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Brexit Discussion Thread VI

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Comments

  • Moderators, Sports Moderators Posts: 27,136 Mod ✭✭✭✭Podge_irl


    However the thing they are leaving, the EU, they can leave without permission of the EU or the other member states. Same with the likes of the EEA, WTO etc. Sure there may be economic consequences, but they are not breaking international law.

    Were it the case that once agreeing to join the EU a member could never leave then the situation would be more like the US (where succession is illegal), and the EU would be free to take whatever measures necessary to keep the member in the union.

    If such a scenario were the case, then few states would agree to join in the first place. You can see why some members of the UK parliament (not limited to mad hard-line brexiteers) are therefore reluctant to sign up to the current May deal which entails a relationship with the EU which, though less involved than full EU membership, can't be exited without EU agreement.

    There was no mechanism for leaving the EU until the Lisbon Treaty.

    Where is the consensus/legal opinion that the backstop can not be withdrawn from even if the Withdrawal Agreement itself is cancelled coming from anyway? Would seem slightly bizarre to me.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 15,711 ✭✭✭✭Leroy42


    But what alternatives did she have? Without regulatory alignment then Hard border, something the likes of ERG, Davis etc are totally against.

    The deal she has got is pragmatic, although it is clearly worse than the EU membership they currently have. But that is not TM's fault, that is the fault of the UK voter who opted for it.

    The problems with the UK goals, is that they are both contradictory and almost designed to set up against the EU. You cannot expect to take on a competitor in terms of less regulations and at the same time expect the other side to accept you new view of regulations.

    So it is not whether or not TM delivered on the hopes and wishes, but in what way has she actually given in to the EU?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 11,035 ✭✭✭✭J Mysterio


    Leroy42 wrote: »
    That certainly appears to be the game plan. TM and her team seem to be of the view that when push comes to shove people will accept this deal as the alternatives (No deal, no Brexit) are simply unacceptable.

    But they have completely failed to sell the deal. It is very much "this is it, take it or leave it". Which of itself is fine, but they are not articulating why "leave it" is such a poor option. Recall that throughout this TM has continued to state that "No deal is better than a bad deal", but seemingly that was all nonsense as No deal is actually terrible and no body could ever vote for it, although if it happens it won't be that bad at all and WTO is great.

    It is this constant lack of detail and continual contradictions that has so many in the UK with diverse opinions as to what to do.

    I have said it before, TM needs to stand up in the HoC, or address the nation, and explain in clear terms, why No Deal is simply not an option. She needs to explain that No PM could ever countenance the negative effects of such a gamble, that peoples very lives would be at stake.

    She must already believe this otherwise she would not be pushing this deal as the only option.

    I think she should avoid the 'no PM could ever' line. She's backtracked on that too!


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,338 ✭✭✭Bit cynical


    Leroy42 wrote: »
    But what alternatives did she have? Without regulatory alignment then Hard border, something the likes of ERG, Davis etc are totally against.

    The deal she has got is pragmatic, although it is clearly worse than the EU membership they currently have. But that is not TM's fault, that is the fault of the UK voter who opted for it.
    The point isn't so much that the deal is worse than EU membership, it is that, from the point of view of UK MPs, the May deal may be worse than no deal. The debate between continued EU membership and some sort of brexit is long over. The only debate now is what sort of brexit: May's deal or no deal.

    If there were no requirement that it pass in the HoC, then the EU negotiated brilliantly. But none of it is any good if it does not pass.
    The problems with the UK goals, is that they are both contradictory and almost designed to set up against the EU. You cannot expect to take on a competitor in terms of less regulations and at the same time expect the other side to accept you new view of regulations.

    What the UK appear to have wanted initially was a close trading relationship with the EU somewhere between a Canada style trade deal and a customs union but not either of those exclusivly. This would have allowed external trade deals to be made but also allowed a relatively open border in Ireland.

