kuro68k wrote: » The British government is going to take it right to the cliff edge and hope that someone else compromises. Of course they have their excuses already lined up if no-one does, only real question is who they will blame.
theguzman wrote: » Wouldn't a hard border suit Nationalists as it would force a United Ireland firmly back onto the agenda? The Reoublic is but a mere Vassal State anyway and the EU is the Fourth Reich in all but name as far as I can see.
trellheim wrote: » Boris' brother resigned as minister of state for transport in protest at the crappy deal
Imreoir2 wrote: » It would seem that you are suffering from severe sightloss in that case. Ireland is not a vassal state of anything and to suggest that the EU is some sort of successor to the Third Reich is ignorent in the extreme.
prawnsambo wrote: » I thought he was being ironic. That's the stuff you see on Twtter in response to a tweet from an arch-brexiter lambasting the paddies for having notions above their station. I actually thought he was parodying them.
prawnsambo wrote: » Those figures are off the top of my head and I haven't looked into the polling data in detail to see how accurate it is. The latest one in September was carried out by the Irish Times/MORI iirc.
“On this most crucial of questions, I believe it is entirely right to go back to the people and ask them to confirm their decision to leave the EU and, if they choose to do that, to give them the final say on whether we leave with the prime minister’s deal or without it. To do anything less will do grave damage to our democracy.”
An Ciarraioch wrote: » Jo Johnson appears to be advocating the Greening option of Deal vs No Deal vs Remain:https://medium.com/@JoJohnsonUK/why-i-cannot-support-the-governments-proposed-brexit-deal-3d289f95f2bc
RobMc59 wrote: » There is very little incentive for people in NI to want to join a UI at the moment and the assertion that they would have to accept stuff like the various tax issues and loss of NHS makes it a non starter-Ireland would have to seriously raise their game to make it happen imo. (By the way,I would love to see a UI).
prawnsambo wrote: » As RobMc59 says, it would be a bit of an empty gun. And without any kind of proper polling to support it, would look like the bar of soap it was carved from too. However, the possibility that creating a hard border might actually lead to the thing they least want, should be threat enough, one would think. Even the onset of brexit has moved polling data from a low of 21% in favour of a UI back in 2016 to close enough to 50% now*, so it wouldn't be an idle threat. *Those figures are off the top of my head and I haven't looked into the polling data in detail to see how accurate it is. The latest one in September was carried out by the Irish Times/MORI iirc.
Professor Moriarty wrote: » I never knew there were two Johnsons in the government. Will make for an interesting Christmas dinner. One a Brexiteer and the other an intelligent and principled politician.
Imreoir2 wrote: » My understanding is that you are correct, the most trustworthy recent poll was done by LucidTalk I believe and had support for UI in the mid 40's with support going over 50% should there be a hard border due to Brexit. Personally the mid 40s figure is the more useful figure as that is how people would vote now. While support going over 50% should there be a hard border is interesting, I would not trust that figure at all, asking someone how they would act in a given hypothetical scenario is not at all the same thing as asking them how they would act now. Until support for a UI actually does go above 50% then all we can say is that a border poll would probably be a reasonably close run failure.
charlie14 wrote: » I wasn`t judging whether a border poll would win or lose. As I have said, I may be incorrect, but faik there is no impediment under the GFA to May calling one if the NI secretary of state just fells that it would pass. Whether it did or not would not matter to May in the position she is now in. If it passed the DUP would be a spent force in Westminster and in a UI the EU border issue is gone. If it failed she could just point to the result and say to the EU it negates the December agreement.
ancapailldorcha wrote: » I still can't believe that Arlene Foster has been allowed to play her hand the way she has. May really should have just threatened her with another GE and the possibility of a Corbyn premiership.
Zubeneschamali wrote: » A disorderly no-deal crashout will cost the EU a tonne of money. Kicking the can down the road (in classic EU style) might result in Brexit never happening, or some cheaper alternative like Norway being adopted by a Labour government.
prawnsambo wrote: » Not sure of your logic here.
Enzokk wrote: » Well there was another mistake May made, apparently agreeing with the DUP in return for their support that she will ensure that NI is not treated differently to the rest of the UK as a result of Brexit. I don't think the DUP can back down now. I think all parties have wedged themselves into a corner that they cannot move from easily without doing some serious damage to their reputations, so as many warned we will sleepwalk into a no deal Brexit because parties have wedged themselves into positions they cannot get out of.
Enzokk wrote: » Zubeneschamali wrote: » A disorderly no-deal crashout will cost the EU a tonne of money. Kicking the can down the road (in classic EU style) might result in Brexit never happening, or some cheaper alternative like Norway being adopted by a Labour government. That is true, but why would the EU want to extend article 50 when there is no prospect of getting a deal through parliament?
charlie14 wrote: » If May actually held a border poll and it failed it would be very difficult for the EU to say it wasn`t the democratic decision of NI to stay in the UK and leave it under the same terms as the rest of the UK.
charlie14 wrote: » If May actually held a border poll and it failed it would be very difficult for the EU to say it wasn`t the democratic decision of NI to stay in the UK and leave it under the same terms as the rest of the UK. That is where the threat of holding a poll would be a gun to our heads and the EU`s in that it would be a hard border. Even if it passed it probably financially wouldn`t be much better for us than failing. That is why I am a bit surprised she hasn`t made mumblings about the possibility of doing it