The European Union’s 27 remaining members will meet to assess its
future next week without Britain, the president of the European council,
Donald Tusk, has said, as the bloc struggles to absorb the seismic
implications of the UK’s decision to leave.
Tusk said he had spoken to EU leaders in the past few days and the
union had been prepared for the result and was determined to keep its
unity. “There is no hiding the fact that we wanted a different outcome
of yesterday’s referendum,” he said in Brussels on Friday.
“There is no way of predicting all the political consequences of this
event – especially for the UK. It is a historic moment, but not a
moment for hysterical reactions.”
Tusk promised to convene informal discussions
without the British prime minister, David Cameron, on the margins of a
scheduled EU summit next week, as well as a wider reflection on the
future of the union. “What doesn’t kill you makes you stronger,” he
said.
Martin Schulz, the president of the European parliament, said
he would speak to the German chancellor, Angela Merkel, “on how we can
avoid a chain reaction” of other EU states following Britain’s lead.
“The chain reaction being celebrated everywhere now by Eurosceptics
won’t happen,” Schulz said, adding that the EU was the world’s biggest
single market and “Britain has just cut its ties with that market.
That’ll have consequences, and I don’t believe other countries will be
encouraged to follow that dangerous path.”
Manfred Weber, the chairman of the European People’s party group of
centre-right parties in the European parliament, stressed that Britain
had crossed a line and there was no going back.
The vote “causes major damage to both sides”, Weber said. “Exit
negotiations should be concluded within two years at max. There cannot
be any special treatment. Leave means leave.”
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