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Re: Brexit discussion
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membership of the Union (opening of accession negotiations, association, serious violations of the Union's values, etc.); change the status of an overseas country or territory (OCT) to an outermost region (OMR) or vice versa. taxation; the finances of the Union (own resources, the multiannual financial framework); harmonisation in the field of social security and social protection; certain provisions in the field of justice and home affairs (the European prosecutor, family law, operational police cooperation, etc.); the flexibility clause (352 TFEU) allowing the Union to act to achieve one of its objectives in the absence of a specific legal basis in the treaties; the common foreign and security policy, with the exception of certain clearly defined cases; the common security and defence policy, with the exception of the establishment of permanent structured cooperation; citizenship (the granting of new rights to European citizens, anti-discrimination measures); certain institutional issues (the electoral system and composition of the Parliament, certain appointments, the composition of the Committee of the Regions and the European Economic and Social Committee, the seats of the institutions, the language regime, the revision of the treaties, including the bridging clauses, etc.). Otherwise, qualified majority voting applies which needs at least 16 countries AND 65% of the population to say yes. Germany has 16.5% of the population and 8.4% of the influence. The UK did sign the Maastricht Treaty by the way. I am sure many people here voted for the Conservative party in 1992 and therefore voted for the party that has instrumental in the transformation of the EEC to EU. John Major was PM if I remember rightly. Nearly lost his majority because of it. |
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Well aware of the Masstricht treaty and I've made the point that the situation we find ourselves in was arrived at with the help of certain of our own leaders. Neither side of the political divide has had the monopoly on mistakes and/or misleading the electorate when it comes to the EEC and EU.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/business/...warns-iceland/ Quote:
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Which brings me to the point at the minute that I have been saying. Germany mainly has influance over the EU among a few others.
The UK is now leaving the EU and you are telling me that Germany or france for that matter have not had any input on how the other nations deal with the UK. They sit back and wait for the likes of Germany to tell them what to do. If that isn't influance then what is? Who actually wants the "cake and eat it?" The other countries are scared they want to see how it all plays out with the UK before they attempt anything. Wasn't the UK exempt from payments to countries like Greece put was told to pay up anyway? |
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The level of paranoia amongst Brexiters about 'johnny foreigner' is comical. Our interests are mutual. Together as countries, we are (were) stronger. Alone, as we're starting to find out, we have little negotiating power.
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Yeah and it's not like there's any increasing racism and right wing extremism evident in Germany, Austria, France, Hungary, Greece, Holland, Poland, etc. etc. :rolleyes:
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The EU feeds into the globalisation thing but I don't think the EU is the main driver, or even a large driver, of this far-right surge. |
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And back in the world of trade deals: Quote:
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Good thought piece from Laura Kuenssberg on the fundamental issue that the UK faces with its Brexit position.
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Ahh, here's Andrew to never fail with his usual 'clutching' at straws, line.
Nobody has. Except for that OECD or ANVCJSJ or AJAJDSJ or DJSJAJ report. :rolleyes: |
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So in the last couple of pages, 'The EU don't negotiate, they dictate as per Juncker's EU ambitions' and Germany tells all other countries what to do. Which is it? Who is your enemy here - the EU or Germany? Probably important to know this when negotiating exit and trade deals...
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IMHO a much more balanced view. |
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