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"Brexit and the Mouse that roare": sorry to see you go Britain |
Britain will not be given a free trade deal by the EU in the next two
years, and a transition arrangement to cushion the UK’s exit after 2019
can last no longer than three years, a European parliament resolution
has vowed, in the first official response by the EU institutions to
the triggering of article 50 by Theresa May.
A leaked copy of the resolution, on which the EU’s chief Brexit
negotiator, Michel Barnier, has been a close conspirator, lays bare the
tough path ahead for Britain as the historic process of withdrawing from
the trade bloc begins.
Across 11 pages of clauses, May is warned that the EU will stridently
protect its political, financial and social interests, and that the
position for the UK even during the transition period will not be as
positive as it is today.
A withdrawal agreement, covering financial liabilities, citizens’
rights and the border in Ireland, will need to be accepted by a
qualified majority of 72% of the EU’s remaining 27 member states,
representing 65% of the population. The agreement would then need to be
approved by the European parliament, voting by a simple majority.
Barnier has said that any free trade deal, to be struck after the UK
leaves, would be a “mixed agreement” requiring ratification by the
national parliaments of the 27 states, plus consent by the European
parliament.
Sir Tim Barrow, the UK’s permanent representative to the EU,
delivered a letter to the European council president,
Donald Tusk, at 12.30pm notifying the EU of Britain’s intention to
leave, as May stood up in the House of Commons to make a statement to
MPs.
Addressing a press conference half an hour later, Tusk said: “There
is no need to pretend that this is a happy day, neither in Brussels or
in London. After all most Europeans, including almost half the British
voters, wish that we would stay together not drift apart.”
Tusk said that Brexit would bind the remaining 27 member states
together, and that the council and the European commission had a strong
mandate to protect the EU’s interests. But he added: “As for me I will
not pretend I am happy…”
One positive development following Brexit. It brought the other 27
member states of the EU with a population of close to half a billion
people closer together with no one of its present leaders ready to call a
referendum or announce they would be leaving the EU
EU-Digest