LONDON: The British government announced on Monday that it will formally begin its exit from the European Union on March 29. Prime Minister Theresa May will invoke Article 50 of the key EU treaty, the official start of the two-year divorce process. Then comes the hard part: the arguments, the lawyers and the squabbles over money. Here’s a look at the main issues and what happens next:
WHAT IS THE EU AND WHY IS BRITAIN LEAVING? The EU is a bloc of 28 nations sharing relatively open borders, a single market in goods and services and for 19 nations a single currency, the euro. Britain joined in 1973, but has long been a somewhat reluctant member, with a large contingent of eurosceptic politicians and journalists regularly railing against regulations imposed by EU headquarters in Brussels. Former prime minister David Cameron offered voters a referendum on EU membership, and in June they voted by 52-48 per cent to leave.
HOW DOES BRITAIN FILE FOR DIVORCE? The British government will invoke Article 50 of the EU’s Lisbon Treaty, which says a member state may “notify the European Council of its intention” to leave the bloc. The Department for Exiting the European Union says notification will come in a letter from May to European Council President Donald Tusk. May will also announce the news in Parliament. That sets a clock ticking: Article 50 says that two years from the moment of notification, “the Treaties shall cease to apply” and Britain will no longer be an EU member.
WHOSE MOVE IS IT NOW? The timing of Article 50 was up to Britain. What happens next is up to the EU. European Commission spokesman Margaritis Schinas said on Monday that the EU is “ready to begin negotiations”. Tusk has said that that once EU officials get Britain’s notification, they will respond within 48 hours, offering draft negotiating guidelines for the 27 remaining member states to consider. Leaders of the 27 nations will then meet in April or May to finalise their negotiating platform.
UK Brexit Secretary David Davis has said “the first meeting, bluntly, will be about how we do this? How many meetings, you know, who’s going to meet, who’s going to come.” Substantial talks may have to wait until after France’s two-round April-May election for a new president. Another hiccup could be Germany’s September election, which will determine whether Chancellor Angela Merkel gets another term.