EU leaders bracing for impending announcement

LONDON: A protester draped in a European Union flag takes part in a protest in support of an amendment to guarantee legal status of EU citizens, outside the Houses of Parliament. - AFP

LONDON: Prime Minister Theresa May is set to begin the countdown to Brexit after parliament gave her the green light-and Scotland wrong-footed her by launching a fresh bid for independence. Downing Street has played down speculation that May could announce yesterday that she is triggering the Article 50 process to leave the European Union, indicating that it would take place later in the month. But coming just hours after lawmakers approved a bill empowering her to begin the divorce, the prime minister's statement in the House of Commons could be an opportunity to set out her plans in more detail.

May appeared to be caught off guard Monday when Scotland's nationalist government announced plans for a second referendum on breaking from the United Kingdom. First Minister Nicola Sturgeon had warned that the prospect was on the cards since the June vote to leave the EU-in which a majority of Scots voted to stay-but an announcement had not been expected so soon.

May immediately condemned the plan, saying that less than three years after Scots voted by 55 percent to reject independence, another vote would cause only "uncertainty and division". But it realized one of her biggest fears about Brexit and opened up a second battlefront as she prepares for two years of tough negotiations with the EU. EU leaders were braced for a potential announcement on Article 50 this week, and the European Parliament was ready to hold a special debate and a vote on its plans for the negotiations.

While this is now looking less likely, ministers insist that Brexit will begin by the end of March, putting Britain on course to become the first country to leave the EU by March 2019. The EU is determined to ensure that Brexit will not encourage other countries to follow Britain out the door, and big battles await over budget contributions, immigration and trade ties. Manfred Weber, a German lawmaker who leads the European People's Party, the biggest grouping in the European Parliament, said  Scotland's breakaway bid signalled "a deepening of the splits in British society". "People all over Europe can see how risky it is to take the EU into question," he said.

Battle for Britain

After weeks of wrangling, British lawmakers on late Monday granted May the right to trigger Article 50 of the EU's Lisbon Treaty, which would start the two-year divorce process with the bloc. The bill still requires the formality of royal assent from Queen Elizabeth II to become law. The government reportedly wants to start the process after a March 25 summit in Rome to mark the EU's 60th birthday.

May has the power to block a second independence vote in Scotland, but this would most likely only energise the Scottish nationalist cause. Polls suggest that a new referendum would be a much closer fight than in 2014, as the Scottish National Party is hoping a newly sovereign Scotland would be able to maintain close ties with the EU. But the European Commission was quick to warn that Scotland would not inherit Britain's EU membership, and would have to reapply as a new nation.

Sturgeon said that she had sought to work with London, but that her concerns about May's plan to leave Europe's single market, in order to cut immigration, had fallen on deaf ears. Several British newspapers described Scotland's move as an "ambush", with The Daily Telegraph calling it "The new battle for Britain".

The approval of the Brexit bill was a victory for the prime minister, and her minister in charge of overseeing the EU exit, David Davis, greeted peers outside the House of Lords chamber late Monday with a broad smile. But new battles lie ahead, with The Times reporting that parliament will need to pass at least seven bills to prepare for life outside the EU on controversial issues such as immigration, taxes and agriculture.

So far May has managed to keep her Conservative MPs in line, but many of them opposed Brexit and could become emboldened as the negotiations progress, particularly if the economy starts to falter. "The unity of the Tory party is shakier than it seems," Tim Bale, professor of politics at Queen Mary University of London said.  - AFP