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[Closed] EU Referendum - are you in or out?

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Gina Miller will be remembered by constitutional lawyers and law students. If there is a vote it will be passed easily. All a waste of time and her and our money really. I imagine she'll write a book

So in all honesty why all the show of 2 trips to court and a massive waste of tax payers money. They could just have passed the bill easily - it's the bit that really doesn't make sense.
At this point there are lists of for and against, the logical conclusion is the numbers don't all stack up and there will be a lot of buying off, suce as I'll vote yes if we retain trade/movement and I'll vote yes if we ditch trade/movement then down to the I want a new hospital.
Given that the majority of MP's are Pro EU where do you think the desire to uphold the will of 35% of the population will come from?


 
Posted : 12/01/2017 12:25 am
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Yes our ever diminishing currency is obviously a statement of our growing global importance 😉

Meanwhile The Brexit bugle cherry picking Carneys comments is hardly surprising


 
Posted : 12/01/2017 12:29 am
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Hasn't Carney done a great job.
It was our money that was blown, but he took the right measures, at the right time, while our politicians where busy destroying each other's careers.
Hurrah for unelected foreigners.


 
Posted : 12/01/2017 12:32 am
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They could just have passed the bill easily - it's the bit that really doesn't make sense.

Because it is not fear of losing a vote to trigger article 50 that motivates them, it is the fear of the party arguing in parliament about readyness, course of action etc… much easier to just keep spinning plates behind the scenes, than have them all dropping noisily in parliament, in front of the cameras.


 
Posted : 12/01/2017 12:36 am
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He's Canadian @kelvin, maybe we need a few more ?

@mike typical political stubborness I suppose

Wise words from Barack


 
Posted : 12/01/2017 12:36 am
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Very wise words from Barack, shame we won't be getting many more from that office for a while.

@Kelvin, part of the problem really is that we can all agree there is absolutly no consensus even among the lead 4 people about what Brexit should look like, when it should happen, how it should happen and even why it should happen. Some people have some very strong views on it (Like Jambalya up there) but that is not a view shared by all the out voters or by all the people charged with delivering this.

Just remember all the films where the hero runs in with no plan and a timer running, the realistic ones end with some slow music and a bit of a montage not a cold beer.


 
Posted : 12/01/2017 12:46 am
 igm
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Also in the piece Oxford Uni's recently appointed head of Brexit Strategy says our EU membership has depressed links with American ans Canadian academics.

Was that all they said Jamba, or are you doing a devil quoting scripture routine?

(I already know the answer on this one)


 
Posted : 12/01/2017 8:18 am
 br
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[i]Gina Miller will be remembered by constitutional lawyers and law students. If there is a vote it will be passed easily. All a waste of time and her and our money really.[/I]

C'mon Jamba even you must be able to see that if it was so easy they'd have just had a vote - it's not her that's wasting money, but the Govt. But since when have politicians ever cared about spending our money when it's THEIR reputation on the line...


 
Posted : 12/01/2017 11:17 am
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Watched the first 40mins of Carney - amusing to see the difference between what he said - including the nuances - and what was reported that he said!

Mike - why do we need to carry on with the narrative that we don't know what we want? The issues are really very simple:

1. [b]We have voted to leave the EU [/b]and therefore we will be [b]relinquishing membership [/b]of the single market - Brexshit means Brexshit
2. Given the importance of the EU to the UK economy (and vice versa) we wish to [b]continue to have access[/b] to the single market
3. To date, there are four possible frameworks for this: EEA; CU; FTA; WTO. These extend across the trade-off spectrum that exists between liberalising trade and exercising sovereignty *
4. The government has expressed a desire to achieve a bespoke arrangment that shares characteristics from these various existing options - [b]red, white and blue Brexshit[/b]
5. Unsurprisingly the government is seeking to choose the best bits of each and minimise/avoid the worst bits - having your cake and eating it.
6. This "May" be a laudable goal but it is [b]logically inconsistent and unachievable in practice[/b]. Why? Because of the inherent trade off between liberalising trade and exercising sovereignty
7. So we need to [b]enter a period of negotiation [/b]with the EU (the other EEA members, the RoW, the WTO etc) in order to achieve a workable compromise solution. You cannot keep straddling the chasm, even in a pair of supportive leather trousers
8. Once we have an agreement on this, the real hard work begins ie, filling in all the detail
9. There is no benefit to be gained from delaying this process.
10. Present the bill, pass the vote, exercise A50 on time and [b]stop fannying around. [/b]

Err, that's it. Simple.

