EU parliament leader: we want Britain out as soon as possible
President Martin Schulz says speeding up of UK exit being considered after ‘continent taken hostage because of Tory party fight’
EU referendum outcome - live
Martin Schulz speaking in Berlin earlier this week.
Martin
Schulz said there would be consequences from Britain cutting ties with
the world’s biggest single market. Photograph: John Macdougall/AFP/Getty
Images
Jennifer Rankin and Jon Henley in Brussels, Philip Oltermann in Berlin and Helena Smith in Athens
Friday 24 June 2016 19.47 BST
Last modified on Saturday 25 June 2016 09.19 BST
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A
senior EU leader has confirmed the bloc wants Britain out as soon as
possible, warning that David Cameron’s decision to delay the start of
Brexit negotiations until his successor is in place may not be fast
enough.
Cameron announced on Friday morning that he would step
down as prime minister by the autumn, after the British public caused a
political earthquake by voting 52%-48% to leave the European Union.
Martin
Schulz, the president of the European parliament, told the Guardian
that EU lawyers were studying whether it was possible to speed up the
triggering of article 50 of the Lisbon treaty – the untested procedure
for leaving the union.
As the EU’s institutions scrambled to
respond to the bodyblow of Britain’s exit, Schulz said uncertainty was
“the opposite of what we need”, adding that it was difficult to accept
that “a whole continent is taken hostage because of an internal fight in
the Tory party”.
“I doubt it is only in the hands of the
government of the United Kingdom,” he said. “We have to take note of
this unilateral declaration that they want to wait until October, but
that must not be the last word.”
Schulz’s comments were partially
echoed by the president of the European commission, Jean-Claude Juncker,
who said he there was no reason to wait until October to begin
negotiating Britain’s departure from the European Union.
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“Britons
decided yesterday that they want to leave the European Union, so it
doesn’t make any sense to wait until October to try to negotiate the
terms of their departure,” Juncker said in an interview with Germany’s
ARD television station. “I would like to get started immediately.”
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As
the pound fell to its lowest level since 1985 amid fears that the
Brexit vote could spark a fresh global financial crisis, the governor of
the Bank of England stepped in on Friday to calm financial markets.
Mark
Carney said Threadneedle Street was ready to do whatever was needed to
mitigate the impact of Britain’s historic vote to leave the EU. City
traders quickly responded by placing bets on an interest rate cut by the
end of the year.
With anti-European sentiment on the rise across
the continent, national governments outside Europe’s capital sought
urgently to prevent any contagion from the UK vote, urging swift reforms
to the 60-year-old bloc. Calls for similar referendums were made in
France, the Netherlands and Sweden.
Cameron, who had campaigned
hard but ultimately unsuccessfully to keep Britain in the EU, emerged
outside No 10 Downing Street just after 8am on Friday to announce his
departure, accompanied by his wife, Samantha.
“I was absolutely
clear about my belief that Britain is stronger, safer and better off
inside the EU,” he said. “I made clear the referendum was about this,
and this alone, not the future of any single politician, including
myself.
“But the British people made a different decision to take a
different path. As such I think the country requires fresh leadership
to take it in this direction.”
Cameron said in his resignation
speech that it would be up to his successor – expected to be appointed
before the Conservative party conference in October – to trigger article
50. Once that is done, the clock starts running on two years of
negotiations.
Boris Johnson, the former mayor of London and a
leading leave campaigner, said there should be “no haste” in the
preparations for the exit of Britain, the first sovereign country to
vote to leave the union.
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European leaders react to UK’s vote to leave the EU
The
president of the European council, Donald Tusk, said the 27 remaining
members of the bloc would meet next week to assess its future without
Britain. “It is a historic moment, but not a moment for hysterical
reactions,” he said.
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In Berlin, the German
chancellor, Angela Merkel, expressed “great regret” at Britain’s
decision, but said the EU should not draw “quick and simple conclusions”
that might create new and deeper divisions.
The Handelsblatt
newspaper said a leaked eight-page emergency Brexit plan suggested the
German government should push for an “associative status” for Britain
after two years of “difficult divorce negotiations”.
The document
indicated that Germany would drive a hard bargain to “avoid offering
false incentives for other member states when settling on new
arrangements”. Specifically, the paper advocates “no automatic access to
the single market”, Handelsblatt reported on Friday afternoon.
While
Brussels talked tough, a chorus of European capitals, anxious to avoid
clashes with their own Eurosceptic citizens, stressed that the Brexit
vote should be seen as a wake-up call for a union that was increasingly
losing touch with its people.
The German chancellor, Angela Merkel
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Angela Merkel. Photograph: Kay Nietfeld/EPA
Speaking
in Paris, the French president, François Hollande, said he “profoundly
regretted” the Brexit vote but that the EU now had to make changes. In a
brief televised statement, Hollande said the vote would put Europe to
the test: “To move forward, Europe cannot act as before.”
Mark
Rutte, the prime minister of the Netherlands, which holds the EU’s
rotating presidency, said the EU “has to become more relevant, deliver
added value to our lives: jobs, growth, control of our external
borders”.
He said he personally felt “this strong discontent with
Europe, the Europe of the lofty speeches. Most of my EU colleagues also
share this view. They too don’t want any more big visions, conventions
and treaties.”
