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.
FrancieBrady wrote: » I wonder what would happen if we got an election/2nd ref where it is not a 'them and us' decision. Such as one purely about Brexit and how it affects unionist and nationalist alike. I don't think the DUP would fare at all well given the business community's pronouncements today or the consensus there seems to be in Ulster farming. UUP would thrive I reckon if they backed this deal.
prawnsambo wrote: » Bloomberg's Tim Ross is reporting that Andrea Leadsom, Michael Gove, Penny Mordaunt, Chris Grayling and Liam Fox are meeting to re-write the agreement over the next week. The bizarreness doesn't stop.
Deleted User wrote: » It has to be remembered that while NI did vote to remain overall it was less than 56% remain. I have no idea how that splits between the 2 "communities".
EdgeCase wrote: » How can you rewrite an 'agreement'? Surely you'd have to negotiate all of the changes and then re-agree everything. Basically a group of rogue ministers are attempting to do a parallel negotiation and the document they would produce would be a proposal not an 'agreement'. Part of the problem with the UK position is that the negotiation has actually been largely between the Tories and the Tories or with the Tabloid press.
RobMc59 wrote: » Ian Paisley Snr was frequently on the news here in England and personally I always thought it strange that someone wearing a priests collar seemed so full of hatred..As a neutral(hoping for a deal which is good for Ireland and the UK) ,you tend to sit up and listen to Arlene Foster as she does seem very passionate about what she`s saying and to be fair,the majority of the people of NI must think she`s doing a decent job or she would`nt be in power.
Gintonious wrote: » Haven't the EU said that they won't be renegotiating anything?
Kermit.de.frog wrote: » I would be amazed if the EU reopens negotiations. To them the deal is done. There is one way out for the hard brexiters though. They can leave NI completely in the SM and CU and then GB would be free to do whatever it likes... Would be quickest way to agreement and buyin at Westminister.
LeinsterDub wrote: » Since we are rewriting agreements why not rewrite the Anglo-Irish agreement of 1921. Get rid of the north and all their brexit problems are solved
Anthracite wrote: » Important to remember that, until very recently, Sinn Fein were very anti-EU.
Seth Brundle wrote: » Anthracite wrote: » Important to remember that, until very recently, Sinn Fein were very anti-EU. Aren't they still anti-EU?
An Ciarraioch wrote: » Interesting NI opinion poll: DUP 31% (-5) SF 27% (-2) UUP 15% (+5) Alliance 12% (+4) SDLP 11% (-1) Seats: DUP 9 (-1) SF 5 (-2) UUP 2 (+2) SDLP 1 (+1) Ind Unionist 1 (-)http://twitter.com/ElectionMapsUK/status/1062757712558243841
theguzman wrote: » Ireland are currently paying billions into the EU whilst there is a housing crisis here, this money would be better off to help people get a roof over their head instead of being spent of Angela Merkel's EU Federal Army.
theguzman wrote: Ireland are currently paying billions into the EU whilst there is a housing crisis here, this money would be better off to help people get a roof over their head instead of being spent of Angela Merkel's EU Federal Army.
PlasticPatrick wrote: » The "Project" is getting out of hand, a militarised europe will see history repeating itself only this time Ireland will not be able to sit it out as a nation.
prawnsambo wrote: » We got billions from Europe for decades. But when it's time for us to step up, we suddenly start shuffling our feet and looking at the floor?
mickoneill31 wrote: » Not really. Therell always be a few but most of us in Ireland are able to see the benefits that being in the EU gives us. And if they can't, would they please educate themselves as to the damage being done to the UK. If there's one advantage of Brexit is that it serves as a cautionary tale.
DOCARCH wrote: » I think it will be down to the wire. I think in December the deal will be rejected by parliament. There will be some very minor tweaking of the deal/wording by TM/EU, to save face/put to new vote. Then, in the New Year, parliament will pass it, as the horrors of no deal become more and more apparent (and as sterling/markets are dropping through the floor!).
Inquitus wrote: » The "Project" that has delivered us from a nation of relative poverty to being one of the richest in the world, yep, lets leave....
hill16bhoy wrote: » although maybe not on the first attempt.
Seth Brundle wrote: » @PlasticPatrick -ignoring the silly phrases about the devil etc, what is your suggested solution? Go alone? Join team GB? They've shown over the centuries that they are never your friend. Stay in the EU effectively as a joint partner? Something else?
PlasticPatrick wrote: » None of the above, just be wary of a push to militarise Europe and use any influence that Ireland has to prevent it.
PlasticPatrick wrote: » Neutrality will not be an option once an EU army influenced by the Germans and French is used to exert foreign policy on behalf of the people of Europe and Ireland.
PlasticPatrick wrote: » None of the above, just be wary of a push to militarise Europe and use any influence that Ireland has to prevent it. Neutrality will not be an option once an EU army influenced by the Germans and French is used to exert foreign policy on behalf of the people of Europe and Ireland.