Britain should use the next few months to “cool down and
rethink” its decision to leave the European Union, the socialist candidate to
head the next European Commission, Frans Timmermans, said on Wednesday.
Last week EU leaders gave Britain an extension of its
departure date until Oct. 31, with the possibility of leaving sooner if
parliament ratifies a divorce deal Prime Minister Theresa May has negotiated
with the EU. Lawmakers have already rejected the deal three times.
“I absolutely hope that the UK might stay in the EU,”
Timmermans, now the Commission’s first vice president, said in a television
debate on France 24 with his main rival, Manfred Weber of the centre-right
European People’s Party (EPP).
“I hope this period of extension will be used for Britain to
calm down and rethink things a bit, perhaps for politicians to be more
responsible with the promises they make, and then look at the issue again later
this year,” the Dutchman said.
“Who knows what might change in the meantime?” he said.
Timmermans was expressing a sentiment shared by some in the
EU, notably the chairman of EU leaders, Donald Tusk, that Britain could still
change its mind and stay in the EU.
Polls show that enough Britons may have had a change of
heart about Brexit since the 2016 referendum, in which they voted to leave the
bloc by 52 to 48 percent. But May and her government remain strongly opposed to
holding another vote.
Timmermans hopes to replace the EPP’s Jean-Claude Juncker as
head of the European Commission, the most powerful of EU institutions. He is
running on a ticket from the EU’s second-biggest political family, the
socialists.
Britain is likely to still be a member of the EU at the time
of the European Parliament elections on May 23-26, which means it would take
part in the vote. Britain’s opposition Labour Party, which backs a second referendum, could help Timmermans’ socialists win more seats in the 751-seat
European assembly.
Weber does not stand to benefit in the same way from British
participation in the EU elections because no UK parties belong to the EPP,
currently the largest grouping in the parliament.
“I have a problem that they (Britain) are now participating
in the EU elections, are deciding about the future of our union,” Weber said
during the TV debate with Timmermans.
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