Safe Mode: On
EU Observers Begin Serious Consideration To British EU Exit

British Prime Minister David Cameron's remarks at the end of June on a possible referendum on his country's relationship with the European Union have prompted pundits elsewhere in Europe to consider the possibility of the UK leaving the bloc altogether.

Opinions vary on how likely or desirable this is. Some would like Britain to stay in the EU, others consider that the country's eventual departure is all but inevitable, and a third group would positively welcome such a development.


Please stay!

The current edition of the German Council on Foreign Relations journal, Internationale Politik, includes an article on "The British question".

Its author, Hans Kundnani, argues that closer integration, which is "probably required" to resolve the euro crisis, "could force Britain to leave the EU".

He says German politicians and media appear to be divided over how important it is to prevent this. Chancellor Angela Merkel seems to be "torn both ways". Her intuitive preference for Britain to stay may come to be outweighed by the "overwhelming pressure" she faces to resolve the euro crisis.

However, Mr Kundnani himself warns that Britain's departure would be "fatal" for the bloc and that Mrs Merkel will have to make greater concessions to Britain if she wants to avoid such an outcome.

Others share this view. A commentary by Michael Stuermer in the German daily Die Welt says it is "in the German interest to keep Britain in the EU at almost any cost". Mr Stuermer praises the "free trade instincts" of the British and says European defence without the UK "would be a knife without a blade".

Hubert Wetzel in Germany's Sueddeutsche Zeitung is somewhat cooler on Britain's continued membership. "Of course Britain's departure would be a disaster for the EU. However, with all due respect, Europe has bigger problems," Mr Wetzel says.


Exit is inevitable!

Some French-language commentators, in particular, regard Britain's eventual departure from the EU as a foregone conclusion.

The Europe correspondent of the French daily Liberation, Jean Quatremer, is categorical. "In a few years' time, Britain will have left the EU," he says in a blog post.

Mr Quatremer argues that, in the face of the coming deepening of eurozone ties, Britain's traditional strategy of negotiating opt-outs might rapidly become "unmanageable" and "even quite simply impossible".

Add to that the "growing hysteria" in the British debate on the EU, and it becomes "difficult to see" how a referendum on EU membership can be avoided, "all the more since the new generation of Conservative leaders is fanatically europhobic".

A lengthy editorial in French on the EU-Logos website agrees that "the moment of truth has arrived" for the UK.

It says the launching of an audit of EU powers and their impact on the UK by Foreign Secretary William Hague is unlikely to stop the British march towards "a rejection, in one form or another, of the European Union, a rejection which is inexorably gaining ground".

The editorial appears to welcome the prospect of a British exit. "The attitude of the United Kingdom is calling the whole patiently constructed edifice into question too strongly and too clearly. Its refusals have disheartened the last of its defenders," it says.


Good-bye and good riddance!

There is in fact a body of opinion according to which Britain's departure would be a boon to a European Union which is being held back by London's constant objections.

"Does the United Kingdom have to leave the European Union?", asks Charles Nonne in a French-language article promoted on bloggingportal.eu.

The author laments the current paralysis of European integration and squarely puts the blame on the UK. "By withdrawing from the institutions of the European Union, the United Kingdom would offer the EU an opportunity to launch a real process of federalisation," he says.

In a German-language post on blogactiv.eu entitled "Without you then!", Andreas Sowa says a "less formal link between Britain and the EU seems to be a necessary evil on the way to an institutionally and conceptually functioning Europe" and concludes: "If you are not willing, then we shall proceed without you. For the next few steps, Europe does not need Britain."

