U. K. to Start ‘Brexit’ on March 29 by Invoking Article 50 -
By STEPHEN CASTLEMARCH 20, 2017
This month the British government is set to trigger Article 50, a provision that starts negotiations on the country’s exit from the European Union.
Prime Minister Theresa May, who had promised to begin the process of negotiating a withdrawal by the end of March, is apparently hoping
that the end of the negotiations will conclude before the next elections to the European Parliament in summer 2019 and the next general election in Britain, expected to take place in 2020.
After Britons voted in a referendum last year to leave the European Union, the government was taken to
court in a battle about whether Mrs. May could invoke Article 50 without the approval of Parliament.
LONDON — The British government said on Monday that it intended to formally notify the European Union on March
29 of its intention to leave the bloc, putting the country on track to complete a withdrawal by early 2019.
David Davis, the cabinet minister responsible for negotiating the exit, said
that Britain would send notice next week to start a two-year negotiated exit, commonly referred to as “Brexit,” under Article 50 of the European Union’s treaty.
The British government said it will formally notify the European Union on March 29 of its plans to withdraw from the bloc.
Amendments to give Parliament a final say over any withdrawal agreement
and to protect the status of the three million citizens from other European countries living in Britain were ultimately rejected, giving Mrs. May a freer hand to negotiate.