Advertisement
If you have a new account but are having problems posting or verifying your account, please email us on hello@boards.ie for help. Thanks :)
Hello all! Please ensure that you are posting a new thread or question in the appropriate forum. The Feedback forum is overwhelmed with questions that are having to be moved elsewhere. If you need help to verify your account contact hello@boards.ie

Brexit discussion thread II

1178179181183184305

Comments

  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,182 ✭✭✭demfad


    demfad wrote: »
    OK. There has being some goings on the Brexit-Russia-UKIP side of things.
    Buzzfeed had an article relating to a study about a 13,000 strong twitter botnet active during EU referendum but deleted very shortly after.
    They reported that Damien Collins, Commons chair of 'Fake news' inquiry asked twitter about these bots: was there interference? Who deleted? Did twitter delete? etc.

    Leave.EU already admitted they ran the Bots

    https://twitter.com/andywigmore/status/902941548610035712

    Questions Guardians Carole Cadwalladr tweeted as a result, Questions deserving answers:

    https://twitter.com/carolecadwalla/status/922174663366729736

    Also an excellent and pessimistic revealing of why there is so little curiosity among politicians about Interference in Brexit:
    https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2017/oct/21/russia-free-pass-undermine-british-democracy-vladimir-putin?CMP=share_btn_tw


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 27,598 ✭✭✭✭Peregrinus


    blanch152 wrote: »
    That is the UK's problem.

    What happens when an Australian enters the UK without a visa, takes the ferry to Dublin and then to France to go looking for a job? The EU won't like that and we will be told to protect our borders.
    He can save himself the roundabout route and fly directly from Australia to France. Australians don't need a visa to enter France.

    In any event, there is passport control between Ireland and France, since Ireland is not part of the Schengen area. If somebody not entitled to enter France tries to enter from Ireland, he'll be refused entry.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 8,219 ✭✭✭Calina


    Aegir wrote: »
    breatheme wrote: »
    will EU citizens still be able to enter the UK on just their ID card? This would also be a wildly differing policy.

    they never could.

    EU citizens can at present enter the UK using their national ID cards.


  • Moderators, Science, Health & Environment Moderators Posts: 20,398 Mod ✭✭✭✭Sam Russell


    It's not people that are the problem, it's taxation of goods and services.

    People can still be covered by the CTA and illegal immigration to the UK can be enforced (as it is today for non-EU countries) by workplace and accommodation checks.

    The real problem is figuring out how to maintain the integrity of the single market and customs union with NI on the outside. Even with the border on the Irish sea, the UK mainland is just 21miles away, short enough to do in a RIB, so smuggling will be rife.

    There are no easy answers to this dilemma apart from the UK staying in the customs union and single market. This is not an option for the UK as it would be an total humiliation for the UK govt, pay for play with no say.

    I was only talking about people. The solution for people is a Natinal ID Card for every legal resident of the UK.

    Goods are a different matter and for Ireland, the only solution is that NI remains in the SM and the CU - that way there is no border.


  • Posts: 5,854 ✭✭✭ [Deleted User]


    breatheme wrote: »
    What do you mean they never could? Of course they can.
    EDIT: .
    Calina wrote: »
    EU citizens can at present enter the UK using their national ID cards.

    True, I thought you were referring to a normal photo id such as a driving licence, the same way Irish and British citizens can when flying within the CTA.

    A national ID card is a big step up from that.


  • Advertisement
  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 18,997 ✭✭✭✭murphaph


    blanch152 wrote: »
    That is the UK's problem.

    What happens when an Australian enters the UK without a visa, takes the ferry to Dublin and then to France to go looking for a job? The EU won't like that and we will be told to protect our borders.
    That isn't a problem as we're outside Schengen. The Aussie would still have to pass through French immigration. The immigration side of things can be fudged. The customs and standards stuff can't.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 13,702 ✭✭✭✭BoatMad


    Can I ask for summaries here , personally I've changed my views to a hard Brexit possibly with no agreement at all

    What do posters think at this stage .