Such sentiments are not entirely confined to EU blogging portals. In December 2011, the highbrow German weekly newspaper Die Zeit carried two articles on Britain's EU membership, one in favour and the other against. Making the case against, the paper's Brussels correspondent, Matthias Krupa, said that "Britain must decide what role it wants to play in the EU in future. As notorious naysayers, the British are redundant."



http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-19742182


Added: Oct-6-2012 
By: drynwhyl
In:
Regional News
Tags: europe, eu, european, union, euro, great, britain, british, exit, referendum, integration, debate
Marked as: approved
Views: 1594 | Comments: 21 | Votes: 0 | Favorites: 0 | Shared: 0 | Updates: 0 | Times used in channels: 2
You need to be registered in order to add comments! Register HERE
Sort by: Newest first | Oldest first | Highest score first
Liveleak opposes racial slurs - if you do spot comments that fall into this category, please report them for us to review.
  • A lot of Brits are sick and tired of EU rules and laws. It took years to get rid of Abu Hamza and his ilk. Parasites who feed off our system, while condemning us. They would happily see us under a blade, while the EU bleat on about their human rights. We had, and want to get back, our own common law.

    Posted Oct-6-2012 By 

    (8)

  • get tha fuck outta the shitty eu

    Posted Oct-6-2012 By 

    (7)

  • Get out now Britain, while you still have some fucking money left, and a modicum of your national sovereignty intact!

    Posted Oct-6-2012 By 

    (5)

  • Comment of user 'Rothschad' has been deleted by author!
    • @Rothschad
      make a poll asking whether the age of retirement should be lowered. The public opinion of course would say "yes". Make a poll to lower the taxes, the answer would be "yes". Public opinion is not always the best choice and rarely reflects what is in the best interest of a country. The undesired factors that come into play here are selfishness and too little knowledge of an issue's complexity.

      My take on whether the UK should leave the EU? I realy dont care but More..

      Posted Oct-7-2012 By 

      (2)

  • Get out Great Brit get out! Leave before they suck ya dry.

    Posted Oct-6-2012 By 

    (3)

  • Brits don't want to see the country go to shit under EU rule, Good for England fuck the EU.

    Posted Oct-6-2012 By 

    (3)

  • Leave the EU, toss out the foreigners, and plug that hole between you and France.

    Posted Oct-6-2012 By 

    (2)

  • Comment of user 'MB-UK' has been deleted by author!
  • Stick your europhobic shite right up your manky arses, Britain is fed up being part of the fucked up and corrupt EU.

    Posted Oct-7-2012 By 

    (1)

  • Whew, finally came to your senses. Tits.

    Posted Oct-6-2012 By 

    (0)

  • CYA

    Posted Oct-6-2012 By 

    (0)

  • Hmm Cameron hints at leaving the EU...
    I mean there is no good news for the British coming from Cameron...
    Ever.
    Any decision he makes we are going to get fucked one way or another, the only question is how deep how long and which orifice...

    Posted Oct-6-2012 By 

    (0)

  • Three options for Britain's future in the EU = Monty Hall's Let's-Make-A-Deal curtains. One curtain conceals the jackpot; the other two, goats. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monty_Hall_problem

    Posted Oct-6-2012 By 

    (0)

  • I'm squarely in the "lets get out of that stinking rats nest called the EU!" camp. A overbearing, unwieldy, heavy handed institution, presided over by unelected officials seeking only to enrich themselves. Membership for the UK has few upsides & many, many downsides.

    As a "powerhouse nation", like Germany & France, we are looked at to provide(££££)for everyone else's misfortune, just look at Greece. We have to abide by stupid rules that put limits on our export More..

    Posted Oct-7-2012 By 

    (0)

  • Yeah,kick the brits.
    We have enough with them

    Posted Oct-7-2012 By 

    (-2)

    • @POLUX No-one's kicking anyone Pierre! If we leave, it'll be on our terms. We'll leave you Frogs & the Germans to bail out the Greeks, maybe the Portuguese, Spanish & whoever else goes bankrupt to save your precious EU!

      Shouldn't be too jarring for us, after all we never bothered with that Monopoly money, the invented currency that is the Euro!

      Btw, fuck your avatar you Argentinian loving fuckhead!!

      Posted Oct-7-2012 By 

      (1)