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EU and Britain agree to Brexit delay until Oct. 31

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‘Please do not waste this time,’ pleads EU President Donald Tusk
The European Union and British Prime Minister Theresa May have agreed to delay Brexit once again — this time until the end of October.
Leaders of the 27 remaining EU member states met for more than six hours before agreeing early Thursday morning to postpone Brexit until Oct. 31.
May, who had sought a delay only until June 30, agreed to the later date.
Please do not waste this time’
Speaking to reporters after the agreement was reached, EU President Donald Tusk said, “During this time, the course of action will be entirely in the U.K.’s hands. It can still ratify the withdrawal agreement, in which case the extension will be terminated. It can also reconsider the whole Brexit strategy … but not in the withdrawal agreement.”
Tusk said the U.K. will also have the option to revoke Article 50 and cancel Brexit altogether.
He added a plea to Britain at the end of his statement: “Please do not waste this time.”
Save or shove
EU leaders spent a long dinner meeting wrangling over whether to save Britain from a precipitous and potentially calamitous Brexit this Friday, or to give the departing nation a shove over the edge.
May pleaded with them to delay Britain’s exit until June 30 so the U.K could sort out the mess that Brexit has become.
Tusk earlier suggested an even longer delay of up to a year with conditions attached to ensure Britain does not stymie EU decision-making if it remains a member.
Some EU leaders were sympathetic, but French President Emmanuel Macron said it was he who ultimately blocked a long Brexit delay and convinced other European Union leaders to agree to a shorter one in order to preserve the functioning of the EU.
“It’s true that the majority was more in favour of a very long extension. But it was not logical, in my view — and above all, it was neither good for us nor for the U.K.,” he said. May initially believed that a June 30 deadline would be enough time for Britain’s Parliament to ratify a Brexit deal and pass the legislation needed for a smooth Brexit.
But British lawmakers have rejected her divorce deal three times, and attempts to forge a compromise with her political opponents have yet to bear fruit.
She said in Brussels tonight that she would not pretend that the next few weeks would be easy. “The choices we now face are stark and the timetable is clear. So we must now press on at pace with our efforts to reach consensus on a deal that is in the national interest,” she said.

Source: cbc.ca

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