Advertisement
If you have a new account but are having problems posting or verifying your account, please email us on hello@boards.ie for help. Thanks :)
Hello all! Please ensure that you are posting a new thread or question in the appropriate forum. The Feedback forum is overwhelmed with questions that are having to be moved elsewhere. If you need help to verify your account contact hello@boards.ie

Brexit discussion thread IX (Please read OP before posting)

13435373940330

Comments

  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,806 ✭✭✭An Ciarraioch


    Labour table a motion "preventing" no deal, but without a concrete alternative to the Withdrawal Agreement, it's merely window-dressing:

    http://twitter.com/jessicaelgot/status/1138460352805560320


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 4,850 ✭✭✭Stop moaning ffs


    Hurrache wrote: »


    I’d love to see the reactions from any of those running for PM to this.
    There won’t be any of course. They’re in full in the sand mode.


  • Moderators, Science, Health & Environment Moderators, Sports Moderators Posts: 24,146 Mod ✭✭✭✭robinph


    Labour table a motion "preventing" no deal, but without a concrete alternative to the Withdrawal Agreement, it's merely window-dressing:

    http://twitter.com/jessicaelgot/status/1138460352805560320

    Yep, but it takes a bit of the wind out of the sails of the leadership contenders claiming that they will just go for no deal somehow and ignore the will of parliament by parliament getting in their first and pointing out that it isn't going to happen. *




    * Hopefully.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,166 ✭✭✭trellheim


    Some history - remember we did all this beforehand, a couple of months ago, with the same parliament ?

    No Deal Rejected 321 to 278

    https://www.politico.eu/article/uk-parliament-votes-to-reject-no-deal-brexit-2/

    Option C (Ken Clarke): Make it UK law to negotiate a customs union with the EU. REJECTED by 273 - 276

    Option D (Nick Boles): Common Market 2.0/Norway-plus. REJECTED by 261 - 282

    Option E (Peter Kyle): Put any agreed Brexit deal to a public vote. REJECTED by 280 - 292

    Option G (Joanna Cherry): Give parliament a final vote to avoid no-deal and revoke Article 50 as a last resort. REJECTED by 191 - 292

    https://www.dw.com/en/uk-parliament-rejects-all-brexit-indicative-votes-to-find-way-forward/a-48149796


  • Moderators, Science, Health & Environment Moderators Posts: 20,361 Mod ✭✭✭✭Sam Russell


    trellheim wrote: »
    Some history - remember we did all this beforehand, a couple of months ago, with the same parliament ?

    No Deal Rejected 321 to 278

    https://www.politico.eu/article/uk-parliament-votes-to-reject-no-deal-brexit-2/

    Option C (Ken Clarke): Make it UK law to negotiate a customs union with the EU. REJECTED by 273 - 276

    Option D (Nick Boles): Common Market 2.0/Norway-plus. REJECTED by 261 - 282

    Option E (Peter Kyle): Put any agreed Brexit deal to a public vote. REJECTED by 280 - 292

    Option G (Joanna Cherry): Give parliament a final vote to avoid no-deal and revoke Article 50 as a last resort. REJECTED by 191 - 292

    https://www.dw.com/en/uk-parliament-rejects-all-brexit-indicative-votes-to-find-way-forward/a-48149796

    If they are faced with a 'No Deal Exit' by the 31st Ocyober with no extension, then those votes can be revisited, and many who voted for particular options were doing so hoping their preferred option would be available. If it is revoke or No Deal, well?


  • Advertisement
  • Moderators, Recreation & Hobbies Moderators, Science, Health & Environment Moderators, Technology & Internet Moderators Posts: 94,897 Mod ✭✭✭✭Capt'n Midnight


    Home Secretary Sajid Javid, a Tory leadership contender, yesterday said the Government could pay “hundreds of million of euros” to create a technological border fix and break the Brexit deadlock.


    The border needs a methodology that doesn't exist yet and technology that doesn't exist yet and it's a fair assumption that many people will be tempted to undermine it for political and financial reasons.