  • Moderators, Category Moderators, Arts Moderators, Business & Finance Moderators, Entertainment Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 18,522 CMod ✭✭✭✭Nody


    BoatMad wrote: »
    Can I ask for summaries here , personally I've changed my views to a hard Brexit possibly with no agreement at all

    What do posters think at this stage .
    Standing by my earlier prediction of hard brexit without a deal (i.e. no agreement on any of the basic 3 questions; partial solutions at best) with financial settlement done through court mid 2020s. I expect the first party to seriously have a chance to get into power have rejoining EU a couple of years later but no actual rejoining until mid 2030s or later.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,182 ✭✭✭demfad


    Excellent!

    Damien Collins now asking Mark Zuckerburg for Russian accounts that bought advertising for Brexit.

    sp99qo.jpg


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 382 ✭✭breatheme


    Aegir wrote: »
    breatheme wrote: »
    What do you mean they never could? Of course they can.
    EDIT: .
    Calina wrote: »
    EU citizens can at present enter the UK using their national ID cards.

    True, I thought you were referring to a normal photo id such as a driving licence, the same way Irish and British citizens can when flying within the CTA.

    A national ID card is a big step up from that.
    I don't think people realise what this means, though. I keep hearing stuff like: "But someone from Australia can enter the UK and then Ireland and it's the same thing!"
    No, it's not. When someone from Australia enters the UK, they will get a stamp on their passport, with their date and point of entry. This is how you know they are overstaying. Ireland has started IDing people flying from the UK into Ireland (this is pre-Brexit, though). The CTA is already inefficient, and visa regimes are far from aligned, and the time "adds up", as in, a citizen from Panama gets three months in Ireland, but six in the UK, but there's no way of policing this. Add in EU Citizens with a right to enter with an ID card to Ireland, but not to the UK and it's chaos.
    In some ways, the CTA will have to change. We'll see how.


  • Advertisement
  • Posts: 5,854 ✭✭✭ [Deleted User]


    breatheme wrote: »
    I don't think people realise what this means, though. I keep hearing stuff like: "But someone from Australia can enter the UK and then Ireland and it's the same thing!"
    No, it's not. When someone from Australia enters the UK, they will get a stamp on their passport, with their date and point of entry. This is how you know they are overstaying. Ireland has started IDing people flying from the UK into Ireland (this is pre-Brexit, though). The CTA is already inefficient, and visa regimes are far from aligned, and the time "adds up", as in, a citizen from Panama gets three months in Ireland, but six in the UK, but there's no way of policing this. Add in EU Citizens with a right to enter with an ID card to Ireland, but not to the UK and it's chaos.
    In some ways, the CTA will have to change. We'll see how.

    Both the UK and Ireland allow passengers to leave without stamping their passports, they only use electronic recording of departures. I wonder if the two countries share this information as well.

    For example, someone entering the UK, but leaving through Ireland (or vice versa).


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 27,565 ✭✭✭✭steddyeddy


    demfad wrote: »
    Excellent!

    Damien Collins now asking Mark Zuckerburg for Russian accounts that bought advertising for Brexit.

    sp99qo.jpg

    It's probably true that Russia seen an opportunity to destabilise Britain via Brexit, but unless there was voter fraud then it was the voters who caused Brexit. All of the facts were available for people to assess and people came to the wrong conclusions. Why do we need to blame anyone else?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 8,229 ✭✭✭LeinsterDub


    The U.K. has shifted its approach to the transition agreement it wants to put in place for after Brexit, falling into line with the European Union’s long-held stance.
    Chancellor of the Exchequer Philip Hammond had championed their calls, saying the longer it took to secure such an accord, the less it was worth. He backed away from those comments on Tuesday, a day after Prime Minister Theresa May surprised lawmakers by saying that transition would only be part of the final Brexit deal, which isn’t expected for another year.

    https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2017-10-24/hammond-joins-may-s-brexit-stance-delaying-transition-deal-push

    We are averaging 3 "positions" a day at this stage. May's , Hammond's and Johnston's. The next day/week/month the 3 of them eventually shift to the EU position. A short while later they will collectively take some amnesia juice and they are back to having their cake and eating it


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 13,702 ✭✭✭✭BoatMad


    https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2017-10-24/hammond-joins-may-s-brexit-stance-delaying-transition-deal-push

    We are averaging 3 "positions" a day at this stage. May's , Hammond's and Johnston's. The next day/week/month the 3 of them eventually shift to the EU position. A short while later they will collectively take some amnesia juice and they are back to having their cake and eating it

    It's just the slow an inexorable processes to the British realising they have zero leverage. When the fog comes down in the channel , it's Britian that is actually cut off.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,541 ✭✭✭Leonard Hofstadter


    I think a lot of you are being very harsh on the English - certainly the under 45s (who let's not forget voted to remain).

