ittakestwo wrote: » "Irrespective of Northern Ireland's constitutional status within the United Kingdom, or part of a united Ireland" The above sentance from the GFA can only be inferred that NI will exist as an entity even after a UI and that people born there even after a UI have the right to British citizenship.
FrancieBrady wrote: » Which is a long way short of NI surviving as an entity. It's status will change. They will be allowed to identify as British and hold British citizenship when that happens, is all that says. Presents no issues whatsoever.
downcow wrote: » I like your use of “they”. I shoes you regard yourself as different from northerners. So stop pretending that ireland is an entity
FrancieBrady wrote: » The Irish in NI only secured a 'birthright' in 1998' I.E. it's in the gift of the British to bestow that to NI citizens and there is no onus on them to bestow it if NI no longer exists.
ittakestwo wrote: » So I am reading the GFA wrong? Another part says "whether NI stays part of the UK or forms part of a united Ireland" which apears they are referring to NI in geographical sence rather than a jurisdiction. Is it accepted that the GFA does not guarantee British citizenship to people born in NI in the case of a UI?
Fionn1952 wrote: » In the case of unification, there is no longer such a place as Northern Ireland. Like I said, it would be akin to expecting countries to still be subject to international agreements made with Yugoslavia when there is no longer any such place.
ittakestwo wrote: » What I am really asking. Has a lawyer confirmed that the GFA does not allow British citizenship for people born in the area that was NI in case of a UI. From reading it it can be interpreted both ways. Is it official that as it stands they cant claim British citizenship in the case of a UI?
FrancieBrady wrote: » It is in the gift of the British...it's nothing we can influence in any legal way.
An Ciarraioch wrote: » Spain effectively gains a condominium role in Gibraltar, as the new treaty's terms are detailed:https://english.elpais.com/brexit/2021-01-11/deal-between-spain-and-uk-plans-to-eliminate-gibraltar-border-checkpoint.html?outputType=amp&__twitter_impression=true
ittakestwo wrote: » We're going around in circles here. They might be bound to it by the GFA which they signed. You and Fionn definitely believe they are not bound to by the GFA. I am reading in a way that I think they are bound to offer citizenship to people born in what was known as NI in the case of a UI. Is there an official legal yes or no answer to this.
jm08 wrote: » GFA isn't set in stone for good. Both parties to the agreement (Irish and British Gov) can decide to nullify or change the agreement.
ittakestwo wrote: » It's an international peace agreement. One side can not unilaterally change it without agreement from the other. Given the constitution of the ROI the Irish government may not even be able to change it without it going to a public vote. Of course one country can walk out of it but it would be seen as breaking an international peace agreement and could cause serious repercussions for the offender. We saw with Brexit how the UK had to respect the GFA or was threatened by both the EU and US of not getting a trade agreement in the future.
‘Private polling carried out by Fine Gael and Sinn Féin before Christmas show it ranking now as the second or third most important issue.’
downcow wrote: » We have had several people on this thread using the grim UK covid figures and ambulances crossing the border as evidence that ni is a failure. I did say these were phases that come and go and countries are not like for like. Unfortunately I have just heard that Roi has now the worst 7-day figure for new cases in the world. It also says vaccine situation is ‘dire’ as over 80s won’t get them until at least February. I genuinely feel for you. These are difficult times for vulnerable people. Ni is having major issues in hospitals currently and doesn’t seem in any position to provide assistance atm. Hopefully if we can get the vaccine rolled out here we may be in a position to return help at the tail end of your crisis in return for help we have recently got from Roi during our worst points in this. This is no longer just about covid but rather anyone now ill will struggle.
FrancieBrady wrote: » Interesting. Things moving at a pace now.https://www.irishtimes.com/news/ireland/irish-news/questions-around-irish-unity-referendum-to-be-examined-in-new-initiative-1.4455633
jh79 wrote: » About time something like the arins project was set up. I see the guy from Trinity that wrote the paper highlighted the cost and pitfalls of unification is involved. A lot of works needs to be done to get the finances in order if a UI is to be achieved.The University of Liverpool Northern Ireland General Election Survey, conducted in January 2020, found that when asked what the most important issue was for respondents, a mere 5 per cent stated constitutional issues, compared with more than 80 per cent choosing education, health, jobs and the economy.https://www.irishtimes.com/opinion/interdependence-is-the-antidote-to-northern-irish-politics-1.4454668
FrancieBrady wrote: » Needs to be said that the Trinity paper was based on the full 11 billion subvention being replaced by Dublin, which is not a credible place to begin from, as we now know.
jh79 wrote: » No France, the Trinity paper had nothing to do with the subvention. The subvention was mentioned as background info and the paper stated the only verifiable figure. That was just you jumping on a perceived anomaly because you didn't want to discuss the financial cost of an UI. If I'm wrong explain how the subvention affected the modelling in the paper?
FrancieBrady wrote: » The costs in that paper where set against the subvention as it currently stands without making the reductions we know exist but still don't know the extent of. You need to know this information when looking at it's findings. It will be like the report SF were attached to in the States, it will contain interesting info but will be by no means authoritative because of that anomaly. Like the SF one, another dust catching report outstripped by more pertinent information. Only mentioned now by partitionists eager for bias confirmation.
jh79 wrote: » Did you even read the paper? What is the effect on your claimed anomaly on the predicted outcomes in the paper? What figure should he of used and have you a citation for it? The research needs to be updated to include the impact of the Brexit agreement. Seems he has more research coming out on the true cost via the Arins Project.
Another option, Irish unity, if it involved ending transfers to Northern Ireland, would produce a dramatic fall in the standard of living there. Alternatively, unification, where Ireland took over responsibility for the transfers to Northern Ireland, would necessitate a major cut in the standard of living in Ireland of 5% to 10% in order to allow Northern Ireland to maintain a standard of living between 10% and 20% above the Irish standard of living.
FrancieBrady wrote: » What figure?The one that outlines what it actually costs. Yes I did read it at the time and have it on a bookmark here along with the other 'dust catchers'. This is from the abstract and shows what I said...it assumes that we replace the subvention (called 'transfers' here)
jh79 wrote: » So want is the actual cost, where are you getting that figure from? The SF figure (2.6bn)has already been fact checker as false (does that mean i can dismiss all subsequent SF publications?). Just to be sure we are on the same page, is this the report;https://www.tcd.ie/Economics/TEP/2019/tep0619.pdf Could you give specific examples where the percieved anomaly has an impact?
FrancieBrady wrote: » You can (and I have) confidently ignore any report based on a false starting point, if it comes from SF or Trinity. The anomaly is presuming we will be 'replacing' the transfer as it currently is and extrapolating from that.