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.
Folkstonian wrote: » Unbelievably he’s consistently polling around about 4 points below May, which paints the bleakest picture of them all I think
golfball37 wrote: » The Irish have been sneering at the decision of the British people since the result came in. The glee being extolled here over Britain’s travails is quite childish. If Britain suffers so will we.
pikebishop wrote: » she could have easily ****ed over the GFA but decided to go with plan to try keep its integrity. a lot of the other headaballs would have easily gone a different way.
Seth Brundle wrote: » She did try to ****over the GFA in order to appease Arlene. However thankfully we had secured an agreement which had she gone ahead and broke it, would have left the UK with zero credibility when they go to making all these wonderful deals that they say they will
ThePanjandrum wrote: » I think that the Brexit supporters in Britain have been pretty patient so far, but maybe this is the point where everything changes and May's supposed deal gets scrapped in favour of leaving on WTO rules and negotiating a Free Trade Agreement afterwards.
ThePanjandrum wrote: » It's just the opposite though, isn't it? What does the GFA say about border arrangements? Nothing.
ThePanjandrum wrote: » It's just the opposite though, isn't it? Wgat does the GFA say about border arrangements? Nothing.
Seth Brundle wrote: » Not sure what your point is. They risked the GFA by trying/hoping to ignore the agreement made last Dec. They also ignored the existing peace and the requests from the people not to risk that peace simply to appease Arlene and her party of anti-GFA bigots.
Under the caveat that nothing is agreed until everything is agreed, the joint commitments set out below in this joint report shall be reflected in the Withdrawal Agreement in full detail. This does not prejudge any adaptations that might be appropriate in case transitional arrangements were to be agreed in the second phase of the negotiations, and is without prejudice to discussions on the framework of the future relationship.
Atlantic Dawn wrote: » Sammy Wilson on Prime Time on RTE now, he's about to blow.
Water John wrote: » GFA said nothing about border arrangements because every one presumed, that any future UK politicians wouldn't do any thing as lunatic as Brexit. This point has been made here before but we'll forgive you as you're a new poster.
ThePanjandrum wrote: » Not at all. Look at the copy of the agreement on the EU site
ThePanjandrum wrote: » That's your assumption. Nevertheless, it's not in the GFA so I struggle to understand why people claim that it is.
Necro wrote: » Sammy Wilson: 'We voted to Leave' Er... no you absolute plank your constituents that you are supposed to represent voted to Remain.
tuxy wrote: » Under what party? The majority of tory MPs will not back something this foolish!
Junkyard Tom wrote: » Sammy Wilson exemplifies perfectly on Prime Time the type of politicians nationalists have had to deal with for decades.
Seth Brundle wrote: » Britain has a lot of hard thinking to do. From their media to their elected officials to the ordinary person on the street, they need to consider what they've achieved with Brexit. What do they actually want and is it a realistic goal? The people need to educate themselves to their position in the world and how they are not bigger than their ego tells them they are.
Britain needs a strong leader to rescue them from the lunatics. Unfortunately, I can't think who that might be.
ThePanjandrum wrote: » The vote was UK wide, the UK voted to leave.