liamtech wrote: » I agree with you, but lets face it - Brexit in general is a bad deal for the people of the UK. The problem is that saying 'we got what we were looking for and about as far as we were going to get, no border on this island' - is only half the storyIreland did get what it wantsAnd so did one community in Northern IrelandThe OTHER community however, did not. And while i accept a number of facts that are sure to be highlight (DUP and unionists in general are to blame - brought this on themselves when they campaigned for Brexit) - none of this changes the fact that said community have been shafted Once you move away from the obvious 'i told yee so' - this circle is less easy to square. This deal does place a very real trade border in the irish sea, and will be unacceptable to many unionists and loyalists - and depending on what happens there are sure to be widespread protests - this would not be unprecedented, they brought down sunning-dale remember Anyway, a devils advocate position Happy to discuss
liamtech wrote: » Once you move away from the obvious 'i told yee so' - this circle is less easy to square. This deal does place a very real trade border in the irish sea, and will be unacceptable to many unionists and loyalists - and depending on what happens there are sure to be widespread protests - this would not be unprecedented, they brought down sunning-dale remember.
Capt'n Midnight wrote: » First of all no one in NI got what they wanted. But the nightmare scenario of a hard border bringing back the troubles is off the table. According to recent polls even reunification was preferred to that. Second can you please define what you mean by OTHER community ? Nationalists, industry, farmers, unions, small, u-unionists, anyone living near the border, the UUP, the 50% who don't identify with either tribe and even the DUP's most recent minister for finance have all supported the alternative to a hard border. It doesn't cover services for the UK either so the EU still has LOTS of leverage
SeaBreezes wrote: » I would suggest Ireland did not get what it wanted. What we want is the U.K. To stop punishing its citizens and forget this self destructive tendency and settle down and be happy and thrive as we would want for any sibling. :-) the crazy part is the UK have more say than any other country in the EU. Per population because of NI they have more MEPs. And have always had more power than any other country in the EU per capita. They choose not to wield that power for good and instead elected useless MEPs that did no work and blamed everyone else.
CelticRambler wrote: » But the situation is black and white: Brexit is a universally bad idea, based on the result of a non-binding referendum, won on the back of illegal campaign practices, promoting unfounded allegations and deliberate misinformation. Three years later, despite the "best" efforts of two Tory governments propped up by the DUP, there is no clear path to Brexit. The way to "fix" this would be to scrap the whole exercise and, if "the will of the people" is really as important to the Tories and the Brexit Party as it's been made out to be, a second referendum can be put to the people in a binding referendum, run according to best-practice rules and with a properly defined proposal put to the vote. Unfortunately, the chance of this happening seems infinitely remote, so we on the EU side are left to make our own arrangements. Not our problem - we didn't draw them; and when campaigning, they ignored our warnings that this would be a problematic issue if the UK voted Leave. Or not. Probably not. If the Scots are saying that they would like the arrangement that's been offered to NI, then what's the problem? Why should the DUP's red lines be respected more than, for example, the Remain-voting residents of the City of London?
briany wrote: » What's the story with Brexit next week? The deadline is on Thursday, the EU are waiting to see what the UK does before deciding the extension length, but what will the UK even move on? The push for a GE appears to be mired in disagreement over the date. How much longer are the EU going to wait?
liamtech wrote: » But we need to accept that economics is not the primary motivating factor for many in Northern Ireland. The 'Other Community' i was referring to was of course the Unionist/Loyalist population of the North. If they behave pragmatically, accepting the trade off, acknowledging the benefits, this deal will function adequately. This will require the broad Unionist community to effectively vote with their heads when ever given the opportunity. The genuine problem is i don't see them doing this. Unionists have for the most part voted DUP knowing full well that they originally opposed the GFA, and are the most extreme Unionist faction on the ballot paper (lets forget Jim Allister shall we). Said Party does not co-operate in power sharing, even when they were in GVT before the RHI Collapse.