    It is, of course, the right of the EU to refuse this, but not in itself contradictory. I would say that it was a good starting point for negotiations rather than what transpired.
    So it is not whether or not TM delivered on the hopes and wishes, but in what way has she actually given in to the EU?
    Well certainly it seems to me that she moved in the directon of the EU. I don't think the EU did much moving.

    Again, all this would be great for Ireland but for the fact that it has to be ratified in the UK parliament. Was it anti-Brexit types that pushed for the parlimentary vote?

    I don't know. Maybe Corbyn will step in at the last minute and try for a vote of no confidence. I'm not familiar with the rules or the parliamentary arithmetic involved. He's claiming he can stop the deal AND avoid a no deal Brexit.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 19,073 ✭✭✭✭Strazdas


    Leroy42 wrote: »
    But what alternatives did she have? Without regulatory alignment then Hard border, something the likes of ERG, Davis etc are totally against.

    The deal she has got is pragmatic, although it is clearly worse than the EU membership they currently have. But that is not TM's fault, that is the fault of the UK voter who opted for it.

    The problems with the UK goals, is that they are both contradictory and almost designed to set up against the EU. You cannot expect to take on a competitor in terms of less regulations and at the same time expect the other side to accept you new view of regulations.

    So it is not whether or not TM delivered on the hopes and wishes, but in what way has she actually given in to the EU?

    Problem with the "deal" is that even if it is ratified by the Parliament, it will lead to years of arguments in the UK. If they were unhappy with EU membership, they are going to be ten times as unhappy with this deal ('they' being the real problem here of course).


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 15,711 ✭✭✭✭Leroy42


    But the EU didn't have to move. the UK are leaving with the rest of the EU staying as it was. Why would the EU make any changes? That simply makes no sense.

    What I haven't heard anywhere is what specifically would people change in the TM deal that would likely meet the requirements of the EU? The EU requirements have been set out from the very start, and they have given in quite a lot during the negotiations (UK wide CU, transition period and extension etc). The problem is that the UK have wanted a totally new agreement on the basis, it would appear, that the UK is special and as such should be treated special.

    No problem with that aim of course, but what has TM's deal shown that the UK (through TM) given in on? Each part of the deal is aimed at getting something else. So UK wide CU is aimed at maintaining trade. Should that not have been considered? Backstop is aimed at preserving the GFA and the stability of NI, is that not something that should be there?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 15,711 ✭✭✭✭Leroy42


    Strazdas wrote: »
    Problem with the "deal" is that even if it is ratified by the Parliament, it will lead to years of arguments in the UK. If they were unhappy with EU membership, they are going to be ten times as unhappy with this deal ('they' being the real problem here of course).

    This is very true, but hardly the EU' fault. This is a direct consequence of the UK not really knowing what it wants, what was available or even what it actually had.

    The very fact that this deal is worse than EU membership, yet the response is "just do a hard brexit" tells you all you need to know.

    They had a feeling that something wasn't working. Haven looked at the alternatives it seems that the current situation isn't actually all that bad, but hey no turning back now I suppose.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,338 ✭✭✭Bit cynical


    Podge_irl wrote: »
    There was no mechanism for leaving the EU until the Lisbon Treaty.
    Yes, the formal mechanism, article 50 and such, came in with Lisbon. But the EU was always a voluntary association.
    Where is the consensus/legal opinion that the backstop can not be withdrawn from even if the Withdrawal Agreement itself is cancelled coming from anyway? Would seem slightly bizarre to me.
    My understanding is that once the Withdrawal Agreement is ratified, negotiations start on the future relationship. If these don't conclude in a way that satisfactory to either side that an open border can be sustained, then the backstop icome into force and remains in force until such time that an agreement can be reached that it is not necessary.

    The problem is this: how can the UK satisfy the EU that border infrastructure will never be needed? The most they can do is demonstrate is that it is not needed at that particular point in time. The EU, knowing this, can then reasonably argue for the continued need for the backstop.

    If the backstop is an insurance policy, then it is one that is needed forever.

