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20 years of European journalism & history

Twenty years doesn't seem a lot. Certainly not in the light of European history. But while we were writing this magazine for the 20th anniversary of EUobserver, we were surprised just how much happened in the European Union in those two decades.

Twenty years doesn't seem a lot. Certainly not in the light of European history.

But while we were writing this magazine for the 20th anniversary of EUobserver, we were surprised just how much happened in the European Union in those two decades.

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Brexit<br />

- A shock to the system<br />

the year<br />

<strong>20</strong>16<br />

In <strong>20</strong>16, Britain became the first member state to decide to leave the EU.<br />

The referendum sent shockwaves through Europe and changed UK politics. As the<br />

first casualties, EU and British citizens have been caught in limbo.<br />

By Eszter Zalan<br />

Britain's EU ambassador, Tim Barrow, hands the written notification on the UK's wish to leave to EU to then <strong>European</strong> Council president Donald<br />

Tusk, in <strong>20</strong>17<br />

Photo: <strong>European</strong> Council<br />

The evening <strong>of</strong> 23 June <strong>20</strong>16, the day British<br />

voters decided whether to leave to <strong>European</strong><br />

Union, had an unnerving feel to it in Brussels.<br />

An unrelenting summer storm painted the sky with<br />

double rainbows and lightening, creating an eerie,<br />

out-<strong>of</strong>-place, out-<strong>of</strong>-time overture to the vote.<br />

real, what does this mean, how will it be done?<br />

British prime minister David Cameron, who opened<br />

the door for a referendum but campaigned for<br />

Remain, quit the day after the plebiscite, leaving his<br />

successor, Theresa May, to figure out what kind <strong>of</strong><br />

Brexit the UK really wanted.<br />

The next morning's shock <strong>of</strong> the UK deciding to leave<br />

the bloc it had joined in 1973, by 52 percent to 48<br />

percent, left everyone scrambling for answers: is this<br />

The EU moved relatively quickly, amid fears others<br />

might follow Britain's example.<br />

32 — EUOBSERVER ANNIVERSARY <strong>20</strong><strong>20</strong>

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