Viewing 40 posts - 10,001 through 10,040 (of 77,140 total)
  • EU Referendum – are you in or out?
  • GrahamS
    Full Member

    Using a UK-focused retail and corporate bank as an example for any argument on passporting seems rather odd.

    It’s

    Not

    thecaptain
    Free Member

    I still have literally no idea whether the govt wants to stay in the Single Market or not. Does anyone know? 3 months in, is there any sign of a decision on this?

    grahamt1980
    Full Member

    Jamba – bit of basic maths for you. 100% subtract 44% does not make 66%.

    You are a full 10% out, the values are 56% row and 44% eu

    teamhurtmore
    Free Member

    Oops, excuse me!

    GrahamS
    Full Member

    Oh they have lots of plans and decisions – honest they do – but they can’t tell us what they are because it would ruin negotiations y’see.

    So over the next few years we need to blindly trust our politicians to secretly make lots of decisions and plans that have the potential for a massive impact on our future, with no public oversight.

    Because democracy!

    Klunk
    Free Member

    I still have literally no idea whether the govt wants to stay in the Single Market or not.

    the problem is most of the cabinet want to remain part of the single market but the EU would want to keep the free movement goods, services and labour as part of the deal and some cash…. which is going to look awfully like we never left come election time.

    jambalaya
    Free Member

    @kimbers so I said 70% and you (fullfact) say 66% – was that really worth the post with charts ?

    70 vs 56 is worth mentioning as graham notes 😳

    I think a large part of the services number is a result of the Rotterdamn effecf, ie intrnational business booked through an EU center like Dublin, this is easy to move and not really related to the EU. Certainly the case with one of my employers.

    GrahamS
    Full Member

    70 vs 56 is worth mentioning as graham notes 😳

    That’s the closest I’ve ever seen you come to admitting you might have got something wrong.

    Well done. I think we’re making some real progress here. 😉

    teamhurtmore
    Free Member

    FT running article today on the turf war over Brexit within the government.

    Dave was right on one thing – self-inflicted harm

    jambalaya
    Free Member

    I still have literally no idea whether the govt wants to stay in the Single Market or not.

    My 2 cents (not my preferences but my view of Govt position)

    Yup we would like to stay in the single market if we have no freedom of movement, no budget contribution and no supremacy of ECJ

    If we have to take a limited number of EU migrants but can place restrictions on in work benefits that could still work

    What I think the most likley outcome is we do not sign up for access to single market (this saves face for the EU) but we agree a more limited trade deal focusing on a few key mutual sectors with no freedom of movement, no budget contributions and no ECJ

    If EU won’t agree to that we’ll go WTO tariffs.

    Junkyard
    Free Member

    look at the actual practicalities of how to actually get out without seriously impacting the country (for a generation at least

    There is not one either theoretically or practically – unless either the EU or we back down on free movement and I cannot see that

    Possibly a free movement for x years and slow Brexit to allow all to adapt.

    fourbanger
    Free Member

    What I think the most likley outcome is we do not sign up for access to single market (this saves face for the EU) but we agree a more limited trade deal focusing on a few key mutual sectors with no freedom of movement, no budget contributions and no ECJ

    Only a few thick racists really want that though so it’s probably not going to happen.

    thecaptain
    Free Member

    Oh I know what the problem is. And there is only one sensible solution, which is to ignore the referendum result.

    Most brexiters think we’ve already left, so perhaps we should just let them carry on believing that, and do nothing.

    jambalaya
    Free Member

    Interesting interview with Boris in NY on Brexit. He suggested A50 couod be fast-tracked and be completed faster than 2 years amd the deal would be customised for UK/EU. He made clear all the key campaign promises would be delivered. Boris also pointed out that the US exported more to Europe and those exports grew faster from mid 1990’s to today than we did, membership of the EU is not essential for trade.

    thecaptain
    Free Member

    Please list those key campaign promises.

    teamhurtmore
    Free Member

    He made clear …..

    ….was that with a straight face?