    I actually live in the North of England, and in a city that voted to leave (although very narrowly), yet I can 100% say that my nationality has never been an issue in the five and a bit years I've been here. The English have been very, very good to me and I've been able to make plenty of English friends.

    If you take away the politics, we have far more in common with them than we wish to admit. I just wish they could see how much they have in common with their fellow Europeans, the younger generation get it, the older ones not really.

    I can tell you a lot of the minorities voted for leave as well. Don't forget Commonwealth citizens were able to vote in the referendum and a lot of them voted to leave. I know of a few Irish people (older generation, the sort that's been there for 30-40 years) who voted to leave because they think there's too many immigrants!

    You only have to look at Birmingham, which has a large Asian population, not to mention a place with plenty of historical Irish connections, and yet they voted to leave for example.

    I really hope common sense will prevail but sadly the Conservative party are in a complete meltdown at the moment and while we will all lose out if they keep up their current nonsense, the biggest losers of all will be the younger generation Brits - and it is they who I feel so sorry for, not least because they are my own generation and I have plenty of friends who are going to have a much worse future because of the sheer stupidity of their elders.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 27,565 ✭✭✭✭steddyeddy


    I think a lot of you are being very harsh on the English - certainly the under 45s (who let's not forget voted to remain).

    I actually live in the North of England, and in a city that voted to leave (although very narrowly), yet I can 100% say that my nationality has never been an issue in the five and a bit years I've been here. The English have been very, very good to me and I've been able to make plenty of English friends.

    If you take away the politics, we have far more in common than we wish to admit. I just wish they could see how much they have in common with their fellow Europeans.

    I can tell you a lot of the minorities voted for leave as well. Don't forget Commonwealth citizens were able to vote in the referendum and a lot of them voted to leave. I know of a few Irish people (older generation, the sort that's been there for 30-40 years) who voted to leave.

    You only have to look at Birmingham, which has a large Asian population, not to mention a place with plenty of historical Irish connections, and yet they voted to leave for example.

    I really hope common sense will prevail but sadly the Conservative party are in a complete meltdown at the moment and while we will all lose out if they keep up their current nonsense, the biggest loses of all will be for the younger generation Brits - and it them who I feel so sorry for, not least because they are my own generation and I have plenty of friends who are going to have a much worse future because of the sheer stupidity of their elders.

    I agree with a lot of what you said. I've been treated well here too. I think there's a mist over the country right now that prevents people seeing what lies ahead.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,162 ✭✭✭✭Lemming


    Bear mind that some of those minorities (Pakistani & Indian at any rate) were encouraged by their "pillars of the community/business leader" sorts to vote Brexit because they claimed that it would mean there'd be more visas for their families & friends to come to the UK. More visas for chefs for ethnic restaurants and the like, etc ...

    ... Meanwhile, Farage is standing over there with that poster ...


    As for cities, Sheffield CaptainSpeed? Near 50/50 vote and quite a nice place all told. Very large student population too owing to having two major universities, one being a red-brick. The surrounding towns & old pit-villages are a different story though, mostly pro-brexit.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 172 ✭✭Rain Ascending


    BoatMad wrote: »
    Can I ask for summaries here , personally I've changed my views to a hard Brexit possibly with no agreement at all

    What do posters think at this stage .

    I'm beginning to suspect that May's premiership won't last the course. There have been a couple of reports from the UK and German press, clearly using different sources, suggesting that she is being worn down. Combine that with a divided cabinet with little discipline, it difficult to see how they will survive any real Brexit-related crisis. That suggests a Tory party leadership battle and a possible general election. All bets off at that point, particularly given the time-bounded nature of the UK/EU negotiations.

    However, let me go off on a slight tangent here. On possibility becoming more likely is, of course, the "no-deal" Brexit. A few pro-EU commentators here have suggested that the UK needs this "pain" so as to "readjust" their thinking.

    A "no-deal" Brexit is categorically not in our (Irish) interests.

