Brexit the Theresa May way

Opinion Wednesday 11/July/2018 15:07 PM
By: Times News Service
Brexit the Theresa May way

Theresa May sat quietly sipping tea in the corner of a small room at the Conservative Party conference in Manchester last October.
The British prime minister had just delivered a speech meant to restore her authority over a ruling party that was sliding in the polls and riven by the country's decision to leave the European Union.
It had gone disastrously.
A prankster handed her a fake notice of dismissal, she struggled with a persistent cough and even the slogan behind her, "BUILDING A COUNTRY THAT WORKS FOR EVERYONE," failed when several letters fell to the floor, prompting giggles from the audience.
Her grip on power had never looked weaker.
When May's speech writer at the time, Chris Wilkins, entered the room where the prime minister was sitting with her husband and a handful of aides, the atmosphere was strained, he said.
He briefly wondered if she was on the point of quitting. But May shrugged.
"She said, 'There's nothing I could do about it. It wasn't my fault. It's one of those things," Wilkins recalled.
It was typically unemotional, say more than a dozen people who have worked with May.
These people, including present and former aides and a former minister, portray her as someone who meets criticism, catastrophe and success with the same even response - take each day as it comes and get back to work. In interviews, they spoke of her resilience, sense of duty and attention to detail.
They said the traits that helped May recover from that calamitous speech in Manchester also inform her approach to leading Britain out of the EU.
Work through the detail, absorb setbacks and keep going.
Her critics, inside and outside her Conservative Party, say May is remote and lacks vision, a robot or "Maybot."
In their view, she is stumbling through the Brexit negotiations with Brussels, an accidental prime minister doing a job that no one else wants. Her latest attempt to agree a Brexit plan was undermined this week when two senior cabinet ministers resigned in protest at her willingness to accept a deal that in many ways would continue to bind Britain to the EU.
David Davis, the minister in charge of Brexit negotiations, and Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson, both strongly pro-Brexit, quit within hours of each other.
May immediately appointed replacements, but now faces powerful opponents who are free to attack her from outside government.
Once again her grip on power has looked shaky, though so far she seems to have faced down any wide rebellion.
Britain has less than nine months to organise its place in the world outside the EU.
On March 29 next year, Britain is due to leave the bloc it joined more than 40 years ago and the task is huge: Most of Britain's economy and laws governing trade and workers' rights are interlocked with those of its EU partners.
The person at the centre of the maelstrom is May, and her calm reserve is playing a key role in shaping Brexit.
"She has taken over more problems than any other prime minister in my lifetime and none of them are her fault, she didn't create any of them," said Ken Clarke, elder statesman of the Conservative Party.
Clarke served at the helm of several departments, including as interior minister and Chancellor of the Exchequer in a career spanning five decades.
May, who declined to be interviewed for this article, stood firm in the wake of the ministerial resignations.
She said in parliament she would continue with her plans, describing them as the "right Brexit."
When Britons narrowly voted to leave the EU in a referendum in June 2016, the result split the country and the Conservative Party.
May emerged from the chaos as the "steady" choice to succeed David Cameron as party leader and prime minister.
Like Cameron, she had campaigned for Britain to remain in the EU. But after her appointment as prime minister in July 2016 she promised to respect the will of the people and navigate a route out of the bloc.
She made an asset of a low-key, solitary style that contrasted with her media-savvy predecessor.
"I don't tour the television studios. I don't gossip about people over lunch. I don't go drinking in parliament's bars. I don't often wear my heart on my sleeve. I just get on with the job in front of me," she said at the time.
May, 61, doesn't belong to a party faction, and although she served as interior minister for six years under Cameron, she wasn't part of his clique.
She dislikes media interviews, current and former aides say, and is ill at ease at the social gatherings that are part and parcel of being party leader.
"If you've got a choice between sitting in a meeting that is talking about a policy area that really matters, and spending half an hour on that, or half an hour prepping for a media interview, she is going to choose the first of those because that is the job to her," former speech writer Wilkins said.
A comparison of May's and Cameron's prime ministerial diaries illustrates their difference in style.
Over a three-month sample period, from April to June 2016, Cameron had more than 10 meetings with national broadcast and print media and hosted two social events at his Downing Street residence.
In the same three months of 2017, May had one meeting with regional media.
There was no Downing Street party.
A senior 10 Downing Street official said the prime minister was "always busy, always at receptions, mostly charity ones. Perhaps she doesn't have three dinners a week with media owners, but everyone's style is different."
A leading Conservative party donor, Alexander Temerko, a British citizen originally from Ukraine, contrasted the two leaders' behaviour at donor gatherings.
Where May was reserved, he told Reuters, Cameron was accessible.
May would deliver "a nice speech, shake hands, stroll around. Couple of words and then she goes."
"There were a lot of photo opportunities with David. He's much warmer."
Frances O'Grady, general secretary of Britain's main labour organisation, the Trades Union Congress, lamented she had met May only once, "and I have in the past reflected on the fact that I've met (Germany's) Angela Merkel, the president of Ireland and various others many more times than our own prime minister."
May's spokesman countered that the prime minister meets regularly with industry leaders and has striven to support workers and their rights. At times, the public has mistaken May's reserve for coldness, and that has hurt, said the former minister and an aide.
When a fire in a social housing block killed 71 people in London in June 2017, many Britons accused May of lacking empathy.
On the first anniversary of the fire, in a rare show of emotion, May said she would "always regret" not meeting survivors immediately after the disaster.
Two Conservative Party colleagues described May as an awkward companion.
If there were two people in a room, they said, "she remains silent until she is asked a question."
An image from one of May's first EU summits, in December 2016, showed her standing alone, fiddling with her cuff, as other leaders chatted and embraced.
Her critics seized on the picture as a symbol of Britain's isolation.