    Clarity and Bojo are uncomfortable bedfellows

    fourbanger
    Free Member

    Boris might possibly be more clueless than you, so I’ll not hold my breath.

    GrahamS
    Full Member

    Interesting interview with Boris in NY on Brexit

    Linky?

    He made clear all the key campaign promises would be delivered.

    All of them?

    jambalaya
    Free Member

    Just listened to Lloyds Insurance Chairman. Re-iterated Lloyds was a global business and that if passporting was lost they wouod just “write” the business from a European subsidiuary. In summary no great change.

    jambalaya
    Free Member

    @Graham Live interview on Sky News, maybe a link on their website/Apple TV or up on YouTube later probably

    zokes
    Free Member

    I think he was key to Leave winning

    Tell me again, what have Leave actually won?

    teamhurtmore
    Free Member

    ted Lloyds was a global business and that if passporting was lost they wouod just “write” the business from a European subsidiuary. In summary no great change.

    Unsurprisingly the CEO of Lloyd’s has a very different conclusion describing the folly as “a major issue for us to deal with” and indicating that it could move operations out of the U.K.

    No great change there then….. 😯

    GrahamS
    Full Member

    Re-iterated Lloyds was a global business and that if passporting was lost they wouod just “write” the business from a European subsidiuary. In summary no great change.

    That was the story I was commenting on earlier. They said they weren’t yet sure whether they’d establish one subsidiary or go further and open branches in all 27 EU countries.

    What was clear was that they expected some Lloyds jobs to move from London to the EU and that they expected the “huge workforce” of London’s insurance brokers would be making similar plans.

    Live interview on Sky News

    Thanks, will look for that. Sounds interesting.

    kelvin
    Full Member

    He made clear all the key campaign promises would be delivered.

    The problem is, everyone has a different idea of which promises were “key”, and they were contradictory.

    ninfan
    Free Member

    Some don’t even seem to know what amounts to a ‘promise’

    teamhurtmore
    Free Member

    Or care when making them – talk is cheap

    kelvin
    Full Member

    Well, you could argue that it was all ‘suggestions’, some of which were known to be impossible, especially when taken together, rather than ‘promises’, in which case, there were no actual promises, so nothing needs to be done, or alternatively anything can be done.

    torsoinalake
    Free Member

    WTO

    Then there are the problems for trade. The idea that we can do without a trade agreement is based on the theory that tariffs are no big deal and the EU won’t put up barriers to trade because it would be an act of self-harm. The truth is more complex. The World Trade Organisation prevents countries discriminating between their trading partners. If you raise or lower tariffs for one nation you must do so for all WTO members. This is the principle of “most favoured nation” treatment. Thus, when imposing tariffs on the UK, the EU would not be acting out of spite but merely following the rules of the WTO trading system. This is why we need a trade agreement.

    Moreover, if the UK opted to impose retaliatory tariffs on imports from the EU, WTO anti-discrimination rules would require us to impose the same tariffs on all of our trading partners (excluding any with which we have negotiated a preferential trade agreement). Should we choose to remove tariffs from EU products altogether, we would have to do the same for all WTO members; thereby destroying our manufacturing base and agricultural industry (the harsh reality of “unilateral free trade”).

    Great idea

    igm
    Full Member

    ninfan – Member
    Some don’t even seem to know what amounts to a ‘promise’

    Best line of the thread. Plus one, ninfan, plus one.

    I certainly have no idea what the quit faction promised, because every time I see something that looks like a promise, they seem to come along and deny it was a promise.

    Perhaps something about kicking foreigners out? I’m not sure.

    jambalaya
    Free Member

    TMH I saw the Lloyds CEO interview on Sky, he said it would be easy to move the business – a handful of brokers move/none ? The fronting part is trivial and will be back-to-backed with London market anyway. As he said 96% of their business in NOT with the EU

    The Re-moaners don’t want Brexit to be a success as they’d be proven wrong. We have already seen all the doom and gloom predictions go up in smoke, uk recession, global recession, punishment budget, crash in house prices etc etc. The whole EU striaght jacket is designed to crush the life out of its members, of course they want people to think there is no alternative.

