The European Union lawmakers dealing with Brexit said on Wednesday there was an increased risk of a disorderly British exit from the bloc after Boris Johnson becomes prime minister.
Johnson, the face of the “Leave” campaign in Britain’s 2016 EU membership referendum, will become prime minister on Wednesday, succeeding Theresa May, after he campaigned for the leadership of his Conservative Party promising to deliver Brexit on Oct. 31, with or without a divorce deal with the EU.
The bloc has congratulated Johnson on his victory but was firm that it would not offer Britain better departure terms.
The message was reiterated on Wednesday by a group of EU lawmakers dealing with Brexit. “The (group) notes that recent statements, not least those made during the Conservative Party leadership campaign, have greatly increased the risk of a disorderly exit of the UK,” it said in a statement. “A no-deal exit would be economically very damaging, even if such damage would not be inflicted equally on both parties.”
The European Parliament must endorse any EU-UK Brexit deal and has said the bloc is ready to amend a declaration on their future ties, which accompanies the legally-binding divorce agreement.
Johnson wants changes to the divorce deal, notably removing the so-called Irish backstop, an insurance policy that could tie the UK to some of the EU’s trading rules after Brexit to avoid deploying extensive checks on the Irish border.
Brexit backers fear that would make it hard for Britain to strike independent trade deals around the world. “An orderly exit is only possible if citizens’ rights.