    Let's leave aside the obvious point of self-interest of preserving stability in Northern Ireland. It is not in Ireland's interest to have a neighbour create chaos for roll-on/roll-off trade routes to the rest of the EU. It is not in Ireland's interest, to have the UK the drop out both the Single Market and out of over 900 international agreements with non-EU countries and not be prepared for the inevitable economical upheaval. It is not in Ireland's interest that the political fallout in the UK will increase the level of scapegoating beyond the current point where a member of government was looking for universities to report who is teaching what on Brexit.

    A stable, successful UK is in our interests.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,541 ✭✭✭Leonard Hofstadter


    A stable, successful UK is in our interests.

    I completely agree, it's in their interests as much as it is ours. I have always been a West Brit and have never had the chip on my shoulder about the British unlike some, and it makes me sad at what is happening for the younger generation but also angry at the older voters who have decided on a future that the next generation simply don't want.

    Sadly, that's not something Ireland has any control over, and we need to do everything in our power to plan around that.

    We can all advise the UK, as friends and neighbours that it needs to take a different course of action but we can't force the UK to change their direction.

    The UK talks about a 'deep and special partnership' with the EU - but it already had one, and it was one better, it was called being an EU member.

    The current UK Government's ability to say completely different things to different audiences never fails to amaze me, I thought I had seen it all when Fianna Fáil was in power and how they bankrupted the country and forced the IMF in, but by comparison to the Tories FF are the poster boy for truthfulness, honesty and competence.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,739 ✭✭✭solodeogloria


    I think a lot of you are being very harsh on the English - certainly the under 45s (who let's not forget voted to remain).

    I actually live in the North of England, and in a city that voted to leave (although very narrowly), yet I can 100% say that my nationality has never been an issue in the five and a bit years I've been here. The English have been very, very good to me and I've been able to make plenty of English friends.

    If you take away the politics, we have far more in common with them than we wish to admit. I just wish they could see how much they have in common with their fellow Europeans, the younger generation get it, the older ones not really.

    I can tell you a lot of the minorities voted for leave as well. Don't forget Commonwealth citizens were able to vote in the referendum and a lot of them voted to leave. I know of a few Irish people (older generation, the sort that's been there for 30-40 years) who voted to leave because they think there's too many immigrants!

    You only have to look at Birmingham, which has a large Asian population, not to mention a place with plenty of historical Irish connections, and yet they voted to leave for example.

    I really hope common sense will prevail but sadly the Conservative party are in a complete meltdown at the moment and while we will all lose out if they keep up their current nonsense, the biggest losers of all will be the younger generation Brits - and it is they who I feel so sorry for, not least because they are my own generation and I have plenty of friends who are going to have a much worse future because of the sheer stupidity of their elders.

    Good morning!

    Admittedly the irrational and dramatic vision of what's to come hasn't taken a hold on me.

    I was personally pretty encouraged by what came out of the European Council. The fact that they are willing to prepare a position on trade whilst the final issues get ironed out or the fact that Barnier is discussing what the final option for Britain looks like (he said this week that given Britain's current position we will end up with something like CETA). The fact that lots of progress has been made on cross border institutions and the CTA and the closeness on citizens rights is encouraging. I think a deal will be struck.

    Your post seems to say that not being a member of the European Union means that people don't see themselves as having anything in common with Europeans. Obviously that isn't true. Before the European Union countries had links to one another. If you want a case study of that look to how the Swiss, German and French reformations impacted the English one. Cross European collaboration won't go away.

    The problems with the European Union for the British aren't because people aren't European. It was because people felt the European Union have too much control over British affairs. From where I stand that's still a legitimate standpoint and it is still a legitimate standpoint to say that taking back control will be good for Britain in the long term. I'm convinced this is the right decision. When the only arguments for staying in a bloc are threats it's time to go.

    British people will always be European and Britain will always be in Europe (the continent). It is manipulative to suggest that leaving the European Union means forsaking any links to the continent.

