Quote:
Originally Posted by Damien
The EU will demand the £39 billion as a prerequisite for any forthcoming trade deal and since we'll be out at that point, and in greater need of a trade deal, they'll be in a stronger not weaker position to do so.
I think they'll offer better wording around the backstop. Something May sorta secured but no one believed. Legally the position will remain the same but packaged in such a way MPs can claim down and vote for a version of May's deal.
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I reckon:
- Boris PM
- Brexit extension of max six months
- Reworded withdrawal agreement or appendices
- MPs vote narrowly to accept it.
---------- Post added at 14:05 ---------- Previous post was at 14:02 ----------
Quote:
Originally Posted by Carth
As far as I understand it, and it seems to be backed up by the hysteria sometimes shown on here, the EU exports £Billions of goods (of any shape size and form) into the UK every year.
If we leave with no deal and no trade agreements, how will the EU manage their loss of revenue and potential manufacturing slowdown?
Surely it will be in everyones favour to have temporary trade deals in place until definite deals are thrashed out 
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Yes, that's called the Withdrawal Agreement.