World  |  Sun Mar 29, 2015 2:42am EDT Related:  World  
Even before any 'Brexit' vote, UK losing sway in Europe
BRUSSELS  |  By Paul Taylor                     European Union flags flutter 
outside the EU Commission headquarters in Brussels February 2, 2015.  
Reuters/Francois Lenoir  BRUSSELS (Reuters) - After decades of punching above 
its weight in Europe, Britain's influence in the European Union is waning, even 
before we know whether a promised referendum on "Brexit" will go ahead.London's 
partners are keen to keep Britain in the 28-nation bloc, but not at any price. 
They value its open economy, international outlook, military prowess, 
democratic culture and able civil servants, even though it remains 
semi-detached outside the euro currency, the Schengen open border area and much 
police and judicial cooperation, and with a permanent rebate on its EU budget 
contribution.But there is growing frustration in Brussels, Berlin and Paris at 
the lack of clarity over Prime Minister David Cameron's goals if he is 
re-elected on May 7 and seeks to renegotiate Britain's EU membership and put 
the result to a vote in 2017."The real danger is that they raise demands that 
cannot be achieved with their partners," said a person familiar with German 
Chancellor Angela Merkel's thinking. A belief in Cameron's entourage that 
Merkel will do whatever it takes to keep Britain on board, to balance out a 
more statist France, may be a misjudgment. He has twice ended up isolated by 
making that assumption - when he tried to veto an EU fiscal pact in 2011, and 
when he sought to block Jean-Claude Juncker as European Commission president 
last year.Long-time British allies such as Poland and other eastern Europeans 
have been alienated by Cameron's anti-migration rhetoric. Others are loath to 
ally themselves in EU bargaining to a country that may not be there to repay a 
favor.Cameron himself, under pressure from the anti-EU UK Independence Party 
and Eurosceptics in his own Conservative party, has been deliberately vague 
about what changes he seeks. In a campaign television interview last week, he 
said: "The problem with the European Union at the moment, it has got some good 
aspects but too many things that drive people mad. "People see that it is 
trying to become too much of a state rather than an organization, it is trying 
to take too much power."LACK OF SUPPORTWhen the prime minister called last year 
for change in the EU treaty to curb free movement of EU migrants, Merkel and 
other leaders quickly told him that was a non-starter. No one is ready to 
plunge into a divisive treaty revision that would entail risky plebiscites in 
states such as France, Ireland and Denmark.Some EU diplomats are hoping the 
election result removes the referendum threat. The opposition Labour party has 
said it would not hold one. But even if it forms a government, uncertainty over 
Britain's place in Europe is unlikely to fade for long. "The UK has had 
enormous influence on EU policies, but the UK is losing influence," said Poul 
Skytte Christoffersen, a veteran Anglophile former Danish ambassador to the EU. 
"Nobody wants to join a coalition with the UK because you don't know where that 
is leading. The lack of influence will grow as long as you have this lack of 
clarity. The fact is, this will be a long time," he said.He said Denmark, the 
Nordic countries and the Netherlands, which shared Britain's attachment to 
liberal economics and free trade, were deeply worried at its waning influence. 
Long over-represented in the upper echelons of the executive European 
Commission, Britons are a dwindling band. There are now many more German than 
British officials in key positions. Some 45 percent of British-born Commission 
staff are aged 55 and over, heading towards retirement, and Britons make up 
less than 2 perce8nt of new recruits. They are a wasting asset with uncertain 
career prospects. Yet the EU carries a British imprint, even through the United 
Kingdom only joined at the third attempt in 1973 after the six-nation European 
Economic Community had been shaped by France and Germany in the 1957 Treaty of 
Rome."The EU today bears strong signs of British design and as such serves 
Britain’s interests well," said Michael Leigh, a British former Commission 
director-general. "The United Kingdom is largely responsible for the EU's 
predominantly liberal ethos and present geopolitical dimensions."The single 
market for goods and services was built with firm backing from then-British 
prime minister Margaret Thatcher in the 1980s, and Britain was a driver of the 
EU's eastward enlargement after the fall of the Berlin Wall. London has long 
set the EU's free-trade agenda and fought protectionism.SLIPPERY SLOPEYet 
Britain's politicians, egged on by a predominantly Eurosceptic media, may be 
about to set the country on a slippery slope to leaving the EU, according to 
Denis MacShane, a former Labour minister of state for Europe.In "Brexit - how 
Britain will leave Europe", MacShane argues that Cameron could be forced into 
setting unachievable negotiation goals to hold his party together. An EU 
referendum would be a chance for Britons to express their anger with the 
political establishment, goaded by a largely anti-EU media."If they get a 
referendum they can give vent to their anti-politics mood by voting against 
whatever the London elites tell them to do," he writes.EU supporters lack a 
charismatic leader capable of tangling with UKIP's man-of-the-people Nigel 
Farage or Eurosceptic Conservative London mayor Boris Johnson. Many of the 
leading pro-Europeans are of retirement age, and big business leaders who back 
the EU are not widely popular, MacShane observes. Mandated by Cameron's 
center-right coalition government, British civil servants undertook an 
unprecedented review of EU competences, producing 32 volumes with 3,000 pages 
of evidence on the division of powers between Brussels and member states.The 
dispassionate findings were trickled out without fanfare because the divided 
coalition parties could not agree to draw any policy conclusions from the 
exercise.A review by the Brussels-based Centre for European Policy Studies, 
published this month as "Britain's Future in Europe", concluded: "Overall, the 
evidence supports a common-sense view that British interests are best served by 
continuing membership of the European Union, combined with pushing ahead with 
reform processes, while retaining its important opt-outs."There was no strong 
case for repatriating powers from Brussels or negotiating more opt-outs, it 
said. Reforms to reduce red tape were under way and would benefit from UK 
help.Whether such a pragmatic conclusion would prevail over emotional identity 
politics in a referendum is far from certain. (Writing by Paul Taylor; Editing 
by Kevin Liffey)

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