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.
First Up wrote: » I can think of quite a few airports where that is not the case. In fact I can't think offhand of one where it is. And its hard to chose an airport after you have chosen your destination!
Hammond said “looking purely at the economics, remaining in the single market would give us an economic advantage”, comments that are likely to rile Brexiters in his party.
But enough logic – it’s still a thrill. BREXIT! It may be winter outside, but in my heart it’s spring – spring 2016 and all the fun and joy of Victory Day still coming round that bend. Once again, I feel that familiar feeling of being quite niche in my interests, as apparently we’re all meant to be bored by now. But how can people ever be bored by politics? It’s like being bored by sex or religion – the great trinity of enthralling social intercourse. I pity the poor fool who can’t wait for a world fit only once more for chatter of shopping, sport and the weather. “Wrap up warm!” the forecasters moan each morning, and you’d be forgiven for thinking they’re talking about more than the temperature. But I don’t want a life in which “wrapping up warm” and “staying safe” are the be-all and end-all. I want to live my life like an adult aware of risks and responsibilities, not like a child or Chicken Licken fearing the sky will fall if things change. Listening to the radio, looking at the internet and reading the papers, the scare stories are still coming thick and fast; as I write, we’re just recovering from Mr Kipling complaining that his French Fancies may suffer from a shortage of such complex raw materials as sugar (because they don’t grow that in the Commonwealth Caribbean, of course) and squaring up to a New York Times expose about the effect Brexit may have on the freshness of cut flowers. The phrase First World Problems is greatly over-used, but it does come somewhat to mind. The old glass-half-full/glass-half-empty personality test has never been so in-your-face. Where Remainers see Here Be Dragonnes, I see a vista of possibilities. Property prices plunging? Great, now young people will stand a chance of making the first rung on the housing market. Workers hired for the cheapness of their labour leaving the country? Fine, now employers will have to pay a decent wage. You cling to this corrupt, tatty old comfort blanket all you like, Remainers. But please don’t ever again portray yourselves as enlightened, democratic, daring embracers of change. Don’t call yourselves internationalists when you’re willing to sacrifice a generation of Southern European youth to the feather-bedded, over-used fantasies of a cabal of filthy rich old duffers who no one ever elected. Like someone afraid to leave a bad marriage and step out into the sunshine of uncertainty, you carry on believing the gaslighting lies – “You look fat in that Union Jack mini dress! No one else ever will want you!” Before the referendum, I was willing to believe that our stroppiness made us Bad Europeans – but since the bullying began, I know that it’s not me, it’s EU.
So right. Remainers are the status quo afraid to rock their comfy lives. It's the poor who need revolution to change things and Labour could have done better if they saw that. Young people are indoctrinated at university to be pro-eu and think they are cleverer but instead are sheep. We need free thinkers and a vision of a better world not controlled by banks and business and insipid celebrities. Have we forgotten the banking crash and who payed? Us the ordinary folk. Lets leave in wto terms and negotiate a trade deal after. The peoples vote was the 2016 one and we won!
Good analogy. Most remainers that I know are Public Sector. The realities of life outside a nice safe cocoon are an anathema to them.
Great piece. Now how do we get MPs to overcome their overblown fears and vote for WTO?
But whatever happens in the next few weeks, it is becoming ever more clear that, unless the EU radically changes its approach to the United Kingdom’s exit – that it stops treating Brexit as a chance to punish our nation in a desperate attempt to shore up support for the failing European project – we will not be able to do a meaningful long-term deal with Brussels. The UK entered this process seeking a fair-minded agreement that would keep trade flowing while cementing our friendship through cooperation as equals. If all the EU is willing to countenance is our capitulation to its terms, we should not be afraid to walk away.
Leroy42 wrote: » Hammond has come out today saying that all scenarios Brexit will result in a negative impact on the economy. https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2018/nov/28/chancellor-uk-worse-off-brexit-scenarios-philip-hammond He states that TM's proposed deal is the least worst option. Now, when the chancellor is telling you that the whole country is going to become poorer you would think that people would pay some heed, but of course this will simply be waved away as Remainer nonsense. There is one line in particular caught my eye: . The expert opinion, from the person charged with managing the states finances, is something to be riles about? It is an odd state of affairs when the journalists even feel the need to put in something like that.
First Up wrote: » Doesn't matter how far back it goes. New laws supercede old ones. Its hard to see how a UK wide CTA could operate in a no deal situation. An NI specific FTA is technically possible but a political minefield.
Leroy42 wrote: » Hammond has come out today saying that all scenarios Brexit will result in a negative impact on the economy.
mickoneill31 wrote: » First Up wrote: » I can think of quite a few airports where that is not the case. In fact I can't think offhand of one where it is. And its hard to chose an airport after you have chosen your destination! It's probably because you're usually traveling to or from a non Schengen country. I worked in CDG and they segregate passengers based on if they're traveling between Schengen countries. You wouldn't ever see that if you're only ever flying to Ireland or the UK.
