EU lawmakers adopt Brexit resolution,
reject pro-Gibraltar hint
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[April 05, 2017]
By Francesco Guarascio
STRASBOURG (Reuters) - European Union
lawmakers adopted a resolution on Wednesday setting their red lines for
the two-year divorce talks with Britain and rejected attempts by British
MEPs to recognize Gibraltar's pro-EU stance in the Brexit referendum.
In a display of EU unity, the legislature' text repeated the same
priorities set by the EU summits' chair Donald Tusk in his draft
negotiating guidelines released last week.
The European Parliament wants talks on Britain's future relations with
the EU to start only after "substantial progress" is made on the bill
for Brexit bill, on the Irish border, and on the rights of the 3 million
EU citizens in Britain and the one million British residents in EU
countries.
The text was backed by more than two-thirds of the deputies in the
parliament, which will have to approve any deal with the United Kingdom.
Britain's Under Secretary for Brexit Robin Walker said this was "a
positive move" although Britain would prefer to start trade talks as
soon as possible. He told reporters at the session in Strasbourg that
Britain will also put citizens' rights first in the Brexit process.
In a minor departure from Tusk's text, the parliament's resolution
hinted at the possibility for Britain to reverse the Brexit process,
stressing however that this would be possible only with the approval of
all the remaining 27 member states.
"The door is open if Britain changes its mind," Gianni Pittella, head of
the center-left grouping, the second largest in the parliament, told
reporters. The Greens expressed a similar wish.
The move was aimed at strengthening the hand of the 48 percent of
Britons who voted against Brexit in last year's referendum, but was
opposed by the EU chief negotiator on Brexit, Michel Barnier, parliament
officials said.
The conservative grouping, the largest in the legislature, tried to
distance itself from such a statement, although they backed the
resolution. "Leave means leave," the conservatives' leader Manfred Weber
said.
The resolution also allowed transitional arrangements to smooth the UK's
departure, but they should not last more than three years. MEPs also
insisted that at the end of the process Britain cannot expect better
conditions than when it was an EU member.
GIBRALTAR
Lawmakers rejected two nearly identical amendments that would have added
to the text a reference to Gibraltar's pro-EU vote in last year's Brexit
referendum, a move meant to recall its residents back the EU but also
prefer to remain in Britain.
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The Union Jack (L), the Gibraltarian flag (C) and the European Union
flag are seen flying, at the border of Gibraltar with Spain, in
front of the Rock in the British overseas territory of Gibraltar,
historically claimed by Spain April 3, 2017. REUTERS/Jon Nazca
The rocky British enclave on the southern Spain coast caused a harsh
controversy after Tusk's guidelines gave Madrid a say in the future
relationship between Gibraltar and the EU after Britain leaves the
bloc.
Gibraltar rejected the idea of Britain sharing sovereignty with
Spain by 99 percent to 1 percent in a 2002 referendum, but voted
overwhelmingly to remain part of the EU in last June's Brexit vote.
The changes proposed by British Conservative lawmakers in the EU
parliament and by a cross-party group of MEPs wanted to highlight
that Gibraltar voted against Brexit.
They also wanted to add a reference to the enclave in a paragraph
saying that a majority of electors in Scotland and Northern Ireland
voted to stay in the EU.
The main groupings in the parliament opposed this change because "we
do not agree to give to the Gibraltar issue the same importance as
Scotland's and Northern Ireland's", a parliament official said.
Other amendments proposed by the United Kingdom Independence Party
(UKIP) euroskeptic grouping, deploring Tusk's guidelines on
Gibraltar, were also widely rejected.
(Reporting by Francesco Guarascio; Editing by Tom Heneghan)
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