May warns of ‘difficult times’ as UK prepares to leave EU

epa05523605 British Prime Minister Theresa May l listens to Chinese President Xi Jinping speech during the opening ceremony of the G20 Leaders Summit in Hangzhou on September 4,  EPA/NICOLAS ASFOURI

 

AP

British Prime Minister Theresa May has warned that Britain faces some “difficult times” as it prepares to leave the European Union following the June referendum.
She told the Andrew Marr Show in an interview that not all would be “plain sailing” as Britain withdraws from the 28-nation bloc.
She said in her first extended interview since taking office that she will not call an early election because Britain needs stability.
The prime minister spoke to Marr before leaving for China for the G-20 summit. She said she would not “pretend” leaving the EU would be easy despite some encouraging recent economic news.
Nevertheless, May says she is certain Britain will make a success of its departure from the bloc and will also find economic opportunities outside the EU.
May said that she intends to seize new trading opportunities for a Britain that has voted to leave the European Union, reiterating that “Brexit does indeed mean Brexit” and there will be “no attempt to get out of this.”
After May’s first meeting with US President Barack Obama since she became British leader in July, the two leaders sought to downplay the impact of a British exit on the much touted “special relationship” between the U.S. and U.K.
But Obama did not back away from his assertion, first made as he campaigned against the exit, that Great Britain would have to wait its turn before the United States prioritized a new, separate trade deal with a newly independent Great Britain. Obama noted the U.S. remains focused on finishing trade deals with Asia-Pacific and with the European Union.
The president said that he believed that Britain’s priority meanwhile was “figuring out what Brexit means with respect to Europe.” Still, Obama promised to work closely with May to avoid “adverse effects” in the trade relationship.
The British people narrowly voted to leave the EU in June, but the government has yet to formally invoke Article 50, the EU treaty clause that would set up its departure. Invoking the clause would start a two-year countdown that would be unlikely to benefit Britain as it has not yet worked out what it wants its future relationship with the European Union to look like. There is also opposition to a British exit among a significant part of the population and questions over whether Parliament will be given a formal vote on triggering Article 50.
“There will be no second referendum, no attempt to turn the clock back, no attempt to try to get out of this,” May told reporters on the sidelines of the G-20 economic summit. “The UK will be leaving the European Union.”
At a separate news conference minutes later, European Council President Donald Tusk reiterated the EU’s stance that they will not start negotiating with Britain on its future relationship with a 27-member bloc until the British government formally invokes Article 50.
He said his words may sound “brutal,” but: “We need to protect the interests of the members of the EU that want to stay together, not the one which wants to leave.”
May also said that she would take a decision this month on whether to approve a French-built and Chinese-backed power plant project in Britain that Beijing is counting on to boost its nuclear technology exports. She abruptly stalled approval for the project pushed through by her predecessor, and said Sunday she was reviewing “all the evidence around this issue,” including relating to national security.
Critics of the planned Hinkley Point project say its technology is untested, it is a bad financial deal for Britain and serious concerns remain about a Chinese state-owned company investing in key infrastructure that could give Beijing major political leverage in the event of a conflict.

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