety of the British embassy, Johnson later told broadcasters the Brexit talks
were in a “difficult moment” and that the press conference had to be cancelled
as “there was clearly going to be a lot of noise and our points would have been
drowned out”.
Johnson
insisted that there was movement in the talks in which the UK is trying to find
an alternative plan to the Irish backstop for avoiding a hard border on the
island of Ireland.
He said:
“Over the last couple of weeks, there’s been a lot of work … papers have been
shared. But we are now at the stage where we need to start accelerating the
work and that was the agreement today with Jean-Claude Juncker and Michel
Barnier.
“We need to
manage this carefully. Yes there is a good chance of a deal, yes I can see the
shape of it. Everybody can see roughly what could be done.”
Johnson
conceded that a deal was not “necessarily in the bag” but that all sides were
working to find a compromise. Confronted with the commission’s statement on a
lack of progress, Johnson said: “Well, it’s certainly the case that the
commission is still officially sticking on their position that the backstop has
got to be there.”
The
protests outside the Bettel’s offices were organised by David Pike, a classical
baritone singer with joint Canadian, British and Luxemburger nationality. He
led the noisy singing and chanting to the EU’s anthem.
“We are
British and quite often dual nationals. I’m not a protester. I have been on a
protest,” he said. “These people don’t go on protest, they are professionals,
boring people. People who are concerned about this catastrophe.”
An official
in the Luxembourg government official said that they had to decline Downing
Street’s request for the press conference to be inside as there was not a room
large enough for the media: “We tried to change it but on such short notice we
had to work with what we had – it really wasn’t our intention to embarrass Mr
Johnson.”
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