* Brexshiteers will continue to play down/ignore the existence of this inherent trade off. This may be deliberate or simply due to their lack of understanding. Either way, they are wrong.


 
Posted : 12/01/2017 11:35 am
 igm
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THM - I'm going to disagree with 9. If we can delay a little it puts the negotiation period into the general election period which may well play havoc with the Brexies' intentions. Using democracy against referenda doncha know. 😉
That also play on your point 10.


 
Posted : 12/01/2017 11:43 am
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Given the harm that uncertainty is creating already, I respectfully disagree.


 
Posted : 12/01/2017 11:48 am
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@igm the BBC headline was very biased. "Oxford academic" quoted was from the old Polytechnic (ie Brookes) and NOT the world leading Oxford University, it was their Brexit officer who looked forward to the positives. Plenty of people here want to agressively put the Remain case so I'll spend my time focusing on Brexit, ie the thing actually happening


 
Posted : 12/01/2017 11:54 am
 igm
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THM - I can understand that point of view.

Jamba - you're still giving a biased view of that story. I was well aware there was an Oxford Poly quote in the story, and even us non-Russell Group types can spot the difference. But the weight of the story behind your bias and your perception of BBC bias (the facts were all in the story as I recall) is that the academic community, in general, think Brexit is a very silly idea and probably harmful. Now I'm now saying academics aren't biased - but they probably have their reasons.


 
Posted : 12/01/2017 11:56 am
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TMH your comment on actual bersus reported is one I endorse wholeheartedly. Increasingly I try and find the source, internet is great for that. The MSM really has a big credibility problem.

even in a pair of supportive leather trousers

🙂

You really do need the factor in the reality that Europe is standing at the edge of an economic casum staring into the abyss. You saw Carney's remarks that Brexit wasn't our biggest risk and Hammond's (?) remark that we do not want to see the EU collapse. For all their tough talk the Armageddon risks are all on their side, they already have high unemployment and its at a staggering level amongst the young. The EU bureaucrats are fighting for their very cushy lives, the European leaders have much more at stake for their populations.


 
Posted : 12/01/2017 11:57 am
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Given the harm that uncertainty is creating already, I respectfully disagree.

This must be right, clarity can only start to emerge once the negotiations are in the public domain. With the other EU countries refusing to engage in public until Article 50 is triggered there is no other option.

On the matter of the legal case, it is perfectly common for the government to take cases to seek clarification of the law where their existing understanding is challenged. The result will inform their future conduct as it will make the circumstances of when prerogative powers be used clearer.


 
Posted : 12/01/2017 11:59 am
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I actually found the questions pretty poor. This was (supposed to be) a TSC interview on financial stability that verged on panto-esque (at times) questioning. Its started poorly and I thought Carney did well to maintain dignity and composure when he must be thinking, "why is this bloke being a bit of a tit? why am I wasting important time here?"

It must be incredibly difficult ensuring that your comments are tight and that they cannot be misconstrued.

With the other EU countries refusing to engage in public until Article 50 is triggered there is no other option.

Indeed mefty, this is the crux for me.


 
Posted : 12/01/2017 12:05 pm
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You really do need the factor in the reality that Europe is standing at the edge of an economic casum staring into the abyss.

Perhaps, but the nature of our relationship has no/little bearing on this. Either way, we will be affected by the EU's fortunes - and NO we do not have a financial obligation to the EZ. Ironically, Brexshit is harmful to the EU hence we have a self-fulfilling downward spiral - a classic lose:lose.

You saw Carney's remarks that Brexit wasn't our biggest risk and Hammond's (?) remark that we do not want to see the EU collapse.

