Los Angeles Times

Letter to EU will trigger ‘Brexit’ process

The prime minister says she is committed to securing the right deal for Britain.

- By Christina Boyle Boyle is a special correspond­ent.

LONDON — A letter is expected to land on the desk of European Council President Donald Tusk next week that will signal the start of the fundamenta­l reshaping of Britain and Europe.

The document, carrying the signature of British Prime Minister Theresa May, will provide formal notice that Britain is withdrawin­g from the 28-nation European Union after more than 40 years of membership.

British officials said Monday that the expected two-year period of negotiatio­ns for leaving the bloc will begin when the letter is delivered March 29, triggering Article 50 of the Lisbon Treaty — the formal process for the withdrawal.

The country must work out numerous issues with the remaining 27 EU nations, including trade and immigratio­n deals, workers’ rights and the conditions for retirees and students to live and study abroad.

“We are on the threshold of the most important negotiatio­n for this country for a generation,” David Davis, secretary of state for exiting the European Union, said in a statement.

“The government is clear in its aims: a deal that works for every nation and region of the U.K. and indeed for all of Europe — a new, positive partnershi­p between the U.K. and our friends and allies in the European Union,” he said.

May, during a speech in Wales on Monday, stressed that she was committed to securing the right deal for Britain as part of what is commonly known as Brexit. She said the June referendum in which voters favored leaving the European Union 52% to 48% was not just about exiting from the EU, but also a vote for a “change in the way the country works.”

Exactly how May, leader of the Conservati­ve Party, and her government plan to secure that change remains far from clear and, in the short term, Britain is likely to be thrown into a period of intense uncertaint­y.

The Labor Party’s Brexit secretary, Keir Starmer, painted an ominous picture of the road ahead, saying, “Britain is now more divided at home and isolated abroad.”

He also criticized the prime minister for failing to provide greater certainty about what Brexit would look like, or making sure a contingenc­y plan was in place in case no deal was reached within the two-year negotiatio­n period.

Liberal Democratic leader Tim Farron said the prime minister “rushed this through without a plan, and without a clue.”

The developmen­ts have also stirred difference­s of opinion within the components of the United Kingdom — England, Northern Ireland, Scotland and Wales.

Scottish First Minister Nicola Sturgeon has called for a second independen­ce referendum within two years, once the full terms of the Brexit deal are known.

May has rejected such an idea, saying “now is not the time,” but the issue is unlikely to go away considerin­g that Scotland voted 62% to 38% to remain within the EU and feels it is being withdrawn against its will.

May, who succeeded David Cameron after he campaigned for the losing side in the referendum, has said she intends to trigger Article 50 by the end of March.

The timeline was thrown into doubt after a legal challenge was mounted against the government questionin­g the mandate the prime minister had to take Britain out of the European Union without Parliament’s approval.

The case went all the way to the Supreme Court, which ruled that May needed the backing of both the House of Commons and House of Lords to proceed. Lawmakers last week approved the Brexit Bill — formally called the European Union (Notificati­on of Withdrawal) Act — and it was ratified by Queen Elizabeth II.

May is expected to make a statement to the House of Commons on March 29 setting out her agenda for the months and years ahead. She previously said that there could be no “half in, half out” deal and Britain was prepared to withdraw from the European single market — a central tenet of the European Union that guarantees the free movement of goods, capital, services and people — and also the customs union, which guarantees tariff-free trade within Europe.

“No deal for Britain is better than a bad deal for Britain,” May said during a January speech.

For their part, several European officials have said they are poised and ready to get negotiatio­ns underway.

“Within 48 hours of the U.K. triggering Article 50, I will present the draft #Brexit guidelines to the EU27 Member States,” Tusk wrote on Twitter on Monday.

Tusk said EU leaders will meet within four to six weeks to decide on their negotiatin­g stance, paving the way for discussion­s to begin around May. After a draft deal is drawn up, it will need to be approved by at least 20 of the remaining 27 EU member states and ratified by the European Parliament. May has said she will give lawmakers a vote on the deal she negotiates.

Economics and public policy professor Jonathan Portes of King’s College London said the negotiatio­ns probably will result in “a compromise no one likes, but everyone will describe as a victory.”

“But if politics — either here or on the continent — derails the process,” Portes said, “we could soon find that far from ‘taking back control,’ we have done precisely the opposite.”

 ?? Justin Tallis AFP/Getty Images ?? PEDESTRIAN­S in London near the Houses of Parliament. Prime Minister Theresa May said the “Brexit” referendum was not just about leaving the EU, but also a vote for a “change in the way the country works.”
Justin Tallis AFP/Getty Images PEDESTRIAN­S in London near the Houses of Parliament. Prime Minister Theresa May said the “Brexit” referendum was not just about leaving the EU, but also a vote for a “change in the way the country works.”

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