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Sunday, July 21, 2019

Brexit Is Dead, Long Live Brexit: How Britain Can Still Finalize Its European Divorce

Source: nationalinterest.org - Sunday, July 21, 2019 Salvatore Babones Politics, Europe London must act. The only real threat posed by a hard Brexit is the prospect of cataclysmic technical barriers being thrown up, like the nonrecognition of British commercial aircraft licenses in the EU. But of course these too cut both ways. It’s hard to imagine EU airlines giving up their precious landing slots at London’s Heathrow airport, which have been valued at $75 million for a single slot. Or EU banks giving up access to London’s capital markets. When Britain’s prime minister Theresa May took office in 2016 with a pledge that “Brexit means Brexit,” she held all the cards in negotiations over leaving the European Union. She had a direct popular mandate, if not for herself, then at least for Brexit. Her EU opponents had to coordinate the negotiating positions of twenty-seven different countries, several of them possible exit candidates themselves, and many of them (Greece, Hungary, Italy, Poland, and others) at loggerheads with the EU executive authorities in Brussels. What’s more, she held two all-powerful trump cards. First, there were 3.2 million (now 3.5 million ) EU citizens in the United Kingdom who hoped to be allowed to stay, most of them depending on the UK economy for their livelihood, compared to only 1.2 million UK citizens in Europe, most of them retired. Second, the Republic of Ireland relied on the United Kingdom as a transit route for 80 percent of its exports to the rest All Related


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