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Re: Brexit Development(s) Discussion
Hugh has been very lenient, I wont be.
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Re: Brexit Development(s) Discussion
In the name of protecting the UK internal market, we will have to ban through traffic to/from Ireland, wherever the backstop related border is to be set. Currently goods destined for Ireland or from Ireland to France and beyond, pass through the UK. Those goods may be EU certified, but they won't be UK certified. In order to protect the UK internal market as agreed in the Political Declaration, what are the EU going to do?:D The single/internal market issues work both ways.
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Re: Brexit Development(s) Discussion
EU goods transiting the UK don’t threaten the UK single market. Essentially you are proposing to blockade another country as a result of our poor planning.
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As I see it, we have several public takes on Brexit negotiations:
1 Varadkar - keen to do a deal in New York next week; 2 Coveney - we’re miles away from a deal; 3 Juncker - a deal could be done by 31-Aug; 4 Barclay - we share the same ideals and objectives; 5 Barnier - neither optimistic nor pessimistic; 6 Finnish bloke - final proposals required by 30-Sep; 7 Verhofstat - the usual claptrap. Looks bad for a deal. |
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Don't be daft, the Government aren't allowed to leave with no deal, I think it's the law or summat, therefore the EU will have to give us one . . won't they? ;) |
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Ireland could always bypass the UK by moving everything via Cherbourg. These issues would also apply to an independent Scotland or Wales, regardless of whether they were in or out of the EU. It is a geographical thing. If only there was a pre-existing scheme to cope with all this? Perhaps they could call it the Common Transit Scheme? Common Transit Scheme. Quote:
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The EU is effectively insisting that the rest of the UK is blocked from sending goods to NI, as they wouldn't be EU compliant. Otherwise as, the EU constantly complains, non-EU compliant goods could end up in Ireland or in the NI-Irish Republic customs zone. |
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I think the best way for you to visualise it is EU citizens freely walking across the border and working in the UK, despite not having the right to do so. Would you be happy for uncontrolled migration into the UK over an open border? |
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You’ve denoted a risk there that could be picked up by border checks - which is why the backstop is necessary to prevent a hard border. That’s literally the whole point. The UK could, for example, conduct random exit checks. That’s not the same as an open border leaking products into the EU. |
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The backstop in its current form is there to protect Ireland's financial interests and to punish the UK.
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