    I think we on this forum sometimes make the mistake of thinking that because we really really want the backstop (and it is indeed great for us) that it is also reasonable for the UK. But that is not necessarily the case.

    When the basis of it was agreed the December before last there was a triumphalist mood in Ireland over what it appeared we had got past the British. We thought we had got one over on them. This is changing now that it looks like the UK parliament may reject the deal and Ireland will be worse off. In fairness, some posters on here did point out the dangers around the time of the December Joint Report.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 19,073 ✭✭✭✭Strazdas


    Leroy42 wrote: »
    This is very true, but hardly the EU' fault. This is a direct consequence of the UK not really knowing what it wants, what was available or even what it actually had.

    The very fact that this deal is worse than EU membership, yet the response is "just do a hard brexit" tells you all you need to know.

    They had a feeling that something wasn't working. Haven looked at the alternatives it seems that the current situation isn't actually all that bad, but hey no turning back now I suppose.

    The problem with the Brexiteers and the Leave voters is that they don't know what they want. The only thing they can agree on is that they hate the EU but they haven't the faintest clue how to make the UK work outside the union.

    You could never describe them as pragmatists or realists. They are chasing an ideological fantasy.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 10,375 ✭✭✭✭kunst nugget


    I thought it was relief at coming to an agreement that wouldn't lead to a reigniting of the troubles and would keep trade flowing seamlessly along the border rather than triumphalism at getting one over on the British.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 15,711 ✭✭✭✭Leroy42


    I don't get the impression Ireland felt we got one over the UK, it was their decision after all. If anything it was relief mixed with a sense of foreboding that the UK would not honour it (which it seems was well placed).

    If the UK can show that no border is required at a certain point in time why would that not mean it would never be needed? It would only be needed if the UK (or indeed the EU) changed something. What the EU are saying is that to comply with the ability to remove a border the UK must meet, and continue to meet, certain conditions. At present within the EU, this means regulatory alignment.

    So the UK must find a way to either maintain regulations so that the EU can be confident that the border is effective and thus the EU secure or they must present a workable solution to ensure that products with different regulations can be sufficiently tracked so as not to interfere with the open market and thus place unregulated (in EU terms) items within the market.

    The UK have singularly failed to provide any solutions to this and thus the EU, in a bid to protect the open border in NI, have put forth a totally unique solution. Nowhere else has been given such an offer. Yet the UK seemingly deem this to amount to bullying and what to reject it without putting anything on the table apart from "trust us, and sure its will all be your fault anyway".


  • Moderators, Sports Moderators Posts: 27,136 Mod ✭✭✭✭Podge_irl


    My understanding is that once the Withdrawal Agreement is ratified, negotiations start on the future relationship. If these don't conclude in a way that satisfactory to either side that an open border can be sustained, then the backstop icome into force and remains in force until such time that an agreement can be reached that it is not necessary.

    The problem is this: how can the UK satisfy the EU that border infrastructure will never be needed? The most they can do is demonstrate is that it is not needed at that particular point in time. The EU, knowing this, can then reasonably argue for the continued need for the backstop.

    If the backstop is an insurance policy, then it is one that is needed forever.

    I think we on this forum sometimes make the mistake of thinking that because we really really want the backstop (and it is indeed great for us) that it is also reasonable for the UK. But that is not necessarily the case.

    When the basis of it was agreed the December before last there was a triumphalist mood in Ireland over what it appeared we had got past the British. We thought we had got one over on them. This is changing now that it looks like the UK parliament may reject the deal and Ireland will be worse off. In fairness, some posters on here did point out the dangers around the time of the December Joint Report.

    I see absolutely nothing in the WA that would suggest that the backstop remain in force if the UK perfectly legally and legitimately simply cut all ties with the EU. The backstop is part of the withdrawal agreement - if they cancel the latter the former ceases to exist. Of course that would put us back in "No Deal" territory. What the backstop does mean is that the UK can't start negotiating a FTA and try and quietly remove the provisions of the backstop. For any relationship between the UK and EU to exist then either the backstop or a FTA that supersedes it must be in place. The EU don't want the backstop to remain in place and it will disappear as soon as a viable FTA is agreed.

