Nicolas Sarkozy Tells David Cameron: 'We're Sick Of You Telling Us What To Do'

Cameron Sarkozy

First Posted: 23/10/11 20:31 Updated: 23/12/11 10:12   PA

David Cameron has been involved in a furious row with French president Nicolas Sarkozy as tensions over the eurozone crisis boiled over.

The two men clashed during a six-hour EU summit in Brussels as leaders sought to hammer out a solution to the problems gripping the single currency.

The row erupted after Mr Sarkozy tried to insist that a follow-up meeting on Wednesday should be restricted to the 17 eurozone leaders.

At one point in the exchanges, the French president was quoted as telling Mr Cameron: "We are sick of you criticising us and telling us what to do. You say you hate the euro and now you want to interfere in our meetings."

In the end, however, Mr Cameron won his battle to ensure that all 27 member states would be there.

The decision to hold a further summit this week means that Mr Cameron has had to call off visits to Japan and New Zealand ahead of the Commonwealth heads of government meeting in Perth, Australia.

According to EU officials, Mr Sarkozy complained that he was tired of reading in the newspapers about advice Mr Cameron and his Chancellor were offering the eurozone. He said George Osborne had been present on Saturday for the agreement on strengthening banks - an issue which affects all 27 countries, although Britain will not need to take action.

Now, on the two remaining issues involving only the eurozone, he argued that Britain and the rest should stay away. The argument ran on, with Mr Cameron finally winning a concession involving a one-hour meeting of the 27 leaders before the 17 break away separately for final negotiations.

The Prime Minister said there had been talks on whether the 27 should meet first or second, pointing out that if the 17 had the final say, Europe would risk destabilising market confidence if the other 10 then tried to "unpick" the deal.

At an end-of-summit press conference, Mr Cameron urged the eurozone leaders to take responsibility for delivering a credible response to restore market confidence in the single currency. While progress was being made, he said that more needed to be done ahead of Wednesday's meeting.

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David Cameron has been involved in a furious row with French president Nicolas Sarkozy as tensions over the eurozone crisis boiled over. The two men clashed during a six-hour EU summit in Brussels ...
David Cameron has been involved in a furious row with French president Nicolas Sarkozy as tensions over the eurozone crisis boiled over. The two men clashed during a six-hour EU summit in Brussels ...
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14:57 on 19/11/2011
Am I starting to see very mild shadows of another world about 75 years ago with countries like France, Germany, and England? Perhaps others, too. The Greeks have recently been portraying Germany as Nazi's (I'm NOT doing that). Do the readers here have recollection of names like Neville Chamberlain, Edouard Dialadier, King George @ Ioannis Metaxas (Greece) to name a few? They were all appeasers (some wuld say outright cowards and enablers) to Germany in the 1930's. I'm not a conspiracy theorist to any degree but I would suggest a very cautious observation of the situation in Europe. All wars are about economics. Find your own truth.
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MarxEngelsLeninTrotsky
Einstein: Socialism is the way forward.
13:12 on 24/10/2011
We're sick of him too Nicolas.
09:11 on 24/10/2011
The "regular" continental folks are all pretty fed up with GB. We don't understand why this country is still part of the union. The Brits have nothing in common with us and they seem to have joined the union only to better torpedo it from the inside, at the orders of their master, the US. We would sincerely prefer to let (or kick) GB out of the EU once and for all. We will take no more advice from a country whose economy is moribund. A country whose economy is on life-support from the fiscal, tax heaven of the City without which the whole country would be 6 feet under.
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lunacougar
I'm worse than a liberal
13:08 on 24/10/2011
"Brits have nothing in common". Laughable, we Brits are the most mongrelised europeans of the lot, just check out the 'phonebook. We were and still are the only safe haven for thousands of european refugees over the centuries. The most recent wave from central and eastern europe happily shoved in our direction by France, Germany, Italy, Spain et al. And by and large they have been welcomed.
Don't believe that the papers reflect mainstream opinion, they're owned by the same laissez-faire plutocrats who see european legislation as a threat and propagandise accordingly.
14:59 on 19/11/2011
Beware the Chamberlain effect.
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lunacougar
I'm worse than a liberal
16:30 on 24/10/2011
It's spookily reassuring to see that ignorant bigots still exist in europe, I thought they were commonplace enough in the UK and USA where I live. You have little idea, don't bother to trouble yourself getting educated it's obviously wasted on you. My teeth are good enought to bite your ass.And I wouldn't be too proud of continental TV either.
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floodberg
Attorney (ret.)
04:54 on 24/10/2011
Cameron is taking extreme measures to make sure a referendum doesn't happen; someone only does that when he's got a deal lined up that's really important to him personally.      

He's like the guy who got left out of a big deal, but if it goes bad it will affect his company but not his own bonus.  He would like to buy in, but his shareholders won't tolerate it because the risk is godawful.  However, if he could get his company in and it worked he'd be rich as Croesus.  Other rich folks would get a bonanza too, and they've got good-faith money (Cherie's deal with the Rothschilds, perhaps?)  That's a powerful motivation common to every compulsive gambler.  (Osborne has zero financial expertise; only a compulsive gambler would put him in as Exchequer, let him go for a long shot bonanza on the taxpayers' bailout, whitewash a 60% loss and then not fire his a*se.)

Cameron's betting with the money, lives and the future of a country, he figures the downside is negligible because it won't affect him personally, even with a bad ending can amass a huge personal fortune and be a 'world figure' (just like Bliar and Brown.)

MPs have figured it out...they can't all get a big payoff for going along. All 3 parties have ordered their MPs to defeat the referendum, they can argue 'his party ordered a no vote, too;' except against BNP, UKIP or an Indy challenger.

Sarkozy and Merkel are desperate; their banks and citizens are on the hook, as are their reputations and their presidencies; their citizens will take to the streets howling if this deal goes bad, and won't let losers escape.  Cameron's just in it for the score.