Miami Herald

EU clears way for U.K. withdrawal from bloc

- BY MATINA STEVIS-GRIDNEFF The New York Times

It’s done. At last. The European Union gave its final, formal approval to Brexit on Thursday, clearing the way for Britain to reverse 47 years of integratio­n with the continent and leave the bloc

Friday night.

After a sometimes emotional vote in the European Parliament on Wednesday, the government­s of the 27 countries still in the union gave a unanimous seal of approval to Britain’s withdrawal, officially ending nearly four years of impassione­d wrangling over whether, when and how it would happen.

In the end, the way the decision became final was vintage Brussels: bureaucrat­ic and undramatic.

Diplomats from the remaining member countries were given plain instructio­ns over email just after 8 p.m. Wednesday: Answer these four dry, procedural questions with “yes,” “no” or “abstain” and send them in an email to the European Council, which represents the 27 nations’ government­s.

At 1 p.m. Thursday, the replies came in — a foregone conclusion, but the last step needed for the withdrawal agreement to take effect. All member states answered “yes” to all the questions, a European Union official said.

On the biggest questions, the European Council meets in person, often with presidents and prime ministers representi­ng their countries.

But Thursday, as if to emphasize how anticlimac­tic the event was, it used a vote-by-email process reserved for technical decisions that don’t require top officials or august gatherings. And it cloaked the news in the drabbest possible language.

“The council has adopted, by written procedure, the decision on the conclusion of the withdrawal agreement on behalf of the EU,” the European Council said in a brief statement.

“The withdrawal agreement will enter into force upon the U.K.’s exit from the EU, on 31 January

2020 at midnight CET,” in most of Europe, 11 p.m. in Britain, it added. “From that time on, the U.K. will no longer be an EU member state and will be considered as a third country.”

In Brussels, some of the next steps will be just as formal and muted, before the negotiatio­ns on the future relationsh­ip between the EU and Britain go into full swing.

But first come the parties. Place Luxembourg, the square in front of the European Parliament, will be taken over by Brexitrela­ted celebratio­ns and commiserat­ions Thursday night, and Brexit-themed events are filling up the weekend’s social calendar.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States