Los Angeles Times

Britain’s divorce gets underway

The nation formally begins the two-year process of leaving the European Union.

- By Christina Boyle and Catherine Stupp Special correspond­ents Boyle reported from London and Stupp from Brussels.

LONDON — It has been described as the most complex divorce in history, but Wednesday afternoon, the breakup began in earnest as Britain formally launched its move to leave the European Union.

Donald Tusk, president of the European Council, received a letter in Brussels hand-delivered by Tim Barrow, Britain’s ambassador to the EU, which triggered Article 50 of the Lisbon Treaty, setting off a two-year withdrawal process.

Minutes later, British Prime Minister Theresa May, who sent the letter to Tusk, announced in the House of Commons that her government was acting on the “democratic will of the British people,” who in June voted 52% to 48% to split from the 28-nation union.

The move Wednesday signifies one of the greatest political changes the continent has faced since the end of World War II.

The letter delivery kickstarte­d a period of intense, probably fraught, negotiatio­ns that ultimately are expected to bring the end of a four-decades-old partnershi­p and sever complex trade, immigratio­n, legal and financial ties.

Some European leaders have emphasized that Britain cannot expect to have deals as good as the remaining 27 nations in the bloc. And EU leaders do not want to do anything to encourage other nations to follow Britain’s lead, weakening the group.

One sticking point is a potentiall­y costly “divorce bill” based on future spending commitment­s that Britain could face, which, by some estimates, would be more than $60 billion.

The deals struck over the next 24 months are expected to fundamenta­lly reshape Britain and Europe for generation­s to come.

In her speech to lawmakers, May declared that “there can be no turning back” from this historic moment, describing it as a great time of opportunit­y for Britain and evoking the notion of the indomitabl­e “British spirit.”

“At moments like these — great turning points in our national story — the choices we make define the character of our nation,” she said. “We can choose to say the task ahead is too great. We can choose to turn our face to the past and believe it can’t be done. Or we can look forward with optimism and hope — and to believe in the enduring power of the British spirit.”

She also implored all sections of society to come together after a fractious referendum campaign that split the nation into two camps: “Remain” and “Leave.”

That task appears difficult as the very future unity of the United Kingdom — comprising England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland — is in question.

In Scotland, where 62% of voters in the June referendum favored remaining part of the EU, the Scottish parliament voted Tuesday in favor of an independen­ce referendum within two years, once the terms of Britain’s exit deal are known.

In Ireland there are concerns about the future stability of the 1998 Good Friday peace agreement as the Republic of Ireland will remain in the EU, while Northern Ireland will be part of post“Brexit” Britain.

Irish Prime Minister Enda Kenny has warned that two decades of peace talks could be undermined if new border checkpoint­s go up and Britain potentiall­y breaks from an EU customs agreement.

May, in her six-page letter to Tusk, included the Ireland-Northern Ireland issue as one of seven principles that British negotiator­s want high on the agenda in Brexit talks.

Political leaders and many observers say the status of the 3 million EU citizens living in Britain and more than 1 million Brits living abroad should be decided quickly.

“The most upsetting thing for any expat at the moment is that these rights could have been guaranteed,” said Adam Bowering, a British citizen working in the European Parliament in Brussels. “But now they’re being used as a bargaining chip in the negotiatio­ns.”

May does not want Brexit to be seen as Britain turning its back on its neighbors, but as finding a new way to exist as an independen­t, sovereign nation while maintainin­g robust economic, trade and intelligen­ce ties with the continent. But she has also stressed that she would be willing to walk away from the talks at the end of two years with no deal, if the only option on the table is a bad one.

European leaders have set their own red lines and made clear that Britain cannot “cherry pick” the best parts of EU membership and reject the others as it seeks to forge a new relationsh­ip.

“It will never be outside the union better than inside the union,” Guy Verhofstad­t, a European Parliament official and former Belgian prime minister, said in a Brussels news conference Wednesday. “That is not a question of revenge.”

The tone across the Channel on Wednesday was far from celebrator­y and Tusk struck a regretful tone during a news conference soon after receiving May’s letter.

“There is no reason to pretend this is a happy day, neither in Brussels nor in London,” Tusk said. “There is nothing to win in this process, and I am talking about both sides. In the essence, this is about damage control.

“What can I add? We already miss you,” he said.

EU leaders also sought to dispel fears that Britain’s departure from the bloc will create a domino effect, but there are looming threats to the union’s unity.

France will hold presidenti­al elections in April and May, and far-right candidate Marine Le Pen, one of the front-runners, has vowed to hold a referendum on France’s membership in the EU.

“Brexit has made us, the community of 27, more determined and more united than before,” Tusk said.

May’s letter comes after a celebratio­n in Rome last weekend, where leaders from the remaining 27 EU countries pledged commitment to a unified Europe.

But some cautioned that Britain will suffer outside the EU and should brace for an exit deal that will bruise foreign trade and cripple the nation’s economy.

Brexit would be “economical­ly painful” for Britain, French President Francois Hollande warned.

In her letter, May seemed to imply that failing to reach an agreement could compromise Europe’s ability to fight crime and terrorism, which some EU leaders took as a veiled threat.

“Europe’s security is more fragile today than at any time since the end of the Cold War,” May wrote. “Weakening our cooperatio­n for the prosperity and protection of our citizens would be a costly mistake.”

The prime minister’s office was quick to deny that was any sort of ultimatum.

The final agreement will be put to the British Parliament for a vote and can also be vetoed by the European Parliament.

But there are already doubts a robust deal can be delivered within two years.

“This is obviously one of the biggest blows that the EU has ever suffered,” said John Curtice, professor of politics at the University of Strathclyd­e. “We will discover how much unanimity there is on this subject.”

 ?? Aurore Belot AFP/Getty Images ?? EUROPEAN COUNCIL President Donald Tusk shows the letter from Britain that starts the process for departing the EU. “There is no reason to pretend this is a happy day, neither in Brussels nor in London,” he said.
Aurore Belot AFP/Getty Images EUROPEAN COUNCIL President Donald Tusk shows the letter from Britain that starts the process for departing the EU. “There is no reason to pretend this is a happy day, neither in Brussels nor in London,” he said.
 ?? Ben Stansall AFP/Getty Images ?? BRITISH PRIME MINISTER Theresa May faces a daunting task in uniting her nation’s divergent factions during the difficult negotiatio­n process with the EU.
Ben Stansall AFP/Getty Images BRITISH PRIME MINISTER Theresa May faces a daunting task in uniting her nation’s divergent factions during the difficult negotiatio­n process with the EU.

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