    Ultimately, a proper FTA and the backstop are going to be mutually exclusive scenarios. The UK will retain the right, as any country has, to simply cancel the FTA whenever they want. But again, it will come with the attendant consequences.

    Also, neither the EU nor Ireland specifically actually care whether the backstop is reasonable for the UK. Honouring your international commitments is the price of continuing to do business with a rule-based supranational organisation.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,338 ✭✭✭Bit cynical


    Leroy42 wrote: »
    But the EU didn't have to move. the UK are leaving with the rest of the EU staying as it was. Why would the EU make any changes? That simply makes no sense.

    Of course, they don't have to move but they had the option of moving but did not. Had they moved, then it may have been possible for an agreement to be reached that would have been satisfactory to both sides.
    What I haven't heard anywhere is what specifically would people change in the TM deal that would likely meet the requirements of the EU?
    Well Mr Corbyin believes that he can negotiate a deal where the UK is in a customs union with the EU but has some say in the rules and regulations governing it. This seems reasonable. It would suit us better in Ireland than no deal. But reasonable and acceptable to the EU are not the same thing.

    He also would not enter into an agreement with no objective exit criteria on the border with the North.

    Again, it seems reasonable. A country leaving the EU leaves a border behind with the remaining EU countries. To say that a country leaving the EU should never, regardlesss of developments, introduce border infrastructure seems unreasonable. But again, reasonableness and acceptable to the EU are not the same thing.
    The EU requirements have been set out from the very start, and they have given in quite a lot during the negotiations (UK wide CU, transition period and extension etc). The problem is that the UK have wanted a totally new agreement on the basis, it would appear, that the UK is special and as such should be treated special.
    But the two things you mention just happen to have the effect of prolonging and deepening the relationship between the EU and the UK, both of which are contentious to MPs wishing to increase the distance as quickly as possible.

    But the general idea of negotiations is that both sides move seeking common ground. Setting out requirements and red lines at the start and sticking to them is good only if those things are genuinely necesssary for the continued operation of the EU. If they are not then it is just intransigence, which is fine if the goal is sticking it to the UK but otherwise not.

    No problem with that aim of course, but what has TM's deal shown that the UK (through TM) given in on? Each part of the deal is aimed at getting something else. So UK wide CU is aimed at maintaining trade. Should that not have been considered? Backstop is aimed at preserving the GFA and the stability of NI, is that not something that should be there?
    The two are related. The backstop is there because the EU insisted on it even though the EU can function without it. Because the orignal NI backstop would have required a sea border, the UK asked for the customs union to be extended to the rest of the UK. The DUP objected to customs control between NI and the rest of the UK but I don't think May or Corbyn or whoever else might take over would have wanted it anyway.

    But I don't think the backstop in the first place is something that the UK would ever have wanted at the outset. Voluntary maintainance of an open border along the same lines as the CTA would have been preferable. Sure it would not have been a formal international treaty but then neither is the Common Travel Area which has existed from before EU membership of both countries. This is also important to the stability of the North but has no international legal status.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,338 ✭✭✭Bit cynical


    Podge_irl wrote: »
    Ultimately, a proper FTA and the backstop are going to be mutually exclusive scenarios. The UK will retain the right, as any country has, to simply cancel the FTA whenever they want. But again, it will come with the attendant consequences.

    Also, neither the EU nor Ireland specifically actually care whether the backstop is reasonable for the UK. Honouring your international commitments is the price of continuing to do business with a rule-based supranational organisation.
    Yes, you can take this point of view. A proper FTA and the backstop are mutually exclusive. Why? Because we say so. Unreasonable? Don't care. If you don't like it you can go away with no deal. It is of no consequence to us.

    That's fine. But then if it doesn't pass in the HoC, we have to take the conseqences here in Ireland. Barnier and that lot will continue to enjoy fine expense account dinners in Brussels.

