Yahoo –AFP, Katherine Haddon, October 2, 2016
Theresa May became British Prime Minister in July 2016 (AFP Photo/Oli Scarff) |
Birmingham
(United Kingdom) (AFP) - British Prime Minister Theresa May announced on Sunday
that her government will trigger Brexit negotiations by the end of March,
putting the country on course to leave the European Union by early 2019.
The move
will plunge Europe's second largest economy into two years of painful
horsetrading with its EU partners, who have voiced deep frustration at the
delay in setting a date to start divorce proceedings.
It was
May's firmest commitment to a clear break with the EU since she became
Conservative Party leader and premier in the political upheaval that followed
June's shock referendum vote to quit.
"Britain
is going to leave the European Union," May told the opening day of the
Conservative Party conference in the central English city of Birmingham.
"There
will be no unnecessary delays in invoking Article 50. We will invoke it when we
are ready. And we will be ready soon," she said, referring to the article
in the EU's Lisbon treaty setting out a two-year process to leave.
"We
will invoke Article 50 no later than the end of March next year."
May said
she would seek the best deal from the 27 other EU members, but told the
conference she would not give a "blow by blow" account of her
negotiating strategy, for fear of weakening Britain's hand.
European
powers keen to dampen rising euroscepticism in their own backyards have taken a
hard line with Britain, warning that informal negotiations cannot start before
the two-year notification process is triggered.
May's
announcement means the process will start before next year's crucial elections
in Germany and France, with an uncertain impact on the polls in the EU's most
powerful nations.
Article 50:
the mechanism that will trigger the Brexit talks (AFP Photo/Kun
Tian, Sophie
Ramis, Alain Bommenel)
|
'Decide
for ourselves'
May's
government and party is divided over whether to go for a "hard" or
"soft" withdrawal from the EU.
"Hard"
Brexit would mean quickly severing all links with EU institutions and pulling
out of the single market, relying instead on World Trade Organization rules to
trade overseas.
"Soft"
Brexit would retain access to the single market in some form, but EU leaders
have made clear that this would require continued free movement for EU workers
into Britain.
Uncontrolled
mass immigration from the EU was a major factor in Britain's historic vote to
become the first country to leave the bloc after four decades of membership.
Brussels
has insisted that if Britain wants free trade with the EU, it must also accept
freedom of movement.
But May
took a hard line in her speech, signalling that while she wanted free trade in
goods and services, she would be prepared to leave the single market if
necessary.
"We
are not leaving the European Union only to give up control of immigration
again," she said. "We will decide for ourselves how we control
immigration."
Anti-Conservative
protesters with a placrads join others in Eastside City Park
in Birmingham,
central England, on October 2, 2016 (AFP Photo/Daniel Leal-Olivas)
|
'Welcome
clarity'
In another
act designed to reassure anti-EU figures in her party, May also announced
Sunday that a "Great Repeal Bill" would be introduced to scrap the
supremacy of EU laws in Britain on the day of exit from the bloc.
The
announcements by May -- who campaigned quietly for Britain to remain in the EU
-- were welcomed by European leaders and Conservative eurosceptics alike.
EU
President Donald Tusk wrote on Twitter that it brought "welcome
clarity", adding that once Article 50 was triggered, the EU would
"engage to safeguard its interests".
Leading
Conservative eurosceptic MP Bernard Jenkin called May's comments "pitch
perfect".
Many
Conservative activists in Birmingham also praised her.
"She's
been respectful of both those who voted to leave and the feelings of those who
voted to stay," said one, Rachel Joyce.
"Pragmatically
it's about the right time. She needs to line all of the ducks up before she
triggers Article 50."
But
Conservative MP Anna Soubry, who campaigned to stay in the EU, warned May's
government against a "gung-ho" approach to activating Article 50
ahead of the French and German elections.
"The
government should be pressing for a deal that keeps Britain open and engaged
with Europe, including keeping us in the single market," she added.
May -- who
will give the keynote closing speech at the conference on Wednesday -- starts
the party conference in a strong position.
Opinion
polls put the Conservatives well ahead of the deeply divided main opposition
Labour Party under socialist leader Jeremy Corbyn.
But she has
ruled out a general election before the next one is due in 2020, telling this
week's Sunday Times newspaper it would "introduce a note of instability".
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