    Much thanks,
    solodeogloria


  • Advertisement
  • Moderators, Category Moderators, Arts Moderators, Business & Finance Moderators, Entertainment Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 18,522 CMod ✭✭✭✭Nody


    I'm beginning to suspect that May's premiership won't last the course. There have been a couple of reports from the UK and German press, clearly using different sources, suggesting that she is being worn down. Combine that with a divided cabinet with little discipline, it difficult to see how they will survive any real Brexit-related crisis. That suggests a Tory party leadership battle and a possible general election. All bets off at that point, particularly given the time-bounded nature of the UK/EU negotiations.
    She will remain as PM until April 2019 (or what ever earlier date if she's pushed to cut it short); they need her as a scapegoat for all things going wrong and no one will challenge her until that point (esp. as the only one stupid enough to do so being Boris don't have the support).
    However, let me go off on a slight tangent here. On possibility becoming more likely is, of course, the "no-deal" Brexit. A few pro-EU commentators here have suggested that the UK needs this "pain" so as to "readjust" their thinking.
    Yes because UK has spent 20 years blaming everything and anything as EUs fault inc. completely made up rules and regulations. Nothing short of the pain of a hard brexit will get the larger population to realize the actual benefits to EU (which many would currently claim are none).
    A "no-deal" Brexit is categorically not in our (Irish) interests.
    A no deal is in no one's interest inc. the citizens of UK but that's based on an intellectual ground of self preservation and analysis; that's not the case in the UK in regards to Brexit which is closer to a religious fever. They don't argue facts; they argue emotions. Put up facts showing how their claim foreigners take up space in NHS and cost money is utterly false and they will fall back on "well the community feels like it's true". Put up facts showing why getting trade deals take a long time and will cost them trade you'll get answered with "Well many countries will want to trade with us as we can give better terms". Facts answered with emotions at every single turn and that's simply not going to be swayed by silly things such as facts, figures and logic. Remember the rallying cry of "We had enough of experts" when challenged and that's still holding true.
    A stable, successful UK is in our interests.
    And for UK to become stable and successful they need to stop blaming EU for everything and take some god damn responsibility. Hence the need for a hard brexit to show them how their press and politicians have been lying to them not only about what EU did previously but also how easy life is outside of EU afterwards. If the population could not be bothered to get the actual facts for the vote (350MM to NHS, Easiest trade deal in the world, remain in the single market and limit freedom of movement, have cake and eat it, EU needs us more than we need them, German car manufacturers will make sure we get a good deal etc.) then they will need to learn it the hard way. Once the coin has fallen down and reality turns out to be different they will be in a much better place to rejoin EU and most importantly take up the role of transforming it as they did in the 80s and 90s compared to being a whiny little 4 year old throwing their toys out of the pram of the 2000s and 2010s. They need a new generation of politicians to replace the current three stooges show going on and that's only going to happen through a grass root revolution due to pain and holding the current crop accountable for said pain.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,544 ✭✭✭Samaris


    BoatMad wrote: »
    Can I ask for summaries here , personally I've changed my views to a hard Brexit possibly with no agreement at all

    What do posters think at this stage .

    I still think it's a cracked idea and so far, it does not appear to be working. It's a disaster I don't see the UK coming out of well.

    Admittedly, while I think the Tories are destroying themselves, inertia tells and they might survive for that reason alone, plus keeping Labour out. Much like if there was an amazingly inept Fianna Fail here*, so inept that they look like destroying themselves. The only thing that might save them is the voting population's fear of Fine Gael and the inertia of "there's always been a FF and I've always voted for them". (Reread with FG in there if you prefer, tis much of a muchness)

    *I know what the anti-FFers will say, but I mean Brexit-inept level! Whatever else they've gotten up to (and haven't there been a lot), they've not managed such a catastrophic head-eating exercise yet.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,555 ✭✭✭Gerry T


    The problems with the European Union for the British aren't because people aren't European. It was because people felt the European Union have too much control over British affairs. From where I stand that's still a legitimate standpoint and it is still a legitimate standpoint to say that taking back control will be good for Britain in the long term. I'm convinced this is the right decision. When the only arguments for staying in a bloc are threats it's time to go.