Yes, and I understood the nuance. Before the vote, Brexshit was considered the biggest risk to financial stability. Hence the BoE made contingency plans (liquidity support etc) which as Carney neatly responsed, "allowed them to make the weather." The nuance now, is that Brexshit still has an on-going effect on four factors that are a risk to financial stability but that these are not exclusively driven by Brexshit itself. Obviously the fourth, rising inflation/inflationary expectations, is directly linked to the folly of Brexshit.


 
Posted : 12/01/2017 12:11 pm
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that verged on panto-esque (at times) questioning

well rees-mogg was on the panel, never misses an opportunity to showboat


 
Posted : 12/01/2017 12:12 pm
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no it was Tyrie


 
Posted : 12/01/2017 12:15 pm
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The result will inform their future conduct as it will make the circumstances of when prerogative powers be used clearer.

aaaand yet several prominent Torys jumped on teh Daily Mail bandwagon, frothing with outrage that Brexit was being questioned


 
Posted : 12/01/2017 12:17 pm
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They should listen very carefully to the introductory comments from the judge - he was v clear. The ruling is about the process, not the result. They just froth for frothing's sake.


 
Posted : 12/01/2017 12:20 pm
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7. So we need to enter a period of negotiation with the EU (the other EEA members, the RoW, the WTO etc) in order to achieve a workable compromise solution. You cannot keep straddling the chasm, even in a pair of supportive leather trousers

All true, but, I repeat… WE DO NOT HAVE THE STAFF IN PLACE TO CARRY OUT THESE NEGOTIATIONS.

8. Once we have an agreement on this, the real hard work begins ie, filling in all the detail

So, you think we can have some broad brush deal, and fill in the details afterwards?

Other than agreeing to keep current arrangements (for longer than 2 years) this makes no sense.

9. There is no benefit to be gained from delaying this process.

Yes there is, we need to buy some time, for bleeding obvious reasons.

May made a political calculation, that she could get away with 9 months without looking to be delaying, but, behind the scenes, everyone knows that longer is needed really.


 
Posted : 12/01/2017 12:20 pm
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Yes, we will have a transition period. That is becoming obvious, although you could just about do EEA in two years.

We dont need to buy time. We need to engage.

We have the staff, but we lack the experience. Why? Because this hasnt been done before. It unchartered territory (Greenland aside). This is a cliched excuse. As mefty highlighted, we cant engage until we trigger A50. Until we engage, we cant determine the resources we need etc.

The ball has to be put in motion, unless one is a leaver that is desperate to ignore he result of course. Then you can play all kinds of silly games.


 
Posted : 12/01/2017 12:27 pm
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* Brexshiteers will continue to play down/ignore the existence of this inherent trade off. This may be deliberate or simply due to their lack of understanding. Either way, they are wrong.

It may be we end up with something that costs a fair proportion of existing EU membership but lacks any influence.


 
Posted : 12/01/2017 12:28 pm
 igm
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On reflection THM, Kelvin, I think we can wait. After all the Brexies (Jamba for example) keep explaining to us that things are getting better not worse since the debacle of the referendum - so uncertainty is clearly good.
Now I may not agree with them, but I'm certainly in no rush to jettison one of the things that has led to the lifestyle we enjoy. Even those in poverty (and I have sympathy with them and feel it is a pressing issue for the country) would look relatively better off than those in poverty in the pre-EU (and predecessor organisation) decades.
And remember one of the reasons we pay EU club subs in is because of our relative wealth. The problem is one of wealth distribution with the UK and leaving the EU won't change that - well not for the better.


 
Posted : 12/01/2017 12:29 pm
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EEA?

Whatever we end up with, it will be worse than the deal we achieved last Feb. That's the sad bit.

Once can knock Dave all you like, but the reality of that wont change.


 
Posted : 12/01/2017 12:33 pm
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We don't have the staff in place to negotiate one trade deal in a 24month window, never mind 20+

Anyway, THM, looks like we agree about a transitional arrangement, realistically it is that or WTO and build up from scratch. That is the battle going on behind the scenes… which they don't want to be happening in public, hence wanting to trigger A50 without that clear and obvious debate happening first in HoC & HoL. As soon as you choose one option, you lose support.


