downcow wrote: » Well you should then have the confidence to go with no backstop.
downcow wrote: » 220 mps not in the dup voted against deal. Stop trying to imply it’s only the dup took a strop
LuckyLloyd wrote: » Neale Richmond playing a blinder on BBC now.
Anthracite wrote: » The question is what way those 200+ MPs would vote when no-deal chaos hits Britain. Are you confident that no East-West customs border is a hill they want to die on?
something like leaving the customs union can't really be regarded as a red line
Bit cynical wrote: » Just out of interest, I know a couple of other countries have expressed support for an extension but have any countries said they would actually object or is it mainly the Brussels establishment that opposes an extension?
Bit cynical wrote: » However another way of looking at it is that the EU, by insisting on a measure that they know will never be accepted by the UK Parliament, is forcing a no deal brexit and thereby throwing Ireland under a bus.
correct horse battery staple wrote: » What is the alternative? ignoring and ripping up the GFA? and for what exactly
FrancieBrady wrote: » No? You are certainly anti the Irish position here as you have consistently undermined it. The request for the backstop is wrong, challenging the UK on it's committments to the GFA is unwise, the backstop is a conspiracy to force a no deal...etc etc. Own what you are doing.
Deleted User wrote: » Generally speaking, the wrong way to look at something isn't worth anything. Not sure why you'd even bring it up.
Bit cynical wrote: » I'm not supporting TM.
FrancieBrady wrote: » 'The PM you are supporting in this', then.
Panrich wrote: » Juncker has already told her that she can have the backstop issue revisited if she agrees to permanent customs union instead. All it takes is to adjust one of her red lines in the spirit of concession on her side.
Bit cynical wrote: » Not my PM. I am Irish.
FrancieBrady wrote: » It is nonsense to suggest a conspiracy to include something the British would never agree to, when your PM agreed to it. Nobody in December 2017 was expecting the DUP strop nor how hamstrung, confused and dithering May's government actually was.
Bit cynical wrote: » But in the light of parliamentary opposition, May is (or was) trying to obtain concessions on the backstop in order to get it to pass.
ThePanjandrum wrote: » He says that because most people do not know what laws have been added to the legislative framework. Let's ask you, name ten items of EU legislation that have altered Irish law to the benefit of your country. With O'Brien's question, I start with the principle of the supremacy of EU law over national law, continue with various treaties, go on to policies like the Common Agricultural and Common Fisheries Policy and then go through a sample of regulations, directives and decisions taken from the EU database together with ECJ decisions. Sometimes I add breaches of the law which the EU has allowed. Amazingly there are very few questioners who know anything about EU laws themselves.
New rules being introduced across the EU from 13 December 2014 (by the Food Information for Consumers Regulation 1169/2011) will give allergy sufferers eating out the same information and protection as when they shop in the supermarket. The aim is to prevent avoidable distress and in extreme cases save lives.
Bit cynical wrote: » Do you think it is, in fact, mentioned? I don't think she did agree to regulatory differences between NI and UK. There is an interpretation that suggests she did, but the wording is ambiguous.
The backstop means the whole of the UK will remain in the EU customs union, while Northern Ireland will have to follow single market rules.
fash wrote: » Actually having the back stop massively increases the UK's negotiating power. Otherwise the UK has a transition period with a ticking clock, and a no deal crash out if it fails to agree "agree to this now or crash out to no deal". With the backstop, the UK Is provided with a safety net with generous terms (terms which some EU MSs were aghast/have misgivings about how generous they were). Thus for anyone except a brexiter jihadist, the current backstop is a pretty sweet deal for the UK. Furthermore, clearly the Brexiters intention (as can be seen currently) was to broadly agree a trade deal, not agree anything about NI- then try to railroad the EU into throwing Ireland under a bus. I'm sure you can agree that preventing a hard border in NI is much too important to be used for that.
otnomart wrote: » Simon Coveney just said at Andrew Marr program that Ireland will not object to extension of Article 50
FrancieBrady wrote: » May negotiated this position and agreed it before the DUP had their strop. Utterly ridiculous conspiracy theory there.