UK sees ‘happy’ Brexit outcome for both sides, says Boris Johnson
Brussels, June 19: Britain and the European Union began their first formal Brexit negotiations on Monday, under pressure to seal a deal amid disarray in London over whether to go for a hard or soft divorce.
At stake is not just Britain’s future but also Europe’s post-war political order and its place in the world which could be fatally undermined without an agreement by the March 2019 deadline.
The EU’s chief negotiator, France’s Michel Barnier, welcomed his counterpart David Davis with a handshake and smiles for the press in the European Commission’s landmark headquarters in central Brussels flanked by the EU and British flags.
“Today we are launching negotiations on the orderly withdrawal of the UK from the EU,” said Mr Barnier, a former European commissioner and French foreign minister. Their first task must be to “tackle the uncertainties caused by Brexit,” he said, citing the rights of EU citizens in Britain and the possible impact on the
I think the whole process will lead to a happy resolution which can be done with honour and profit to both sides
— Boris Johnson, British foreign minister
open border between Northern Ireland and the republic.
“I hope that today we can identify priorities and a timetable to allow me to report to (EU leaders) later this week (that) we had a constructive opening of negotiations.”
Mr Davis, a prominent tough-talking figure in the “Leave” campaign, sounded a positive note too, saying “there is more that unites us than divides us.”