ADVERTISEMENT

May Resumes Talks to Keep Power Amid Calls to Soften Brexit

Former Premier Major Says May Has No Mandate for Hard Brexit

May Resumes Talks to Keep Power Amid Calls to Soften Brexit
Theresa May, U.K. prime minister (Photographer: Simon Dawson/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- Theresa May is under growing pressure to abandon her plan for a hard Brexit as she tries to stitch together a deal with Northern Ireland’s Democratic Unionists that will keep her Conservative Party in power.

Two former Tory prime ministers broke cover on Monday to demand that May reassess her approach to leaving the European Union after she lost her parliamentary majority in last week’s election.

David Cameron and John Major both urged May to collaborate with rival parties on shaping the U.K.’s departure from the European Union because she failed to win a mandate for a hard Brexit. Their separate interventions came as France and Germany told Britain the door is still open to reversing its decision to leave.

“It’s going to be difficult, there’s no doubt about that, but perhaps an opportunity to consult more widely with the other parties on how best we can achieve it,” Cameron told a business conference in Poland, according to a report in the Financial Times. “I think there will be pressure for a softer Brexit,” he said.

His comments emerged within hours of Major telling May to listen more to people who opposed leaving the EU. “A hard Brexit was not endorsed by the electorate,” Major told BBC Radio.

On Wednesday, the longest-serving lawmaker in the House of Commons and most prominent Tory advocate of the EU, former Chancellor of the Exchequer Kenneth Clarke, backed the calls for a new approach.

“I don’t remember a political situation like it,” Clarke told BBC Radio 4. “The national interest calls for a cross-party approach.”

Cameron and Major are close allies and in the past have coordinated their interventions in U.K. politics. Cameron -- who resigned after losing the Brexit referendum last year, and was replaced by May -- worked for Major’s government when he was a young adviser before being elected to Parliament in the 1990s.

They are the two most senior Conservatives to urge May to change course on Brexit after last week’s disastrous election result for the party. She called a snap vote in an attempt to win a bigger majority and strengthen her position before embarking on Brexit talks.

Instead, she lost her majority in a surprise result that saw her Labour opponents win seats. The comments from the two former premiers will embolden those Tory ministers who are privately plotting to soften May’s stance on Brexit, potentially even allowing the U.K. to stay in the single market and customs union.

Brexit negotiations are due to begin next week. Before then, May hopes to conclude talks with Democratic Unionist Party leader Arlene Foster to secure the backing of her 10 lawmakers in the House of Commons for the Tories’ program for government.

Deadly Fire

A government official said Tuesday the talks were making good progress. Foster tweeted that “we hope soon to be able to bring this work to a successful conclusion.” However, U.K. media reported that any announcement on Wednesday is unlikely, with the domestic news agenda dominated by a deadly fire in an apartment block in west London.

In Paris on Tuesday, May met French President Emmanuel Macron, who echoed German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble’s comments earlier in the day that it’s not too late for the U.K. to change its mind and stay in the EU.

“The British government has said we will stay with the Brexit,” Schaeuble said in a Bloomberg interview. “But if they wanted to change their decision, of course, they would find open doors.”

--With assistance from Svenja O'Donnell Thomas Penny and Nejra Cehic

To contact the reporters on this story: Tim Ross in London at tross54@bloomberg.net, Alex Morales in London at amorales2@bloomberg.net, Charlotte Ryan in London at cryan147@bloomberg.net.

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Alan Crawford at acrawford6@bloomberg.net, Eddie Buckle