Brexit's Fate 'is in British Hands' - Donald Tusk

Brexit's
fate is "in the hands of our British friends" after EU leaders agreed
to delay the departure date by at least two weeks, says Donald Tusk.
If MPs
approve Theresa May's withdrawal deal next week - Brexit would be delayed from
29 March until 22 May.
But if they
do not, the UK has until 12 April to come up with a new plan.
European
Council President Mr Tusk said that until 12 April, "anything is
possible" including a much longer delay or cancelling Brexit altogether.
Speaking in
Brussels on Friday, he said he was "really happy" the 27 EU leaders
had reached a unanimous decision to extend the two-year Article 50 process,
under which the UK was due to leave the EU next Friday.
"It
means that until 12 April, anything is possible: A deal, a long extension if
the United Kingdom decided to rethink its strategy, or revoking Article 50,
which is a prerogative of the UK government.
"The
fate of Brexit is in the hands of our British friends. As the EU, we are
prepared for the worst, but hope for the best. As you know, hope dies
last."
According to
the final summit conclusions, the UK is expected to "indicate a way
forward" before 12 April, if MPs do not approve the withdrawal deal
negotiated with the EU, which would then be considered by the European Council.
Theresa May
has been granted a little breathing space. The EU has allowed a few more days
to try to get her deal through the House of Commons.
But it's not
the timetable that she chose.
And as
things stand, the expectation that the compromise deal will get through is low.
And, more to
the point, the government does not believe that it can hold off another attempt
by a powerful cross-party group of MPs who are resolved to put Parliament
forcibly in charge of the process to find alternatives.
Ministers
are therefore today not just wondering about how to manage one last heave for
the prime minister's deal, but what they should do next, when - odds on - the
whole issue is in the hands of the Commons, not Number 10.
The UK must
decide by then whether it will be taking part in European Parliamentary
elections from 23-26 May - if it does not, then a long delay would become
"impossible", Mr Tusk said.
Theresa May,
who had requested an extension of the process until 30 June, has ruled out
revoking Article 50, which would cancel Brexit, and has said it would be wrong
to ask Britons to vote for candidates for the elections to the European
Parliament, due to be held from 23-26 May, three years after they voted to
leave the EU.
After she
returned to the UK on Friday, Downing Street said she had been briefing
ministers on her talks with EU leaders.
Her official
spokesman said: "There is now a clear point of decision. If we are able to
have a successful vote next week then we can pass the necessary legislation for
ratifying the agreement and we can, as a country, be outside the European Union
two months today."
For now, the
UK's departure date is still written in to law as next Friday, 29 March.
But Mrs May
is expected to change that by tabling legislation next week and getting it
through the Commons and the Lords before then.
FROM .bbc.com/news/uk-politics-
No comments