Some British politicians frustrated with Irish during BrexitGetty

Conservative British politicians frustrated with Ireland’s showing of power during Brexit talks

Some British politicians have grown resentful of Ireland exercising its power throughout Brexit talks, says the BBC.

Read More: Irish Ambassador attacks British “depth of ignorance” about the Irish

Nicholas Watt, a political editor for the BBC, reports on a recent encounter he had with a conservative British politician.

“A Tory grandee recently sidled up to me to express grave reservations about the Brexit process," writes Watt.

Watt says the British politician said: "We simply cannot allow the Irish to treat us like this."

"This simply cannot stand," the politician continued. "The Irish really should know their place."

Watt did not name the politician but did say it was an MP from the Conservative party.

May's Postponement

On Monday, British Prime Minister Theresa May postponed a vote in the British parliament on a proposed Brexit deal. Watt attributes the postponement to the Northern Irish backstop, which he calls “the single most troublesome element of the deal.”

The deal that May postponed a vote upon indicated that "Britain would remain largely within the European Union’s customs and trade system for the next two years while a long-term pact is negotiated."

For Brexit supporters, this deal is too vague.

Watt writes: “And that is what alarms so many Tories: after centuries of troubled Anglo-Irish relations it is the smaller of the two islands which appears to be exercising greater power for the first time.”

Read More: Threat to cut food supplies to Ireland over Brexit by leading Tory politician

After May postponed the vote, Guy Verhofstadt, the European Parliament's Brexit Coordinator, tweeted that they would not let Ireland down:

The day after the postponement, May was in both The Hague and Brussels to meet with EU leaders in hopes of finding a solution to the issue. She will arrive in Dublin on Wednesday for a meeting with Taoiseach Leo Varadkar and his cabinet.

Following the vote’s postponement on Monday, Ireland’s Foreign Minister Simon Coveney said: "The deal is the deal. It's taken two years to put together. It's a fair deal for both sides."

Similarly, the Taoiseach said the deal that was set to be voted upon in Parliament was “the only agreement.”

“We’ve already offered a lot of concessions along the way,” added the Taoiseach.