Houston Chronicle

EU to Britain: Hit the road, Union Jack — and don’t you come back no more

Leaders reject pleas for favorable exit conditions

- By Raf Casert and Lorne Cook

BRUSSELS — European leaders pushed Britain toward the exit door Tuesday, warning Prime Minister David Cameron that there’s no turning back after his country’s unpreceden­ted vote to leave the European Union and pressing for a quick and clear British departure plan to quell worldwide anxiety about the continent’s future.

Leader after leader rejected Cameron’s pleas for favorable conditions for Britain once it leaves, insisting there would be no cherry-picking of advantageo­us trade conditions. Yet Cameron frustrated them by refusing to initiate the divorce proceeding­s immediatel­y, saying he would leave the departure negotiatio­ns to his successor.

“Everyone wants to see a clear model appear” for Britain’s future relations with the bloc, he said after what was probably his last dinner with EU counterpar­ts, adding that he “can’t put a timeframe on that.”

No ‘wishful thinking’

German Chancellor Angela Merkel dismissed suggestion­s that Cameron’s successor might not start the formal EU withdrawal process because of the financial turmoil prompted by the vote and wide confusion about how to extract a country from the EU.

“I see no way to reverse it,” Merkel said. She said this is not the time for “wishful thinking.”

EU Council President Donald Tusk agreed: “Europe is ready to start the divorce process, even today.”

Last week’s vote unleashed financial and political turmoil not only in Britain but across the EU, the world’s biggest economic power and home to half a billion people. The unexpected exit vote will rob the EU of its richest financial market, biggest military power and a diplomatic giant.

During the summit, Cameron sat at one end of the oval summit table in blue shirt sleeves, arguing for the best possible exit conditions for his island nation. Other EU leaders refused to negotiate, seemingly eager to kick Britain out as soon as possible to avoid further turmoil after the shock and emotion of the British vote last week.

“We are not on Facebook, where things are complicate­d. We are married or divorced, but not something in between,” Luxembourg Prime Minister Xavier Bettel said.

In a special session of the EU parliament hours on Tuesday, there had been cries of campaign “lies” from legislator­s regretting the loss of Britain, and taunting by “leave” campaigner Nigel Farage.

“You as a political project are in denial,” declared Farage, leader of the antiEU U.K. Independen­ce Party. “When I came here 17 years ago and said I wanted to lead a campaign to get Britain to leave the European Union, you all laughed at me. Well, you’re not laughing now, are you?”

When the traditiona­l family photo of the leaders at the summit was taken, few were smiling.

Realizing the threat of a rift further tearing at European unity, Tusk said he was planning a special meeting of the EU leaders in Slovakia in September to chart a way ahead.

Merkel pledged to use “all her strength” to prevent the EU from drifting apart.

The leaders of Britain’s “leave” campaign hope the nation can still enjoy many perks of the EU internal market for business, while being able to deny EU citizens entry to the U.K. to address Britons’ concerns about unlimited EU immigratio­n.

Goodbye privileges

The leaders of Germany and France, the bloc’s biggest economies, made clear that isn’t an option.

French President Francois Hollande said Britain will have to meet strict conditions if it wants to continue to be part of the single market. “The four freedoms. You cannot have the freedom of capital movement, the freedom of goods, freedom of services and then say, ‘When it comes to people, stay put!’ Well no, it doesn’t work that way,” Hollande said.

Merkel said “Whoever wants to leave this family cannot expect to have no more obligation­s, but to keep privileges.”

Unshackled from Britain, the other EU members need to plot a common way ahead.

EU Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker and other European leaders insist they won’t begin any talks until Britain invokes Article 50 of the EU’s Treaty of Lisbon, which sets in motion a two-year process to split from the group designed to unify Europe after the horrors of World War II.

“No notificati­on, no negotiatio­n,” he said to resounding applause.

The EU won’t wait, however, to rethink its own future without Britain. With Cameron gone, the other 27 leaders are to meet Wednesday to focus on what they can do to prevent further fracture.

 ?? John Thys / AFP / Getty Images ?? Britain Prime Minister David Cameron, left, gestures as Portuguese Prime Minister Antonio Costa talks with German Chancellor Angela Merkel in Brussels.
John Thys / AFP / Getty Images Britain Prime Minister David Cameron, left, gestures as Portuguese Prime Minister Antonio Costa talks with German Chancellor Angela Merkel in Brussels.

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