    For years I worked for a number of companies, I felt they had too much control over my time, how I prioritised work, who I should or shouldn't work with. So when I took back control and started working for myself I was looking forward to managing my working day, doing what I felt needed to be done first, selecting y own customers. How wrong was I. Being self employed ment my customers set what felt like unrealistic time lines to me but that's why they use a contractor. I soon realised I had less control of my time and less say in when work would be done. Of course I could chose not to work with certain people, but there really wasn't a line of people waiting for me to work with them.
    This is how I see brexit, far away fields and all that. If they want to sell into the EU then the products and services will have to comply with EU or USA rules and legislation. But unlike now, costly infrastructures to ensure compliance will have to be setup. Also being outside the UK will have no say in how the EU develops.
    Of course the UK can decide not to trade with the EU, but are they sure there's a line of countries wanting to trade with them on equal or better terms than they either currently have or may negoatate with the EU. If not, taking back control is just a smoke and mirror catch phrase with no substance behind it.
    What control does the EU have that the UK wants back, some specifics please


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 27,565 ✭✭✭✭steddyeddy


    David Davis admits UK might only get "bare bones" deal. So can Davis apologise to people for telling them that people will be queuing up to do a deal with Britain? From the Evening Standard.


    Britain could end up with a “bare bones” Brexit deal which business chiefs are warning could further hit the economy, a Cabinet minister admitted today.

    Brexit Secretary David Davis also told MPs that he believes the UK can get agreement with Brussels on a trade deal within a year - an aim which many experts have dismissed as over-optimistic.

    He also outlined the Government’s aim to agree the “form” of a transition deal, possibly of two years, in December, or at least shortly afterwards.
    s

    However, Mr Davis stressed that Britain wanted all the negotiations to be concluded, including on the trade deal and transition/implementation period by Brexit Day in March 2019.


    Davis expects 'exciting' Brexit negotiations to go down to the wire
    He also made clear that he expects the negotiations may well go down to the wire as often happens in EU talks and that the UK does not want to be having to agree a trade deal after March 2019. given that its negotiating position could be weakened having already left the EU.

    Appearing before the Commons Brexit committee, Mr Davis said: “What we are intending to do is get the form of the implementation period agreed quickly - December or thereabouts. But we want to conclude the overall negotiation by 2019,” he said.


    “Are you going from where we are now to a free trade agreement? Are you going from where we are now to what you might call a bare bones agreement, which is WTO (World Trade Organisation) plus agreements on the fundamentals like aviation, and so on? So you need to know where you are going.

    “We are aiming for the conclusion of negotiations on all fronts - on the grounds that nothing is agreed until everything is agreed - by the end of March 2019.”

    A Government spokesman said: “'We are leaving the EU in March 2019 and have committed to a meaningful vote in Parliament on the final deal once it has been negotiated. Today the Secretary of State was asked a number of hypothetical questions about the process but to be clear: the final deal will be agreed before we leave, and MPs will get a vote on it.”

    Business chiefs have warned that having to rely on WTO rules to trade with the Continent, which would mean more tariffs on cars and other goods, would hit the economy.

    Mr Davis also indicated that Britain may pay billions of pounds for EU pension liabilities as part of a political deal.

    Asked about a demand for a payment reported to be up to £10 billion pounds towards the pensions of current European Commission officials, he said: I will have to make some political judgments later on, rather than legal ones.

    “The legal basis is not strong for many of the claims.”

    Mr Davis confirmed that the EU side had discussed a total “divorce” payment of 100 billion euros at one stage, saying the sum “was one of the aspirations”.

    British legal experts have advised the Government that there is no legal requirement on the UK to pay a Brexit settlement, according to Whitehall sources. However, Theresa May last week signalled that she is prepared to pay tens of billions for the sake of a trade agreement.

    In her Florence speech, the Prime Minister confirmed she will pay for existing budget commitments, adding up to around £18 billion.

    But in the Brussels summit last week she signalled she could agree more, telling leaders of the 27 other countries that the Florence speech was “not the final word”.

    Mr Davis’ today comments came after Theresa May appeared to suggest in the Commons that there could be no deal on a transition until there was agreement on Britain’s future relationship with EU - including a potential deal on free trade.

    Her intervention led to warnings that businesses could be facing a “cliff edge” break when Britain leaves the EU in March 2019 if there is no overall deal.

    Pressed by committee chairman Hilary Benn on whether he thought a free trade and customs agreement could be concluded in a year, he said: “Yes.”

    The leaders of the other 27 EU member states agreed in Brussels last week to begin discussions among themselves on the transitional arrangements.

    Mr Davis also told American banking chiefs not to “waste your money” by starting now to move staff and offices from the City to Frankfurt or Paris.

    “If I was being asked this in front of a bunch of American bankers I would give them advice to save their money for the moment, at least until January,” he said.

