French President Emmanuel Macron said Tuesday the door was “always open” for Britain to remain in the EU even after Prime Minister Theresa May said Brexit talks would begin next week.
“Of course the door is always open as long as the negotiations on Brexit have not finished,” Macron said in a press conference.
But he stressed that the British people had taken the sovereign decision to leave the 28-member bloc in their referendum a year ago, adding that the start of talks was an important milestone.
“Once it (the Brexit process) has started we need to be collectively clear that it’s more difficult to reverse course,” he said at the Elysee palace.
May stressed that she would stick to her timetable of starting Brexit discussions next week in Brussels, saying the talks were “on course” despite her domestic difficulties.
Her Conservative party lost its parliamentary majority in a bungled snap election last week which some observers suggested might lead May to abandon her plans for a so-called “hard Brexit”.
“I think there’s a unity of purpose among people in the UK. It’s a unity of purpose having voted to leave the EU that their government gets on with that and makes a success of it,” she said.
Before May’s arrival in Paris to meet Macron, many commentators had underlined their contrasting fortunes.
He is a 39-year-old centrist leader seemingly clearing all obstacles from his path after standing in and winning his first-ever election this spring.
Last Sunday, his new Republic On The Move party won the first round of parliamentary elections and is on course for an overwhelming majority in the new parliament.
She is a 60-year-old rightwing veteran who is now fighting to keep her job following the loss of the Conservative party’s majority in the British parliament.
“Everyone assumes that she’s a zombie,” Francois Heisbourg, a former French diplomat and chairman of the International Institute for Strategic Studies in London, told AFP this week.
He also repeated the conclusion of May’s former cabinet colleague George Osborne, now the editor of the London Evening Standard newspaper, who called her a “dead woman walking”.
Macron’s comments on leaving the “door open” are likely to encourage Britain’s minority europhiles who still dream of keeping Britain inside the EU.
May signalled she does not plan to change course, however, and the reversal of the historic Brexit decision last June would probably require another referendum.
Macron’s comments were echoed on Tuesday by German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble.
“If they wanted to change their decision, of course they would find open doors, but I think it’s not very likely,” Schaeuble told Bloomberg Television.