Opinion / Christopher Cermak
Round two
Hands up if you remember the Greek euro referendum in 2015. Back then it was Angela Merkel facing off with Alexis Tsipras, a brash, newly elected prime minister who believed that the threat of a euro exit could change the conditions of Greece’s EU bailout deal. After going a few late-night negotiating rounds with the German chancellor, he wound up accepting the terms of the bailout rather than risking a disastrous no-deal exit.
As we potentially enter the final throes of the UK’s Brexit campaign, only the characters have changed: this time Boris Johnson, the brash PM demanding new terms, is facing off with Emmanuel Macron. The French president says that the EU will be making a decision on the UK’s fate by the end of the week.
So why isn’t Merkel taking the lead? It’s a sign of shifting powers in Europe, sure, but the reality is that Macron is the bad cop on Brexit, taking up the mantle that Merkel held on Greece. France is the country most determined – or stubborn, depending on your point of view – to resist bending the EU’s founding principles to give Johnson what he wants, just as Germany was with Greece when the EU’s budget rules were the point of discussion.
One difference: Macron is unlikely to receive the same backlash from his European colleagues that Merkel got for her tough approach to Greece. But why is that? Is there more solidarity with Greece than with the UK? Or is there more trust in France’s EU vision than Germany’s? Diplomats, discuss.