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Re: EU demand extra £1.7bn from UK
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Though I hope Ed and Nick pay an equally high price given that in private they're probably cheering the EU on here being the sycophantic europhiles they are. |
Re: EU demand extra £1.7bn from UK
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when the EU give us an order we CANNOT disobey it. |
Re: EU demand extra £1.7bn from UK
Funny thing though, is that if you want an in/out referendum...if you believe DC will keep his promise......then voting Tory is the only way you'll get it.
Of course his get out clause is if there's another coalition. |
Re: EU demand extra £1.7bn from UK
even if the torys keep their promise it will be one small party campaigning for out and pretty much everyone else voting for in.
we saw how dirty the Scottish elections got, i expect an EU one to be much worse. |
Re: EU demand extra £1.7bn from UK
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Spending our money campaigning to win a referendum to ensure that they can keep spending our money. There's democracy at work. |
Re: EU demand extra £1.7bn from UK
The only thing that does concern me about this whole debacle is what the international bond markets will make of it. We're borrowing so heavily that to simply refuse to pay could lead to some seriously "interesting" movements in that market.
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Re: EU demand extra £1.7bn from UK
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Everyone in the EU has the right to come here and look for a job, and we have the same right to do this as well in other EU countries. But there is nothing in EU law that says we have to pay benefits to foreigners from other EU countries who have no intention of working. Personally, I think there is everything to play for and no need to invoke article 50. The treaties are old and could do with a bit of tweaking while keeping the principle of free movement of workers. |
Re: EU demand extra £1.7bn from UK
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If the bond markets are feeling feisty there are a ton of EU countries they could attack, alongside the USA. |
Re: EU demand extra £1.7bn from UK
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---------- Post added at 23:27 ---------- Previous post was at 23:19 ---------- Quote:
To answer your point about the benefits of being in the EU, we are part of a single market of 500 million people which is bigger than America and its worth 11 trillion quid. All without trade barriers like customs duties and tariffs. Plus, we broadly have to follow the same rules. Remember all that guff about Brussels rules dictating that fruit has to be the same size, shape etc. Well, that's simply so that everyone in the EU can trade on the same terms with each other. ---------- Post added at 23:32 ---------- Previous post was at 23:27 ---------- Quote:
What Cameron should have highlighted is the massive rebate we get back from the EU, the one that was negotiated by Thatcher. We pay less into the EU per head of population than anyone else in the EU. ---------- Post added at 23:52 ---------- Previous post was at 23:32 ---------- Quote:
It was never just about a common market but a means to integrate countries together (especially France and Germany) that had fought each other in WW2, so that war in Europe never happened again. Churchill was one of main people behind it, and despite her public musings, so was Thatcher. She signed every single European treaty given to her. Quote:
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They mostly speak our language in the European parliament and comission. They have adopted our free market way of thinking and much of EU law is based on English law. The EU is wasteful and their accounts haven't been signed off. But we'll win on all of this. We'll get the number of Eurocrats cut down and even decide on one place where "Europe" should be based, rather than the current nonsense of moving between two different locations with all the vast expense that carries. And the biggest blinder of all, thanks to Major, we can enjoy all things Europe, without having to pay for many of its problems aka we're not in the Euro - Yay! They, in Europe, hate us for that and envy us at the same time. If the Germans could do it all again, there is no way they would have voted to join the euro. We have the best of both worlds, lets pay that damn bill and get on with it. |
Re: EU demand extra £1.7bn from UK
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Re: EU demand extra £1.7bn from UK
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Re: EU demand extra £1.7bn from UK
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As net contributors to the EU your claim that we pay less is a red herring If we pay £10 in and get £5 back and somebody else pays £15 but gets £20 back, we get a worse deal |
Re: EU demand extra £1.7bn from UK
Is this a new precedent? If I get a pay rise, can I refuse to pay more tax?
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Re: EU demand extra £1.7bn from UK
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In 2010 our net contribution per capita was E75.26, which of the 9 net donors placed us above Austria and France and at a level virtually identical to Italy. So rather than paying less in per head than anyone else in Europe we were in 2010 actually 7th out of 28, meaning that not only were we in the top half over the EU28 but we also paid in more than the majority of the Eurozone. Or were you perhaps going for % of GDP? In which case our net contribution of 0.27% of GDP places us just 0.02% of GDP below Germany, obviously above the vast majority of the member states and they are net recipients, and continues to place us above Austria and France. The rest of the post is largely a combination of recycled comments alongside outright fantasy. We can't trade with Europe without being in the EU even though Switzerland do, Europe is apparently coming over more to our way of thinking which is beyond comedy given there are veerings towards more socialist ways of thinking after a completely botched austerity spree, Germany regretting Eurozone membership when they've been the main beneficiary, France not opposing any attempts to pull Strasbourg off the gravy train. A really simple example of how misplaced your optimism is is that David Cameron was, not that long ago, trumpeting how he'd won a reduction in the EU budget. Here's what's actually rumbling through the EU machine. Overspend from 2013 to be paid for, and indeed actively overspent knowing it will probably be funded as QMV is coming in imminently across more policy areas, reversal of budget cuts for 2015, probably be an overspend in 2014. Too many nations in receipt of other people's money who of course want to keep that flow going. Quote:
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Re: EU demand extra £1.7bn from UK
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---------- Post added at 16:24 ---------- Previous post was at 16:15 ---------- Quote:
When the sovereign debt crisis happened in countries like Greece, yes the Greeks were buying "cheap" German made trains, helping the German economy, but the Germans also had to fork out for bailing the Greeks out of their own mess... I wish the euro would simply go away, but its the method the Germans and French have decided to integrate Europe together. Lets see how far it will go. Will the European Central Bank start buying up the debt of Greece, Italy etc? ANd will the Germans really transfer wealth from themselves to countries in Southern Europe? I can't see it happening. ---------- Post added at 16:28 ---------- Previous post was at 16:24 ---------- Quote:
No idea why the other countries agreed to Thatcher's rebate, I'll look it up. |
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