    Recruitment for the UK armed forces is a process that's been going on for hundreds of years, you don't need to invent new scannerising technology ,everyone has a vested interest in making it work so throwing “hundreds of million of euros” at it should get you something that works ?

    It was outsourced to Capita in 2012 for nearly half a billion pounds. And then the delays and cost overruns started. The UK army has spent £677 million so far, 47% of applicants drop out because it's taking almost a year to process them and they are only hitting 80% of the recruitment target. Maybe they'll hit 100% 10 years after starting the project.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,166 ✭✭✭trellheim


    If they are faced with a 'No Deal Exit' by the 31st Ocyober with no extension, then those votes can be revisited, and many who voted for particular options were doing so hoping their preferred option would be available. If it is revoke or No Deal, well?

    ie. an action rerun of earlier and absolutely no reason to expect any change , a new PM notwithstanding since on balance nearly all the candidates running were in TM's cabinet.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 625 ✭✭✭Cal4567


    Just my 5 cents worth.

    I am in the UK for a number of months each year. When I am at home, and reading forums such as this, I sense there is a view that broadly is - 'the UK will see sense and revoke Article 50'. However, when I speak to friends and collegues in the UK, they are mostly adamant that the UK will leave, that now there is no going back. I don't even get a view that the UK will fall off a cliff and that is coming from Remainers I know and respect. They seem to accept the UK will suffer but don't think it will be too troublesome.

    Also, during the referendum, even people I know who voted Remain, were very critcal of the EU. Really wanted to see a better deal for the UK in the EU. I struggled to locate anyone who had much to say anything positive about the EU.

    I'm non commital either way myself but my perception is the UK will now leave and leave by 31 October.


  • Moderators, Science, Health & Environment Moderators Posts: 20,361 Mod ✭✭✭✭Sam Russell


    Cal4567 wrote: »
    Just my 5 cents worth.

    I think you are undervaluing your opinion - or overvaluing the opinion of your UK friends. In June 2016, your 5 cents was worth 3.75 pence. Today, it would be worth 4.45 pence.

    After 40 years of Boris Lies, fed to that bastion of truth and goodness, the Daily Telegraph, no wonder they cannot see anything good about the EU. He thought it a jolly jape to make them up and likened it to throwing rocks and hearing the distant sound of breaking glass as they landed.

    Obviously they have studied how the EU works and understand how bad it is.

    Except the EHiC helath insurance card.

    Or the 'No roaming charges' or no extra charges for credit card usage.

    Or the freedom to work in other EU countries or take advantage of the Erasmus scheme.

    Or the single market that allows free access with unified standards and no customs, which helped the UK to become such a power house in services.

    Or the Common Agriculture policy that allowed the EU to guarantee its food supply.

    Or plenty of other EU measures that make Europe a great place to live.

    Mind you, the EU has been free from war and famine in Europe since 1960, but that is just a by the way. The UK have been involved in plenty of wars since the end of WW II, so perhaps absence of war is not so important.

    Of course the EU is not perfect - yet.


  • Moderators, Entertainment Moderators, Politics Moderators Posts: 14,567 Mod ✭✭✭✭johnnyskeleton


    Cal4567 wrote: »
    Also, during the referendum, even people I know who voted Remain, were very critcal of the EU. Really wanted to see a better deal for the UK in the EU. I struggled to locate anyone who had much to say anything positive about the EU.

    That the EU needs to, depending on your view, either reform or carry out a better PR exercise is beyond question. Personally, I think the two biggest misteps were taking ten new members in 2004 & 2007 rather than over a longer period e.g. over 20 years, perhaps requiring EEA membership for a decade beforehand, and, more importantly, taking it for granted that the man on the street knew what the EU did simply because his elected representatives seemed to be vaguey aware of it.

    However, all that has changed since the brexit vote and the whole issue of not wanting an ever closer union has become toxic, to the point that only far right groups promote it.

    What is completely lost in the UK is any sense of the invisible benefits of EU membership. No intra member states war being the biggie but economic stability being the other.

