trellheim wrote: » We will be worse off when they leave. Lets try and mitigate that.
trellheim wrote: » Oh for heavens sake. That has absolutely nothing to do with it. We will be worse off when they leave. Lets try and mitigate that.
UK policy from Day 1 has been to try and divide us from the EU. Divide and conquer. Best friend my hole, they would drag us out with them if they could.
trellheim wrote: » Completely accept all of that. But - its only one side of the equation ! - it does not benefit Ireland - quite the reverse - the harder the Brexit is . We can affect two sides of that albeit indirectly on on one side - the UK side and the EU side. Strikes me both sides should be worked. Taoiseach and Coveney have been consistent on this - that we need to be the UK's best friend in negotiating their Brexit because its in Ireland's best interest to do so.
VinLieger wrote: » Go easy how? Like just stop pushing the UK for any concrete plans at all on what they want or how they suggest to achieve it? Cus that sounds like a quick and easy path to a hard brexit going by their behaviour so far. Literally all the EU have done so far as is ask "so what do you want and how do you plan to do it?" and the reply has been akin to that of a screaming child throwing a tantrum every time consisting of "BREXIT MEANS BREXIT"
Zubeneschamali wrote: » UK policy from Day 1 has been to try and divide us from the EU. Divide and conquer. Best friend my hole, they would drag us out with them if they could.
trellheim wrote: » its in our interest to be the 1 out of the 27 being the best friend.
Imagine we did that and gave the UK the cakeist deal you want to give them.
trellheim wrote: » Strikes me both sides should be worked.
Deleted User wrote: » It is just a streamlining of the rather odd and unwieldy corporate structure. The key bit though is that it opted to become Dutch rather than British. It reflects poorly on the UKs attractiveness as a location for a headquarters.
This has nothing to do with politics at all. It is really about mergers and acquisitions — being able to more easily do them, as much as block them from the US. Read what Unilever has actually said: “The proposed simplification will provide greater flexibility for strategic portfolio change and help drive long-term performance.” Expect more deals — across whichever borders you care about.
Zubeneschamali wrote: » This was stated on SKY News this morning, but they served up a lot of spoof about how this was just streamlining of corporate blahdeblah and no jobs would be lost in the UK as a result. Uh-huh, sure.
But here's where we part company: you want us to push the EU? That's mad, Ted. There's no need to push the EU. The EU's preferred outcome, obviously, would have been no Brexit at all. But that's off the table now, given the referendum outcome and the positions taken since by the UK government. The EU's next best option would have been that the UK would remain in the Single Market, in the Custom Union, join the EEA, etc, etc, but these are all being ruled out by the British and their absurd "red lines". Are you seeing the pattern here? It's not the EU that putting increasing distance between the EU and the UK; it's the UK that's doing that. The EU wants the closest possible relationship; the UK has been putting barrier after barrier after barrier in the way. In so far as Ireland is in a position to push anybody, we should be pushing the UK. In terms of minimising the impact on Ireland, all the threats to us stem from decisions the UK makes, positions the UK takes. The EU's reaction to those has been entirely rational, and entirely predictable. They have devised the closest relationship they feel is feasible, given the barriers the UK has erected. In doing that, they have prioritised Ireland's interests, which (happily) align with the EU's interests). The have signalled that, if the UK can lower some of its barriers, the EU would be very keen to have a closer relationship, and that would certainly minimise the impact on us. What is needed is for the UK to accept what the EU is offering, but only the UK can do that. Whatever influence we have should be devoted to getting the UK to accept the easier Brexit that the EU is keen to offer them.
trellheim wrote: » Yes of course I do ; I firmly believe the focus should be on minimizing the impact on Ireland, and part of that should be pushing the rest of the EU to go easy on it and forward planning for that. The wrong Brexit will badly affect us. There are certain things we can and should be doing.
Water John wrote: » I think Unilever are due to announce today that their sole HQ will in future, be in Rotterdam. When will the British public and their politicians start getting the hint.
LeinsterDub wrote: » https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2018/mar/15/david-davis-says-he-could-live-with-shorter-brexit-transition-period A other win for the EU . At this stage I don't know the UK just doesn't go away and sit in a corner and just sign whatever the EU produces or just declare they are going to a hard brexit now.
David Davis, the Brexit secretary, has said he “could live with” a 21-month transition period as Britain leaves the EU. He made the concession, demanded by commission negotiators, with EU talks in Brussels a week away.
trellheim wrote: » What ? You don't see a place for pragmatism here ? Which particular principles are you defending here. If Irish people ( in Ireland ) are the worse for Brexit over our own principles, have we "won every time" to use your own words ?
trellheim wrote: » Is it in the Irish interest to push the EU for the easiest possible Brexit ... discuss...
Water John wrote: » TM now having to go to the EU and ask for support on sanctions against Russia.
ou need to be very clear on one thing, neither we nor the other 26 states representing about 450m people are about to give up on our purpose or principles for the sake of a third country - the UK. Yes of course we will do our best to minimise the impact, but if the choice is principles versus the UK then principles wins every time.
The Institute for Fiscal Studies added that dismal productivity, earnings and GDP growth had become the "new normal". ... "If high-paid jobs - and EU citizens, who are well represented among high earners in the UK - relocate elsewhere, the consequences for the Exchequer will be severe," he added. Given the outlook, the IFS said tax rises of £30bn would be needed each year to retain public spending and balance the budget by the middle of the next decade - a Conservative Party pledge.