Bit cynical wrote: » I think one of the optimistic aspects of the agreement from Ireland's point of view is that the UK will be able to negotiate and ratify its own trade deals with countries outside the EU. This was one of the principles on the UK side and the EU accepting this is good for Ireland.
Leroy42 wrote: » The latest deal seems to cement the December agreement (which the UK claimed was merely a talking point) into a backstop position. In other words if the other two options (technical solution to allow frictionless border or the UK remains in the CU) are not delivered then NI becomes separate in regulatory terms from Great Britain. The problem is that none of these options are remotely achievable. NI cannot be seen to be separated, the technology does not exist. So the only realistic solution is to remain in CU, which is never going to float in the UK. So what is the point of postponing the inevitable? Why are the EU allowing the UK to simply push this further down the track? Are they hoping that at some stage the UK will cave, but they have shown no indication that they will to this point. My worry is that this will become a last minute "deal breaker" and as such with a deal so close both sides will simply fudge it. The EU, seeing that continued trade with the UK is almost within reach and thus avoiding many of the issues that could arise may see it as a price worth paying. EU have shown before that no one country is above the long term future of the EU (Ireland & Greece for example) and I fear that will happen again. So the UK avoid a hard brexit but we are left with a border. Effectively we are left to pay the price
Leroy42 wrote: » Are they hoping that at some stage the UK will cave, but they have shown no indication that they will to this point.
Telegraph wrote: Jacob Rees-Mogg to fling fish from trawler on Thames in protest for fishermen 'betrayed' by May's Brexit dealTheresa May is facing a Brexit backlash from Tory MPs over her "abject betrayal" of Britain's fishermen with rebels planning a fishing boat protest on the Thames. Jacob Rees-Mogg, leader of a 60-strong group of Eurosceptic Conservative MPs, and others are due to board a boat and pass by Parliament throwing fish into the Thames in protest at the alleged “sellout”. A Brexit transition deal agreed with Brussels allows the EU to maintain control of Britain’s territorial waters until the end of 2020, which protestors described as “a potential death sentence” for the British fishing fleet. ... [/]https://www.telegraph.co.uk/politics/2018/03/19/jacob-rees-mogg-fling-fish-trawler-thames-protest-fishermen/ [behind pay wall]
Sand wrote: » I'd just like to note Leave voters were clear on what they were voting for. To exit the EU and reject the direction of travel that their country was on.
Peregrinus wrote: » But the closer Brexit day approaches, the less plausible it is that a collapse of the Withdrawal Agreement talks could ultimately lead to the cancellation of Brexit.
Sand wrote: » I think we are going to have to agree to disagree because we're going round in circles on this. I'd just like to note Leave voters were clear on what they were voting for. To exit the EU and reject the direction of travel that their country was on. Pretending that they didn't understand that there would be an economic cost reads as an attempt to de-legitimise their view.
Zubeneschamali wrote: » I don't agree. I think cancelling Brexit is a 100-1 longshot at this stage, but the path might go: Final, final deal emerges at the talks, and is very much dictated by the EU. The DUP and the Eurosceptics balk and bring down the Government. . . .
Zubeneschamali wrote: » . . . Labour romp home in the election, and immediately ask for talks extension and membership of CU. EU says no worries, we have that plan on our shelf of plans. Extended talks period begins, and talks reveal to the UK public that a Norway option (or whatever) will cost a lot, and give less control than they have now. People continue to ask "What exactly is the point of Brexit again?". Eventually Labour organize a referendum on the new deal, with Brexit on the new agreed terms or Remain as the options, and Remain wins. In this scenario, only collapse at the last minute with an election can help.
Zubeneschamali wrote: » I don't agree. I think cancelling Brexit is a 100-1 longshot at this stage, but the path might go: Final, final deal emerges at the talks, and is very much dictated by the EU. The DUP and the Eurosceptics balk and bring down the Government. Labour romp home in the election, and immediately ask for talks extension and membership of CU. EU says no worries, we have that plan on our shelf of plans. Extended talks period begins, and talks reveal to the UK public that a Norway option (or whatever) will cost a lot, and give less control than they have now. People continue to ask "What exactly is the point of Brexit again?". Eventually Labour organize a referendum on the new deal, with Brexit on the new agreed terms or Remain as the options, and Remain wins. In this scenario, only collapse at the last minute with an election can help.
Ellian wrote: » In this hypothetical scenario, do you see the UK keeping it's rebate and outside the Euro? Keeping sterling (and more importantly the ability to deflate your own currency and avoid the problems Greece face) is a red line for quite a lot of remainers I know in the UK - for pragmatic economic reasons.
Peregrinus wrote: » Is an election inevitable at this point? Could the fall of May be followed not by a general election (which, I agree, Labour would likely win) but by a new Tory leader, who would pursue a somewhat harder Brexit (and, inevitably, end up with a no-deal Brexit)?
