Tuesday, 28 June 2016

'Why are you here?' Juncker asks Brexit lawmakers

European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker solicited administrators from Britain's against EU UKIP on Tuesday why they had gone to an European Parliament session to talk about the results of the British vote to leave the alliance.

"We should regard British majority rule government and the way it has communicated its perspective," Juncker said in a discourse to parliament, words that were welcomed by uncommon acclaim from the UKIP individuals present.

"That is the last time you are praising here... what's more, to some degree I'm truly astonished you are here. You are battling for the way out. The British individuals voted for the way out. What are you doing here?" Juncker kept, breaking from his discourse content.

Juncker talked from a work area alongside that of UKIP pioneer Nigel Farage, who took after the to a great extent French and German discourse with earphones and with a British banner planted before him.

Prior to the session started, Farage had headed toward address Juncker. Both men seemed loose and as Farage made to leave, Juncker pulled him close and gave him a lip pursing on the cheek.

Juncker said he would make no conciliatory sentiment for being "dismal" at the consequence of the British vote - "I am not a robot," he said, "I am not a dim civil servant."
He encouraged Britain to clarify rapidly what it needed from the EU as far as another relationship yet demanded he had advised his staff to take part in no preparatory converses with British authorities until London draws in the two-year system for leaving the EU.

"No warning, no transaction," he said.

On an uncommon individual note, the 61-year-old previous Luxembourg head administrator, struck out at commentators, outstandingly in the German press additionally among east European governments, who have approached him to remain down after the Brexit vote.

"I am neither drained or debilitated, as the German papers say," he said. "I will battle to my final gasp for a unified Europe."

(Reporting By Philip Blenkinsop; Editing by Alastair Macdonald)

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