The Jerusalem Post

EU’s hearts still open to Britain changing mind on divorce deal

Juncker joins push to back ‘remainers’ • Leave campaigner says no way

- • By GILBERT REILHAC

STRASBOURG (Reuters) – Leaders of the European Union institutio­ns weighed into a British debate on whether to hold a second referendum on Brexit by saying on Tuesday that Britons would be welcome to stay in the EU.

Prime Minister Theresa May and her main opponent Jeremy Corbyn have ruled out giving voters a chance to approve whatever withdrawal treaty is agreed with Brussels before Britain leaves the bloc in March 2019. However, campaigner­s on both sides of the debate have raised the issue again this month.

Updating the European Parliament on a summit he chaired last month at which EU leaders agreed to open talks with London on their post-Brexit future, European Council president Donald Tusk took the opportunit­y to support those calling for a rethink.

“Brexit will become a reality, with all its negative consequenc­es, in March next year, unless there is a change of heart among our British friends,” the former Polish premier said. “We here on the continent haven’t had a change of heart.

“Our hearts are still open to you,” he said.

Picking up on Tusk’s comment, European Commission president JeanClaude Juncker, whose executive arm is negotiatin­g Britain’s departure, added his endorsemen­t: “He said that our door is still open. I hope this is heard in London.”

Constituti­onal lawyers are divided on whether Britain can withdraw its twoyear notice to quit but the exchanges underline a view in Brussels that an EU political consensus could be found to avert Brexit – even if most are now resigned to Britain leaving and believe the Union will weather the disruption.

May’s spokesman repeated her determinat­ion to follow through on Brexit, even though she campaigned against it in 2016.

In the debate, senior EU lawmakers called on her to offer more clarity on what she wants. Some mocked her, with the top German conservati­ve skewering her announceme­nt that she would restore Britain’s old blue passports after Brexit as a “scam.”

Member states are discussing among themselves a new set of negotiatin­g instructio­ns for Juncker’s negotiator Michel Barnier ahead of the expected launch of talks on a post-Brexit transition period during which much of the status quo would be maintained.

Diplomats say those discussion­s reveal a firm line among the 27 on holding Britain to commitment­s to accepting continued obligation­s to the Union during the transition, including accepting continued free immigratio­n from the EU and being subject to EU courts – key complaints of Brexit supporters.

Work is continuing on how Britain might continue to take part in free trade agreements between the EU and other countries during the transition and on how and whether the transition might be extended beyond December 31, 2020.

Among the most eye-catching of demands which diplomats have clarified is that EU citizens arriving in Britain even after Brexit, during the transition, would be entitled to retain for life the rights currently enjoyed by EU expatriate­s.

Senior lawmakers in the Strasbourg chamber were generally scathing about May’s plans for Brexit. The leader of the center-right group, an ally of German Chancellor Angela Merkel, mocked her announceme­nt that British passports would go back to being blue after Brexit as opposed to the red used by most EU states.

“The whole story is a scam,” said Manfred Weber, denouncing a “lack of leadership” and of “honesty” in portraying the move on passport color as a restoratio­n of sovereignt­y. No EU law binds member states to red passports, and fellow member Croatia uses blue ones.

Guy Verhofstad­t, the chamber’s Brexit coordinato­r, called the passport saga “hilarious” and also derided May and her ministers for claiming credit for new laws curbing plastic bag use and credit card fees, when these were in fact EU legislatio­n.

For the UK Independen­ce Party, which campaigned for Brexit, David Coburn accused Barnier of trying to “destroy Britain” as a center for financial services by rejecting London’s efforts to retain existing access to EU financial markets.

 ?? (Vincent Kessler/Reuters) ?? EUROPEAN COUNCIL PRESIDENT Donald Tusk delivers a speech during a debate at the European Parliament in Strasbourg yesterday.
(Vincent Kessler/Reuters) EUROPEAN COUNCIL PRESIDENT Donald Tusk delivers a speech during a debate at the European Parliament in Strasbourg yesterday.

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