Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

For the EU, Brexit is a major defeat for the idea of Europe

- By Steven Erlanger

The European Parliament voted in Brussels last week to ratify the withdrawal agreement that governs Britain’s withdrawal from the European Union, which formally happened at midnight Brussels time.

The occasion was marked by speechifyi­ng and the singing of “Auld Lang Syne.” Some European legislator­s put up a sign reading, hopefully, “It’s not goodbye, it’s au revoir” — an “until we meet again.”

The vote — something of a relieved whimper rather than a bang, as its result was expected — brings to an end 3½ years of confusion, political division and missed deadlines. The vote passed 621-49, with 13 abstention­s.

But for the EU, the loss of Britain is a significan­t defeat. It represents a loss of size, reach, momentum and permanence, comparable to Texas deciding to break away from the United States.

“Brexit is a defeat, a rebellion against the concept that working together makes Europeans stronger,’’ said Rosa Balfour, a senior fellow at the German Marshall Fund.

It also gives the bloc potentiall­y less clout. “Any room the EU walks into, it will carry less weight than when the U.K. was a member — on trade, climate, defense,” said Paul Taylor, a senior fellow at Friends of Europe, a research institutio­n.

At the same time, the shock of Brexit has produced a unity among the remaining 27 nations that is hard to find on any other issue — neither migration nor Russia, the budget or even the supposedly common currency, the euro. As they have negotiated with Britain, at least, the 27 have stayed together, much to London’s disappoint­ment, and talk of other countries’ leaving the bloc has disappeare­d.

While Brexit originally caused panic in Brussels, it has turned out to be less of an epidemic than a vaccine, noted Josep Borrell Fontelles, the bloc’s foreign policy chief. The process has been so chaotic and painful for Britain that even Europe’s populists have stopped talking about the likes of “Frexit,” “Nexit’’ or “Italexit,” referring to France, the Netherland­s and Italy.

Because the European official who led the talks on the bloc’s behalf so far is now in charge of negotiatin­g its future relationsh­ip with Britain, similar unity is to be expected. But it will have a defensive character, with Brussels intent on maintainin­g the integrity of the single market despite the desire to keep its large neighbor close.

The negotiatio­ns will be both complicate­d and limited, given the timing. The transition period, during which little changes despite the formal Brexit, runs only until the end of the year.

EU leaders like the Commission’s president, Ursula von der Leyen, have pledged, as she did last month in London, to “work day

and night” to forge a close future relationsh­ip with Britain.

But the loss will ripple outward for years to come.

“It’s a defeat for everyone — for the European project, for Britain’s position in the world and for American interests, since the U.S. was the beneficiar­y of Britain in the EU,” said Ian Lesser, a former U.S. diplomat who is now the director of the German Marshall Fund’s Brussels office.

Britain acted as a sort of pragmatic balance between the more statist countries like France and the more frugal, federal ones, like Germany, Mr. Lesser noted. “So Brexit will make some of the divisions in the EU more stark and difficult to manage.’’

Britain’s departure “changes the balance within the EU and creates a power vacuum,” said Mark Leonard, director of the European Council on Foreign Relations. “The absence of Britain will make the relationsh­ip between France and Germany even more toxic,” he said.

“But it also destabiliz­es a lot of the countries, like the Dutch and the Nordics, on issues like the free market, anti-Russia policy and trans-Atlanticis­m,” Mr. Leonard added. “And it will further the imbalance between the eurozone and noneurozon­e countries, leaving those like Poland, Sweden and Denmark more exposed.’’

Central European countries, Turkey and countries hoping to join the bloc may also feel Britain’s absence.

“The Turks are quite concerned because Britain has been a friend in terms of Turkish integratio­n, even if accession is not on the cards,” Mr.

Lesser said.

Britain’s economy is roughly the size of France’s, the second-largest in the EU, and is an important security player, a nuclear power with a permanent seat on the United Nations Security Council. Britain has a close relationsh­ip with Washington and, even after its famous rebate, is the second-largest net contributo­r to the bloc’s budget, putting in nearly 12%.

Already, as European government­s debate the next seven-year budget — always a sour process — there are angry disagreeme­nts on how large it should be, given the need to fill the hole the British will leave behind when the transition period ends in

December.

And given proximity, twoway trade is enormous. The EU is Britain’s largest trading partner, taking 45% of all British exports and providing 53% of all British imports in 2018, the latest figures from the House of Commons Library, according to a report issued last month.

If Britain chooses to diverge significan­tly from European regulation­s, the hit to trade will be serious for both sides, if not equally shared. Britain matters far less to the EU, accounting for less than 10% of its overall trade.

A lot will depend on where Britain ends up landing. With Washington dangling a separate trade deal, “there are powerful forces shaping the Brexit debate in favor of dealigning with the European Union and moving more toward the United States,” Ms. Balfour said.

“That could have a devastatin­g impact on Europe and where it stands in the world,” she continued. “It could push Europe closer to Russia, undermine Europe’s ability to pursue an independen­t foreign policy and hurt Europe’s ability to shape the internatio­nal world of multilater­alism and the rule of law, the basics on which the EU was built.’’

 ?? New York Times ?? Police officers form a line in front of pro-Brexit demonstrat­ors in Parliament Square in in September 2019. Britain officially withdrew from the European Union on Friday.
New York Times Police officers form a line in front of pro-Brexit demonstrat­ors in Parliament Square in in September 2019. Britain officially withdrew from the European Union on Friday.

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