understand that there will be political elements who will want to undermine the arrangement as it stands. But of the two most possible outcomes for NI right now, i.e. the one that can be more easily implemented and has a majority of public and political support, or the one that can be less easily implemented and has a minority of political and public support, which one constitutes the 'good' deal, and which one the 'bad'? The idea of one side trying to wreck the deal is a defining feature of Northern Irish politics. We accept that will happen, and simply have to move through it as best we can. Outside of cancelling Brexit altogether or making it a rather soft one, this is the best thing yet to be proposed for NI. If there are any alternatives out there more to everyone's satisfaction, let us get them to relevant people ASAP.
theological wrote: » Boris Johnson has put a deal before parliament that was approved at its second reading.
theological wrote: » The problem is that there are a large number of MPs in parliament who are refusing the implement the decision the people took in 2016. That's the reality and it is because of hard remainer MPs, not the Conservative government who have brought this deal to parliament.
CelticRambler wrote: » Clarification: MPs in parliament implemented the wishes of the people, as expressed in the non-binding referendum of 2016, by triggering Article 50. The reality is that the process has since become bogged down in the entirely foreseeable quagmire of not knowing what the people really wanted when they cast their vote.
briany wrote: » "We voted to leave the EU" "Grand, so. We'll move a Norway arrangement." "That's not what we voted for." "You voted to leave the EU." "Yes" "Well, Norway's not in the EU." "But they're in the Single Market." "The EU and the Single Market aren't the same thing, exactly." "Well, when we voted to leave the EU, we also voted to leave the Single Market." "I'm sorry, where did it say about leaving the Single Market in the referendum?" "Leave means leave." Repeat until you have a horrible throbbing pain behind both eyes.
liamtech wrote: » What i merely highlight is the fact that NI is locked into the CM/CU while the rest of the UK leaves, and if you can play devils advocate for a moment, and look at this from a Unionist POV, you will see the problem - the union is altered
Strazdas wrote: » The ballot paper, which was evidently written in crayon on the back of a cigarette packet, didn't even define what "the European Union" was.
briany wrote: » I wouldn't necessarily mind that so much as there's only so much room on a sheet of paper, but I'm more vexed by the Vote Leave leaflet not bothering to define what EFTA or a customs union was in terms of their respective obligations and that the UK could be part of one or both after Brexit. You know how you get all these people on Question Time who say, "We voted to LEAVE!! No deals! Just leave!". I'm really puzzled how they're so confident that not a significant proportion of Leave voters actually voted the way they did based on the confident assertions made before the referendum that turned out to be a total crock of s***.
Strazdas wrote: » Most of the arguments for the last three years have been because the utter sham of a referendum didn't even define what the UK was leaving. Was it the 28 member political union? Was it the SMCU? No wonder no two people can even agree on the subject.
They can spin and rage and threaten all they like, but they're a spent force
liamtech wrote: » 3. Finally i have to conclude by saying its DEFINITELY not black and white. Despite the fact that Ireland and the EU behaved in the only way they could, with respect and genuine sincerity towards the UK, the narrative is already being spun that this 'violation of the union' is our fault. This narrative has existed all along with accusations of Dublin using the EU, and vice versa, to hold Ulster hostage etc - it doesnt matter that this is not the truth, this is the narrative that is being spun - and it will be where the rage is directed if this deal actually comes in to force. Even if ireland wished to say 'not our problem' at that point, it will in short order become our problem Happy to discuss further, respectful as always
CelticRambler wrote: » The union the capital-U Unionists believe in ceased to exist 100 years ago - if it ever existed even before that. They have never accepted that the UK has always been made up of GB on one side and (Northern) Ireland on the other, with a deep, unbridgeable sea between the two islands - and even though they exploit that difference when it suits them. All that Brexit has done - and the Johnson WA in particular - is to highlight just how separate and distinct they are from the British. Recent machinations have also shown the Scots how separate, distinct and irrelevant they are to the English political process; they have reacted with a hearty "F**k You" and invested ever more energy into preparing for their independence. In contrast, the DUP is like the battered wife of an alcoholic husband who refuses to divorce him, even though he has heaped every calumny upon her, and she's got a reliable friend right next door, desperately trying to help her see sense. In short: there is no point whatsoever in trying to see things from the DUP's point of view - devil's advocate or not - because they simply do not belong in the 21st (or 20th ...) Century. They can spin and rage and threaten all they like, but they're a spent force, and if they're not going to represent the best interests of people of NI, someone else will ... and right now, that just happens to be the government of the Republic in collaboration with the EU.
