Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette
EU grants Britain more time for exit
BRUSSELS — European Union leaders Thursday grudgingly offered the U.K. more time to ease itself out of the bloc, delaying by several weeks — but not eliminating — the threat of a chaotic British exit.
After a meeting that stretched through the afternoon and over dinner, the bloc said Britain could postpone its departure, due on March 29, until May 22 — if the U.K. Parliament approves Prime Minister Theresa May’s divorce deal with the bloc next week.
If the twice-rejected deal is thrown out again, the bloc says Britain has until April 12 to “indicate a way forward.” May agreed to the plan, European Council President Donald Tusk said.
The deep uncertainty among leaders at an EU summit in Brussels was exceeded only by the anxiety being felt by politicians, businesses and citizens in Britain. The British military has even set up a command post in a bunker under the defense ministry in London to help coordinate “no-deal” planning.
Thursday’s summit opened with ominous warnings from EU leaders about the possibility of a no-deal exit.
French President Emmanuel Macron warned it was the responsibility of U.K. lawmakers to approve a deal and make sure Britain does not crash out of the bloc without an agreement.
“In case of a ‘no’ vote … it will guide everybody to a nodeal for sure,” Macron cautioned. “This is it.”
The British House of Commons is split, both among and within its political parties, over whether and how to leave the EU. It has twice rejected the deal May brokered with the bloc’s leaders late last year.
“We are all waiting, waiting for what the British intend to do,” said EU Parliament President Antonio Tajani. “We are all concerned.”
This week, May finally acknowledged the gridlock and asked the EU to delay Britain’s departure until June 30 — enough time, she hoped, to win parliamentary approval for her deal in a third attempt and then pass the legislation necessary for a smooth departure.
But opposition to May’s agreement among British politicians appeared to be hardening, rather than softening, after she blamed Parliament for the impasse.
In a televised address Wednesday night, May accused lawmakers of “infighting,” “political games” and “arcane procedural rows,” but acknowledged no personal error in creating the deadlock.
A lawmaker from May’s Conservative Party called the speech “toxic.” Legislator Anna Soubry, of the breakaway Independent Group, described it as the “most dishonest and divisive statement from any prime minister.”
In response, May hunkered down, calling on lawmakers to back her agreement and refusing to rule out a no-deal exit if they did not back her.
“What matters is that we recognize that Brexit is the decision of the British people. We need to deliver on that,” May said as she arrived in Brussels. “I sincerely hope that will be with a negotiated deal.”
Businesses and economists say a no-deal exit would cause disruptions and billions in costs to the economies of Britain and the EU.
Underscoring the sense of dread gripping the nation, one of Britain’s biggest business lobbies and a major trade union federation said in a rare joint appeal that the “country is facing a national emergency.”
The Confederation of British Industry and the Trades Union Congress warned May that if Britain crashes out of the EU, “the shock to our economy would be felt by generations to come.”
Worry about a chaotic departure is rising among EU leaders, who fear May no longer has the clout in Parliament to get her way.
“Nobody wants no-deal here,” Irish Prime Minister Leo Varadkar told reporters.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel vowed to work “until the last hour” to try to ensure that Britain doesn’t leave without a deal, even though her government has enacted emergency measures to deal with such a scenario.
May plans to make a third attempt to get her deal through Parliament next week.
But many anti-EU legislators still oppose it, saying it does not deliver the clean break they long for. And ProEU lawmakers will try to derail May and wrest away control of the process to steer Britain toward a close relationship with the bloc.
It’s a struggle that has been going on for almost three years and took the U.K. to within days of a chaotic withdrawal. Information for this article was contributed by Samuel Petrequin, Lorne Cook, Geir Moulson, Danica Kirka, Gregory Katz and Jan M. Olsen of The Associated Press.