E.U. Parliament head rejects May’s vote-meddling claim

U.K. PM’s remarks ascribed to election campaign rhetoric

May 04, 2017 08:51 pm | Updated 08:51 pm IST - Brussels

The President of the European Parliament Antonio Tajani arrives to take part in the EU leaders summit at the Europa building, the main headquarters of European Council and the Council of the EU, in Brussels, on April 29, 2017.
The 27 ?EU leaders hold a summit to adopt Brexit negotiating guidelines. EU President Donald Tusk urged the bloc to keep a united front at a special Brexit summit in Brussels, saying it will also help Britain if they can reach a deal. / AFP PHOTO / THIERRY CHARLIER

The President of the European Parliament Antonio Tajani arrives to take part in the EU leaders summit at the Europa building, the main headquarters of European Council and the Council of the EU, in Brussels, on April 29, 2017. The 27 ?EU leaders hold a summit to adopt Brexit negotiating guidelines. EU President Donald Tusk urged the bloc to keep a united front at a special Brexit summit in Brussels, saying it will also help Britain if they can reach a deal. / AFP PHOTO / THIERRY CHARLIER

European Parliament President Antonio Tajani on Thursday dismissed a claim by British Prime Minister Theresa May that the EU was trying to influence the outcome of the June election in Britain.

“No one is trying to influence the outcome of the election campaign in the United Kingdom,” Mr. Tajani told journalists at the opening of a European history museum in Brussels. “It is neither an attack or a bad word to say being a member of the European Union is not the same as being outside the EU.”

Ms. May accused Brussels on Wednesday of trying to influence next month’s election with “threats against Britain” over Brexit talks, as the two sides traded blows over terms of the country’s divorce from the bloc.

‘Deliberately timed’

Ms. May fired off her broadside after the EU’s Brexit negotiator, Michel Barnier, warned that the negotiations on Britain’s divorce from the EU would not be quick or painless. She said the hardening of the European Commission’s stance was “deliberately timed to affect the result” of the snap June 8 general election.

The chief spokesman for European Commission head Jean-Claude Juncker played down Ms. May’s comments, chalking them up to election campaign rhetoric. “We are not naive. We know there is an election taking place in the United Kingdom,” European Commission spokesman Margaritis Schinas said on Wednesday.

“We here in Brussels, we are very busy with our policy work, we have too much to do on our plate,” he said. “In a nutshell we are very busy and we will not ‘Brexitise’ our work.”

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