prawnsambo wrote: » There is another narrative out there too. That the DUP got screwed and dumped by the Tories. Again. And what's worse is they stamped their feet and voted against a better offer that was available to them. Not once, but three times. This is on them. And Boris Johnson. Because he's the other party to this agreement.
liamtech wrote: » CelticRambler - without doubt the greatest metaphor for the DUP i have ever seen! I think you're all correct RE the DUP - my concern is Unionism as a community/population in the north - and whether they will be whipped up against the deal and, as a result the people who they blame for the deal IMHO, unionism has always behaved as CelticRambler has said - treated badly by one party (in this case the Tories) - ends up blaming another (the EU and US) - but this is not just a DUP thing, and like i said all you need is a new Carson, Craig, or Paisley to whip them up and there will be genuine trouble Logic will play no part in it - Tories shaft them - Johnson humiliates them by turning up at a Unionist conference in the UK and cheering to shouts of no surrender, and a week later stabs them in the back - who do they blame? it will be the EU and the Irish Government - The narrative will be sold not just to DUP loyalists - but to unionism as a whole community, and if they buy it, this will be a problem
Water John wrote: » We know Tories have a lead in the Polls but elections, once called, have a life of their own. We can surmise the Lib Dems and SNP will pick up seats. The crucial question as to whether the Tories will get a governing majority is, I would say 50:50 at best.
ancapailldorcha wrote: » I'm inclined to agree. I hate to go against the expertise of people like Strathclyde University's Professor John Curtis who have turned polling into a science insofar as such a thing can be done on the basis of my own feelings but we need to see how Johnson and Corbyn plan and execute their campaigns. Will Johnson seek a mandate for his deal or plump for none? Will Corbyn finally embrace fully the People's Vote? If not, I can see Swindon making significant gains.
trellheim wrote: » NI is not self sufficient in electricity generation hence the plan to float lots of barges with gennys up to NI
Joe_ Public wrote: » The notion that the tories are absolutely gunning for an early election isnt fully accurate i dont think, lot of reports that there is a split among their ranks too and that even johnson himself may not be as gung ho as he lets on. Big risks for them too. Will be interesting to see how they respond to the ld/snp motion if it does come before the house. Without brexit bill being passed i wouldnt give much chance of a tory majority, be more inclined to think they'd lose seats. Just hard to know how much damage farage would inflict on them.
Strazdas wrote: » A GE would be high risk for Johnson and the Tories. The current political atmosphere in the UK is very volatile. He could win a comfortable overall majority or could perform badly and be way short in seats (which could well mean 'Goodnight Vienna' for his political career).
Joe_ Public wrote: » Maybe wishful thinking on my part but i'm backing him to get no majority whatsoever on the understanding he'll go into election with yet another broken promise behind him. Be interested whether he goes around selling his "great" deal or whether he pretty much ditches it. Opposition has big problems too, but this guy who people keep banging on about his popularity was being booed all over the country on his travels a few weeks back!
CelticRambler wrote: » the DUP is like the battered wife of an alcoholic husband who refuses to divorce him, even though he has heaped every calumny upon her, and she's got a reliable friend right next door, desperately trying to help her see sense.
liamtech wrote: » 3. Finally i have to conclude by saying its DEFINITELY not black and white. Despite the fact that Ireland and the EU behaved in the only way they could, with respect and genuine sincerity towards the UK, the narrative is already being spun that this 'violation of the union' is our fault. This narrative has existed all along with accusations of Dublin using the EU, and vice versa, to hold Ulster hostage etc - it doesnt matter that this is not the truth, this is the narrative that is being spun - and it will be where the rage is directed if this deal actually comes in to force. Even if ireland wished to say 'not our problem' at that point, it will in short order become our problems