Europe’s leaders meet Wednesday June 29,2016 without Britain for the first time following
its shock decision to leave the EU, trying to pick up the pieces and
prevent further disintegration.
The 27 remaining members of the bloc agreed to give Britain some
breathing space yesterday, accepting that it needs time to absorb the
shock of the Brexit vote before triggering Article 50 that will begin
the formal divorce proceedings.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel warned British Prime Minister David
Cameron could not “cherry-pick” the terms of the exit negotiations,
reflecting wider concerns that Britain’s departure could spark a domino
effect of other states wanting to leave the EU.
David Cameron flew back to London after Tuesday’s summit, as Scotland’s first
minister headed in the opposite direction to test the waters in Brussels
for her country joining the bloc as a separate entity.
Scotland overwhelmingly backed “Remain” in last Thursday’s vote, and a
combative Nicola Sturgeon has said she was “utterly determined to
preserve Scotland’s relationship and place within the EU.”
That may require a second referendum on Scottish independence, which
failed in 2014, with Sturgeon saying that the Britain of that time “does
not exist any more” following the Brexit vote.
Five days after Britain voted by a margin of 52 % to leave EU on the Referendum held on Thursday June 23,2016, unleashing turmoil on global financial markets, EU President
Donald Tusk said that he understood that time was needed “for the dust
to settle” before the next steps can be taken.
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