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Italy’s foreign minister, Paolo
Gentiloni, said the EU must relaunch “common policies for growth, for
migration and common defence”, while the Austrian chancellor, Christian
Kern, said Brussels needed a clear reform process to boost economies,
stem unemployment and improve working conditions.
Sigmar Gabriel,
the head of Germany’s Social Democrats, Merkel’s coalition partners,
said the British vote was a “shrill wake-up call” for European
politicians. “Whoever fails to heed it or takes refuge in the usual
rituals, will drive Europe against the wall.”
The Belgian prime
minister, Charles Michel, called for a special “conclave” of EU leaders
as early as next month. “We need to keep a cool head and need to see
what new way of cooperation would be possible,” he said.
Poland’s
foreign minister, Witold Waszczykowski, said the result showed
“disillusionment with European integration, and declining trust in the
EU”. He sought to reassure at least 850,000 Poles living in Britain that
“during talks (...) we will aim to guarantee the rights citizens have
acquired”.
Poland’s foreign minister Witold Waszczykowski
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Witold Waszczykowski. Photograph: East News/REX/Shutterstock
The
Italian prime minister, Matteo Renzi, tweeted: “We must change it to
make it more human and more just. But Europe is our home, it’s our
future.” Lars Loekke Rasmussen, the Danish prime minister, said Denmark
“belongs in Europe” but that mounting Euroscepticism must be taken
seriously.
In Greece, there was concern that the referendum result
would intensify anti-European sentiment. “In the short term, Brexit may
help Greece, because our allies will want to solidify and show
solidarity,” a senior minister told the Guardian. “But in the long term,
it will not. The prospect of Grexit will increase.”
Turkey, whose
future membership of the EU played a key role in the UK referendum
campaign, cast doubt on the likelihood of it joining in the aftermath of
the Brexit vote. “The European Union’s disintegration has started,”
deputy prime minister Nurettin Canikli tweeted. “Britain was the first
to jump ship.”
Schulz’s stark comments followed an earlier joint
statement with the presidents of the European council and commission,
Tusk and Jean-Claude Juncker, as well as Rutte, warning that the EU
would expect Britain to act “as soon as possible, however painful the
process may be” and that there could be “no renegotiation”.
The
four said after emergency talks in Brussels that they regretted, but
respected Britain’s decision. “This is an unprecedented situation, but
we are united in our response.”
While the UK would remain a member
until exit negotiations were concluded, they said, Europe expected it
to “give effect to this decision ... as soon as possible”. The special
settlement negotiated by Cameron earlier this year was void and could
not be renegotiated, they said.
Schulz said he would speak to Merkel about “how to avoid a chain reaction” of other EU states following Britain.
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“The
chain reaction being celebrated everywhere now by Eurosceptics won’t
happen,” he said, adding that the EU was the world’s biggest single
market and “Britain has just cut its ties with that market. That’ll have
consequences, and I don’t believe other countries will be encouraged to
follow that dangerous path.”
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Manfred Weber, the
chairman of the European People’s party group of centre-right parties in
the European parliament, stressed that Britain had crossed a line and
there was no going back. “There cannot be any special treatment,” he
said. “Leave means leave.”
The UK was the EU’s second-largest
economy and largest military power. It will embark on the process of
leaving as the union grapples with multiple crises: huge numbers of
migrants, economic weakness and a nationalist Russia seeking to overturn
the post-cold war order.
The UK has to negotiate two exit
agreements: a divorce treaty to wind down British contributions to the
EU budget and settle the status of the 1.2 million Britons living in the
EU and 3 million EU citizens in the UK; and an agreement to govern
future trade and other ties with its European neighbours.
Tusk has
estimated that both agreements could take seven years to settle
“without any guarantee of success”. Most Brussels insiders think this
sounds optimistic.
There were early warnings of difficulties
ahead. The German MEP Elmar Brok, who chairs the European parliament’s
committee on foreign affairs, told the Guardian the parliament would
call on Juncker to strip the British commissioner, Jonathan Hill, of the
financial services brief with immediate effect and turn him into a
“commissioner without portfolio”.
He said: “They will have to
negotiate from the position of a third country, not as a member state.
If Britain wants to have a similar status to Switzerland and Norway,
then it will also have to pay into EU structural funds like those
countries do. The British public will find out what that means.”
Jean-Claude
Piris, a former head of the EU council legal service, said claims that
Britain would get unfettered access to the single market, without free
movement of people, were the equivalent of believing in Father
Christmas. He said the British “cannot get as good a deal as they have
now, it is impossible”.
Some Brussels insiders fear France and
Germany may soften their approach after the vote. Others think
countries, especially France, will push for a harsh settlement to hammer
home the price of leaving.
One likely outcome of negotiations is
that banks and financial firms in the City of London will be stripped of
their lucrative EU “passports” that allow them to sell services to the
rest of the EU.
In theory, the UK retains the decision-making
privileges of membership; in reality, power will rapidly drain away and
British diplomats can expect to be marginalised in the councils of
Brussels.
The UK will keep its veto in some areas, such as tax and
foreign policy, but diplomats say Britain’s voice on other EU
decisions, for example, on economics and business, will count for
little.
Saturday, June 25, 2016
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