Friday, 23 June 2017

May vows EU citizens can stay after Brexit

British Prime Minister Theresa May promised Thursday to let EU citizens stay after Brexit as she met sceptical European leaders for the first time since her disastrous election gamble.
Under pressure from all sides since losing her parliamentary majority in the June 8 vote, May held out an apparent olive branch on the uncertain fate of three million Europeans living in Britain.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel said the plans were a "good start", but added that "there are still many, many other questions" to be dealt with over Brexit.
Merkel had earlier made clear that Britain´s exit was not at the top of the agenda for the remaining 27 EU members, as they try to capitalise on a renewed sense of optimism to put the bloc back on track after years of austerity and crisis.
The EU sought instead to show its unity by pressing ahead with plans on counter-terrorism, defence and by renewing damaging economic sanctions against Russia over the war in eastern Ukraine.
"For me the shaping of the future of the 27 is a priority coming before the issue of the negotiations with Britain on the exit," said Merkel, Europe´s most powerful leader.
New French President Emmanuel Macron, attending his first summit, added that the EU had to "establish our own strategy based on our own interests".
 May addressed the issue of citizens´ rights, one of the key three priorities for the opening stage of Brexit negotiations that began on Monday.
No EU citizen currently in Britain would be asked to leave on Brexit day, she said, while EU citizens living in Britain for more than five years will get "settled status".
"The UK´s position represents a fair and serious offer and one aimed at giving as much certainty as possible to citizens who have settled in the UK," May told her colleagues.
The prime minister said she expected any offer by Britain to be matched by the EU for the one million Britons living on the continent, a government source said.
But her proposal sets up a clash with the EU after she rejected Brussels´s demand that the European Court of Justice oversee and resolve any dispute over citizens´ rights post-Brexit.
May said the pledge on EU citizens would instead "be enshrined in UK law and enforceable through our highly respected courts".
She also drew criticism from a campaign group of EU citizens, the3million, which called her offer "pathetic".
"It fails on several points which would enable EU citizens in the UK to continue to live normally after Brexit," it said.
Other crunch Brexit issues are Britain´s estimated 100 billion euro (88 billion pounds, $112 billion) divorce bill, and Northern Ireland, which will be on Britain´s only land border with the EU after Brexit.

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