Iceland’s parliament on Thursday voted in favour of holding an August 29 referendum to begin European Union accession talks, supporting the government’s two-step plan that could lead ​to membership in the 27-nation bloc later this decade.

Reykjavik in 2013 abandoned ‌negotiations after four years of talks when a Eurosceptic government took power, but a rise in the cost of living and the war in Ukraine have since rekindled interest in ​joining the union, opinion polls have shown.

If voters back the resumption of ​talks, the final terms of EU membership will require approval ⁠in a second referendum, while a “no” vote would end attempts to restart ​negotiations, the government has said.

Many voters are uncertain of whether to support EU ​membership or not, and may therefore take comfort in the two-step process, said Olafur Thordur Hardarson, a professor of political science at the University of Iceland.

“The large proportion that has ​not finally decided if they want to join or not, many of ​them, of course, want the (first)referendum because they want to see exactly what terms would be ‌in ⁠a potential agreement,” he said.

Membership for the nation of some 400,000 people would extend the EU’s reach far into the North Atlantic Ocean at a time when U.S. President Donald Trump seeks to control Greenland, an island between Iceland and ​the United States.

“Even ​though Iceland of ⁠course is a very small country, putting Iceland on the EU map would sort of have a symbolic advantage,” ​Hardarson said.

In the 63-seat national parliament of Iceland, Althingi, 34 voted ​for the ⁠referendum, while 8 rejected it. 14 members abstained, while 7 were absent, according to the secretary general of the parliament.

Foreign Minister Thorgerdur Katrin Gunnarsdottir in March told ⁠Reuters she ​was optimistic that Iceland could join the EU ​as early as 2028, and that she expected fisheries and agriculture to be the toughest points ​of negotiation.

Source:  Reuters