Hollande urges Brexit talks ‘as soon as possible’

epa05434924 French President Francois Hollande (L), Irish President Michael D. Higgins (C) and his wife Sabina Higgins (R) pose for photos as they meet at the Irish President's official residence in Áras an Uachtaráin, Dublin, Ireland, 21 July 2016. Hollande is on an official visit to Ireland.  EPA/MAXWELLS DUBLIN / POOL

 

Dublin / AFP

French President Francois Hollande on Thursday urged Britain to begin talks to leave the EU “as soon as possible” and ruled out granting access to the EU’s single market without access by EU workers to Britain.
“The sooner these negotiations begin the better, and the shorter they are the better,” Hollande said after meeting Irish PM Enda Kenny in Dublin, calling for negotiations “as soon as possible”. “Things should not drag on,” Hollande said, hours before he is due to meet British PM Theresa May in Paris for the first time.
He said he expected May to give her “reasons” on why she was planning to delay until next year invoking Article 50 of the EU’s Lisbon Treaty — the formal procedure for withdrawal from the European Union.
Hollande’s tough talk contrasted sharply with a more accommodating German Chancellor Angela Merkel, who agreed to give Britain more time to prepare its departure during May’s visit to Berlin on Wednesday.
On her first foreign trip since taking office in the wake of Britain’s seismic June referendum, May told Merkel that her government would not ask to leave the EU before the end of 2016 in order to plan a “sensible and orderly departure”.
Merkel, who is expected to play a pivotal role in the Brexit talks along with France, said it was in the interests of all that Britain had a “well-defined position” before beginning the negotiations. Faced with growing euroscepticism at home, Hollande has taken a harder line since Britain’s seismic June 23 vote to leave the EU.
He has a presidential election looming next year and faces a challenge from the far-right National Front, which wants France to leave the EU too.
The Brexit talks are expected to hinge on Britain’s desire to restrict immigration of EU citizens but still retain vital access to the EU’s single market.
Hollande appeared to rule out the possibility.
“Access to the single market cannot be guaranteed unless free movement of workers is respected,” he said.
Hollande and Kenny also said in a joint statement that there should be “a balance of rights and obligations, including in respect of the four freedoms”, referring to the free movement of goods, services, capital and people in the EU.
EU immigration was an emotive issue in the referendum. Brexit campaigners argued that the hundreds of thousands of EU immigrants arriving in Britain every year have been pushing down wages for low-paid Britons and overburdened public services.

‘Unique concerns’ on Brexit
Ireland’s concerns revolve mainly around the future of its lucrative exports to Britain and its border with British-ruled Northern Ireland, which would be the EU’s only land border with Britain once it has left.
PM Enda Kenny has also raised the possibility of a vote by Northern Ireland, which voted to stay in the EU, to unite with Ireland.
“Ireland and France are the UK’s nearest neighbours, with significant and complex economic, human, cultural and historical links” Kenny and Hollande said.
“In consequence, both countries have specific and indeed unique concerns to be addressed in future negotiations” they said.

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