    Sure you can argue that Ireland is only a tiny part of the EU. But wasn't the EU supposed to be standing behind Ireland? Wasn't that the whole point of the backstop?

    This of course assumes that there will be a no deal Brexit. If that is not the case, then the EU strategy will have been the correct one for Ireland.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 15,711 ✭✭✭✭Leroy42


    Of course, they don't have to move but they had the option of moving but did not. Had they moved, then it may have been possible for an agreement to be reached that would have been satisfactory to both sides.

    But the EU have moved. From a transition period, to an extended transition period, citizen rights matching, allowing them to continue to be in certain EU bodies, to the UK wide CU. These are all unique offerings from the EU. TO say they have not moved is simply untrue.
    Well Mr Corbyin believes that he can negotiate a deal where the UK is in a customs union with the EU but has some say in the rules and regulations governing it. This seems reasonable. It would suit us better in Ireland than no deal. But reasonable and acceptable to the EU are not the same thing.

    What Corbyn believes is totally irrelevant. The UK is already in a CU where they have a say, they want to leave that. The EU have been reasonable in that that option is there for the UK, they do not want to exercise that option unless the EU completely change.
    He also would not enter into an agreement with no objective exit criteria on the border with the North.

    So what is the alternative that he has put down?
    Again, it seems reasonable. A country leaving the EU leaves a border behind with the remaining EU countries. To say that a country leaving the EU should never, regardlesss of developments, introduce border infrastructure seems unreasonable. But again, reasonableness and acceptable to the EU are not the same thing.

    And if the UK did not include NI then you would be correct. However, the UK has an obligation and a responsibility to both NI and the ROI, and have always stated their desire to maintain that. The backstop is aimed at just that. Again, seems the resonableness is coming from the EU who has agreed to bend it own rules in order to preserve this special are.
    But the two things you mention just happen to have the effect of prolonging and deepening the relationship between the EU and the UK, both of which are contentious to MPs wishing to increase the distance as quickly as possible.

    In conplete contradiction to the stated aims of most MPs, including Brexiteers, who continually talk about relationships.
    But the general idea of negotiations is that both sides move seeking common ground. Setting out requirements and red lines at the start and sticking to them is good only if those things are genuinely necesssary for the continued operation of the EU. If they are not then it is just intransigence, which is fine if the goal is sticking it to the UK but otherwise not.The two are related. The backstop is there because the EU insisted on it even though the EU can function without it. Because the orignal NI backstop would have required a sea border, the UK asked for the customs union to be extended to the rest of the UK. The DUP objected to customs control between NI and the rest of the UK but I don't think May or Corbyn or whoever else might take over would have wanted it anyway.

    You seem very biased towards the UK on this. IT has been the UK that drew up the red lines before the negotiations even began. It is TM who has continued to insist that the EU need the Uk more than the other way. They have approached this as trying to face down the EU, rather than working with them. TM made an agreement last December which she almost immediately wanted to row back on.
    But I don't think the backstop in the first place is something that the UK would ever have wanted at the outset. Voluntary maintainance of an open border along the same lines as the CTA would have been preferable. Sure it would not have been a formal international treaty but then neither is the Common Travel Area which has existed from before EU membership of both countries. This is also important to the stability of the North but has no international legal status.

    Of course they didn't want it. They wanted free and open trading between the UK and EU on their terms. Free to make whatever trade deals suited them, and also free to take advantage of the market and agreements that the EU had worked 40 years to get in place.

    CTA did not lead to stability in NI. Did you miss the troubles? the CTA was in operation during that.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 15,711 ✭✭✭✭Leroy42


    This of course assumes that there will be a no deal Brexit. If that is not the case, then the EU strategy will have been the correct one for Ireland.

    What other strategy was there? Trying to hold a country to its international oblilgations seems quite a reasonable approach to take.

    If the UK reject the TM deal, what deal do you think would pass the HoC? Anything that gives the UK the benefits but not of the obligations of membership will call into question the very existence of the EU, which cannot be good for Ireland.

