Cameron and Sarkozy meet for euro talks

British Prime Minister David Cameron travelled to Paris today for talks with French president Nicolas Sarkozy amid desperate efforts by eurozone leaders to prevent the single currency breaking up.

Cameron and Sarkozy meet for euro talks

British Prime Minister David Cameron travelled to Paris today for talks with French president Nicolas Sarkozy amid desperate efforts by eurozone leaders to prevent the single currency breaking up.

The two men are meeting a week ahead of a crunch European Council summit in Brussels, at which proposals will be tabled to save the single currency which could involve rewriting the treaties governing the EU.

As Cameron arrived in the French capital, UK Chancellor George Osborne called on the 17 eurozone nations to "stand behind their currency" and find a solution to the sovereign debt crisis to allow "economic recovery across the continent".

Speaking during a visit to the Humber Bridge to mark a reduction in tolls, the Chancellor said: "We need the eurozone to resolve their crisis. We need the countries of the euro to stand behind their currency.

"We do need the countries of the euro to work more closely together to sort out their problems.

"Britain doesn't want to be a part of that integration - we've got our own national interests - but it is in our economic interest that they do sort themselves out. The biggest boost that could happen to the British economy this autumn would be a resolution of the euro crisis."

European Council President Herman van Rompuy will present a paper setting out options for the way forward to EU leaders at the summit next Thursday.

Mr Cameron is expected to resist proposals favoured by Mr Sarkozy which would effectively create a two-speed Europe, with the 10 non-euro countries sidelined from decisions affecting the single currency.

Today's meeting was initially intended to be a full-blown Anglo-French summit involving a number of ministers from both sides, but was downgraded to a brief meeting over lunch to prepare the ground for next week.

Mr Sarkozy will meet German Chancellor Angela Merkel on Monday, amid expectations that the two biggest powers in the eurozone will agree a joint plan to drive through at the summit.

The French president said last night that he and Mrs Merkel would unveil proposals to try to lift Europe out of its debt crisis and "guarantee" its future.

"France will push with Germany for a new European treaty refounding and rethinking the organisation of Europe," Mr Sarkozy said.

Mrs Merkel this morning said the 17 eurozone nations must be subjected to "legally binding regulations" to ensure that they do not fall back into excessive debt.

But it is unclear whether that will require treaty changes to be agreed by all 27 EU member states, including the UK, or whether it can be done by agreement of the eurozone nations alone.

Addressing the Berlin parliament, Mrs Merkel said: "The German government has made it clear that the European crisis will not be solved in one fell swoop. It's a process, and this process will take years."

Germany wants the Stability and Growth Pact, which was intended to impose fiscal discipline on eurozone states but has been breached dozens of times, to be replaced with closer supervision of national budgets and more effective rules to keep debt under control.

Berlin is pushing for new powers to send countries to the European Court of Justice if they violate the pact's requirement to keep deficits below 3% of GDP and government debt under 60% of GDP.

"We need to do away with the underlying deficiencies in the fiscal and currency union," said Mrs Merkel.

"In order to win back trust, we need to do more. Where we today have agreements, we need in the future to have legally binding regulations."

Downing Street made clear this morning that the UK is prepared to see the demise of the Pact, adopted in 1997 as part of the Maastricht Treaty process which paved the way to the single currency.

But it was unclear whether Mr Cameron will demand the return of any powers from Brussels in return for UK approval of any treaty change which might be required.

The British Prime Minister's official spokesman told reporters: "We accept the fact that the eurozone needs to look again at the rules that it has for dealing with fiscal policy.

"We accept that the Stability and Growth Pact hasn't worked and has to be replaced with something else, so it is right that the eurozone are discussing this issue.

"The issue for us is to ensure we have appropriate protections in place to ensure that the single market is maintained and we don't do anything to jeopardise the single market."

The spokesman stressed that Britain's priority in the current negotiations was a successful eurozone.

Asked if Mr Cameron plans to use the process to win back powers from Brussels over issues like employment law, the spokesman said: "In any negotiation and discussion in the EU, we will seek to further our national interests."

Mr Osborne declined to say whether a limited treaty change would require a referendum in the UK, saying: "Let's see what comes out of the discussions in Europe, in the eurozone."

More in this section

Cookie Policy Privacy Policy Brand Safety FAQ Help Contact Us Terms and Conditions

© Examiner Echo Group Limited