 
Posted : 12/01/2017 12:35 pm
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IMO WTO is even worse in terms of negotiations!

The battle is going in behind the scenes but it is a false battle since what we want is only 1/27 of the equation. We know what we want (cake and eat it) is out-of-rach so we need to start to negotiate to determine want is likely/achievable.. We recruit the staff in this phase 1 for phases 2-17659


 
Posted : 12/01/2017 12:45 pm
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The recruiting is going on (phase1 if you like) but it isn't going well.
It doesn't help that we have given our trading partners a very good reason to hold on to the best people.
It also doesn't help that the government won't tell key staff exactly what the aims are, so they are trying to recruit with a blank job description.


 
Posted : 12/01/2017 12:53 pm
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The recruiting is going on (phase1 if you like) but it isn't going well.
It doesn't help that we have given our trading partners a very good reason to hold on to the best people.
It also doesn't help that the government won't tell key staff exactly what the aims are, so they are trying to recruit with a blank job description.

Im guessing we can only recruit loyal brexiters with 3 generations of british ancestors too? (im kind of joking but knowing how bonkers some of the top brexies are....)


 
Posted : 12/01/2017 12:56 pm
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TMH my view is that the eurozone / EU was [b]always[/b] the biggest risk to the UK economy and the sooner we can ween ourselves off it as a trading partner the better. We keep hearing about access to a market of 500m people but Germany and the UK are responsible for the vast majority of EU job creation and economic strength. IMO tariff free access to most of the rest is a total red herring. It is they who benefit the most and we pay them for the privilige.

From what I have heard the various Brexit teams in the civil service have been overwhelmed with volunteers / applicants of people who want to be involved in this historic once in a lifetime event.

IMO the vast majority of the trade "negotiations" are going to be very simple, ie just replicate with the UK what they have with the EU. We add far more to the EU than they add to us, with us leaving the economic vakue of the EU as a trading partner is much reduced.


 
Posted : 12/01/2017 1:54 pm
 br
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[i]The recruiting is going on (phase1 if you like) but it isn't going well.[/I]

Probably a combination of fixed-term offers (only going to take 2 years 🙂 ), crap package for perms and the April 2017 rules of only paying Contractors net of tax/NI?


 
Posted : 12/01/2017 2:13 pm
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From what I have heard the various Brexit teams in the civil service have been overwhelmed with volunteers / applicants of people who want to be involved in this historic once in a lifetime event.

one can only imagine.......

[img] [/img]

[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 12/01/2017 2:17 pm
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Jamba, Jamba, Jamba…

The EU doesn't stop us trading with the rest of the world. It doesn't stop Germany.
Making trading with the EU harder for businesses doesn't make it easier for us to trade with the rest of the world.
If by "weening off" you mean decrease our total exports so that the balance between EU and rest of world exports is moved away from EU, what does that gain us?
I'd rather we grew our exports with the rest of the world while maintaining current or slightly increasing trade with EU.
We can do that best inside the EU, or EEA, or similar.

As for recruitment, I'm talking about skilled experienced people in actual posts, as reported to me by someone in one those departments, not some hearsay about dreamers requesting posts beyond them.

IMO the vast majority of the trade "negotiations" are going to be very simple, ie just replicate with the UK what they have with the EU.

A good thing to aim for. Short and medium term, this can be achieved by a transitional deal. Anything else will be far from simple, and I suspect you are totally aware of that.


 
Posted : 12/01/2017 2:54 pm
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IMO the vast majority of the trade "negotiations" are going to be very simple, ie just replicate with the UK what they have with the EU.

Isn't this impossible? How can we negotiate "existing" terms with Canada who have a trade deal with the EU for instance, when we are no longer in the EU and they won't allow us to trade inside the single market?


 
Posted : 12/01/2017 3:16 pm
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We can't - its a myth that you can copy and paste/that it is simple. It isnt.

