quadraginta
Becoming Beth
Brexit will be a Great Leap Forward.![]()
While ignoring that giant cliff...
How better to make a Great Leap?
Brexit will be a Great Leap Forward.![]()
While ignoring that giant cliff...
Tensions boiled over in Brussels as the EU accused Britain of failing to reveal its hand on the financial settlement. UK officials hit back at the EU, saying some claims for money had no legal basis.
And now the negotiations are beginning to get serious:
https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2017/aug/30/uk-tells-brussels-negotiators-their-brexit-bill-sums-do-not-add-up
It's difficult to see how this particular circle can be squared.
And now the negotiations are beginning to get serious:
https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2017/aug/30/uk-tells-brussels-negotiators-their-brexit-bill-sums-do-not-add-up
It's difficult to see how this particular circle can be squared.
And now the negotiations are beginning to get serious:
https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2017/aug/30/uk-tells-brussels-negotiators-their-brexit-bill-sums-do-not-add-up
It's difficult to see how this particular circle can be squared.
The EU could start by presenting an itemized bill. At the moment they're asking us to agree to pay whatever, still-to-be-announced, sum of money they will eventually ask for.
It's an example of the hopeless bureaucracy of the EU that they're unable to pin down the likely size of the bill to an accuracy of tens of billions of Euros. I can appreciate that the final bill may vary depending on the eventual leaving date - but they should at least be able to define the formula.
That might be literally the reality if the UK simply crashes out of the negotiations, as ceptimus has been hopefully suggesting.
The UK only produces 54% of the food it consumes and imports 27% from the EU. No more Dutch tomatoes for you! They'll turn stale while the trucks stand in line in Dover waiting for the understaffed customs. And of the Dutch and German and Danish pigs you import, half will die from the stress while waiting at customs and the other half declared unfit for consumption at the slaughterhouse due to increased hormone levels.
Etcetera etcetera.
But hey, everything to achieve that Dunkirk spirit? Has Davis already taken steps to design rationing coupons?![]()
How better to make a Great Leap?
The EU could start by presenting an itemized bill. At the moment they're asking us to agree to pay whatever, still-to-be-announced, sum of money they will eventually ask for.
It's an example of the hopeless bureaucracy of the EU that they're unable to pin down the likely size of the bill to an accuracy of tens of billions of Euros. I can appreciate that the final bill may vary depending on the eventual leaving date - but they should at least be able to define the formula.
According to the UK representatives in the negotiations, the EU has presented an itemised bill - as evidenced by the fact the UK delegation think that some of those line items are unjustified. OTOH the UK delegation has apparently presented nothing concrete.
The EU has presented an outline of what it thinks Britain's "obligations" are, but has not attached a monetary value to them. People will vary as to whether this counts as a "bill" or not.
The UK government starting point, as I understand it, is that almost none of the "obligations" meet the definition of a legal liability under the treaties, but they are prepared to negotiate voluntary contributions. The level of these contributions to be linked to the attractiveness of the post-exit agreements.
The main liability that I understand that the UK has effectively agreed to is the unfunded pension payments for EU staff.
That's not really a surprise.He said negotiations are still "quite far" away from being in a position to begin talks on future trade arrangements.
He also said there were issues of "trust" between the two sides.
Ah yes, "more imaginative". Davis wants to negotiate in cuckoo-lala-land.But UK Brexit Secretary David Davis urged the EU to be "more imaginative and flexible" in its approach.
Wow. This is so crazy.
The EU position paper on the financial settlement is here:
https://ec.europa.eu/commission/sit...tial-principles-financial_settlement_en_2.pdf
It was published a week before the negotiations started. Over 10 weeks ago!
It's been half a year since the British government invoked article 50 and only now they are beginning to actually engage with the issues.
These fantasy stories you make up about the EU may make you feel really smart and superior but reality doesn't go away.
Breaking news on the BBC website:
That's not really a surprise.
Ah yes, "more imaginative". Davis wants to negotiate in cuckoo-lala-land.
ETA: I hope I don't breach the MA by quoting 3 of the 4 sentences of the page...
No total there. For it even to be worth discussing, it needs to have an amount. It could say something like, "If the UK does leave on {date} then the amount payable will be {x billions of Euros}. Should the leaving date be postponed then the amount is likely to increase/decrease by {y millions of Euros per calendar month}"
No. I want the EU to begin the negotiation by presenting an itemized bill. I already said that so you're being deliberately obtuse. Once an itemized bill is on the table, the negotiators can go through it item by item and agree/disagree/modify each item till a consensus is reached.So crazy...
You want the EU to dictate to the UK. No discussion about the obligations, just a fixed number that is to be payed, or else.
Except you were outraged when you falsely believed the EU was doing that.
No. I want the EU to begin the negotiation by presenting an itemized bill. I already said that so you're being deliberately obtuse. Once an itemized bill is on the table, the negotiators can go through it item by item and agree/disagree/modify each item till a consensus is reached.
If that's really the case, you will be able to tell me the amount payable if the UK leaves on the earliest possible date. I've not seen any such hard figure. The figures bandied about seem to range anywhere between about forty billion Euros and a hundred billion. They need to narrow that range a good deal before they can expect us to begin serious negotiation about it....which has been done as far if the UK delegation's reports are to be believed
Meanwhile the UK is doing almost literally no prep.
If that's really the case, you will be able to tell me the amount payable if the UK leaves on the earliest possible date. I've not seen any such hard figure. The figures bandied about seem to range anywhere between about forty billion Euros and a hundred billion. They need to narrow that range a good deal before they can expect us to begin serious negotiation about it.
No. I want the EU to begin the negotiation by presenting an itemized bill. I already said that so you're being deliberately obtuse. Once an itemized bill is on the table, the negotiators can go through it item by item and agree/disagree/modify each item till a consensus is reached.