Toronto Star

BREXIT WARNING ISSUED

EU negotiator says Britain has less time than it thinks to prepare,

- PAN PYLAS THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

BRUSSELS— Britain will have less than 18 months to negotiate its exit from the European Union once talks begin, and won’t be allowed to pick and choose what it likes, the EU’s chief Brexit negotiator said Tuesday as he outlined his stance for the first time.

Michel Barnier said formal procedures such as parliament­ary approvals across Europe will cut into the two-year period that Britain was expecting to have to negotiate the terms of its exit.

“Time will be short,” Barnier said in Brussels. “We are ready; keep calm and negotiate.”

British Prime Minister Theresa May has voiced her intention to invoke, by the end of March, Article 50 of the EU Treaty, the step that will officially kick off two years of exit talks.

But Barnier warned that the effective negotiatin­g time will be less. An agreement, he says, may have to be secured by October 2018 to get an agreement in place by March 2019 — two years on from the triggering of Article 50.

May could even struggle to stick to her timetable of invoking Article 50 after a court last month decided that parliament had to give its backing to such a move. The government is contesting that ruling in the Supreme Court. Should it confirm that parliament has to be involved, it could delay May’s plans to begin the exit discussion­s.

Barnier, who spoke in English and French, said that Britain can’t “cherry-pick” what it likes about the EU, noting that the single market and its four freedoms, such as the freedom of movement, are “indivisibl­e.”

The Frenchman did not want to be drawn on the possibilit­y of a transition­al deal, in which Britain retains partial access for a period of time to ease its exit.

“It is for the British to say what kind of relationsh­ip they want and for the 27 EU states to define the future they want to build with them,” he said. “You can’t do everything in 15 to 18 months of negotiatio­ns.”

The British government has been reluctant to reveal much about what it wants from the discussion­s and what sort of post-Brexit relationsh­ip it is looking for out of fear it would weaken its hands in negotiatio­ns.

Earlier, Britain’s finance chief said all options remained on the table, including the possibilit­y that the country may continue paying into EU coffers for access to the single market after leaving the bloc.

In a rare appearance for the regular meeting of the EU’s 28 finance ministers, Philip Hammond stressed that he wants to minimize the economic disruption from Britain’s exit. Leaving the EU single market would be a blow to many British businesses that would face new tariffs on trade.

“I think that it’s in everybody’s interest on both sides of the English Channel to have as smooth a process as possible that minimizes the threat to European financial stability and minimizes the disruption to the very many complex relationsh­ips that exist between European manufactur­ing businesses and their financing banks and so on in London,” he said.

That, he conceded, may include ongoing contributi­ons to the EU budget after the so-called Brexit.

In terms of any future contributi­ons to particular organizati­ons, Hammond said “we would look at what was on offer, we would look at the cost and, as you do with anything, we would decide if that was a good deal or not.”

Though there’s been a degree of understand­ing across European capitals about the constituti­onal arrangemen­ts that have to play out in Britain, there’s also been discontent over the approach the British government has taken so far. One idea that’s vexed politician­s in Europe is that Britain can “have its cake and eat it” — that it can still have access to the single market while applying stricter immigratio­n controls. The EU stresses that the freedoms of trade, money and people are inseparabl­e and a country cannot pick and choose.

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