Ditto membership of EEA would have to be agreed by other EEA members. Its not automatic.


 
Posted : 12/01/2017 3:19 pm
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IMO the vast majority of the trade "negotiations" are going to be very simple, ie just replicate with the UK what they have with the EU.

So how will you handle the quantitative tariffs?

The only simple thing appears to be you, if you think this is at all straightforward or 'simple'. Its taken 40 years to get all the deals in place and hundreds of expert negotiators and we have 2 years and about 20.


 
Posted : 12/01/2017 3:21 pm
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IMO the vast majority of the trade "negotiations" are going to be very simple

And your expertise in international trade is what?


 
Posted : 12/01/2017 3:24 pm
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igm - Member

Jamba - you're still giving a biased view of that story. I was well aware there was an Oxford Poly quote in the story, and even us non-Russell Group types can spot the difference.

Frankly talking down another university's contribution because they're in the 5 out of 6 non-Russell Group universities is ridiculous- there's a tendency to roll out a Russell Group institution every time people want to hear from a university but it's like only speaking to Eton when you ask about schools.


 
Posted : 12/01/2017 3:30 pm
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The finest Uni in the Uk isnt even in the Russell Group either 😉


 
Posted : 12/01/2017 3:32 pm
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Mexico said they were going to increase trade with EU.
At this rate we'll end up with only a Russian controlled, bankrupt USA to trade with.
If I were a conspiracy theorists...


 
Posted : 12/01/2017 3:36 pm
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Does anyone else think that Jambo might have grabbed the 'stupidest post of the year award' in the 2nd week of January with this Gem:

Jambo - IMO the vast majority of the trade "negotiations" are going to be very simple


 
Posted : 12/01/2017 3:43 pm
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At this rate we'll end up with only a Russian controlled, bankrupt USA to trade with.

I can picture the supermarket now.... you can choose tesco or Trump branded products only


 
Posted : 12/01/2017 3:44 pm
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teamhurtmore - Member

The finest Uni in the Uk isnt even in the Russell Group either

Maastricht?


 
Posted : 12/01/2017 4:13 pm
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Maastricht in the UK???

I now you are joking NW anyway, as no one forgets your country's oldest and the UK's second oldest (and finest) Uni

(at least until AS opens his mouth and then we all cringe)


 
Posted : 12/01/2017 4:18 pm
 igm
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What button did I press mentioning Russell Group unis?

It's a joke at home because my degrees are from two respected in their fields but non-Russell unis, while my wife has two Russell Group degrees.

igm is bemused.


 
Posted : 12/01/2017 4:27 pm
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Posted : 12/01/2017 4:30 pm
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IGM - its the 15-16:00 energy low and we are easily distracted

I'm 50:50 FWIW


 
Posted : 12/01/2017 4:32 pm
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teamhurtmore - Member

Maastricht in the UK???

It's the fastest growing university for UK students, and easier to get to for most folks than Aberdeen. Same as Schiphol is our hub airport 😉


 
Posted : 12/01/2017 4:36 pm
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Mini THM1 did look at it too! [Maastricht not Aberdeen!]

Dont mention distances though - mini THM2 has major clobber for next semester, so I may be driving North in a few days time. Will have to avoid duckie's border guards, but some golf might be in order!! Bloody long drive though, but had a nightmare with unibaggage.com before


 
Posted : 12/01/2017 4:42 pm
 igm
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Bob in for a pint if you're through York on the way.


 
Posted : 12/01/2017 5:50 pm
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Would be nice, but I use the west coast route sorry.

Good trivial pursuit question - which is further west, Edinburgh or Carlisle? I am amazed at how many people use the east coast route which is much, much longer

(waves at Cody!! 😉 )


 
Posted : 12/01/2017 6:01 pm
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Now I'm scared..... 🙂


 
Posted : 12/01/2017 6:13 pm
 igm
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Even from York A64, A1, A66, M6/74, A702 is shorter than A64 then A1 all the way.

How did this get on a Brexit thread?


 
Posted : 12/01/2017 6:16 pm
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Be very scared 😉

It's c) BTW 😉

Just joking tbc!!!