LuckyLloyd wrote: » It's an unfortunate consequence of our fractured societal discourse (where everyone is indeed willingly "cocooned" in a bunker of their own ideas) that you cannot discuss / debate / argue with the real Brexit believers. The general (though not exclusive, it is important to note) tone and focus of this thread is on the economic and political realities, and the legal binds that underpin the EU and the UK's membership of same. Essentially realpolitik, and I guess some shades of schadenfreude borne of pure frustration at the religious fervour with which Brexit is held in some quarters despite the absence of any concrete plan to underpin the blind faith.
Zubeneschamali wrote: » Before the Referendum, the UK Government estimated Brexit would cost 3-6% of GDP longterm, depending on how close the future trading relationship is, but the Leave side just waved the numbers away, no-one listens to experts anymore. It has already cost 2.5%, and I have seen estimates from 3-9% more depending on the future relationship. But no-one really knows how much a crashout will hurt, it is really difficult to estimate. More than 9%, that is for sure.
Zubeneschamali wrote: » I can't see these numbers having any effect on Brexit voters, though. They were well publicized and then dismissed two years ago. Anyone afraid of a 5% drop is just lacking that WWII bulldog spirit, why we faced worse than that at Agincourt etc. etc.
ancapailldorcha wrote: » No but I get the impression that a lot of people, thought not nearly enough have woken up to the con. The WWII spirit/Agincourt thing tends to be more common among older people in my experience who will of course be fine given that they own homes. It's the younger people who will bear the consequences and are less likely to spout such claptrap.
Professor Moriarty wrote: » IIRC, somebody researched the age demographic and calculated that over a two year period there would be a 4% swing away from to Remain from Leave due to older people dying off and younger people maturing enough to take an interest and voting.
prinzeugen wrote: » Yes I forgot the world is going to end. No food etc. People will survive. Did it before. The only people in trouble will be the ones that survive on imported food. Ie Lidl and Aldi shoppers!
ancapailldorcha wrote: » Pretty much. Wonder how much difference the utter farce of the last two and a half years would make.
Professor Moriarty wrote: » It's a bit like Trump. There's a hardcore who buy into the nationalistic hubris and who will always want a Brexit at whatever cost. It's the middle ground that is shifting. The big problem is that the ERG and DUP have inordinate influence. So much so that this small rump could yet cause Britain to crash out.
Leroy42 wrote: » I think it is more than that. Whilst there has been a small shift in the polls in terms of remain/leave, not nearly enough to warrant anybody to claim that things havw changed.
Leroy42 wrote: » And for that, the voters need to take full responsibility. The mess that HMG have made of it, the resignation of so many ministers, the failure to deliver on any campaign promises, the failure to point to anything concrete in terms of benefits. Yet none of that seems to be making a significant difference.
Leroy42 wrote: » The public seem very much of the view that the vote happened, they want nothing more to do with it.
keane2097 wrote: » Slightly off topic but maybe someone can give me the five line version of what the downsides to Schengen are that kept Ireland and the UK out of it in the first place?
FreudianSlippers wrote: » In short, the UK didn't join because they didn't believe that the EU's external borders were strong enough or well enough policed - which would result in unwanted non-EU migration into the UK (read: the UK wanted to pick-and-choose who it let in); Ireland didn't join because the UK didn't join - it would have effectively ended the CTA between UK/Ireland. Basically, the UK wanted to have their cake and eat it for their entire EU membership.
ancapailldorcha wrote: » Depends on where you cast the net. Bolton? Sure. Stoke-on-Trent? Most definitely. Birmingham? There's an interesting one. If Theresa May's plate balancing act collapses and major employers announce relocation plans, I'd say the penny will drop sharpish but it'll be too late then.
Calina wrote: » Nope. Actually not having to clear passport control would make a big difference to me.
ancapailldorcha wrote: » It won't be properly tangible though until May fails to get her deal through the House of Commons. That'll be it then as the EU are refusing to renegotiate the deal.
Leroy42 wrote: » If? We have had plenty of it already. Car manufacturing bosses being one example. But no matter what it is simply dismissed as Pro-EU Project Fear. Dyson recently announced is electric cars would be made in Taiwan or somewhere, hardly a ripple for the UK. This was exactly the sort of investment that should have been coming to the UK in the new Brexit era. And FDI is way down. Investment is down Universities are saying that research and development will take a major hit. People really don't seem to care. "Just get on with it" seems to be the cry for many a vox pop. What "getting on" and "it" actually are nobody seems entirely sure, but by god the government better get on and deliver.