![]() |
Re: Brexit
Quote:
|
Re: Brexit
Quote:
---------- Post added at 21:26 ---------- Previous post was at 21:22 ---------- Quote:
I knew you were left leaning and you’ve managed to portray yourself pretty much as a remain leaning centrist in most of your posts, but now........well............... |
Re: Brexit
I didn’t say that’s my preferred outcome, but it’s undeniable there’s been a number of examples of private industry creaming off the profits and dumping liabilities (including pensions) back on the state. Is that really a positive outcome?
“Competition” by way of rail franchising, and for example the “big 6” energy firms aren’t true free markets anyway. Remain leaning centrist, I’d say that’s fair. |
Re: Brexit
Quote:
Why would anyone expect politicians,( and you only have to watch question time, listen to any questions to realise that the vast majority or just plain stupid,) to be able run industry better than business? Quote:
The national treasure and no doubt the biggest waste of tax payers money. But nobody dare reform it......properly. |
Re: Brexit
I’m not saying politicians could run industries better, it’s a balancing act between public/private and effective regulation. It’s far from black and white.
Freedom from the EU could permit awarding contracts to less favourable bidders for other reasons, e.g. the contract that employs people here rather than simply importing goods. I’m not saying that’s always the road to take, but where bids are close enough the one that hypothetically employs thousands of people here will return millions in income tax revenue, VAT revenue, supports local economies. As opposed to sending that money overseas to save a few quid. We are going off on a tangent, and I don’t think we are a million miles apart. :) |
Re: Brexit
Quote:
Insisting on a simple, arithmetic majority for such a significant structural & economic change was always doomed to be divisive and as such could never have delivered a compelling mandate, as we can clearly see. Chris Patten had a strong argument against the use of referenda: https://www.wikiwand.com/en/Referendum#/Patten's_criticism Quote:
---------- Post added at 06:16 ---------- Previous post was at 06:06 ---------- I think a second vote had inched a step closer: Brexit: EU says no to May on renegotiating deal Quote:
The vote will be lost in Jan, the clock rapidly running down with a No Deal as the only option so Parliament will force the Government to extend the A50 deadline to allow more consideration of "all possible options". |
Re: Brexit
A pretty damning assessment from the Former UK ambassador to the EU.
https://www.theguardian.com/politics...ns-ivan-rogers Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
|
Re: Brexit
I’m not sure May is being dishonest.
Politicians who would be perceived as leaders of the Leave campaign undoubtedly yes they have been dishonest. |
Re: Brexit
All of us are now finding out what the EU is really like.
It is a spider's web from which it is extremely difficult to escape. This is a deal we should reject. The EU still has to sell its goods but if not to us to whom will they sell them? No deal is just as bad for them as it is for us. Maybe a rejection of the deal will increase their willingness to renegotiate. Instead of going for a deal with the whole EU, we should have gone for a deal that protects our banking rights and which protects our trading rights with EU countries currently trading with us now. This protects our current trade and frees us from the jurisdiction of the European Court of Justice. Other individual EU countries wanting to trade could set up their own deals in the future. The backstop only really affects Ireland and the UK and should be left to them to sort out without EU interference. Goods can be flown in to Northern Ireland and Ireland without the need for a hard border. Technology can take care of the rest. Given that the EU is planning to form a European Army and the recent aggressive Russian moves, will our young people who voted to stay in the EU still be as keen if they receive call-up papers from the EU? It will be very interesting to see how this all pans out. |
Re: Brexit
Quote:
Just before Brexit they'll complete the EU-Japan trade deal and become the biggest economic trading bloc in the world: https://www.reuters.com/article/us-e...-idUSKBN1OB1EN We need to be realistic about the cards we hold. |
Re: Brexit
Quote:
Quote:
|
Re: Brexit
Quote:
UK exports to EU in 2017 - £274b or 44% of all exports UK imports from EU in 2017 - £341b or 8% of all exports Quote:
|
Re: Brexit
Quote:
Feeling strongly that your perception of reality is correct against all the reasonable evidence is more likely to be a sign of mental illness than a politician capable of delivering a positive outcome. |
Re: Brexit
Weak leader for a weak negotiating position, we're on a hiding to nothing.
Something has to happen now, not just wait till the New Year hoping something might change. It won't. Except we'll have less of a chance to do anything about it. |
Re: Brexit
Quote:
|
All times are GMT +1. The time now is 11:51. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions Inc.
All Posts and Content are © Cable Forum