Updated in: 28 February 2024 - 12:38

EU to Reportedly Reject May's Request for Brexit Delay

TEHRAN (defapress)- UK Prime Minister Theresa May's plan to delay Brexit by three months and request a new withdrawal date has been reportedly limited to no later than May 22, The Guardian reported on Thursday.
News ID: 76300
Publish Date: 21March 2019 - 21:46

EU to Reportedly Reject May's Request for Brexit DelayAccording to sources at an EU ambassadors meeting on late Wednesday, the EU has reached a consensus that the UK should leave the bloc no later than May 23, just before European elections.

“The May 22 has to be the limit,” said a senior diplomat, adding, “The reason is that there has got to be a very clear message from the European council."

"Yes, to a short extension on condition that the prime minister passes her deal through the Commons," the diplomat stated, noting, "But beyond that it is utterly complicated. It cannot be done without British MEPs having been elected.”

Some member states favoured a "longer period and some a shorter", but agreed that May 22 would be the maximum amount of time permitted.

European leaders will hold further talks this afternoon following the British prime minister's address, and will require unanimous backing of the extension date, which will be written into its summit communique.

Brexit coordinator for the European parliament, Guy Verhofstadt, told the Guardian, “There will be a problem with June. It is absolutely not in the interests of the European Union for it to beyond the date of the European elections.”

The European Commission concluded that it could only approve an extension no later than May 23 unless new British MEPs were elected. July 1 was the "legal backstop" for extending Article 50 as the European parliament will convene on July 2.

EU officials could possibly shorten the UK's Brexit delay to allow Britain to prepare for elections. But delaying Brexit by a few weeks "would be useless", one senior official said.

Verhofstadt slammed May's handling of cross-party talks in order to reach a consensus, stating the “problem is that Brexit is not being treated as an existential crisis on the table of British politics but as an element in a war between the Conservatives and Labour".

German chancellor Angela Merkel said on Thursday that Brussels could approve a short delay to Brexit, but only if London agreed on a Brexit deal next week, adding that the EU could "comply in principle" and if the deal was not passed, the EU would "keep open whether there has to be another meeting of the European Council before the withdrawal date".

UK Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt said on Monday there was still a "lot more work to do" and warned that the risk of "Brexit paralysis" had not subsided.

"There is a lot more work to do, and, I think, the risk of no deal, at least as far as the UK parliament is concerned, has receded somewhat, but the risk of Brexit paralysis has not… That's why we will be redoubling our efforts this week," Hunt added.

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