terça-feira, 13 de setembro de 2016

London keep secrets negotiating details with Brussels

Bandeiras da Grã-Bretanha e União Europeia vistas em Londres. 19/06/2016

London - The British government aims to keep secret some details of his attitude toward the exit from the country of the European Union not to put the negotiators sent by Brussels, warned on Tuesday the British minister for "Brexit," David Davis.

In a speech to the Foreign Affairs Committee of the House of Commons, Davis held to account to deputies about his plans on aspects such as future trade agreements to be negotiated with the EU would be "a gift to the other side."

The responsible for delineating the British plan for "Brexit" appeared before the committee at a time when the government led by Prime Minister, Theresa May, faces pressures to start detailing your UK view out of the ordinary block.

In view of the questions of parliamentarians, Davis said that remains standing the timetable set for May, which provides turn in early 2017 Article 50 of the Treaty of Lisbon, which will start a countdown of two years to finally break the formal ties between London and Brussels.

"I think it would be a bad idea into the negotiations with fear of any results that can be achieved," said Davis, who admitted that there is a possibility that once the period of two years has not reached an agreement, or While some of the 27 other EU members to block the agreement reached.

However, the minister considered unlikely this scenario, that would require the United Kingdom to trade with the EU under the rules of the World Trade Organization, a potentially harmful situation for the British economy.

Besides the possibility of an agreement being paralyzed by other EU countries, the government also faces the risk that the very British Parliament put difficulties at Union checkout process.

By leaving the bloc, the United Kingdom will overcome its legislation thousands of Community rules, a process which need the green light from MEPs.

It is seen as certain that the House of Commons, with conservative majority, will support the government's decisions in this direction, although there is the possibility of the House of Lords, where many of the seats are hereditary or are occupied by members of the Anglican Church, creating obstacles some legislative changes.

"The government is fulfilling a very clear mandate from the citizens. The House of Lords would be very unwise not to take this mandate seriously and chose the way of the blockade," Davis said before the Foreign Affairs Committee.

When the parliament should decide on legal aspects of "Brexit", probably in the last stretch of negotiations with Brussels, the former Prime Minister David Cameron will no longer be among the Commons, since yesterday ended his political career in front line to give up the chair by the Conservative Party.

The former leader "Tory," which won an absolute majority in the general elections of 2015, had resigned as prime minister shortly after the victory of the "Brexit" in the referendum of June 23, which he called with the conviction to win the option of staying in the EU.

49 years, Cameron, who in 2010 became the head of younger British government in nearly two centuries, now consummated his disappearance from the public scene on the grounds that his presence in parliament would be a "distraction" to the new Executive May in uncertain times ahead.

Among other complex aspects, London should start bilateral trade relations with dozens of countries since it is outside the EU, a scenario that will require a double or triple the budget of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, according calculates the camera of Commons committee.

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