Opinion: What is Article 50 - the law that governs exiting the EU - and how does it work?
(opens in a new window)Gavin Barrett, (opens in a new window)University College Dublin
What exactly will happen if the UK votes to leave the EU in its June 23 referendum? A range of negative economic consequences have been predicted by various organisations including the (opens in a new window)IMF, the (opens in a new window)OECD, the (opens in a new window)LSE’s Centre for Economic Performance and the (opens in a new window)Treasury. They include falling investor confidence, market turbulence, a plummeting pound, reduced British GDP and increased unemployment.
While much of this may seem speculative, however, what does the law tell us will happen?
The short answer is: initially virtually nothing. Few legal consequences will ensue on June 24, if Britain votes to leave. It will probably take up to two years for the major legal consequences to reveal themselves. A little-known provision of the EU Treaty – (opens in a new window)Article 50 – will govern the Brexit process during this time.
Article 50 looks deceptively simple. Briefly, it provides for the EU negotiating an agreement with a departing member, setting out terms. The (opens in a new window)European Commission, the EU’s executive body, negotiates this agreement and the remaining member states sign off on it once the European Parliament has given its consent.
When the Article 50 agreement enters into force, the EU treaties simply stop applying to the UK. And if agreeing a mutually satisfactory deal proves impossible, there is a fallback position. The EU treaties will simply stop applying two years after the UK first notified its intention to withdraw (a period that can be extended if needed).
The process all sounds straightforward. In reality, however, it will be anything but that.
Expect messiness
In the first place, Article 50 is very far from a simple case of the UK and its neighbours engaging in individual mutual negotiations. The negotiations will see the UK on the one side, and all the remaining member states collectively on the other. Within the EU side, we can expect hard bargaining, messy compromises and trade-offs between the remaining EU member state interests. Individual states will block agreement in one area unless they gain concessions in others. Nothing will be agreed until everything is agreed.
As regards to the UK side in any future Article 50 negotiations, very little is known. It is not even clear who would be in charge of the government conducting the negotiations – much less what they would want. David Cameron will probably (opens in a new window)have to resign if Britain votes for Brexit. Boris Johnson, one likely successor, appeared initially to be using the Brexit vote merely as a means of securing better terms for remaining in the EU. Other Brexiters, like Michael Gove (perhaps another candidate for the succession) want to leave both the EU and the single market.
(opens in a new window)European Press Association
Some things are clear about the Article 50 negotiations, however.
- The UK will be the weaker side in the negotiations because it needs access to the EU’s (opens in a new window)colossal single market.
- If Britain wants access to the single market, it will have to pay with sovereignty: the more sovereignty the UK is prepared to sacrifice, the greater its access will be to the market (and vice versa).
- Single market access will also involve allowing continued access to the UK market, including for migrants.
- From the moment the Article 50 process starts, uncertainty – and the prospect that a good deal cannot be reached – is likely to hang over the UK and the EU alike like a toxic cloud. This will impact on financial markets. It will hit investment. It will hit the value of the pound.
- The need to deter other moves to leave within the EU will toughen the EU’s collective stance against Britain – as will elections in France and Germany in 2017 – although enlightened commercial self-interest might simultaneously restrain EU members in favour of a more generous approach than would otherwise be the case.
- Throughout the two years or more of the talks, the UK will remain an EU member – but a rather lame duck one, with little influence on its partners.
No design for Brexit
But Article 50 is only part of the story. Certainly, it will be used as the vehicle to take the UK out of the EU. But Article 50 agreements do not seem ever to have been intended to govern future relations between the EU and the UK.
Future relations will likely involve an entirely separate parallel agreement – requiring tortuous negotiations which could last years. Furthermore the UK will also have to negotiate trade deals with states outside the EU (meaning agreements with all non-EU (opens in a new window)WTO member states) – something of a daunting undertaking in terms of the time, the effort and the persuasive skills it will take.
After the UK leaves, the remaining member states will probably have to negotiate the revision of their internal institutional arrangements, which might involve treaty change.
Would a change-of-mind referendum by the UK be legally permissible, enabling it to back out of Brexit? The Irish electorate, after all, (opens in a new window)changed its mind twice, having voted down EU treaties in referendums. The point is not absolutely clear, but there is arguably no legal bar on the UK government rescinding its withdrawal notice under Article 50, should the UK change its mind, once it sees just how bad the final deal offered to it by the other member states in 2018 or later would be.
Article 50 envisages another intriguing possibility – that of the UK eventually applying to rejoin the EU. The idea that the UK, having left, might ever seek re-entry may now seem far-fetched. However, the disadvantages of non-membership for the UK are, if expert opinion is anything to go by, likely to be considerable. If such unpleasant predictions prove true, who knows if everlasting exile might not one day be abandoned in favour of re-engaging with “ever closer union” once again?
(opens in a new window)Gavin Barrett, Associate Professor, Jean Monnet Professor of European Constitutional and Economic Law, (opens in a new window)University College Dublin
This article was originally published on (opens in a new window)The Conversation. Read the (opens in a new window)original article.
University College Dublin was the first Irish university to join The Conversation.