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Re: Brexit
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Brexit works if we make a clean break. ---------- Post added at 13:35 ---------- Previous post was at 13:32 ---------- Quote:
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Re: Brexit
There are a few people in these threads that post things that raise my hackles . . unintentionally I presume . . but I've always had a different 'mind set' attitude anyway ;)
Many of those posters have however received positive 'likes' for stuff that has made me chuckle etc. Brexit is a very difficult topic not to get 'wound up' about, especially when it's all text based communication on a forum. Those same people that sometimes wind me up would be bought a drink if we met in a pub, we're just folk with different views, ideas and goals. :Yes: :tu: 99% of politicians would get that drink poured over their head :D |
Re: Brexit
Baby steps works because it removes the cliff edge which is at present galvanising the opponents of Brexit. Get a deal and end freedom of movement now.
A future Government will be better placed to renegotiate trade agreements than this one which is tied to the whims of the ERG/DUP. The backstop is why we need a proper customs union with exit rights. Move the Northen Ireland problem to when we have a Government that’s not relying on NI votes. |
Re: Brexit
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1) It would be one step forward to Brexit and 2 steps forwards firmly to Remain in the future. Brexit must not be allowed to be reversed as easily as it would be. 2) Still no mechanism for ending whatever arrangement. 3) Wouldn't solve the delays at Customs. Doesn't currently solve it for the EU-Turkey Customs union. 4) Everything would be set by the EU, with us having no say whatsoever. Not that we have much of a say as it is. With the backstop we have NO exit rights. Only what the EU allows us to have, and that would inevitably be remaining in a Customs Union against our will. Why shouldn't the DUP object to NI being treated differently. |
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On point 2 a genuine customs union would have exit arrangements for Great Britain (but not Northern Ireland). A small price to pay, but that’s why we are where we are. Unless you want to deliver a united Ireland this is how Brexit has to work. On point 3 would depend how closely our arrangements matched Turkey’s. On point 4 not “everything” would be set by the EU. We can strike separate trade deals on services, which is more lucrative anyway, and common standards facilitates our trade in goods with the EU countries (which account for most of our trade in goods) anyway. You appear to simply dislike things because they are European. A more pragmatic approach can deliver Britain the Brexit it wants in a phased approach. There’s no need for an “all or nothing” now approach, indeed an approach that is putting Brexit at risk from remainers. |
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We voted for Leave in the referendum, but have we got it or are we even remotely going to get it? Therefore moving away from Brexit is NOT a foregone conclusion in the future even with having a say on it. Just look at what a potential Labour government wants. If in the mythical world we got a vote, it would be ignored if it went the "wrong" way, as it is now. The backstop IS a customs union until the EU decides upon an alternative agreement. Why would they agree bother to agree to anything less than that, when they aren't prepared to agree to it now? The proposals that would remove customs delays have been TURNED DOWN by the EU. Not coincidentally that would also have removed the need for a backstop, which is why the EU objected to it. The EU is just going to get bigger and bigger in many ways. In the countries it includes and areas that it controls. Once locked into any agreement with the EU, locks you into whatever the EU becomes. An obvious example of that is joining the EEC and what it has now become. The EU is in full control of what you are locked into. No way would any arrangement be allowed to be more restrictive in nature. A general customs union wouldn't be able to be more selective/restrictive. It only works if you agree to ADD something, not take something away. |
Re: Brexit
You aren’t going to get the Brexit you want if it’s framed exclusively in ideology. Unicorn Brexit doesn’t exist. Small countries get told what to do by big ones. That’s what globalisation and free trade does.
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A customs union, in effect a free trade deal, with the EU on goods allows us to maintain no tariffs with out closest neighbours on goods while being able to negotiate with the rest of the world on services. It actually strengthens our hand, not weakens it. ---------- Post added at 17:53 ---------- Previous post was at 17:50 ---------- Quote:
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Couple of hundred million of fish?
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Russia is a huge country, but its economy is pants. Size matters, certainly, but you are measuring the wrong thing. |
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