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Prime Minister Theresa May took her time to respond to U. President Donald Trump’s pullout from the Paris Agreement on climate change, and the way she did so speaks volumes about where her allegiances lie.
The German, Italian and French governments all reacted individually within an hour of Trump’s announcement on Thursday, before putting out a joint statement saying they “take note with regret” of Trump’s decision, and describing the accord -- put together over years of negotiations -- as “a cornerstone in the cooperation between our countries.”
May chose not to join those three nations in defending the accord, and her own muted reaction came almost three hours after Trump’s announcement in the form of an email statement that said the prime minister had “expressed her disappointment” to Trump when he had called her. In the final week of a tightening election campaign, her political foes saw an opening to attack.
"You have gone to Washington to hold Donald Trump’s hand, now is the time to hold his feet to the fire,” said Tim Farron, leader of the Liberal Democrats which formed a coalition with May’s Conservatives in 2010. "If the special relationship between the prime minister and Mr. Trump actually exists, it exists for moments like this. We need to make him see sense on climate change.”
Up to Trump
May’s reluctance to come down strong on Trump suggests that with Brexit negotiations drawing closer, May is distancing herself from her European partners and casting her eyes across the Atlantic to a U. administration with which she wants to broker a trade deal.
For hours, her party pointed only to remarks she made earlier in the day during a rally when she was asked specifically about how she would feel if Trump ruled against the accord. Her answer was measured: “It’s up to the president of the United States to decide what position the United States is going to take.”
That contrasts with the dismay expressed by European colleagues -- Belgian Prime Minister Charles Michel called the withdrawal a “brutal act,” while German Chancellor Angela Merkel had been vocal in trying to sway Trump not to retreat from the climate deal. French President Emmanuel Macron gave a video address from the Elysee Palace in English, calling the withdrawal “a mistake.”
For environmental activists, May’s demure words mark a retreat from Britain’s long-trumpeted position as a leader in the global fight against climate change.
The opposition Labour Party’s spokeswoman on foreign affairs, Emily Thornberry, called Trump’s withdrawal an “act of global, generational vandalism sacrificing the future of our planet,” before turning her attention to May. “Also guilty are his so-called ‘closest allies’ in our own Tory government, who have failed to raise even the quietest peep in protest.”
In a statement, Thornberry added that “while Trump’s decision hung in the balance and leaders around the world were pressuring him to do the right thing, all Theresa May could say was: It’s up to the president to decide. That is a total dereliction of her duty.”
It’s not the first time May has been criticized for pandering to the Trump administration. After becoming the first foreign leader to visit the president in the White House in January, May announced Trump would come on a state visit to the U. later this year. That led to more than 1.8 million Britons signing a petition urging her to retract the invitation.
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