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LeadershipBrexit

Germany’s Gabriel: Badly Handled Brexit Would Send Europe “Down the Drain”

By
Reuters
Reuters
By
Reuters
Reuters
August 28, 2016, 10:52 AM ET
TOPSHOT-BRITAIN-EU-VOTE-BREXIT
TOPSHOT - Postcards featuring the World War II British slogan "Keep Calm and Carry On" are seen outside a newsagents in London, on 24 June, 2016. Britain voted to break away from the European Union on June 24, toppling Prime Minister David Cameron and dealing a thunderous blow to the 60-year-old bloc that sent world markets plunging. / AFP / LEON NEAL (Photo credit should read LEON NEAL/AFP/Getty Images)Photograph by Leon Neal—AFP/Getty Images

German Economy Minister Sigmar Gabriel said on Sunday that if Britain’s exit from the European Union was badly handled and other member countries followed its lead, Europe would go “down the drain”.

“Brexit is bad but it won’t hurt us as much economically as some fear – it’s more of a psychological problem and it’s a huge problem politically,” Gabriel, the deputy to Chancellor Angela Merkel in Germany’s governing coalition, told a news conference.

He added that the world was now looking at Europe as an unstable continent.

It’s Time to Start Worrying About a Frexit

“If we organise Brexit in the wrong way, then we’ll be in deep trouble so now we need to make sure that we don’t allow Britain to keep the nice things, so to speak, related to Europe while taking no responsibility,” Gabriel said.

Since Britain’s stunning June 23 referendum vote to leave the European Union, all eyes have been on Germany to indicate a way out of danger for the 27 members who will remain.

On Aug. 24, Merkel said remaining member states must listen to each other carefully and avoid rushing into policy decisions. “If you do it wrong from the beginning and you don’t listen, – and act just for the sake of acting – then you can make many mistakes,” the conservative German leader said.

The World’s Largest Pension Fund Blames Brexit for a $51.8 Billion

Merkel has met 15 other European heads of state during the past week to prepare the groundwork for a Sept. 16 EU summit in Bratislava aimed at shoring up the battered bloc.

A British government spokesman said in mid-August that Prime Minister Theresa May will not begin formal divorce talks with the EU before the end of the year.

EU leaders are refusing to countenance a “Europe a la carte” by letting Britain select the parts of its future relationship that it may like, such as access to the bloc’s single market of 500 million consumers, while dispensing with EU principles such as the free movement of people.

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