Brexit

European countries await letter from UK asking for a Brexit extension

Key Points
  • European countries are expecting a letter from Prime Minister Theresa May on Wednesday, requesting a delay to the country's departure from the bloc.
  • "The letter to President (Donald) Tusk will be sent ahead of the European Council," a U.K. official based in Brussels told CNBC Tuesday.
British Prime Minister Theresa May arrives at the Council of the European Union on the first day of the European Council leaders' summit on June 28, 2018 in Brussels, Belgium.
Jack Taylor | Getty Images

European countries are expecting a letter from Prime Minister Theresa May on Wednesday, requesting a delay to the country's departure from the bloc.

"The letter to President (Donald) Tusk will be sent ahead of the European Council," a U.K. official based in Brussels told CNBC Tuesday.

The letter from May is due to arrive in Brussels before the heads of state gather on Thursday for an important summit. The 27 leaders will then be discussing the implications of an extension to the Brexit process.

However, a senior EU official said Wednesday morning that the letter has not yet arrived in Brussels and that the U.K. has not requested an extension in any other form. "As it stands, there is no request," the official said. "Maybe it will come, maybe it will not come."

Any delay to the U.K.'s departure from the EU needs to originate in London first. It is up to Theresa May to tell the other 27 heads of state that she needs an extension and why.

European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker said Wednesday morning that May "must bring clear plans to the EU summit if she wants an extension on Brexit" but said it is "highly probable" that Britain will not leave the EU on March 29. Speaking to Deutschlandfunk radio, he reiterated that there would be no re-negotiations of the Brexit deal.

"When it comes to Brexit we're in God's hands. But even God has a limit to his patience," he said.

Brexit deadlock

Until now, the 27 countries of the European Union have said that they need a "credible justification" for a delay on the Article 50 process – the EU's legal framework for a country to leave the bloc. Without a good reason to extend this process, the 27 countries may struggle to give more time to the U.K.

"We need something new, because if it is an extension to remain in the same deadlock that we are – how do we get out of this deadlock? This is a question for the British authorities," Nathalie Loiseau, minister for European Affairs of France said in Brussels Tuesday.

The chances of a no-deal exit start to rise if the EU countries don't find a strong reason to extend Brexit.

"It can very well happen, it is not what we want to happen," Loiseau told CNBC when asked about how real is this scenario.

"It is a choice to be made by the United Kingdom, they have said no to a no-deal and no to a good deal, they have to change their mind in one of these options," she said.

An internal EU memo seen by CNBC suggested that Theresa May will tell the other leaders that a decision on the extension will be the most important moment since the Greek bailout program.