But one former aide described such moments as "water off a duck's back" for May.
It suits her purpose to keep a distance, said the aide.
In negotiations to achieve a Brexit deal, described as a 3D game of chess by one colleague, such reticence can be useful.
Her approach is to say little, focus on the details and leave the courting to others in her team, such as her Brexit adviser Oliver Robbins.
The senior 10 Downing Street official said: "Olly Robbins of course works very hard on his relationship with fellow sherpas, Tim Barrow (Britain's permanent representative to the EU) charms the diplomats, the PM talks to the leaders."
May is no EU rookie.
During her six years as interior minister she attended numerous meetings of the EU's Justice and Home Affairs Council, which develops EU policy on security and crime.
She developed a distaste for EU jargon.
In early 2016, speechwriters wrote the word "solidarity" into a speech the prime minister was to deliver.
May objected that she'd sat through "too many EU meetings where we talk about solidarity all the time so can we use a different word please?" They agreed on "shared society" instead.
EU officials, bitter over Britain's decision to leave the bloc, concede that May is always on top of the detail in talks.
But, they add, she and her government can often show a lack of understanding of how the bloc works.
May's critics, including some in the Conservative Party, say her "provincial" English roots make her ill-equipped for EU diplomacy.
If you want to understand May, go to Maidenhead, advised two other colleagues who know her well.
They were referring to the town on the River Thames west of London that she has represented in parliament since 1997.
The village of Sonning, a few miles upstream, is her adopted home.
With whitewashed cottages blended among palatial houses, it is a classic example of the manicured countryside in southern England's well-heeled areas.
"She loves the area," said Richard Kellaway, an oil and chemical storage consultant who serves on the local council and is chairman of the Maidenhead Conservative Association.
"This is very much her home."
When May is at a low ebb - as she was after the Manchester speech and the London housing block fire - she retreats into her work and to Sonning, several aides said.
Her husband Philip is a tremendous support, according to those who know May well; he is often at his wife's side in Downing Street during the week and in Sonning, where they spend most weekends.
When in the village, she has a routine of church every Sunday and regular trips to the Waitrose supermarket in nearby Twyford.
Typically, she is dutiful in turning up to local events.
After racing to Brussels in the early hours of a December morning for another in a long series of EU crisis meetings about Brexit, May headed back to Maidenhead on December 8 to become an honorary member of the local Rotary Club.
"Mrs May met with club president John Clegg and other club members at Maidenhead Town Hall to be presented with a certificate and Rotary pin," the club announced at the time.
After authorising British airstrikes on Syria with allies the United States and France in April, May was soon back in her constituency to take part in the opening of the summer exhibition at the Stanley Spencer art gallery in the village of Cookham.
"She had had about two hours sleep," Kellaway said.
In May and June, May was wrestling with yet another Brexit crisis, this time over the fate of the border between Northern Ireland, which is part of the UK, and Ireland, which is an EU member.
She still found time to open a refurbished church in Maidenhead, visit the local non-profit Citizens Advice Service and attend the annual Maidenhead Duck Derby.
The trappings of being prime minister of the world's fifth largest economy do not sit well with her.
She dislikes having to have a security detail, and routinely checks and double checks the front door of her mock Tudor-style home in Sonning to make sure it is locked even though it is probably one of the most secure houses in Britain.
An enthusiastic cook, she doesn't feel at home in the sleek, steel kitchen Cameron and his wife installed in Downing Street, saying it is not a "cook's kitchen."
Nor is she a fan of Chequers, the 16th-century country manor house retreat used by British prime ministers.
She will run after her staff if they leave something behind in her office, current and former aides say.
A creature of habit, she often has the same chicken salad from Pret a Manger, a chain of sandwich shops.
Aides say May has a brilliant memory.
Kellaway, the Maidenhead councillor, recalled her delivering a word-perfect repeat of a rap performed for her by school children.
But her mechanical delivery in front of the cameras led to her becoming known as the "Maybot" in the British media - and the tag has stuck. May's team took an early decision to use speeches to set out "proper thoughtful arguments."
They hoped that would suit May's style more than the Twitter politics of some other world leaders, such as US President Donald Trump.
Her former speech writer, Wilkins, explained May's methods.
She would sit down with Wilkins and her then chief of staff, Nick Timothy, to outline the themes.
The two men would then write a draft, which May would read and respond to within hours.
She would zero in on the detail.
May knew that her speech in Manchester last October would be one of the most important of her premiership.
She wanted to assert her authority over her party after a poor showing at a general election four months earlier.
The Conservatives had won the largest number of seats, but were reliant on the backing of a small Northern Irish party for a majority.
Preparing the speech, Wilkins asked May for a narrative to describe her motivation for staying in politics.
Her answer was: "And when people ask me why I put myself through it - the long hours, the pressure, the criticism and insults that inevitably go with the job - I tell them this: I do it to root out injustice and to give everyone in our country a voice."
May explained her vision of "the British dream" by talking about her grandmother, a lady's maid below stairs, who had three professors and a prime minister among her grandchildren.
"And we all went, 'That's brilliant,' and she said, 'Is it?'" Wilkins recalled.
"Yes, that's human, that's what it's all about."
It was the perfect material to make her more human, Wilkins said, but she had not recognised it.
Unfortunately for May, few people recall the contents of that speech.
Instead it is remembered for the prankster, May's cough and the disintegrating set.
May inspires loyalty in her team because she is, several aides say, the consummate professional. But outside that small team, that professionalism can feel very cold.
One party colleague, a May critic, described her as "a sphinx without a riddle."
That imperturbability, however, has its uses during the fraught and complex process of Brexit.
As one Conservative Party member who complains about May's handling of the process said: "I'll give her one thing, she really does just carry on." - Reuters