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Pound slides as U.K. PM signals ‘hard’ break with EU

by Jill Lawless, The Associated Press   

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Theresa May says British government is not "muddled" about leaving EU, adding it won't try to keep "bits of membership" once it leaves trade bloc

Theresa May took over as Prime Minister following last year’s Brexit referendum. PHOTO: UK Parliament/Jessica Taylor, via Flickr

LONDON—The pound has fallen to its lowest level since October as U.K. Prime Minister Theresa May suggested the country was heading for a clean break from the European Union.

Prime Minister Theresa May said Jan. 8 she will announce details of Britain’s European Union exit plans in the next few weeks, and denied a former diplomat’s claim that the government is “muddled” about Brexit.

In her first interview of 2017, May also said Donald Trump had made “unacceptable” comments about women—but stressed she’s had “good” conversations with the U.S. president-elect about the vital trans-Atlantic relationship.

May has said for months that she will invoke Article 50 of the EU’s key treaty, triggering two years of EU exit talks, by March 31. But she has refused to reveal details of Britain’s goals or negotiating strategy.

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May argues that to do so would weaken Britain’s hand, but the lack of detail has fueled allegations that government plans for Brexit are in disarray.

Ivan Rogers, who resigned as Britain’s EU envoy last week, criticized politicians’ “ill-founded arguments and muddled thinking” about the EU exit.

In an interview with Sky News, May insisted the government is “not at all” muddled.

“I will be setting out some more details in the coming weeks,” she said.

She signalled the U.K. is likely to leave the bloc’s single market in goods and services, saying Britain won’t try to keep “bits of membership” once it leaves.

Many U.K. businesses—especially in London’s huge financial-services sector—argue that access to the single market is vital. But EU leaders say membership is impossible unless Britain continues to allow the free movement of workers from other EU countries.

May said free movement would end because Britain has voted to take control of its borders. But she also said she did not see immigration and trade as “a binary issue” or “a zero-sum game.”

She said Britain would seek an “ambitious trade deal … that allows our companies to trade in and operate in the European single market.”

May, who took office in July, also faces the challenge in 2017 of forging a relationship with a new U.S. president.

The prime minister, a long-time campaigner for women’s equality, was asked about Trump’s vulgar 2005 remark that his celebrity allowed him to grope women and “grab them by the p—-.”

“I think that’s unacceptable,” she said. “In fact, Donald Trump himself has said that and has apologized for it.

“But the relationship that the U.K. has with the United States is about something much bigger than just the relationship between the two individuals as president and prime minister,” she added.

May’s top advisers have met Trump’s transition team, and the Foreign Office said Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson was in the U.S. on Sunday to meet “close advisers to the president-elect and senior Congressional leaders.”

May said she has had two “very good, positive” phone calls with Trump since the Nov. 8 U.S. election.

“From the conversations I’ve had, I think we are going to look to build on that relationship, for the benefit of both the U.S. and the U.K.,” she said.

Trump tweeted Sunday that “I look very much forward to meeting Prime Minister Theresa May in Washington in the Spring. Britain, a longtime U.S. ally, is very special!”

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