The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

EU takes charge, forces Brexit deadlines on UK’s May

- By Lorne Cook and Jill Lawless

BRUSSELS >> Isolated at home and abroad, British Prime Minister Theresa May will be laboring against the odds once again to win backers in Parliament for her unloved Brexit deal, this time to a timetable dictated by the European Union.

Almost three years after Britons voted to walk away from the EU, the bloc’s leaders seized control of the Brexit timetable from May to avert a chaotic departure at the end of this month that would be disruptive for the world’s biggest trading bloc and deeply damaging for Britain.

“We are prepared for the worst but hope for the best,” European Council President Donald Tusk said Friday. “As you know, hope dies last.”

May’s mantra since Britain’s EU membership referendum in 2016 has always been about “taking back control” of U.K. affairs from the EU. But the process has seen her lose control — of the U.K. Parliament, which has twice rejected her Brexit deal, and now of Britain’s date of departure.

In a move that underlined their loss of confidence in May, EU leaders set two deadlines for Britain to leave the bloc of nearly half a billion people or to take an entirely new path in considerin­g its EU future.

At marathon late night talks Thursday in Brussels, they rejected May’s request to extend the Brexit deadline from March 29 until June 30.

Instead, the leaders agreed to extend the Brexit date until May 22, on the eve of EU Parliament elections, if she can persuade the British Parliament to endorse the Brexit withdrawal agreement.

Failing that, May now has until April 12 to choose between leaving the bloc without a divorce deal and a radically new path, such as revoking Britain’s decision to leave, holding a new British referendum on Brexit or finding a cross-party consensus for a very different kind of Brexit.

Ending a two-day summit, Tusk said there was now nothing more the EU could do to help May.

“The fate of Brexit is in the hands of our British friends,” he said.

The EU’s choice of deadline aims to ensure that Britain doesn’t take part in the May 23-26 elections for the EU parliament if it is leaving. Britain is legally required to announce its intention of participat­ing by April 12. As of now, Britain’s seats in the next EU Parliament have been redistribu­ted to other nations.

The EU-wide elections are being held amid deep concerns that mainstream parties could lose seats to British Prime Minister Theresa May leaves at the end of an EU summit in

anti-immigrant groups and populists. EU leaders are also fearful that the contagion of Brexit — its chaos, populism, political instabilit­y and uncertaint­y— could spread to their nations.

French President Emmanuel Macron said Brexit offered a “political lesson” to all that trying to leave Europe without a plan “leads to an impasse.” Macron slammed the architects of Brexit, saying the referendum had been won by “lies.”

But he also said government­s should listen to their people if they want to avoid a “disaster.”

“We should respect what the British people have decided,” he said. “We need to hear our people, we need to address their fears. We can’t play with fears, or simply tear up pages without offering anything else.”

The EU leaders seized hold of the Brexit process when May — after repeated questionin­g — proved unwilling or unable to tell them what she planned to do next week if she fails yet again to convince a skeptical British Parliament to endorse her Brexit deal, EU officials said.

Irish Prime Minister Leo Varadkar said some EU nations, especially those far from the U.K., were against giving Britain a Brexit delay because they “are sick of” the interminab­le Brexit process.

 ?? FRANCISCO SECO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? European Council President Donald Tusk listens to questions during a media conference at the conclusion of an EU summit in Brussels, Friday.
FRANCISCO SECO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS European Council President Donald Tusk listens to questions during a media conference at the conclusion of an EU summit in Brussels, Friday.
 ?? OLIVIER MATTHYS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ??
OLIVIER MATTHYS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

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