The EU is not gagging to keep the UK on board.
Ellian wrote: » In this hypothetical scenario, do you see the UK keeping it's rebate and outside the Euro?
Zubeneschamali wrote: » I don't think the DUP will prop up another Tory PM - they have not enjoyed propping this one up much.
Zubeneschamali wrote: » Agreed, but at the same time, Brexit is going to be pointless and costly for the EU, and Hard brexit doubly so. If they can avoid it, they will, even if the UK continues to be the annoying racist Uncle at the dinner table for the forseeable. There is just too much cash involved.
Zubeneschamali wrote: » I think the UK would only remain on current terms. There is no way the UK would swallow some punishment like giving up the rebate or Sterling as well as renouncing Brexit.
Zubeneschamali wrote: » But this is all very unlikely at this stage.
Sand wrote: » You can believe or disbelieve Neather - none of the Labour figures are going to confirm his claim. But its certainly clear that something dramatic happened in the late 1990s and early 2000s to long term migration into the UK. Firstly, in the ten years to 1998, migration into the UK averaged 304 thousand people annually. For the 10 years after 1998 to 2008 this leaped to 535 thousand people annually. This is just an average, many years were much higher again.
Professor Moriarty wrote: » Labour is a disaster. If they were halfway decent, the Tories would be in opposition instead of leading Labour by 3 points in the latest poll.
Sand wrote: » Farage is the son of a stockbroker. Farage himself is an ex-City of London banker/trader. He's married an Irishwoman and a German. He is very much plugged into the globalist/metropolitan elite. He's called for the UK to accept more Syrian refugees, rejected talks of caps on immigration and the UKIP immigration policy in 2015 is not exactly radically different to anything the Tories would produce. I think Farage is actually quite liberal on immigration: it is the UKIP base which was pushing hard for more restrictions. Farage is going to be quite happy with the Tory style Brexit. He might criticise the outcome as not being good enough, but Singapore-on-Thames is just fine for him and his class.
Peregrinus wrote: » They might, if (a) the reason May has fallen is that she's not Brexity enough, and (b) not supporting a Tory government under, e.g., Davis means a general election and a likely Corbyn victory.
Plus, remember, unanimous agreement of the EU-27 is needed to extend the Art. 50 period. Even if it is in all their interests, it may take some time to get them all to see that.
Peregrinus wrote: » And I don't see the EU accepting this unless they are given some very good reason to believe that the whole of the past three years cannot happen again. So something would have to change in the UK's commitment to the EU.
sink wrote: » I don't think there could simply be another leader instated as it would not solve the fundamental problem for the Tory party, that there is no commons majority for any defined course. There are enough Tory rebels in the Anna Soubry / Ken Clarke camp to block any legislation to would facilitate a no-deal Brexit. Even without a withdrawal agreement, parliament will be required to pass legislation to enact control over areas where the EU no longer has a role, e.g. food safety, aerospace etc. The rebels can continue to tack on amendments to any future legislation demanding the government go back and negotiate a withdrawal agreement and customs union membership. If the government can't pass it's own policy agenda it has to call an election.
Leroy42 wrote: » UKIP did and they only got 4m votes and no seats.
Enzokk wrote: » Are these the same polling companies that had the Conservatives with a majority before the last election? Only Yougov had the result as a hung parliament at any stage and all of the rest underestimated the Labour result by 40-60 seats. Seeing as we are talking about one result that could be an anomaly, but I would not be surprised if Labour comfortably wins if there is a new election this year. This would be due to austerity and concerns about the NHS in the main and not too much about Brexit. The one I quoted was the latest poll and is actually a Yougov poll. To paraphrase, there are lies, damn lies and polls. But they are as best an indicator as you'll get.
Are these the same polling companies that had the Conservatives with a majority before the last election? Only Yougov had the result as a hung parliament at any stage and all of the rest underestimated the Labour result by 40-60 seats. Seeing as we are talking about one result that could be an anomaly, but I would not be surprised if Labour comfortably wins if there is a new election this year. This would be due to austerity and concerns about the NHS in the main and not too much about Brexit.
Skedaddle wrote: » The best case scenario from an Irish point of view now would be for the DUP to go absolutely bonkers and pull support for the UK Government, triggering a general election within 14 days.
Water John wrote: » The DUP, like JRM will grumble, throw a few shapes, similar to JRM throwing, fish into the river, but do nothing. If the fishermen of the UK think that, JRm gives a flying f**k about them, they are very deluded.
MrPudding wrote: » Yeah, it is a special kind of deluded to think JRM give any kind of sh1t about any "normal" people. Personally I can't believe he is actually going to touch fish. Are you sure be isn't going to send one of his boys to do the throwing? MrP