Britain could not rejoin the European Union after leaving because membership requirements would be too onerous, Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond. He said Thursday’s referendum on EU membership offered “no way back”.
Since becoming a member of the bloc in 1973, Britain has negotiated exclusions from EU laws and membership of the single currency, as well as winning a rebate from the EU’s annual budget. Such measures would not be available to a new member, Hammond said.
“It simply wouldn’t be credible for the UK to ever contemplate rejoining,” he said. “Any future British government wanting to join the EU would be faced with standard terms,” Hammond said, citing membership of the euro zone, the EU’s passport-free travel zone and areas of security and justice legislation.
“So this makes this a very asymmetric decision on Thursday. If we decide to go, we’re gone, forever, no second thoughts, no turning back.”
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