    If you were to ask the same people who are critical of the EU if they would like to join and be a leading member of an international organisation that promotes peace and prosperity, Im sure they would all leap at that proposition.
    I'm non commital either way myself but my perception is the UK will now leave and leave by 31 October.

    Or keep extending until people have lost interest, providing the Labour/Tory duopoly can survive the next election!


  • Advertisement
  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 855 ✭✭✭mickoneill31


    Cal4567 wrote: »
    Just my 5 cents worth.

    I am in the UK for a number of months each year. When I am at home, and reading forums such as this, I sense there is a view that broadly is - 'the UK will see sense and revoke Article 50'. However, when I speak to friends and collegues in the UK, they are mostly adamant that the UK will leave, that now there is no going back. I don't even get a view that the UK will fall off a cliff and that is coming from Remainers I know and respect. They seem to accept the UK will suffer but don't think it will be too troublesome..

    It depends on the demographic you're dealing with. In my bubble anybody I've spoken to thinks leaving the EU is lunacy. But the people I met are typically from the South.

    I met one guy from Manchester a couple of week ago that was a Brexiter though. When I asked why it was "because the EU was deciding 60% of the UKs laws".When I asked where that came from he couldn't give any examples and it was what "he was told "

    The UK is split. Leave or remain I think it's still shagged. The problem now isn't the EU its their government. And leave or remain they're going to continue to blame the EU for stuff they don't want to take responsibility for.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 19,088 ✭✭✭✭BonnieSituation


    I think you are undervaluing your opinion - or overvaluing the opinion of your UK friends. In June 2016, your 5 cents was worth 3.75 pence. Today, it would be worth 4.45 pence.

    After 40 years of Boris Lies, fed to that bastion of truth and goodness, the Daily Telegraph, no wonder they cannot see anything good about the EU. He thought it a jolly jape to make them up and likened it to throwing rocks and hearing the distant sound of breaking glass as they landed.

    Obviously they have studied how the EU works and understand how bad it is.

    Except the EHiC helath insurance card.

    Or the 'No roaming charges' or no extra charges for credit card usage.

    Or the freedom to work in other EU countries or take advantage of the Erasmus scheme.

    Or the single market that allows free access with unified standards and no customs, which helped the UK to become such a power house in services.

    Or the Common Agriculture policy that allowed the EU to guarantee its food supply.

    Or plenty of other EU measures that make Europe a great place to live.

    Mind you, the EU has been free from war and famine in Europe since 1960, but that is just a by the way. The UK have been involved in plenty of wars since the end of WW II, so perhaps absence of war is not so important.

    Of course the EU is not perfect - yet.

    [NOTE: I don't think the point I was making was clear]

    Funnily enough the EU wasn't actually free of war.

    There was a civil war ongoing in one of its member States until the late 90s. What member State might that have been?

    ---

    EDIT: I pretty much agree with everything that Sam says above.

    What I was alluding to was that, despite the fact that the EU was really a peace project to begin with, it always struck me that the most troublesome member who never really figured out its place within it, was the one member who had a civil war on its territory during its membership.

    Only God knows where we would be without the EU and what state the north might be in given the complete intransigence of the British State towards it.

    It's just fascinating!


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 9,671 ✭✭✭volchitsa


    Funnily enough the EU wasn't actually free of war.

    There was a civil war ongoing in one of its member States until the late 90s. What member State might that have been?

    Which of course began half a decade before we joined the EEC as it then was, and the EU was instrumental in helping to promote all sorts of peace initiatives.

    For several years after the GFA, the EU was firing money at pretty much any cross-community cooperative scheme (from personal experience). If the British government had been half as ready to play its part and really work on the fundamental social problems that NI has, we would probably be a lot better off now. But I don't think we can blame the Eu for that. Ingrained inequalities seem to be an inherent part of the British system.

