lola85 wrote: » Timmy Dooley tried it and was put back in his box quickly.
Indestructable wrote: » Not a fan of that, at all. Rather they would head off with no deal. They'd be back soon enough.
TCDStudent1 wrote: » Any current affairs show on tonight covering Brexit?
Spanish Eyes wrote: » Where is the link to the sign off by V and Coveney wrt to this please? To be absolutely fair FF have not interfered much either and have let them get on with it. IMO compared with the absolute parody and faux drama going on in Westminster, our little country has acquitted itself very well in a quiet and non dictatorial way on behalf of us all, North and South. I obviously missed the so called climb down by our Gov. I am sure someone will point me in the right direction. And thanks.
PokeHerKing wrote: » Nothing is confirmed but it's of course a climb down IF it's true. It' would be a time limited backstop essentially.
Leroy42 wrote: » This is a pretty major climbdown by the government. I get that we want to be all 'looking after NI interests' but this is madness. We would never be more than 6 years away from a hard border, with the very real potential that every 4 years it turns into 2! We will spend our time talking about the fecking border. Not only does it create a crisis of confidence in NI, it has a knock on effect on RoI.If Leo and Coveney are agreeing to this they will lose a huge amount of the goodwill built up over the brexit years. Has Leo really given in on this? I can't believe it. Those that claimed that the EU would throw us under the bus were wrong, it was our own government!
davedanon wrote: » Not a chance any of this crap is true. 'Buzzfeed's Europe editor' pipes up and suddenly it's gospel, whereas Tony Connelly's always excellent reporting is debated back and forth? Not a hope.
Kermit.de.frog wrote: » There has been no climb down. If unionists in the north want to screw their own economy up in order to support the deal by having that uncertainty every 4 years then let them.
davedanon wrote: » There's a triumph for optimism and no mistake. I'd give them the first; the rest, meh. If they were really canny operators, they wouldn't have ****canned May's deal. Best of both UK/EU worlds. Idiots.
Leroy42 wrote: » Yes, I had been wondering this myself. It is part of the WA, and seems that no-one is talking about it now.
CelticRambler wrote: » If that protocol for consent is accurate, then that kills off every advantage for NI business - all the red tape of asking for import/export rebates, all the hassle of complying with two different VAT regimes, and no guarantee that the feckers in Stormont will keep things stable long enough to see your company through to the end of a five-year plan. Who'd want to invest in NI under such circumstances? The only way I can interpret this as a positive move is that it's a Cunning Plan that will allow GB to push NI towards reunification. I can't see the Scots being happy either: NI gets to have a Brexit referendum every four years, while they have to fight tooth and nail for a second Indy Ref ... and of course, the UK as whole has been told that 2016 was a one-off-never-again-democratic decision that cannot be called into question or reversed, ever.
Joe_ Public wrote: » Not much talk of the 39 billion, assume Johnson seems fine with handing it over despite his condemnations of it in the past.
Joe_ Public wrote: » Not much talk of the 39 billion, assume Johnson seems fine with handing it over despite his condemnations of it in the past. Just doesn't stack up for me on a whole lot of levels.
VinLieger wrote: » Yeah i cant believe Varadkar and Coveney are signing off on it, maybe they are just hoping the current demographics trends make it increasingly impossible for a vote against the deal
Deleted User wrote: » Some mixed messages from RTE's correspondents on the 9pm news. Tony Connelly sticking to his optimistic line. But Tommy Gorman contradicting him on the DUP position. As said by others, I find it very hard to believe the EU is buying into this Stormont consent idea. It's nuts.