    Remember that the UK have set out from the very start to be a direct competitor to the EU, and as such Ireland.


  • Registered Users Posts: 2,435 ✭✭✭Imreoir2


    J Mysterio wrote: »
    Really, all this nonsense that has infected the thread the last couple of days points to a lack of any news to discuss in terms of the furthering of the negotiations.

    It's seemingly just what May wants... Count the clock down, increase uncertainty and concern... Bounce Westminster into the deal to avoid chaos.

    Either bounce parliament into supporting a deal, or force another referendum on her "against" her will, I think she would be happy with either outcome at this point. As long as she can blame others for the referendum I don't think she will have much reason to complain about it.


  • Registered Users Posts: 2,435 ✭✭✭Imreoir2


    In fairness, she hasn't been saying "no deal is better than a bad deal" recently. She was saying that during negotiations because she had to say it. Had she not, she would be in an even weaker position now as she would have had to give away more and therefore even less likely to get it through Parliament.

    Now that the deal is done and there is no further negotiating, she is saying take this deal or face a "no deal" brexit. This makes sense: make the choice as stark as possible. Varadkar is backing her up on this saying that the choice is between "no-deal and a cliff edge" brexit.

    Of course she would not have had to give away more had she not engaged publicly in the fantisy that no-deal is a viable option for the UK. Do you think anyone on the EU side believed it for even a second? Do you think pity drove the EU to give more to TM as a result of her being put in a position of having to publicly make nonsence statements regarding no-deal?

    The one and only reason that May had to engage in the no-deal fantisy is that she would have left herself open to attack fro her own ultras had she not.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,823 ✭✭✭✭First Up


    Well Mr Corbyin believes that he can negotiate a deal where the UK is in a customs union with the EU but has some say in the rules and regulations governing it. This seems reasonable. It would suit us better in Ireland than no deal. But reasonable and acceptable to the EU are not the same thing.

    The EU and Turkey have been in a Customs Unions for more than 20 years. It allows free movement of industrial goods but not of agricultural products. Turkey aligns with EU standards and tariffs for the items covered under the agreement.

    An EU - UK customs union would be negotiated case by case so the UK would have its input. However any such agreement would have to include the UK aligning with EU standards and tariffs.


  • Registered Users Posts: 4,831 ✭✭✭RobMc59


    Strazdas wrote: »
    The problem with the Brexiteers and the Leave voters is that they don't know what they want. The only thing they can agree on is that they hate the EU but they haven't the faintest clue how to make the UK work outside the union.

    You could never describe them as pragmatists or realists. They are chasing an ideological fantasy.

    That is not the case,not every leave voter hates the EU or is uninformed-there are people who are rational but voted to leave and stick by that and they are the most worrying to those of us who hope the country will come to it`s senses and send the hard core brexiteers packing- they do tend to be older but not all odd balls which makes a potential 2nd vote result scary and genuinely unpredictable.


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  • Registered Users Posts: 2,435 ✭✭✭Imreoir2


    Ladbrokes has May replaced before end of March as 1/2 which is great news if they are on the money. Boris to the rescue with Mogg moved into cabinet. I personally would prefer Davis or Rabb which would be amazing comebacks after the charade they went through as brexit secretary(totally ignored by Brussels because they were secretly dealing with Oillie Robbins)..imagine Juncker and COs face when they suddenly have to deal with the lads they were giving the run around too and they are hard brexiteers. Could be good times.

    Good times for what exactly? Junker and co wont be dealing with the new UK prime minister, they will be replaced by a new Commission later this year. The UK will either have buckled and accepted the deal by then, crashed out in a no-deal disaster for the UK, or withdrawn Artical 50 with their tail between their legs. In none of these cases will Junker's successor have too much reason to care who the PM of the UK is or what they have to say for themselves.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,715 ✭✭✭serfboard


    Mr Corbyin believes that he can negotiate a deal where the UK is in a customs union with the EU but has some say in the rules and regulations governing it.
    And the name of this deal is Remain.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 19,073 ✭✭✭✭Strazdas


    RobMc59 wrote: »
    That is not the case,not every leave voter hates the EU or is uninformed-there are people who are rational but voted to leave and stick by that and they are the most worrying to those of us who hope the country will come to it`s senses and send the hard core brexiteers packing- they do tend to be older but not all odd balls which makes a potential 2nd vote result scary and genuinely unpredictable.

