British Prime Minister Theresa May likely faces the toughest challenge of any world leader as she tries to come to a divorce agreement with the European Union, a top EU official told CNBC Tuesday.
“Good luck is all I say to Theresa May,” Alexander Stubb, vice president of the European Investment Bank (EIB), told CNBC’s Silvia Amaro on Tuesday, when asked what advice he had to offer to her. The EIB is the EU’s official lending institution.
Stubb, who formerly served as Finland’s prime minister, said May probably has the “toughest PM job in the world” because “she has to negotiate a package which she knows in the heart of her hearts is not a good deal for the United Kingdom or for Europe.”
“And on top of that,” he added, “she has her own barking at her ankles from morning to night, so my only advice is just hang in there, good luck and I feel for you.”
Stubb was referring to lawmakers within May’s party, who are displeased with her so-called Chequers deal. May’s Chequers plan would see some alignment between the U.K. and the EU continuing after March 29, 2019 in terms of trade and regulations although the deal foresees the U.K. being able to stop the free movement of people from the EU. It also foresees the U.K. being able to strike independent trade deals elsewhere.
Some lawmakers in May’s reining Conservative Party, including former Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson, have condemned the plan aggressively, arguing it strays from what the British public voted for in June 2016.
On the topic of the possibility of Westminster and Brussels reaching a Brexit deal, Stubb said: “Usually these things have a tendency to take a while, so I wouldn’t bank on getting a deal this week.”
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