Angela
Merkel ‘tormented’ by Brexit vote and saw it as ‘humiliation’ for EU
Former
German chancellor’s book tells how she tried to help David Cameron win over
Britain’s Eurosceptics
Kate
Connolly in Berlin
Sun 24 Nov
2024 15.26 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2024/nov/24/angela-merkel-tormented-brexit-vote-humiliation-eu
Angela
Merkel has said she was “tormented” over the result of the Brexit referendum
and viewed it as a “humiliation, a disgrace” for the EU that Britain was
leaving.
In her
autobiography, Freedom, due to be published on Tuesday, the former German
chancellor says she was dismayed by the notion that she might have done more to
help the then British prime minister, David Cameron, who was keen for the UK to
stay in the EU, but that ultimately, she concluded, he only had himself to
blame.
In extracts
from the book, Merkel, who left office three years ago, said looking back she
recognised that Brexit was on the cards once Cameron proposed in 2005 that
Conservative party MEPs should leave the European People’s party, which they
subsequently did, over the parliamentary alliance’s backing of the Lisbon
treaty in 2009.
The treaty
introduced significant changes to the EU that anti-European critics considered
undemocratic.
In her
700-page memoir, about five pages are dedicated to Brexit and to her role in
the pre-referendum negotiations with Cameron in an attempt to help him keep
Britain inside the bloc. She also writes about the subsequent exit deal drawn
out over several years once Britain had decided to leave, and refers to how
deflated she felt over the result.
“To me, the
result felt like a humiliation, a disgrace for us, the other members of the
European Union – the United Kingdom was leaving us in the lurch. This changed
the European Union in the view of the world; we were weakened.”
Merkel
writes about how she had reached out to Cameron as he struggled to try to
secure changes over freedom of movement and trade that might have won over
Eurosceptics and allowed him to keep the UK in a reformed EU.
She says she
“tried wherever possible to help David Cameron”, despite risking the ire of
other EU leaders who had distanced themselves from him.
Referring to
various stages in her attempts to help him and ensure he was not isolated, most
crucially at a summit of EU leaders in February 2016 during which an agreement
was expected to be reached over Britain’s renegotiation demands to stay in the
EU, she says: “My support of him rendered me an outsider with my other
colleagues … The impact of the euro crisis was still lingering, and I was also
being repeatedly accused of stinginess.
“And yet,
during the summit, I steadfastly remained by David Cameron’s side for an entire
evening. In this way I was able to prevent his complete isolation in the
council and eventually move the others to back down. I did this because I knew
from various discussions with Cameron that where domestic policy was concerned,
he had no room for manoeuvre whatsoever.”
But she
writes that there came a point when she could no longer help him.
The UK, she
says, had not helped itself by making the mistake of not introducing
restrictions on eastern European workers once 10 new countries joined the bloc
in May 2004, the then Labour government having grossly underestimated the
number of people who would arrive. This gave Eurosceptics the chance to put
freedom of movement in a negative light.
By contrast,
France and Germany introduced a gradual phase-in of eastern Europeans’ rights
to work, not giving them full access to their labour markets until 2011.
Merkel says
she thought Cameron’s pledge in 2005 for the Conservatives to leave the EPP was
the initial nail in the coffin of any attempts to keep Britain in the EU. “He
therefore, from the very beginning, put himself in the hands of those who were
sceptical about the European Union, and was never able to escape this
dependency,” she writes.
Brexit, she
concludes, “demonstrated in textbook fashion the consequences that can arise
when there’s a miscalculation from the very start”.
Subsequently
she was pained by the idea that she might have been able to have done more to
keep the UK in the fold, she says.
“After the
referendum, I was tormented by whether I should have made even more concessions
toward the UK to make it possible for them to remain in the community. I came
to the conclusion that, in the face of the political developments taking place
at the time within the country, there wouldn’t have been any reasonable way of
my preventing the UK’s path out of the European Union as an outsider. Even with
the best political will, mistakes of the past could not be undone.”
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