Brexit
European Parliament aims to endorse any deal just two weeks before #Brexit day
The European Parliament expects to be able to endorse any deal with London just two weeks before Britain leaves the EU on March 29, a leading lawmaker said on Monday, highlighting how tight the schedule is to agree on divorce terms and future ties, writes Gabriela Baczynska.
Danuta Hubner, head of the European parliament’s constitutional affairs committee that will first handle the agreement, said the target to hold a vote would be a plenary session due on 11-14 March 2019.
It was one of the first times a senior lawmaker has discussed the likely timing of the vote, making clear just how close to the deadline it will be. The European legislature must endorse any Brexit deal for it to take effect, meaning a 'No' vote could force Britain to crash out of the EU with no accord.
“We have to vote during the first March plenary,” Hubner told her committee. “The second one (due March 25-28) will be too late because after us the Council (of all EU member states) must look into this again.”
She said EU leaders did not know if they “will be successful in finalizing negotiations in October, or they will slip to November.”
Parliament officials estimate the chamber of 751 lawmakers will need more than two months to process the agreement. Lawmakers are keen to subject it to proper scrutiny to make sure it does not look like a rubber stamp.
The EU parliament also wants to vote only after Britain’s parliament, to avoid endorsing a deal that may then get struck down in London.
Share this article:
EU Reporter publishes articles from a variety of outside sources which express a wide range of viewpoints. The positions taken in these articles are not necessarily those of EU Reporter. Please see EU Reporter’s full Terms and Conditions of publication for more information EU Reporter embraces artificial intelligence as a tool to enhance journalistic quality, efficiency, and accessibility, while maintaining strict human editorial oversight, ethical standards, and transparency in all AI-assisted content. Please see EU Reporter’s full A.I. Policy for more information.
-
Kazakhstan3 days agoKazakhstan cuts water use by 874 mln m³ through new technologies
-
Health5 days agoImpasse in European Union Tobacco Tax Reform: The Swedish veto
-
San Marino5 days agoInconvenient questions about Andorra and San Marino that Brussels should be asking
-
General5 days agoHow digital wallets are changing the way Welsh consumers pay for online services
