srhutch said:sp3ctre said:Jembo said:....& then there’s the European Chanpions league where we can’t participate.
Do you have a source for that. I thought it was similar to the Ryder Cup, totally separate from the EU?
Scaremongering again.:wink:
Not that I give a $hit about football.
Jembo said:srhutch said:sp3ctre said:Do you have a source for that. I thought it was similar to the Ryder Cup, totally separate from the EU?
Scaremongering again.:wink:
Not that I give a $hit about football.
Evening - I now work for a French firm who’re footie mad - the comment has been made a few times by those I work with so not substantiated unlike the rest.
exdos said:The real problem with Brexit is that the negotiations for leaving have a two year period which ceases on 29th March 2019. The EU always takes negotiations to the 59th minute of the 11th hour so until that time comes, nobody will know what has yet to be agreed.
Unfortunately, the media is wanting to report everything as a blow-by-blow event throughout this 2 year period and this is really winding people up and most are now either bored stiff with it, or scared of an uncertain future.
The British establishment will actually be running the UK gameplan, rather than it being the scheme of TM and a few other Tories, and as such all the UK negotiations will be intended to run the clock down until 29th March 2019 when the EU will eventually claim that miracles have been performed and an agreement has been reached with the UK. The UK has played a masterstroke by putting £39bn on the table at an early stage for the EU to lose if it doesn't do a deal which is acceptable to the UK at the end.
The UK is the second biggest contributor into the EU's coffers and the EU is making Brexit as difficult as possible for us to deter any of the other contributing countries (particularly France and Holland) from attempting to leave. The smaller EU countries which have been latterly admitted are invariably net recipients of our money and so enjoy the benefits that our contributions provide. The EU will have a big blackhole in its funds when the UK leaves which will put huge financial pressure onto the economies of Germany and France mainly to provide the shortfall. The EU will not want trading with the UK to be reduced, of which the EU economies are beneficiaries, because that would put further pressure on the Germans, particularly, to continue and increase financial support to the EU to supplement the UK's former contributions. Therefore, a No Deal scenario from the EU perspective must be unimaginable.
The EU wants the "backstop" in place, or any other delaying tactic, so that until the UK eventually leaves the EU, we would still have to keep making annual payments into the EU's coffers. Th EU does not relish the UK making a clean break because our contributions would cease immediately. In the game of brinksmanship being payed out, the UK must show the EU right up to 29th March 2019 that we are prepared to do a No Deal Brexit, where all contributions to the EU immediately cease, that they will not receive £39bn and that future trade with the UK would be reduced thereafter.
What is wrong with Europe getting back to being a straightforward trading arrangement as it was before Maastricht?
You've hit the nail on the head with the term "mission creep". But what is the mission of the EU?Smartbear said:I think the mission creep that happened after Maastricht has been the death knell for an EU that became to big for its (EU approved) boots.
Rob
Vornwend said:In 2016 (last published data that I could find) the UK was the third largest contributor at 13.5% behind France 16.6% and Germany 19%

ronk said:It’s all a pigs breakfast!
ronk said:You only have to watch/listen to the juvenile antics of our elected representatives in parliament to see how this debacle is going!
obewan said:Winds me up all the time - If I behaved like that in a meeting at work, I'd be sackedronk said:You only have to watch/listen to the juvenile antics of our elected representatives in parliament to see how this debacle is going!
griffnut said:In 2016 we had a YES or NO vote to stay in EU. As we all know, the vote result was NO - now some people wan't a Second vote because it was the wrong result in the first vote (given the wrong information etc).
Jembo said:griffnut said:In 2016 we had a YES or NO vote to stay in EU. As we all know, the vote result was NO - now some people wan't a Second vote because it was the wrong result in the first vote (given the wrong information etc).
The point of a ‘second vote’ is to confirm whether the people are happy with May’s deal, because Brussels won’t budge anymore.
Yes or No.
IF the people’s answer is YES, we go ahead with May’s Brexit - as a remainer I would have to accept this.
IF the answer is NO, then & only then a second choice then comes in of HARD BREXIT or REMAIN
This is the point of a second people’s vote...
Jembo said:The point of a ‘second vote’ is to confirm whether the people are happy with May’s deal, because Brussels won’t budge anymore.
etc.
exdos said:Jembo said:The point of a ‘second vote’ is to confirm whether the people are happy with May’s deal, because Brussels won’t budge anymore.
etc.
The ballot paper for the 2016 Referendum gave each voter the choice of either: Remain a member of the European Union, or Leave the European Union. Those voting to Leave the EU were in the majority, so in our democracy, our Parliament then set about following the will of the People. Parliament then voted 498 to 114 (81.3%) in favour of triggering Article 50 when it did, as per the will of the People, which means that we will no longer be members of the EU after 29th March 2019.
What the UK and the EU have been negotiating is the Exit Terms of the UK leaving the EU, and the EU is unwilling to negotiate future trading terms between itself and the UK until after the UK is no longer a member of the EU. A so-called "No Deal" Brexit has always been the scenario that will take place on 30th March 2019 and thereafter. That is Plan A and there is no place or reason to have a second "people's vote" or to do anything to change the date of our leaving the EU.
The EU is hoping like hell that the UK electorate will get "cold feet" and then Parliament will either i.) seek an extension of Article 50, or ii.) will withdraw Article 50 and permanently remain in the EU. If either of those 2 situations occur, then the EU is guaranteed to continue to receive payments to the EU, which is the reason the EU really wants the UK, as the 2nd largest net contributor to its budget, to remain in the bloc. The EU is reliant on the fear of the unknown for the UK population to make us change our minds.
However, if we do not sign up to the present Agreement on offer, on 30th March 2019 there is no Irish backstop in place, and the UK has no intention of putting a hard border between NI (UK territory) and the ROI (EU territory). Therefore if the EU requires a hard border then it is its prerogative to do so. Without there being any backstop terms for future trading negotiations, the UK and EU will be negotiating as "equals" which will pressurise the EU to agree deals with some haste, rather than being able to use a backstop as a means of blackmailing the UK.
The EU may wish to make trading somewhat difficult between the UK and the rest of the EU, but to do so would be economic madness and I'm sure that EU businesses will not tolerate the EU, in receipt of their money, to do this. Likewise if the EU do try to make life somewhat uncomfortable for us, I am sure that the UK could find many ways of retaliating.
At the end of the day, the EU has Article 8 of the Lisbon Treaty which states:
" The Union shall develop a special relationship with neighbouring countries, aiming to establish an area of prosperity and good neighbourliness, founded on the values of the Union and characterised by close and peaceful relations based on cooperation."
Perhaps Trump was right when he said that the UK should sue the EU?
Smartbear said:Jembo said:griffnut said:In 2016 we had a YES or NO vote to stay in EU. As we all know, the vote result was NO - now some people wan't a Second vote because it was the wrong result in the first vote (given the wrong information etc).
The point of a ‘second vote’ is to confirm whether the people are happy with May’s deal, because Brussels won’t budge anymore.
Yes or No.
IF the people’s answer is YES, we go ahead with May’s Brexit - as a remainer I would have to accept this.
IF the answer is NO, then & only then a second choice then comes in of HARD BREXIT or REMAIN
This is the point of a second people’s vote...
Remain shouldn’t be on the menu at all, that option was defeated in the referendum, so it should be Mays deal or leave & sort ourselves out with the rest of the world in my opinion![]()
Rob