    ”I enjoy cigars, whisky and facing down totalitarians, so am I really Winston Churchill?” (JK Rowling)



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,647 ✭✭✭gooch2k9


    Are the EU going to carry out a review of progress this month? I know Tusk/Juncker have said this won't lead to an end of the extension but frankly that should be on the cards now. The UK were told not to waste the time given. This leadership contest is doing precisely that and will change nothing as the EU have stated.


  • Moderators, Science, Health & Environment Moderators Posts: 20,361 Mod ✭✭✭✭Sam Russell


    Funnily enough the EU wasn't actually free of war.

    There was a civil war ongoing in one of its member States until the late 90s. What member State might that have been?

    That is one of the problems with the EU. It is not within the competence of the EU to involve itself with internal political matters within a member state. (For example, the Catalan situation in Spain was not seen as a concern that required EU intervention. There was also a problem with the Basque independence in Spain).

    However, Michel Barnier was very well aquainted with the matter and that may have informed his attitude to the backstop.

    The EU has areas where it alone has competence. (EG Trade deals, or monetary policy for Euro countries) There are areas where it does not have competence. (EG Local voting systems, or tourism). Shared competence exists in areas like consumer protecion and transport.

    Many of the areas that are cited by Brexiteers as reasons to leave the EU do not form any part of the EU competency - like austerity, lack of police numbers, or many of the Boris lies.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 16,121 ✭✭✭✭Spanish Eyes


    I feel done in now, looking at the way the potential incumbents for PM are trying to be more Brexit than the Brexit Party.

    However they are playing to the MPs who might support them. So now we know who they are. 50 50 Hard brexiteers and softer (intelligent and realistic) MPs now.

    And when two candidates are left, it is then up to the Conservative members to choose.

    Honestly if any of them spoke about democracy or the will of the people, I would have to put my knuckles in the small of my back. But I would never even contemplate putting my knuckles anywhere else, was just an image of a tiny bit of rage at what is enfolding now.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,806 ✭✭✭An Ciarraioch


    Polling confirmation that there are four electorally significant parties in the UK at present (but will the Brexit Party still exist next year?):

    http://twitter.com/britainelects/status/1138554485373116417


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 17,976 ✭✭✭✭A Dub in Glasgo


    Cal4567 wrote: »
    Just my 5 cents worth.

    I am in the UK for a number of months each year. When I am at home, and reading forums such as this, I sense there is a view that broadly is - 'the UK will see sense and revoke Article 50'. However, when I speak to friends and collegues in the UK, they are mostly adamant that the UK will leave, that now there is no going back. I don't even get a view that the UK will fall off a cliff and that is coming from Remainers I know and respect. They seem to accept the UK will suffer but don't think it will be too troublesome.

    Also, during the referendum, even people I know who voted Remain, were very critcal of the EU. Really wanted to see a better deal for the UK in the EU. I struggled to locate anyone who had much to say anything positive about the EU.

    I'm non commital either way myself but my perception is the UK will now leave and leave by 31 October.

    I am in the UK for 26 years and most folk I know feel absolutely betrayed with the leave campaign and would not hesitate to vote remain in any future referendum. This is what the leave side are scared stiff of


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,806 ✭✭✭An Ciarraioch


    Strangely, the Lib Dems actually rise under a Johnson premiership:

    https://twitter.com/EuropeElects/status/1138560501452038144


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,394 ✭✭✭✭Professor Moriarty


    Strangely, the Lib Dems actually rise under a Johnson premiership:

    https://twitter.com/EuropeElects/status/1138560501452038144

    That's interesting. The Tories had a majority in 2015 with 37% of the vote.


  • Advertisement
  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 55,672 ✭✭✭✭Headshot


    Polling confirmation that there are four electorally significant parties in the UK at present (but will the Brexit Party still exist next year?):

    http://twitter.com/britainelects/status/1138554485373116417

    I wonder would the Lib Dems do a coalition with Labour?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 21,886 ✭✭✭✭Roger_007


    Headshot wrote: »
    I wonder would the Lib Dems do a coalition with Labour?

    Not while Corbyn is the leader.