 
Posted : 12/01/2017 6:17 pm
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@molgrips quite a bit as a matter of fact. 11 years working for one of the worlds largest trade finance banks (behind only Citibank and HSBC) and 3 years directly on global trade related transactions, then the last 4 years investing in them. Did my first global trade finance transaction with Glencore in the late 1990's (first ever such deal)

TMH don't want the EEA either. Outside the lot.

@kelvin the EU isn't worth paying for and has curtailed our traditional Commonwealth relationships and severely restricted us in our ability to forge new alliances.

@Northwind, frankly there is a pecking order. It is what it is. BBC clearly used the headline to mislead including a photo of the Radcliff Camera (the event was being held at Oxford Uni - the real one), a significant chunk of the readership would not understand that Oxford Brookes isn't Oxford Uni itself or an Oxford Uni College


 
Posted : 12/01/2017 7:15 pm
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Jamabs - c'mon, you know that stuff about the commonwealth is not true, just check waht happened with our trade deals with the commonwealth immediately when we joined. Negotiating as part of the EU has facilitated and accelerated our abilty to establish free trade deals. One reason why we have trade deals with close to 90% of our trading partners, guess what happens to these deals now?

From the LSE

Contrary to the myth that the UK ‘betrayed’ the Commonwealth by joining the EU in 1973, the majority of Commonwealth countries – those located in Africa, the Caribbean and Pacific – were in fact incorporated into the EU’s system of trade preferences at this time.  Under the 1975 Lomé Convention, this arrangement provided the African, Caribbean and Pacific (ACP) countries with unilateral preferential access to the EU market, a series of lucrative commodity protocols for bananas, beef, rum and sugar and development finance through the European Development Fund. [b] The EU’s special relationship with the ACP countries served to preserve and extend the UK’s links with this group of former colonies at a time when the Commonwealth was otherwise fractious and divided.[/b]


 
Posted : 12/01/2017 7:20 pm
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@kelvin the EU isn't worth paying for and has curtailed our traditional Commonwealth relationships and severely restricted us in our ability to forge new alliances.

Bullshit. Utter Bullshit.

Look at EU India trade talks, it is a series of UK governments, obsessed about immigration and protectionism for finance services, that has always been the stumbling block. The UK has curtailed relationships with Commonwealth countries as regards trade. In particular, in the HO, and now as PM, May is the biggest block to any trade deal with India in particular, due to her two big red lines… one is because looking to keep out immigrants is her political ticket into power, and to stay there… the other is because she will protect The City industries at all cost, it is where her family and friends make their livings.


 
Posted : 12/01/2017 11:39 pm
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I am done with the bias towards Europe, time for a more level playing field.

We absolutely can have a trade deal without significantly increased immigration from India. As I have noted before we've had a close relationship with India for 100 years leading to approx 1m Indians resident in the UK Poland got there in 10. Yes of course India asked for more visas, why wouldn't they ?

Protectionist tariffs on lamb killed our long term trade relationship with NZ. I have far more trust in NZ animal husbandry than hugely discredited Eastern Europeans wrt pork, poultry and of course horse burgers.


 
Posted : 13/01/2017 12:01 am
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we've had a close relationship with India for 100 years leading

That was called an empire and they're generally frowned upon.


 
Posted : 13/01/2017 12:04 am
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So when is Borris going to visit Bob so Liam can start hashing out a trade deal

[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 13/01/2017 12:07 am
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. I have far more trust in NZ animal husbandry than hugely discredited Eastern Europeans wrt pork, poultry and of course horse burgers

That's the problem with just making random statements based on your own prejudices, it leaves you open to looking silly

http://www.noted.co.nz/currently/social-issues/inside-the-new-metro-scandal-in-the-slaughterhouse/

http://www.safe.org.nz/articles/010714/horrific-nz-pig-cruelty-exposed-again


 
Posted : 13/01/2017 12:23 am
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I know people who's grandparents were immigrants from Poland, don't go suggesting Polish UK links are either week or new, they are not. I've worked with lots of people from India, and the visa restrictions for them working here are a complete pain in the arse. Anyone that thinks that us making it harder for Polish people to live and work here will result in workers from India having an easier time here are deluding themselves (or attempting to delude others). Anyone that thinks that the EU is stopping us trading with the rest of the world, likewise. Quite the opposite.


