In a bittersweet landmark, EU leaders yesterday approved an agreement on Britain’s departure next year — the first time a member country will have left the 28-nation bloc.
It took leaders a matter of minutes at a summit in Brussels to endorse a withdrawal agreement that settles Britain’s divorce bill, protects the rights of UK and EU citizens hit by Brexit, and keeps the Irish border open.
They also rubber-stamped a 26-page document laying out their aims for relations after Britain leaves in March next year.
Photo: AFP
Barely half an hour after leaders sat down, EU President Donald Tusk tweeted: “EU27 has endorsed the Withdrawal Agreement and Political Declaration on the future EU-UK relations.”
British Prime Minister Theresa May, waiting in the wings as the other leaders met, joined them once they had given the deal the seal of approval to discuss the next steps on the road to Brexit.
May has hailed the deal as the start of a new chapter for Britain, but European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker said the UK’s departure was a tragedy.
“It’s a sad day,” Juncker said as he arrived.
He told reporters that deal was “the best possible,” but the summit “is neither a time of jubilation nor of celebration. It’s a sad moment, and it’s a tragedy.”
The agreement paves the way for Britain’s smooth departure from the bloc from the EU side, though a bumpy ride still awaits in the UK.
In a formal statement endorsing the deal, the leaders called on EU institutions “to take the necessary steps to ensure that the agreement can enter into force on 30 March 2019, so as to provide for an orderly withdrawal.”
The UK is due to leave the EU at midnight Brussels time on March 29.
European Chief Negotiator for the United Kingdom Exiting the EU Michel Barnier said now that the first phase was done, Britain and the EU needed to work for “an ambitious and unprecedented partnership.”
“Now is the time for everybody to take their responsibility — everybody,” he said.
Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte said the deal — the product of a year-and-a-half of often grueling negotiations between Britain and the EU — was regrettable, but acceptable.
“I believe that nobody is winning. We are all losing because of the UK leaving,” Rutte said. “But given that context, this is a balanced outcome with no political winners.”
The last big obstacle to a deal was overcome on Saturday, when Spain lifted its objections over the disputed British territory of Gibraltar.
The deal must still be ratified by the European Parliament, something parliament President Antonio Tajani said would likely take place early next year.
A “large majority” of European parliamentarians supported the deal, Tajani said.
More dauntingly for May, it also needs approval from Britain’s parliament.
May is under intense pressure from pro-Brexit and pro-EU British lawmakers, with large numbers on both sides of the debate opposing the divorce deal and threatening to vote it down when it comes to the British House of Commons next month.
Brexiteers think it will leave the UK tied too closely to EU rules, while pro-Europeans say it will erect new barriers between Britain and the bloc — its neighbor and biggest trading partner.
Pro-Brexit Conservative lawmaker Iain Duncan Smith yesterday said that May should demand new conditions from the EU.
He said the deal as it stands “has ceded too much control” to Brussels.
May insists her deal delivers on the things that matter most to pro-Brexit voters — control of budgets, immigration policy and laws — while retaining close ties to the UK’s European neighbors.
EU leaders said that Britain could not hope to get a better offer.
“This is the deal, it’s the best possible and the European Union won’t change its fundamental position when it comes to this issue,” Juncker said.
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