The News (New Glasgow)

EU turning the screws on Britain over post-Brexit relations

- BY RAF CASERT

The European Union turned the screws on Britain Wednesday, insisting that Prime Minister Theresa May’s ambition to maintain an intense post-divorce partnershi­p where it could pick and choose in which sectors it can maintain seamless economic cooperatio­n was nothing but a pipe dream.

Both EU President Donald Tusk and the European Parliament drafted texts making it clear that any hopes Britain could “have its cake and eat it” after Brexit, were wildly overambiti­ous. Instead, they painted a picture of drift and economic loss for a country that has been a member of the EU since 1973.

The post-Brexit economic relationsh­ip “will only be a trade agreement,” like the EU has with a host of other nations, said Tusk, who co-ordinates policy between the 27 EU nations that Britain is negotiatin­g with.

Though Britain is due to leave the EU in March 2019, there is still vast uncertaint­y over how it will do so and what relationsh­ip it will have with what is its biggest trading partner.

Tusk said on a free trade agreement with Britain that “we will do our best, as we did with other partners, such as Canada recently.”

The comparison stung, not least because far-flung Canada is some 5,000 kilometres (3,100 miles) away as opposed to the 50-kilometre stretch that separates Britain from the European mainland.

Last Friday, May laid out her hope that of “the broadest and deepest possible agreement - covering more sectors and co-operating more fully than any free trade agreement anywhere in the world.”

EU leaders have warned that May’s insistence on leaving the EU’s tariff-free single market and customs union means the close ties she is seeking are impossible.

Beyond the economic divergence­s, Tusk insisted co-operation should be smooth when it comes to defence, foreign affairs and facing down common threats like terrorism and internatio­nal crime.

The EU parliament, which will have to approve any Brexit deal, followed with a draft resolution backed by the major parties which says that Britain should not count on being able to cherry-pick the benefits of the EU market- in her speech, May said Britain could continue to stick closely to EU laws and regulation in some sectors while retaining the ability to diverge in others.

The British government is hoping Tusk’s guidelines will be revised at the March 22-23 summit, when the 27 leaders are set to adopt the outline for future negotiatio­ns.

British Finance Minister Philip Hammond said he was not surprised that Tusk had set out “a very tough position” as new negotiatio­ns start.

“I expect that we will have a deep and constructi­ve engagement,” he said.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? British Prime Minister Theresa May, left, walks with European Council President Donald Tusk in Brussels.
AP PHOTO British Prime Minister Theresa May, left, walks with European Council President Donald Tusk in Brussels.

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