 
Posted : 13/01/2017 12:35 am
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Mike - why do we need to carry on with the narrative that we don't know what we want? The issues are really very simple:

Back a page but I had to go to the pub, it's evidence based THM the 3 leading people on the case seem to be unable to keep things consistent with the PM, the ones on the sideline want something else at times and what they want is generally being dismissed as impossible by the people they need to agree it with.


 
Posted : 13/01/2017 12:53 am
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It's about making it a level playing field kelvin. Same for everyone.

kimbers you won't read about the Eastern European stuff as it's covered up by the EU. 6 countries are in breach of the animal welfare standards for pigs but they are allowed to freely export to the rest of the EU. We have abuses in our country but when they are discovered they are sorted out. My belief is the EU turned a blind eye as it was all sold to Russia cheaply, now with samctions that doesn't happen.


 
Posted : 13/01/2017 12:53 am
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Genuine question. Entire countries in breach of just certain abattoirs have been found to be in breach. I would honestly struggle to believe it's an entire country (or six)

Any links?


 
Posted : 13/01/2017 1:00 am
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It's about making it a level playing field kelvin. Same for everyone.

No, it's about making things worse for people you have no affinity for.
And worse for UK business to work on the international stage.
You want to level down.
You want to dispose of the trade deals we have.
You want to remove travel and working rights from people across Europe.
As it happens, it looks like most of the country feels the same way as you.
Some of us want to raise up.
We want to do more trade, with more countries.
We want people to be able to more easily work and live in more countries.
I accept there are fewer of us.


 
Posted : 13/01/2017 1:03 am
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You want to remove travel and working rights from people across Europe.
As it happens, it looks like most of the country feel the same way as you.

Actually i suspect most that voted because because they wanted to curb immigration to the UK would probably NOT want any travel restrictions placed on the British. I suspect it's a terribly one sided viewpoint


 
Posted : 13/01/2017 1:06 am
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It's about making it a level playing field kelvin. [s]Same[/s][b] Near impossible[/b] for everyone.

It was the stated aim of this government to reduce immigration, huge amounts were made about the problems of immigration in the debate. It is about keeping foreigners out of the UK.


 
Posted : 13/01/2017 1:09 am
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[quote=jambalaya ]It's about making it a level playing field

Are you describing a race to the bottom or politics of envy there?

I'm wondering if your bias is so inherent that you'll support the notion of "making it a level playing field" on this thread if I point out that one way to make the playing field more level is hugely progressive taxation system (ie top rate >90%)?


 
Posted : 13/01/2017 2:22 am
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Out. Can't stand Juncker dictating to and bullying us.

We shovel huge amounts into the EU coffers and then get told how to spend the fraction we get back.

There was/still is a substantial concerted effort to frighten us into remaining, but all the doom and gloom predictions have been wrong so far and not just by a small amount.

Britain's economy is stating to boom and despite the challenges ahead, Brexit presents huge opportunity for our future prosperity.

I principally voted leave as I value democracy and freedom.


 
Posted : 13/01/2017 2:57 am
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Out. Can't stand Juncker dictating to and bullying us.

We shovel huge amounts into the EU coffers and then get told how to spend the fraction we get back.


any facts to actually back that up?
There was/still is a substantial concerted effort to rughrennus inti remaining, but all the doom and gloom predictions have been wrong so far and not just by a fraction.

Britain is statring to boom and despite the challenges ahead, Brexit presents huge opportunity for our future prosperity.


again any facts? The UK has not left yet, any positives are happening while being part of the EU.

I principally voted leave as I value democracy and freedom.

2 very important things that being part of the EU doesn't remove, we are just part of a larger democracy which has MP's who are voted for and represent you.