    Though there does seem to be an alarmingly high number of Leave voters who say they are not open to changing their minds on Brexit, no matter what happens. Difficult to put a figure on it but it seems to be well into the millions, could even be double figures (ie. 10m+).

    The Brexit crisis would actually be easier to resolve if there were far more floating voters saying they were more than open to having their minds changed. But it is this large rump who are driving forward the Brexit narrative and saying it cannot be cancelled or watered down, no matter what the consequences.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,146 ✭✭✭✭briany


    The EU have said that the deal is not up for renegotiation, so Corbyn just sounds silly saying that it is. There's nothing to say that the EU would even want to renegotiate the deal anyway. The EU seems happy enough to put this deal to the UK, knowing fairly well that the UK could walk away from it entirely, so the EU is either beyond attempting to placate, or else they're playing as crazy a game of chicken as the UK is.


  • Moderators, Category Moderators, Arts Moderators, Business & Finance Moderators, Entertainment Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 18,329 CMod ✭✭✭✭Nody


    Well remember that cliff hanger Brexiteers are happy jeering about not coming and experts being wrong? Well how does a 100 billion GBP+ loss over 6 months feel like when it comes from the Tory government (and note the drop in volume is not only going to affect Dover & the tunnel either)...
    The information comes via the Financial Times, a beguilingly simple claim that Ministers believe that under a no-deal Brexit, the Dover corridor (port and tunnel) could run at just 12-25 percent of normal capacity for up to six months.

    This, in itself, does not tell us very much, but once we look at some relevant figures on trade an alarming picture starts to emerge. We start with the latest estimates for trade (in goods) with continental Europe which passes through the corridor.

    In 2017, this was valued at approximately £220 billion (allowing for currency conversions) - the split roughly £120 billion to the port and £100 billion to the tunnel. And with total trade in goods with the EU recorded at £422.6 billion, this means the proportion of trade with Europe handled by the corridor worked out at about 52 percent by value.

    If we then take the Minister's worst case scenario for the corridor running at 12 percent capacity for six months, trade levels drop from the expected £110 billion in the period to a mere £13 billion, representing a loss of throughput of just short of £100 billion – roughly equivalent to twice the value of the six-monthly traffic through the Tunnel.

    This, then, is the crunch. The purpose of the £107 million ferry contract, of which Seaborne is part, is route substitution. But when we look at the figures, we see the scale of the problem. Ministers are faced with a need to provide capacity equivalent to twice the throughput of the Tunnel. Yet the entire (shipping) capacity bought by the contract is only about five percent of the corridor throughput.

    If we do the assessment a different way, in terms of vehicles handled, a similar position emerges. Dover Port claimed to have handled 2,601,162 lorries in 2017. The Tunnel handled 1,637,280, making a combined total of 4,238,442 lorry movements in the year.

    Worked out on a weekly basis, movements are running at 81,500. If we lose 88 percent of that traffic, the corridor will end up moving less than ten thousand vehicles a week (in both directions). That leaves more than 70,000 to find, while the combined capacity bought by Mr Grayling's £107 million is 3,700 movements a week.
    But don't worry; it's worth it to regain sovereignty and it's all project fear anyway because experts and forecasting is always wrong. Above is part of today's longer article that can be found here.


  • Registered Users Posts: 8,045 ✭✭✭Christy42


    Leroy42 wrote: »
    But what alternatives did she have? Without regulatory alignment then Hard border, something the likes of ERG, Davis etc are totally against.

