The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
EU, U.K. may talk of future before settling on pending divorce
BRUSSELS — The European Union on Friday raised the possibility of starting general talks on Britain’s future relationship with the bloc as early as autumn if decisive progress is made on key parts of the divorce proceedings — a move that grants some of the British prime minister’s wishes.
Draft guidelines obtained by The Associated Press say the EU and Britain must first “settle the disentanglement” of Britain from the bloc. But once there is a tentative consensus between the two sides on major topics — the treatment of citizens in each other’s nations, billions in budget commitments, legal clarity for companies working in Britain and a solution for Ireland’s border with the United Kingdom — the EU says it would be willing to look ahead.
“Once and only once we have achieved sufficient progress on the withdrawal, can we discuss the framework for our future relationship,” EU Council President Donald Tusk said in Valletta, Malta.
He added “probably in the autumn, at least I hope so.”
British Prime Minister Theresa May had been seeking parallel talks on the EU divorce and the future but those apparently will not happen for the foreseeable future. Still, Tusk’s timetable and the EU draft showed that the EU was willing to compromise.
It will take a summit of the 27 leaders, however, to signal that that moment has come to look toward the future.
The challenges prior to moving onto the next step of talks are sizable, however. Some 3.3 million EU citizens now live in Britain and about 1 million Britons live in the rest of the EU. Since the issue of foreigners taking jobs from British workers fueled the Brexit referendum, a solution pleasing both Brussels and London will not be easy.
In addition, the outstanding bill for London to pay in previously agreed EU costs and commitments has been estimated at up to 60 billion euros ($64 billion).
And when it comes to the U.K.’s land border in Ireland, which is key to the Northern Ireland peace process, Tusk’s draft guideline says that “flexible and imaginative solutions will be required.”
Further complicating things in the full withdrawal negotiations will be Gibraltar, the British overseas territory on the Mediterranean that Spain has wanted back since it ceded it more than three centuries ago. The outpost at the southern point of the Iberian peninsula has a population of 32,000 and about 96 percent of its residents voted to remain in the EU last year.
The EU draft says the future of Gibraltar will be set in talks between Spain and the U.K., giving Spain a very strong negotiating position.
“After the United Kingdom leaves the Union, no agreement between the EU and the United Kingdom may apply to the territory of Gibraltar without the agreement between the Kingdom of Spain and the United Kingdom,” the draft says.