It’s shaping up to be an interesting day:
Tory Prime Minister David Cameron is resigning. “Mr Cameron announced shortly after 08:15 BST that he had informed the Queen of his decision to remain in place for the short term and to then hand over to a new prime minister by the time of the Conservative conference in October.” Current favorite to replace Cameron is pro-Leave MP Boris Johnson.
Under terms of the Lisbon Treaty, it will take about two years to negotiate the terms of the UK’s withdrawal from the EU.
World markets are going crazy.
The Pound Sterling is at its lowest exchange rate in 30 years.
Scotland, Northern Ireland and London voted heavily to stay in the EU, while Leave won pretty much everywhere else, including Wales. Now there’s talk of a second Scottish Independence referendum.
Euroskeptic parties across the continent are calling for their own independence votes.
Obama continues to demonstrate his magic touch at persuasion.
I would say the panic selling is largely unwarranted; there’s no reason that UK can’t negotiate an orderly exit from the EU and continue to participate in the European Economic Area the way that Norway and Switzerland do now. There was talk before the Brexit vote that the EU wouldn’t go along with this out of spite, but if the endless Greece crisis has shown, Eurocrats negotiate their non-negotiable demands all the time, and I doubt even Angela Merkel is willing to put Europe through a deep recession (which is to say, deeper even than the current one the Euro seems to have engendered in perpetuity) just to “teach the UK a lesson.”
More later…
Tags: Boris Johnson, Brexit, David Cameron, Economics, Elections, EU, European Economic Area, Euroskeptic, Foreign Policy, Obama, Scotland, UK, Wales
This entry was posted on Friday, June 24th, 2016 at 7:03 AM and is filed under Economics, Elections, Foreign Policy. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed.
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