The Star Malaysia

Decision on unilateral Brexit reversal by Christmas

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EDINBURGH:

Scotland’s Court of Session has asked the European Court of Justice (ECJ) for a preliminar­y ruling on whether the British parliament can change its mind about leaving the European Union without the bloc’s agreement, the Scottish court said.

Britain’s Conservati­ve government is struggling to reach a deal with the EU on how it will leave the world’s biggest trading bloc as the March 29 exit date approaches.

The petitioner­s, who represent Scottish voters, successful­ly argued to the Scottish court that if parliament is to vote on the government’s eventual Brexit deal, it needs legal certainty on whether the process can be reversed without permission from the other 27 EU states.

The Court of Session has asked the Luxembourg-based ECJ, which rules on the meaning of EU law, for a preliminar­y ruling, the court said in a statement.

The Article 50 withdrawal clause in the EU’s Lisbon Treaty can be reversed with the permission of the other 27 EU members.

But it does not specify whether the exit process can be unilateral­ly reversed, although former British diplomat Lord Kerr who drafted it has said Britain can change its mind at any stage before the final exit date in 2019.

Scottish lawmakers opposed to Brexit filed a petition to the Court of Session, Scotland’s highest court, last year.

They represent electoral areas in Scotland which voted strongly to remain in the EU in the June 2016 referendum. The United Kingdom as a whole voted to leave.

The Scottish National Party, the strongest political party north of the border, has opposed leaving the bloc. Given the urgency of the Brexit deadline the ECJ hopes to make a decision on the case before Christmas, sources close to the case said.

The British government, which has argued that it has no plans to reverse Brexit and therefore does not need to know, could in theory have presented an appeal to this stage of the process, but have not done so.

“This ship sailed yesterday – when the reference was sent to Luxembourg – and the government wasn’t on it,” Jo Maugham, a lawyer who is funding the Scottish lawmakers, said on Twitter

“We believe it’s now too late.” A British government spokesman did not immediatel­y comment.

The Scottish petitioner­s argue that legal certainty about the process is needed in advance of any British parliament­ary vote on an EU withdrawal deal because no country has ever before withdrawn from the European Union. —

 ??  ?? Welcome: Ireland’s Prime Minister Leo Varadkar (right) being greeted by European Council President Donald Tusk ahead of a meeting to discuss Brexit in Brussels, Belgium. — Reuters
Welcome: Ireland’s Prime Minister Leo Varadkar (right) being greeted by European Council President Donald Tusk ahead of a meeting to discuss Brexit in Brussels, Belgium. — Reuters

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