Brexit

Making ‘Brexit’ official, UK wades into a thorny thicket

Stephen Castle
WATCH LIVE
Anti-Brexit protesters, one wearing a giant Theresa May head, hold placards outside Parliament on the day the Prime Minister will announce that she has triggered the process by which Britain will leave the European Union, in London, March 29, 2017.
Stefan Wermuth | Reuters

In one of the most consequential diplomatic events in Britain since World War II, Prime Minister Theresa May on Wednesday sent formal notice of the country's intention to withdraw from the European Union, starting a tortuous two-year divorce littered with pitfalls for both sides.

Speaking in Parliament, Mrs. May said she was invoking Article 50 of the Lisbon Treaty, putting Britain on track to leave the European Union in 2019 and raising a host of thorny issues involved in untangling a four-decade relationship.

In addition to a welter of trade and customs matters, the Conservative government faces the prospect of a new independence referendum in Scotland, where the majority voted to remain in the European Union, and deep worries about the 1998 Good Friday peace agreement in Northern Ireland.

Just before 12:30 p.m., Britain's top envoy to the European Union, Tim Barrow, walked to the office of Donald Tusk, the president of the European Council, and handed him a letter with the official notification. Mr. Tusk then posted on Twitter acknowledging receipt of the letter.

"Today the government acted on the democratic will of the British people, and it acts too on the clear and convincing position of this house," Mrs. May told Parliament. "The Article 50 process is now underway, and, in accordance with the wishes of the British people, the United Kingdom is leaving the European Union."

She added: "This is an historic moment from which there can be no turning back." She cited the "enduring power of the British spirit." And she painted a vision of a "truly global Britain, the best friend and neighbor to our European partners but a country that reaches beyond the borders of Europe too."

With this step, Mrs. May enters what William Hague, a former foreign secretary, called "the most complex divorce ever in history," with limited leverage, having made clear that establishing control of immigration takes priority over membership in the European Union's single market or customs union.

As a result, analysts say, she has frequently stressed her willingness to walk away from the table if a good deal proves elusive, leaving European Union negotiators wondering whether she is serious or trying to bluff her way into a stronger negotiating position.

"I think they would prefer a deal," Anand Menon, a professor of European politics and foreign affairs at King's College London, said of the British government, noting the high economic stakes. Nevertheless, he said, "I still think they are readier to walk out than most people accept."

Given her negotiating "red lines," the difference between whatever deal Mrs. May can secure and no deal at all, may turn out to be relatively small. Blaming the Europeans for a collapse of the talks might be easier, politically, than bringing a weak agreement to Parliament.

The politics are so toxic, Professor Menon added, that they make a disorderly departure from the bloc — often likened to walking over a cliff edge — plausible. "It's ugly and so frighteningly horrible, that I can't quite believe it's happening," he said.

European leaders have emphasized that Britain cannot "cherry pick" the rules and regulations it likes, and certainly cannot expect to have a better deal than countries that remain in the bloc. The last thing they want to do is lend greater momentum to the centrifugal forces already threatening to tear apart the European Union.

From agriculture to aviation, from fisheries to pharmaceuticals, Britain's economy has been shaped by membership in the European Union, its main trading partner. With its single market — the world's largest — and its customs union, the European Union ensures customs-free trade across frontiers in goods and some services.

Without a deal, Britain faces customs checks at its borders and tariffs on imports and exports, not to mention the relocation of at least part of its lucrative financial services sector.

But Britain is a big market for Continental Europe, too: Germany alone exports 800,000 vehicles there every year. Though London's dominant financial services sector is hardly popular, many businesses on the Continent rely on its deep capital markets.

Britain is one of only two significant military powers in the bloc — the other is France — and has valuable security and intelligence capabilities that elevate Europe on the global stage.

To make matters more difficult, the final deal will require votes in perhaps 38 legislatures across Europe, as well as in the British Parliament.

It is even possible that the negotiations could founder over the issue of money before they really get underway. Michel Barnier, the negotiator appointed by the European Commission, wants to resolve the terms of the departure before moving on to future trade ties.

The commission estimates that Britain owes as much as $64 billion in future spending commitments and pension entitlements for European Union officials. Boris Johnson, the foreign secretary, has rejected that idea, invoking the memory of Margaret Thatcher, who in 1984 demanded — and received — her "money back" from European partners in another acrimonious negotiation.

Diplomats say a collapse over money matters can be avoided if specifics can be left until the end of the negotiations, when the parameters of a trade deal are known. European officials seem open to that idea of reaching agreement on the principles and methodology of calculating what Britain owes, based on commitments undertaken while it was a member. That would allow Mrs. May to justify payments as part of a deal allowing continued access to European markets.

Joachim Fritz-Vannahme, director of the Europe program at the Bertelsmann Foundation, a research institute based in Germany, said the best prospect of achieving agreement was a broad discussion, including defense and security cooperation, an area where London has something to offer at a time when NATO's role is being questioned.

"If you go narrow, it is tremendously difficult," Mr. Fritz-Vannahme added. "It is like rug trading. It will not bring the problem to a conclusion in two years."

He said he believed that one danger was the "illusion" among some in Brussels that the European Union is "strong enough to live without the Brits," who still have significant economic and military power. Another is the illusion among some Britons that they can dictate the terms of a deal.

Professor Menon, too, said he thought the messages from some British politicians, reinforced by aggressive pro-Brexit tabloid newspapers, were destructive. "The British people now think that Europeans will be stupid if they don't give us a good deal, because it's in their own interest," he said.

Time will be a problem, too. British businesses want a transition period to adapt to the post-Brexit world, but this requires an agreement on what Britain would transition to after 2019. And unless all this is decided quickly, it will be of little use; companies will not be able to wait long into 2018 before assuming the worst outcome and acting accordingly, even if that means a sharp economic adjustment.

"Whatever happens, she is not going to have a great deal," Professor Menon said, referring to Mrs. May. "It is still going to involve a lot of pain, given that we are outside the customs union and the single market."