
President Trump on Thursday said his
administration wants to make a "large scale trade deal" with the U.K.
and called the potential for such a deal "unlimited" -- a boost to
British Prime Minister Theresa May’s besieged government on the same day as
lawmakers across the pond are due to vote on delaying Britain’s departure from
the bloc.
“My Administration looks forward to
negotiating a large scale Trade Deal with the United Kingdom,” he tweeted. “The
potential is unlimited!”
Trump’s pledge is likely to be welcomed by
pro-Brexit lawmakers in the U.K., who have signaled the value of Britain being
able to negotiate its own trade deals once it leaves the E.U. Under E.U. terms,
individual countries are not allowed to negotiate their own deals.
Trump has been a vocal supporter of
Britain’s 2016 decision to leave the E.U., claiming that the outcome of that
vote foreshadowed his election victory a few months later. He has allied
himself with pro-Brexit figures in the U.K., and has repeatedly promised to
make a trade deal with the U.S. ally. Last summer the U.S. Trade Representative’s
Office formed a trading “committee” with the U.K. to work out a trade
agreement, as a way to get around the fact that the U.S. cannot formally
negotiate with the U.K. until it leaves the E.U.
Later on Thursday, in the Oval Office
alongside Irish Prime Minister Leo Varadkar, Trump said he was "surprised
at how badly it's all gone from the standpoint of a negotiation" and said
that May didn't listen to his advice on how to negotiate with the E.U. He also
said that a second referendum, that some pro-E.U. politicians are calling for
in the U.K., would be "unfair."
"I hate to see everything being
ripped apart right now, I don't think another vote would be possible because it
would be very unfair to the people that won that say: 'What do you mean you're
going to take another vote?'" he said. "So that would be tough."
Britons voted in 2016 to leave the E.U.,
and Britain is set to leave the bloc on March 29. But Parliament overwhelmingly
voted down May’s withdrawal agreement this week for the second time, leaving
Britain set to exit without a deal -- something that business leaders and
pro-E.U. lawmakers have warned would be catastrophic for the country.
Pro-Brexit lawmakers have downplayed fears
of chaos at ports and food and medicine shortages, noting that the U.K. will
revert to World Trade Organization (W.T.O.) terms, and have dismissed the
warnings as part of a “Project Fear” by those seeking to delay and eventually
cancel Brexit.
Lawmakers voted Wednesday on a non-binding
motion to reject a “no deal” Brexit, meaning that Parliament will vote Thursday
on a motion that would call for May’s government to seek an extension of
Britain’s departure until June.
It is not clear that E.U. leaders will
agree to such an extension. French President Emmanuel Macron said last month
that E.U. leaders would only agree to an extension “if it is justified by new
choices by the British.” European Council President Donald Tusk said on Thursday
that he would call for E.U. leaders to be open to a “long extension” but that
was on the condition that Britain “rethink its Brexit strategy and build
consensus around it.”
Nenhum comentário:
Postar um comentário