    The deal she has got is pragmatic, although it is clearly worse than the EU membership they currently have. But that is not TM's fault, that is the fault of the UK voter who opted for it.
    The point isn't so much that the deal is worse than EU membership, it is that, from the point of view of UK MPs, the May deal may be worse than no deal. The debate between continued EU membership and some sort of brexit is long over. The only debate now is what sort of brexit: May's deal or no deal.

    If there were no requirement that it pass in the HoC, then the EU negotiated brilliantly. But none of it is any good if it does not pass.
    The problems with the UK goals, is that they are both contradictory and almost designed to set up against the EU. You cannot expect to take on a competitor in terms of less regulations and at the same time expect the other side to accept you new view of regulations.

    What the UK appear to have wanted initially was a close trading relationship with the EU somewhere between a Canada style trade deal and a customs union but not either of those exclusivly. This would have allowed external trade deals to be made but also allowed a relatively open border in Ireland.

    It is, of course, the right of the EU to refuse this, but not in itself contradictory. I would say that it was a good starting point for negotiations rather than what transpired.
    So it is not whether or not TM delivered on the hopes and wishes, but in what way has she actually given in to the EU?
    Well certainly it seems to me that she moved in the directon of the EU. I don't think the EU did much moving.

    Again, all this would be great for Ireland but for the fact that it has to be ratified in the UK parliament. Was it anti-Brexit types that pushed for the parlimentary vote?

    I don't know. Maybe Corbyn will step in at the last minute and try for a vote of no confidence. I'm not familiar with the rules or the parliamentary arithmetic involved. He's claiming he can stop the deal AND avoid a no deal Brexit.
    The UK wanted all the parts it liked without any requirements. It was offered a Canada style deal or a customs union and threw a strop when it didn't get what it wanted. Certainly small details could have been negotiated but the idea of paying the price for the cheap item and getting the expensive item is off the radar for most shops selling you things.

    Honestly this is all coming from the point that EU should have done something because the UK was never reasonable enough to compromise.

    May moved in the direction of the EU because her initial stance was ridiculous. If you try and meet half way then the most ridiculous starting position wins. The Canada deal and all the others offered are already negotiated stances that involve the EU giving ground and receiving things in return as a result of past negotiations (for instance with Canada). Asking it to give further ground is ridiculous. Why should they be more willing to give the UK a better deal than Canada?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,614 ✭✭✭cryptocurrency


    Christy42 wrote: »
    The UK wanted all the parts it liked without any requirements. It was offered a Canada style deal or a customs union and threw a strop when it didn't get what it wanted. Certainly small details could have been negotiated but the idea of paying the price for the cheap item and getting the expensive item is off the radar for most shops selling you things.

    Honestly this is all coming from the point that EU should have done something because the UK was never reasonable enough to compromise.

    May moved in the direction of the EU because her initial stance was ridiculous. If you try and meet half way then the most ridiculous starting position wins. The Canada deal and all the others offered are already negotiated stances that involve the EU giving ground and receiving things in return as a result of past negotiations (for instance with Canada). Asking it to give further ground is ridiculous. Why should they be more willing to give the UK a better deal than Canada?

    Because it's a much bigger economy, player and on their doorstep....


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 19,433 ✭✭✭✭road_high


    Because it's a much bigger economy, player and on their doorstep....

    You’d almost think that exact same argument would resonate with those in the UK pushing for no deal?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,614 ✭✭✭cryptocurrency


    road_high wrote: »
    You’d almost think that exact same argument would resonate with those in the UK pushing for no deal?

    Not apples with apples. The UK is a long-established and powerful economy that will be there long after the EU. You'd say they may know a good bit that you don't. Storm clouds gathering for the EU and the Euro, buckle up.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 19,433 ✭✭✭✭road_high


    Not apples with apples. The UK is a long-established and powerful economy that will be there long after the EU. You'd say they may know a good bit that you don't. Storm clouds gathering for the EU and the Euro, buckle up.

    Yea. So you keep saying. Yawn zzzzz


This discussion has been closed.
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