Skip to main content
Netherlands News in English

Main navigation

  • Top stories
  • Health
  • Crime
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Tech
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Weird
  • 1-1-2
Image
Mark Rutte
Mark Rutte - Credit: Photo: Corepics/DepositPhotos
Business
Politics
Mark Rutte
Brexit
UK
EU
Friday, 15 March 2019 - 11:00

Share this article:

Dutch PM done with “whining” over Brexit; demands clarity from UK

The British government must quickly make clear what its plans are regarding the Brexit, before a postponement can be discussed, according to Prime Minister Mark Rutte. “What good is it to continue whining at each other for months, while you’ve been spinning in that circle for two years now”, he said after the British parliament voted to postpone the Brexit on Thursday, NOS reports.

On Tuesday the British House of Commons shot down an adjusted withdrawal agreement made between the British government and the EU, which included guarantees that the so-called Irish backstop will be a temporary measure - the reason why the British MPs shot down the previous agreement. On Wednesday the Brits voted against the UK leaving the EU with no agreement in place. And on Thursday they voted to postpone the Brexit, but this requires approval from all other 27 EU member states. If that approval does not happen, the British will leave the European Union on March 29th, without a deal.

“The political, social, financial and economic damage in Britain can not be ignored”, Rutte said shortly after Thursday’s vote. “And they still don’t know what they want.” The Dutch Prime Minister wonders whether there is any sense in a postponement. “You will get a situation in which we continue to talk for months, as we have been doing for months”, he said to NOS. “What good is it to continue whining at each other for months, while you’ve been spinning in that circle for two years.”

The biggest issue seems to be the so-called Irish backstop - a safety net meant to ensure that there is no hard border between Ireland and Northern Ireland after the Brexit. Despite new guarantees that the backstop is only a temporary measure, the British parliamentarians still fear that it will force the UK to stay in a customs union with the EU due to the open border in Ireland.

According to Rutte, it would solve a lot of problems if the British quit drawing ‘red lines’. “If the British say that Northern Ireland can stay in the internal market for a while and remain a member of the United Kingdom, then the problem is solved. If they say that England will become part of the customs union in the future, the problem is solved. But they’ve drawn all those red lines. British politics must now give way.”

Rutte said that he will now do “absolutely nothing”, according to the broadcaster. “They have decided to leave. If they want to postpone, they must also say why”, he said, repeating multiple previous statements on postponement.

Whether Britain will get the postponement they want, remains to be seen. When the adapted deal was presented on Monday, European Commission president Jean-Claude Juncker said: "We give the agreement a second chance. There will be no third chance. There will be no new negotiations. This is it."

If the House of Commons passes the withdrawal agreement in the third vote on this matter next week, then a deal is in place and Britain will likely be granted a small postponement to get everything in order. If the deal is again shot down, that is a different matter. Then the EU may well say, enough, let’s just get the no-deal Brexit over with, according to NOS. The European government leaders are meeting next week to discuss this situation.

More like this

Image
Bulgarian and European Union flags.
Netherlands drops objection to Bulgaria's accession to the Schengen area
Image
Mark Rutte talking to the press after a Summit of European Union leaders in Brussels, 28 June 2018
Europe's call for humanitarian pause in Gaza will make a difference, Rutte thinks
Image
Immigrants and asylum seekers outside the center of permanence for repatriation of the Italian town of Gradisca d'Isonzo, 27th June 2017
PM Rutte calls EU's migration deal with Tunisia a "true milestone"
Image
Jos Leijdekkers
Dutch gov't will try cutting EU development aid to Sierra Leone over Bolle Jos
Make NL Times your top Google source

Follow us:

Latest stories

  • Termite colonies growing in Netherlands through wood trade, study finds
  • Three men handed lengthy prison sentences for series of 21 explosions in Alkmaar
  • Bankrupt Dutch carmaker Spyker relaunched with multi-million euro Ukrainian investment
  • Mauritshuis not required to return Bredius artworks after court ruling on will wording
  • Goalkeeper Bart Verbruggen trains separately as Oranje open Kansas City World Cup camp

Top stories

  • Lightning strike halts train services between Amsterdam, Schiphol and Utrecht
  • Netherlands 17th on Global Peace Index in an increasingly unsafe world
  • Falling tree kills driver, hail destroys campsite in Noord-Brabant; More storms today
  • Dutch home prices won't rise further this year: Rabobank
  • New national siren system to be developed as Netherlands keeps air raid alerts

© 2012-2026, NL Times, All rights reserved.

Footer menu

  • Change Privacy Settings
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact
  • Partner Content