Juncker and co want the UK out as soon as possible to limit "contagion" - they want the period of uncertainty to end ASAP to stop people in Holland, Denmark and France getting funny ideas about asking for referendums and exceptions. But the rules that do exist are clear - the referendum was not legally binding and nothing can happen until the UK voluntary enacts article 50, and even then there is no way to get rid of the UK until 2 years have passed. Two long years that don't start until the UK says so! And why should we say so straight away, when the prime minister has understandably resigned and there is a real possibility of both a change in labour leadership and an unplanned general election? It makes no sense for the UK to enact article 50 immediately, just because that is what suits the Eurocrats.
Sod them. Chickens are coming home to roost for them too. The UK will leave the EU in its own sweet time, and if we can take some more nations out with us then that is all well and good.
http://www.theguardian.com/politics/201 ... xit-crisis
Britain was heading into a period of unprecedented political, constitutional and economic crisis on Saturday night as European leaders stepped up demands for it to quit the EU as soon as possible.
Petition to hold second EU referendum reaches 2.5m signatures
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However, prominent Leave campaigner and cabinet minister Theresa Villiers, writing in the Observer, dismissed the calls. “There is no need to plunge into tabling article 50 now, whatever [European commission president] Mr Juncker may want,” she writes, referring to the trigger for formal Brexit negotiations. “The period of informal negotiation prior to an article 50 process will be crucial and should not be rushed.”
BJ is right. If the Eurocrats want the UK to leave as soon as possible, to limit the uncertainty and contagion, then the last thing we should do is rush it. On the contrary, the longer we dawdle, the more likely the EU will be to grant us a decent deal to get the negotiation process over with! Make them sweat.Johnson, the favourite to succeed Cameron, has also said there is no need to hurry triggering the formal process, a move he believes would limit the UK’s room for manoeuvre.
But after an emergency meeting of ministers from the bloc’s six founder members, Germany’s foreign minister, Frank-Walter Steinmeier, said negotiations should begin “as soon as possible” and that Britain had a responsibility to work with the EU on exit terms.