FRANKFURT (Reuters) - Europe is facing yet another make-or-break week.

With an emergency EU summit over Brexit and an ECB policy meeting on the agenda, officials will be under pressure to take decisive steps to soothe concerns ahead of a set-piece gathering of the global financial elite in Washington.

But the temptation will be great to stick with the bloc’s rich tradition of just kicking the can down the road.

The deadline for Britain to leave the EU, seen as set in stone just days ago, is again in flux as both sides are openly discussing an extension, even if that means Britain must cross another red line by participating in May’s European elections.

The apparent softening of British Prime Minister Theresa May’s position suggests the end game is far from imminent.

Another EU summit muddle would, however, keep economic uncertainty at fever pitch, weighing on sentiment that is already dragging down growth across Europe and raising recession fears.

A long extension - and taking part in EU elections - also carries the risk of a Conservative Party mutiny, which could force an already weakened May out.

“Such leadership changes are always unpredictable and, in this instance could be brutal, with more centrist elements of the party struggling against a membership whose views on Brexit are increasingly hardline,” JP Morgan economic Malcolm Barr said.

But blurring the red lines suggests Britain is keen to avoid the most damaging of all outcomes - a hard Brexit.

FILE PHOTO: An anti-Brexit protester is seen among EU flags, as Brexit wrangles continue, outside the Houses of Parliament in London, Britain, April 4, 2019. REUTERS/Henry Nicholls/File Photo

For the EU, a longer extension also carries the benefit that Britain’s departure would not occur during the crucial month of the election campaign, which will determine who leads both the EU and, after Mario Draghi’s term ends this autumn, the European Central Bank.

Taking a hard Brexit off the table would also allow British officials to put on a brave face at the IMF’s spring meeting in Washington starting on Friday, letting the gathering focus on broader trade issues.

NARROW PATH

Still, the delay solves little in itself.

Any concession by May to win votes on a deal from Britain’s opposition Labour Party is likely to lose her Conservative MPs.

That suggests the path to any majority outcome is quite narrow, keeping the chance of an eventual no-deal Brexit uncomfortably high.

“Despite the switch to a cross-party approach, the risk of an election remains high because the path toward a successful ‘meaningful vote’ is treacherous, due to the deep divisions

within both parties,” Andrew Goodwin at Oxford Economics said.

The cost of the Brexit saga is already tangible for the EU.

Global trade tensions are weighing even more heavily, and the steady flow of bad news is keeping investment and business sentiment in a negative spiral, depressing growth for the third straight quarter.

The ECB, the bloc’s first port of call in case of growth weakness, has already eased policy, exhausting much of its firepower during years of crisis fighting. More generally, central banks lack potent tools to offset imported economic troubles.

Having already delayed a rate hike, the ECB will sit on the sidelines for now, while economists expect more easing later in the year.

“Since the main refinancing rate is already at zero percent, such easing is likely to amount to further unconventional measures,” Commerzbank said.

“We therefore expect the ECB to decide in the autumn ...to promise unchanged key rates ...until the end of 2020,” it added.