    Corbyn is the reason why Labour are not soaring in the opinion polls.
    Labour are just as hamstrung by their members as the Torys. Most Brits are conservative with a small 'c'. The Lib Dems would be mad to get into bed with Labour. They would be better off doing a deal with the SNP.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 19,088 ✭✭✭✭BonnieSituation


    volchitsa wrote: »
    Which of course began half a decade before we joined the EEC as it then was, and the EU was instrumental in helping to promote all sorts of peace initiatives.

    For several years after the GFA, the EU was firing money at pretty much any cross-community cooperative scheme (from personal experience). If the British government had been half as ready to play its part and really work on the fundamental social problems that NI has, we would probably be a lot better off now. But I don't think we can blame the Eu for that. Ingrained inequalities seem to be an inherent part of the British system.
    That is one of the problems with the EU. It is not within the competence of the EU to involve itself with internal political matters within a member state. (For example, the Catalan situation in Spain was not seen as a concern that required EU intervention. There was also a problem with the Basque independence in Spain).

    However, Michel Barnier was very well aquainted with the matter and that may have informed his attitude to the backstop.

    The EU has areas where it alone has competence. (EG Trade deals, or monetary policy for Euro countries) There are areas where it does not have competence. (EG Local voting systems, or tourism). Shared competence exists in areas like consumer protecion and transport.

    Many of the areas that are cited by Brexiteers as reasons to leave the EU do not form any part of the EU competency - like austerity, lack of police numbers, or many of the Boris lies.

    For Clarity:

    I pretty much agree with everything that Sam says above.

    What I was alluding to was that, despite the fact that the EU was really a peace project to begin with, it always struck me that the most troublesome member who never really figured out its place within it, was the one member who had a civil war on its territory during its membership.

    Only God knows where we would be without the EU and what state the north might be in given the complete intransigence of the British State towards it.

    It's just fascinating!


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,267 ✭✭✭joeysoap


    Anyone see the news tonight where is showed William and Kate visiting a sheep farm in the north of England. The father voted remain and the son voted Brexit. Father is now worried about future payments and son is worried where their sheep will go in the event of import duties/restrictions into the EU.

    Bit late.


  • Posts: 17,378 ✭✭✭✭ [Deleted User]


    Ireland had a civil war in the last few decades? Or am I misreading that post?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 27,489 ✭✭✭✭Peregrinus


    Ireland had a civil war in the last few decades? Or am I misreading that post?
    The UK did.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,191 ✭✭✭Mr.Wemmick


    Cal4567 wrote: »
    Just my 5 cents worth.

    I am in the UK for a number of months each year. When I am at home, and reading forums such as this, I sense there is a view that broadly is - 'the UK will see sense and revoke Article 50'. However, when I speak to friends and collegues in the UK, they are mostly adamant that the UK will leave, that now there is no going back. I don't even get a view that the UK will fall off a cliff and that is coming from Remainers I know and respect. They seem to accept the UK will suffer but don't think it will be too troublesome.

    Also, during the referendum, even people I know who voted Remain, were very critcal of the EU. Really wanted to see a better deal for the UK in the EU. I struggled to locate anyone who had much to say anything positive about the EU.

    I'm non commital either way myself but my perception is the UK will now leave and leave by 31 October.
    It depends on the demographic you're dealing with. In my bubble anybody I've spoken to thinks leaving the EU is lunacy. But the people I met are typically from the South.

    I met one guy from Manchester a couple of week ago that was a Brexiter though. When I asked why it was "because the EU was deciding 60% of the UKs laws".When I asked where that came from he couldn't give any examples and it was what "he was told "

    The UK is split. Leave or remain I think it's still shagged. The problem now isn't the EU its their government. And leave or remain they're going to continue to blame the EU for stuff they don't want to take responsibility for.
    I am in the UK for 26 years and most folk I know feel absolutely betrayed with the leave campaign and would not hesitate to vote remain in any future referendum. This is what the leave side are scared stiff of

    I also live in the UK most of the year and the Brexiteers are really coming across as clueless in that it's just a feeling they have, a need to leave without foundation or clear reason/ backed-up argument. It is fantasy.. and increasing numbers, where I live, now see this for what it is and would vote remain in a heartbeat.

