EU leaders meet to decide another Brexit delay

AFP  |  Brussels 

European leaders gathered in on Wednesday to decide how long a delay to grant British -- and under what conditions.

May has embarked on a last-ditch battle to postpone from April 12 to June 30 to arrange an orderly departure -- but European leaders are expected to offer her a longer delay of up to a year.

"There are times when you need to give time," tweeted, as he issued summit invitations.

Summit host Tusk said the evidence of recent months gave EU leaders "little reason to believe" that British lawmakers will ratify the Brexit withdrawal before May's preferred June 30 departure.

"In reality, granting such an extension would increase the risk of a rolling series of short extensions and emergency summits, creating new cliff-edge dates," he said, reflecting concern in EU capitals.

"One possibility would be a flexible extension, which would last only as long as necessary and no longer than one year," he said.

According to a draft copy of the summit conclusions that EU leaders were to receive and debate later in the day, they will agree to an extension to allow May time to ratify the withdrawal agreement.

"Such an extension should last only as long as necessary and, in any event, no longer than (XX.XX.XXXX)," the draft reads.

The other 27 EU leaders will thrash out what date to fill in the blanks on Wednesday.

"If the Withdrawal Agreement is ratified by both parties before this date, the withdrawal will take place on the first day of the following month," the draft, seen by AFP says.

If Britain is still in the when EU begin on May 23, it must take part in the vote.

"If the fails to live up to this obligation, the withdrawal will take place on 1 June 2019," the draft warns.

If an extension is agreed, will portray it as a concession to Britain, with some members -- particularly -- not keen to see the disruptive Brexit drama drag on much longer.

But May insists she still wants to quickly ratify the withdrawal she agreed with EU leaders last November, but which has been rejected by British lawmakers, and to leave before the EU polls.

On Tuesday, May flew to to meet German Angela Merkel, then on to Paris, where an aide to said was open to solutions.

"We've never been closed to the idea of finding an alternative solution to 'no deal' within certain limits and not at any price," the Elysee source said.

Discussions in are to focus on the length of the delay -- the French source said a 12-month extension "seems too long" -- and arrangements to limit Britain's influence within the EU.

EU members want to ensure that a semi-detached Britain does not seek leverage in Brexit talks by intervening in choosing the next of the or the next multi-year EU budget.

Britain was originally due to leave the EU on March 29, but Brussels agreed an extension after the rejected the withdrawal agreement negotiated with May.

The British is hoping a new period of extra time, if granted, will enable her to finally get a divorce deal through the legislature.

British MPs have rejected her deal three times, but May is now in talks with the opposition to try break the deadlock.

These discussions are moving slowly, and EU said May must explain what postponement would achieve.

"The length of the extension must be linked to the purpose -- what it's for -- and that depends on what Mrs May will say to European leaders tomorrow," he said, after meeting EU ministers in

A "no deal" -- in which Britain crashes out of the EU -- is still a possibility.

The said Tuesday that Britain risks a serious shock if it leaves the EU without an agreement.

And warned American lawmakers: "I think at this point we need to be prepared for a hard Brexit as a very realistic outcome.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Wed, April 10 2019. 15:55 IST