May tackles first big Brexit grilling as PM ahead of meeting with Merkel

New British Prime Minister Theresa May will make her first international trip as leader Wednesday when she heads to Berlin for talks with German Chancellor Angela Merkel.

The working dinner between two of the world’s most powerful women will be the second major test of May’s premiership Wednesday, a week after she assumed the country’s top job.

Earlier in the day, May made her debut at Prime Minister’s Questions in Parliament, fielding questions from lawmakers for the first time as Britain’s leader.

During the session, May reiterated her commitment to Britain leaving the EU, following the vote to do so in a referendum last month.

But although the country is leaving the EU, she said, “The United Kingdom is not leaving Europe.

“I’m very clear, Brexit does mean Brexit,” she said.

“We will make a success of it. What we need to do in negotiating the deal is ensure that we listen to what people have said about the need for controls on free movement. But we also negotiate the right deal, and the best deal for the trade of goods and services for the British people.”

She also stressed that Britain should not be limited by focusing exclusively on its relationship with its European neighbors but should instead look to build beneficial ties throughout the world.

Tensions over when EU exit begins

Following the June 23 vote to leave the EU, Britain now faces a complicated process of negotiations to remove itself from the bloc.

EU leaders have said they will not enter into formal exit negotiations with Britain until it triggers Article 50 of the Lisbon Treaty, which officially kicks off the exit process and opens a two-year window for negotiating the departure. They have urged Britain to move swiftly.

But the British government does not plan to trigger Article 50 before the end of this year, the country’s High Court heard this week.

May, who will follow her Berlin trip with a visit to Paris for talks with French President Francois Hollande on Thursday, is expected to tell both leaders — two of Europe’s most powerful figures — that Britain seeks time to prepare for the negotiations, according to a statement from 10 Downing Street.

Officials will need time to consult with the governments of Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland, as well as with various industry sectors, to work out the UK’s objectives for the negotiations. Both Scotland and Northern Ireland, constituent countries within the United Kingdom, voted in the referendum to remain in the EU, and the vote to leave has revived talk in both countries of leaving the UK instead.

The statement said the trips to Paris and Berlin were intended to build May’s relationships with key European leaders ahead of the critical Brexit negotiations.

“I am determined that Britain will make a success of leaving the European Union and that’s why I have decided to visit Berlin and Paris so soon after taking office,” May said in a statement Wednesday.

“These visits will be an opportunity to forge a strong working relationship that we can build upon and which I hope to develop with more leaders across the European Union in the weeks and months ahead.”

May also told European Council President Donald Tusk on Tuesday that Britain would not take up its scheduled presidency of the council in 2017. The presidency of the European Council is rotated between member states.

First questions in Parliament

May’s first Prime Minister’s Questions session came a week after she succeeded David Cameron, who stepped down after his unsuccessful campaign to persuade Britons to remain in the EU.

The session, a key test of her parliamentary authority amid hostile questioning, opened with fiery exchanges between May and Jeremy Corbyn, leader of the opposition Labour Party.

In response to Corbyn’s questions, May said that while Labour, embroiled in a leadership crisis, might spend the next few months tearing itself apart, “the Conservative Party will spend those months putting the country back together.”

She took another shot at Corbyn’s shaky leadership after he attempted to raise the issue of workers’ rights.

“I suspect there are many members on the opposition benches who might be familiar with an unscrupulous boss, a boss who doesn’t listen to his workers, a boss who requires some of his workers to double their workload, and … maybe even a boss who exploits the rules to further his own career,” she said pointedly.

“Remind him of anybody?”

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