 
Posted : 13/01/2017 3:01 am
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kimbers you won't read about the Eastern European stuff as it's covered up by the EU. 6 countries are in breach of the animal welfare standards for pigs but they are allowed to freely export to the rest of the EU. We have abuses in our country but when they are discovered they are sorted out. [b]My belief is[/b] the EU turned a blind eye as it was all sold to Russia cheaply, now with samctions that doesn't happen.

My belief, I think, in my opinion etc counts for diddly squat. Today's homework is to go away and come up with some evidence, some hard facts, something that supports your belief.
I would like you to show that 6 countries are breaching EU rules and is doing nothing about it, and that these privately run companies anre any worse than the UK'
[url= https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2016/aug/28/fsa-4000-breaches-animal-welfare-laws-uk-abattoirs-two-years ]https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2016/aug/28/fsa-4000-breaches-animal-welfare-laws-uk-abattoirs-two-years[/url]
One has to wonder whether those UK figures will go up or down after we split. I mean, we're brimming to overflowing with civil servants in this country, aren't we?


 
Posted : 13/01/2017 8:33 am
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I principally voted leave as I value democracy and freedom.

What about cooperation and integration?


 
Posted : 13/01/2017 9:01 am
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Out. Can't stand Juncker dictating to and bullying us. [b]Always better to run away towardds an uncertain future than standing up to bullies. Go us![/b]

We shovel huge amounts into the EU coffers and then get told how to spend the fraction we get back. [b]99/100s is a fraction. What is the fraction that you're talking about? What are we putting and what are we getting out as a whole?[/b]

There was/still is a substantial concerted effort to frighten us into remaining, but all the doom and gloom predictions have been wrong so far and not just by a small amount. [b]Whereas, and we do come back to that bus, getting our border (that never went away) back and the scaremongering of immigration from leave was what exactly?[/b]

Britain's economy is stating to boom and despite the challenges ahead, Brexit presents huge opportunity for our future prosperity. [b]0.6% over 3 months as opposed to an annual figure of 2.5%, your dictionary is broken if boom means remaining the same. Let's wait and see what happens after A50 is triggered and the BS stops and reality kicks in. I imagine that when the other 48% of the population get behind Brexshit, the economy will truly boom. :roll:[/b]

I principally voted leave as I value democracy and freedom. [b]'Coz we didn't have those before.[/b]


Good luck in your new found freedom where pavements are gold.


 
Posted : 13/01/2017 9:12 am
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So it turns out that Mays experienced safe pair of hands pick for EU ambassador is the one that passed the dirty trump dossier onto the FBI.... how is his position looking?
I wonder if trump will mention it when he meets May, we have to keep him sweet so we can get a new [s] TTIP[/s] trade deal set up


 
Posted : 13/01/2017 10:22 am
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Well. After toing and froing I voted in.

What I wanted (and want) us to be in is a reformed EU, but figured we were better off as a thorn inside an unreformed EU than as a European country trying to deal with the EU as it now is!

However, a new dream scenario now presents itself. If the Irish court case says that article 50 is reversible it seems to put us in an awesome position. Work out the deal for 1 year 11 months, don't like it, cancel brexit and then kick it all off again.

The EU sans UK wouldn't like this game, but tough. They could end the game by kicking us out of the EU, but that would take a unanimous decision, so fat chance?

The real stumbling block is that the UK government probably isn't up for playing hardball in this way, but as I said, it's a dream!


 
Posted : 13/01/2017 10:37 am
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Not a great deal to add..


 
Posted : 13/01/2017 10:39 am
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20,000


 
Posted : 13/01/2017 10:40 am
 mrmo
Posts: 10720
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The EU sans UK wouldn't like this game, but tough. They could end the game by kicking us out of the EU, but that would take a unanimous decision, so fat chance?

I wouldn't count on it, try reading the European press. What i have read is along lines of f*** off.

The Brexiters claims that the EU will have to work with us are crap, the UK has never tried to involve itself in the UK and has just snipped for 40years.

De Gaulle has been proven right, and that is the feeling in many articles.

Also some of the comments coming from the British government don't help our case.


 
Posted : 13/01/2017 10:51 am
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