    The US does huge amounts of trade with the EU without any special deal, whilst a deal is desirable provided it comes with no strings like freedom of movement or budget payments if there is no deal then so be it. Perhaps that what Boris meant when he said A50 may take less than 2 years, EU won’t agree a deal without freedom/budget so we pull the plug early and save £1bn a month ?

    @ign Leave made it clear all EU citizens would be welcome to stay (assuming equivalent rights granted to uk citizens) so “kicking out foreigners” was not on the list.

    El-bent
    Free Member

    If EU won’t agree to that we’ll go WTO tariffs.

    Of course we will have to re-join the WTO as independent members, which would be a long and torturous process, just look at how long it took Russia and China to join, and we will really have to hope that other independent members in the WTO don’t have an axe to grind with us, I can think of a few.

    And that’s just for starters. As I have said, the World is unionised.

    El-bent
    Free Member

    The Re-moaners don’t want Brexit to be a success as they’d be proven wrong. We have already seen all the doom and gloom predictions go up in smoke, uk recession, global recession, punishment budget, crash in house prices etc etc.

    We haven’t left the EU.

    teamhurtmore
    Free Member

    TMH I saw the Lloyds CEO interview on Sky, he said it would be easy to move the business

    Given that the CEO of Lloyds is a woman, I find that hard to believe….

    Lifer
    Free Member

    😆

    jambalaya
    Free Member

    Given that the CEO of Lloyds is a woman, I find that hard to believe….

    You are quite right of course, it was the Chairman not the CEO my mistake

    Nipper99
    Free Member

    The Re-moaners don’t want Brexit to be a success as they’d be proven wrong. We have already seen all the doom and gloom predictions go up in smoke, uk recession, global recession, punishment budget, crash in house prices etc etc. The whole EU straight jacket is designed to crush the life out of its members, of course they want people to think there is no alternative.

    No Brexitmaggedon in our time – don’t worry it’ll all be over by Christmas.

    [url=https://flic.kr/p/MuV91R]No Brexit meltdown in our time..[/url] by jamesanderson2010, on Flickr

    jambalaya
    Free Member

    El-bent WTO we are hardly China or Russia are we. We already comply with all the requireme ts and we only gave up our membership as the EU rules forbade it

    The doom amd gloom predictions where to kick-in immediately

    jambalaya
    Free Member

    The funny thing Nipper is I used that same photo in relation to Cameron’s renegotiation, even quoted from Elvis Costello’s Peace in our Time.

    jambalaya
    Free Member

    Full interview inc Syria

    Captain Brexit

    mikewsmith
    Free Member

    jambalaya – Member
    Interesting interview with Boris in NY on Brexit. He suggested A50 couod be fast-tracked and be completed faster than 2 years amd the deal would be customised for UK/EU. He made clear all the key campaign promises would be delivered.

    Now correct me if I’m wrong but have you not just spent the last 10 pages or more telling us that they were not in fact promises more just aspirational wafts of thought bubbles?
    If the process tells us anything I’d have to go with

    Want to make promises – write them all down and say these are the promises.

    Only people who can actualy make/deliver them should be making them

    Any not in full possesion of the facts should probably avoid making promises.

    How can the article 50 deal not be customised for the UK/EU? It’s the deal between the UK and the EU to leave the EU and the terms of the divorce. I assume he is trying to play to the uninformed (spot a theme here) the 2 ways article 50 can be completed is when both sides agree or 2 years end. If we end early then one side got screwed and we are in the weaker position.
    So an early end probably means all the same terms as being in the UK but paying for the privilige with no say in decision making.

    The Re-moaners don’t want Brexit to be a success as they’d be proven wrong. We have already seen all the doom and gloom predictions go up in smoke, uk recession, global recession, punishment budget, crash in house prices etc etc.

    I see you have a new name calling going on…
    I assume that if any of these things happen it will be for the greater good/outside factors/much better than if we had stayed.

Viewing 40 posts - 10,001 through 10,040 (of 77,140 total)

The topic ‘EU Referendum – are you in or out?’ is closed to new replies.