Khaleej Times

Britain could join reconfigur­ed EU

- AFP

london — Britain could take part in a new model of European cooperatio­n after Brexit but is unlikely to rejoin the EU in its current form, a senior minister said.

Cabinet Office minister David Lidington, who chairs several Brexit ministeria­l committees, said the suggestion by some EU leaders that Britain might change its mind about leaving the bloc was a “red herring”.

“Having taken a decision by a referendum, I don’t see that changing,” he told the Daily Telegraph newspaper in an interview.

However, he added: “We may be looking in a generation’s time at an EU that is configured differentl­y from what it is today.

“And the exact nature of the relationsh­ip between the United Kingdom and that future system — whatever it turns out to be — of European cooperatio­n is something that future parliament­s, future generation­s will have to consider.”

Lidington was appointed earlier this month to his post, which involves standing in for Prime Minister Theresa May in parliament and deputy chairing cabinet meetings.

He opposed Brexit in the 2016 EU referendum, but said most Britons did not want to be part of the EU as it stands — and were unlikely to change their minds as the bloc moves towards greater economic and political integratio­n.

But he added: “There’s going to be a need for a system of cooperatio­n within the continent of Europe including the UK, that covers both economic and political cooperatio­n.” He noted that Britain will remain part of the Nato military alliance, the Organizati­on for Security and Co-operation in Europe, and the Council of Europe human rights watchdog. “I can’t predict sitting here today what that network of organisati­ons and alliances including the EU, how that will change or is going to look in 10 years or 20 years time,” he said.

EU President Donald Tusk said this week that the bloc’s “hearts are open” to Britain changing its mind. European Commission chief Jean-Claude Juncker followed up by offering to back any British attempt to rejoin, even after it leaves.

Britain began the two-year Brexit process last year, putting it on course to end its four-decade membership of the EU on March 29, 2019. —

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