    Goldman Sachs has piled pressure on the Government over the Brexit talks, with the US bank’s chief executive, Lloyd Blankfein, saying he expected to be “spending a lot more time” in Frankfurt.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,739 ✭✭✭solodeogloria


    Gerry T wrote: »
    What control does the EU have that the UK wants back, some specifics please

    Good evening!

    I'm surprised by this. I don't think the Leave campaign could have been much clearer about the control they wanted the UK to regain.

    On 23 occasions on this thread I've discussed the broad thesis that they put forward namely to take back control of laws, borders, money and trade policy.

    Here's one of the clearest posts I've put forward:
    Good morning!

    I think you know the answer to that. The terms aren't acceptable so something else needs to be negotiated.

    The UK needs to honour the referendum result. Which means (after transition)
    • Control of borders (specifically in respect to EU economic migration)
    • Control of money (ultimately ending contributions to Brussels)
    • Control of laws (The UK Supreme Court needs to have a final say on UK law and its interpretation)
    • Control of trade policy (to allow the UK to expand trade with its non-EU trade partners)

    Within these lines nearly anything else can be proposed. The Government must deliver a true Brexit though.

    Much thanks,
    solodeogloria

    There's no point repeating ourselves ad nauseum.

    The idea that Canada and Australia can be successful countries without being in a political union like the EU and that Britain can't is just absurd. Of course the UK can be successful outside the EU.

    Much thanks,
    solodeogloria


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 8,219 ✭✭✭Calina


    Absolutely none of that was specified in the referendum vote.

    This is a key example of why I consider the referendum to have been extremely poorly executed.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 8,219 ✭✭✭Calina


    Also both Canada and Australia have raw materials.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,823 ✭✭✭✭First Up


    Calina wrote:
    Also both Canada and Australia have raw materials.


    76% of Canadian exports go to the US. Almost 70% of Australian exports go to Asia (33% to China.)

    Raw materials make up the bulk of both countries' exports. (Canada also supplies automotive parts to the US motor industry under NAFTA.)

    They are both spectacularly bad as models for what the UK can do outside the EU.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 669 ✭✭✭Pablo Escobar


    Good evening!

    I'm surprised by this. I don't think the Leave campaign could have been much clearer about the control they wanted the UK to regain.

    On 23 occasions on this thread I've discussed the broad thesis that they put forward namely to take back control of laws, borders, money and trade policy.

    Here's one of the clearest posts I've put forward:


    There's no point repeating ourselves ad nauseum.

    The idea that Canada and Australia can be successful countries without being in a political union like the EU and that Britain can't is just absurd. Of course the UK can be successful outside the EU.

    Much thanks,
    solodeogloria
    Of course the UK can stand on it's own two feet. But getting to a stage where it can thrive on it's own will likely take years and a lot of pain is likely to be felt. There is lot's of unwinding to do from the EU which need to be re-built on an, as yet, unclear pathway. People can point to the fact that unwinding needs to take place and claim the the EU is "controlling" but the structuring of these agreements and legislation has co-incided with and incredibly sustained period of economic growth and prosperity for the UK. I'd take that idea of being controlled in a heartbeat. As I mentioned there is no obvious pathway to fix this in a hard Brexit scenario in a manner that will allow the UK to thrive in the short-term. This is what the remainders are querying and the Brexiters are failing to answer. The Government is currently holding the poison chalice and I'm not sure the have a remedy.


  • Advertisement
  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 18,997 ✭✭✭✭murphaph


    Good evening!

    I'm surprised by this. I don't think the Leave campaign could have been much clearer about the control they wanted the UK to regain.

    On 23 occasions on this thread I've discussed the broad thesis that they put forward namely to take back control of laws, borders, money and trade policy.

    Here's one of the clearest posts I've put forward:


    There's no point repeating ourselves ad nauseum.

    The idea that Canada and Australia can be successful countries without being in a political union like the EU and that Britain can't is just absurd. Of course the UK can be successful outside the EU.

    Much thanks,
    solodeogloria
    Canada and Australia are major exporters of the raw materials the rest of the world needs. The UK exports credit cards and insurance policies instead.

    Edit: sorry beaten to it. As mentioned above, terrible examples to give.


This discussion has been closed.
Advertisement