Business World

EU leaves Britain out in the cold as PM race begins

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BRUSSELS, BELGIUM — European leaders met Wednesday without Britain for the first time in 40 years to prepare for life after the “Brexit” bombshell, as the race began to succeed Prime Minister David Cameron.

Highlighti­ng the seismic shock from last week’s referendum, one person who was in Brussels however was Scottish First Minister Nicola Sturgeon, “utterly determined” to see Scotland remain in the EU.

Britain “made the decision that it did. And this morning it looks like they aren’t sitting at the table any more,” European Commission President jeanclaude Juncker said as he arrived Wednesday.

At a summit described as “sad” on Tuesday, Mr. Cameron won some breathing space from the remaining 27 leaders of the bloc five days after Britain rocked financial markets by voting 52 to 48 percent to leave the bloc.

EU President Donald Tusk said he understood that time was needed “for the dust to settle” before the next steps can be taken.

However, Mr. Juncker warned Britain did not have “months to meditate” before triggering Article 50 — the EU treaty clause that begins the two-year withdrawal process — after Cameron’s successor takes office in early September.

And German Chancellor Angela Merkel warned that London could not cherry-pick the terms of the exit negotiatio­ns.

Some in Brussels are concerned that giving Britain favorable divorce terms will spark a domino effect of others leaving the union, set up six decades ago to foster peace on the continent after World War II.

“We need more than ever a united Europe, in contrast to a disunited UK,” Luxembourg’s Prime Minister Xavier Bettel said Wednesday.

CAMERON OUT, STURGEON IN

Mr. Cameron flew back to London after Tuesday’s summit, as Sturgeon headed in the opposite direction to test the waters in Brussels for her country joining the bloc as a separate entity.

Scotland overwhelmi­ngly backed “Remain” in last Thursday’s vote, and the combative Sturgeon has said she was “utterly determined to preserve Scotland’s relationsh­ip and place within the EU.”

That may require a new referendum on Scottish independen­ce, with Sturgeon saying that the Britain from the last vote in 2014 “does not exist any more” following the “Brexit” vote.

Mr. Sturgeon met on Wednesday morning with European Parliament President Martin Schulz and was to hold talks with Mr. Juncker later.

Top of the agenda at Wednesday’s EU meeting was how the remaining 27 members can bolster unity after the shock of the British vote.

Mr. Cameron has urged a reform the rules of freedom of movement, with officials seeing the large influx of eastern European workers as a key factor behind the referendum outcome.

Ms. Merkel has called for a “new impulse” for the EU and stepped-up cooperatio­n in areas including defense, jobs and competitiv­eness.

CORBYN HANGS ON

Meanwhile, both main political parties in Britain are in turmoil with the opposition Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn refusing to resign despite a crushing noconfiden­ce vote.

Within the governing Conservati­ves, nomination­s opened Wednesday for a successor to Mr. Cameron. The cutoff is noon on Thursday and the winner will be named on September 9.

Pro- EU finance minister George Osborne, long seen as a possible Mr. Cameron successor, has ruled himself out.

Boris Johnson, the charismati­c blond-mopped former London mayor and a leading Brexiteer, was expected to throw his hat in the ring along with Interior Minister Theresa May.

A new poll Tuesday put May in the lead with 31%, against 24% for Mr. Johnson.

Meanwhile, on Tuesday thousands protested in London, which voted to stay in the EU by a 60% margin, waving EU flags and placards saying: “Stop Brexit” and chanting “Fromage (cheese), not Farage!”

Nigel Farage, head of the UK Independen­ce Party and key figure in the “Leave” camp, told a jeering European Parliament on Tuesday that the joke was now on those who never expected Britain to leave the EU.

“When I came here 17 years ago and I said I wanted to lead a campaign to get Britain to leave the EU, you all laughed at me,” he said. “But you are not laughing now.” —

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