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December 15, 2016

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Boris paints picture of May in ‘lederhosen’

BRITISH Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson has publicly poked fun at Prime Minister Theresa May, telling dozens of foreign ambassadors she was so cosmopolitan that she sported leather trousers like German “lederhosen.”

Johnson, known in Britain and beyond for his often outlandish persona and disheveled mop of blond hair, said his country would not turn its back on the world after Brexit and cast the United Kingdom as a cosmopolitan consumer of imports.

“We are gluttons in this country for imports. We buy huge quantities of stuff, particularly of course from our friends in the European Union, as of course we shall continue to do so when we do that great free trade deal,” he told ambassadors.

Johnson quipped that Britain had even managed to export Brexit campaigner Nigel Farage, who enjoys a friendship with President-elect Donald Trump, to the United States.

“We managed to export Nigel Farage to America,” he said, before joking about May’s decision to be photographed wearing fashionable full-length leather trousers that British media said had cost 995 pounds (US$1,260).

“We are so cosmopolitan that we drink more champagne, more prosecco, buy more German cars than anyone else and our wonderful prime minister actually wears lederhosen,” he said, using the German word for Alpine leather shorts.

Johnson denied a media report that he had privately told some European ambassadors that he supported freedom of movement, one of the EU’s fundamental citizenship rights that was established by the 1992 Treaty of Maastricht.

Britain wants to control immigration from the EU as part of Brexit, though European leaders say Britain cannot have full access to EU markets if it does.

“The last time I spoke to so many ambassadors, I’m afraid a rather curious account of what I had said emerged,” Johnson told ambassadors in London.

“I am in favor of the free press, I am in favor of freedom of speech, I am in favor of free universal suffrage, I am in favor of free drinks ... but I am not necessarily in favor of freedom of movement,” he said.

It was not the first time that Johnson and May seemed to be on different wavelengths. Last week, May slapped him down after video emerged showing him saying Saudi Arabia was stoking proxy wars across the Middle East.




 

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