    Any new PM will be in the same situation as Theresa May in that GATT Art. 24 is waiting to bring their brexiteer talk crashing down, and funny how the hard facts are not included in their PM self-promoting talks. It's all rather fantastical, pure drama, with no practical or realistic input.

    “The fact that society believes a man who says he’s a woman, instead of a woman who says he’s not, is proof that society knows exactly who is the man and who is the woman.”

    - Jen Izaakson



  • Moderators, Entertainment Moderators, Politics Moderators Posts: 14,567 Mod ✭✭✭✭johnnyskeleton


    Mr.Wemmick wrote: »
    I also live in the UK most of the year and the Brexiteers are really coming across as clueless in that it's just a feeling they have, a need to leave without foundation or clear reason/ backed-up argument.

    That is undoubtedly true but it seems to be happening the world over, where peoples feelings override facts. People in Ireland too have strong feelings about FG, SF etc that often doesnt allow them look at specific facts entirely objectively.

    The difficulty is that something has gone majorly wrong in the UK that so many people "feel" that they need to leave the EU. Part of that is that they "feel" that the EU is ineffamably evil, they "feel" that their lives have gone wrong because of the EU and will be better when they leave, and also they don't "feel" it whenever the EU does something positive.

    You cant argue facts against feelings, as James O Brien often says to his utter frustration, and in reality very few people are trying to make the brexiteers "feel" that the EU isnt the bad guy and has actually improved their lives and will do in the future.

    Even if they crash out the economy shrinks and the city of London moves en bloc to Frankfurt, people wont feel that leaving the EU was a mistake and will most likely feel that they can live without this part of the economy.
    It is fantasy.. and increasing numbers, where I live, now see this for what it is and would vote remain in a heartbeat.

    I'd like to believe that is true of the whole UK, but the large Brexit/UKIP vote vs the Lib Dems/Green/SNP vote in the EU elections suggests the opposite.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 27,489 ✭✭✭✭Peregrinus


    . . . I'd like to believe that is true of the whole UK, but the large Brexit/UKIP vote vs the Lib Dems/Green/SNP vote in the EU elections suggests the opposite.
    Gotta point out that the LD/Grn/SNP vote was in fact larger than the Brexit/UKIP vote.

    But the real issue is that the two were fairly closely matched. The UK remains pretty much as divided on this question as it was 3 years ago. Even if - as I think is the case - the balance has tipped so that the Remainers are now slightly more numerous than the Leavers, that doesn't make for any more stable or settled an outcome.

    The key here, obviously, is the 30% or so of the population who didn't vote for either of those two groups. They voted Labour or Tory (a) they are prepared to contemplate Brexit, but not necessarily on any terms; (b) they do not demand of a political party that it have a clear position on Brexit; and therefore (c) views on Brexit, one way or the other, are not their overriding political concern. They're the group that's most likely to be open to either persuasion to change their position on Brexit, or acquiescence in the victory of a position that isn't the one they hold.


  • Advertisement
  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,983 ✭✭✭Enzokk


    It seems like the wheels are in motion for Boris Johnson to become PM. The Telegraph is pushing him to other MPs and to the membership as well.

    https://twitter.com/JohnRentoul/status/1138551562522046464

    This reminds me of the polling before the last election and we know how that turned out as well.

    As for where he stands on Brexit and the ERG, it seems like he has their backing at least according Beth Rigby,

    https://twitter.com/BethRigby/status/1138467029906808838

    https://twitter.com/BethRigby/status/1138470479294009344

    Now that seems contradictory to me. How can you promise to go directly to a FTA and leave on the 31st October and claim not to pursue no-deal?

    This tweet sum it up for me,

    https://twitter.com/NinaDSchick/status/1138701595762417664


This discussion has been closed.
Advertisement