http://www.independent.co.uk/voices...-lies-350m-nhs-deception-brexit-a7955836.html
Interesting editorial comparing Trump, Johnson, and Maxwell
Interesting editorial comparing Trump, Johnson, and Maxwell
I take that point. However the RoI will, after Brexit, be in an area of free within EU travel and the UK will not. Before the establishment of the EU there was no arrangement of that kind.
So it's not now a question only of "British and Irish citizens", is it?
Boris wades in again.
We're heading for a diamond hard Brexit
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-41441444
As others have said, it's all about the Tory leadership and **** the country
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Also, please don't call Boris. It makes him sound like a cute and loveable teddy bear, rather than a backstabbing shyster who would throw his country under a bus to further his own political career.![]()
@quadraginta: you forgot the wodka vat that doubled as the first post-Soviet president of Russia.
Fair enough about the first, but as to the second, Yeltsin != Putin.No, because he isn't what comes to mind for me with the name "Boris". I mean, I know his name is Boris, but I don't think of him that way. To me he is "Putin".
Fair enough about the first, but as to the second, Yeltsin != Putin.
Liam Fox promises that we will get 40 new trade deals outside the EU, the minute we leave:
http://uk.businessinsider.com/liam-...e-trade-deals-the-second-after-brexit-2017-10
While I hope he's right (surely he couldn't have legally got anything in writing, as we are still technically in the EU), we would still need a trade deal with the EU what with it being a major source of trade, and being rather close by.
Liam Fox promises that we will get 40 new trade deals outside the EU, the minute we leave:
http://uk.businessinsider.com/liam-...e-trade-deals-the-second-after-brexit-2017-10
While I hope he's right (surely he couldn't have legally got anything in writing, as we are still technically in the EU), we would still need a trade deal with the EU what with it being a major source of trade, and being rather close by.
However, it could also signify resistance from “third countries” outside the EU to allow the U.K. to simply roll over the same terms and conditions negotiated by the EU, a bloc with almost seven times the number of consumers. Countries such as Japan, South Korea and Switzerland — significant economies with existing trade deals with Brussels — may hope to extract more concessions from the U.K. than they are able to from the EU.
Fox, though, is adamant the future is positive for the U.K., even if new trading relationships take longer for his department to negotiate than first imagined.
Even if true, I wonder if the terms of those trade deals are better, the same, or worse than we enjoyed with those same countries/organisations while we have been in the EU.
Trade deals typically take years, if not decades, to thrash out. Unless the trade deals Liam Fox is promising are very narrow or very vague then the only way I can see it working is if 40 countries agree to deal with the UK on the same current terms as EU members (in which case we'll have the same deal, and be under the same obligations as an EU member).
That still leaves the thorny issue of divergence. If the EU updates their deal with one of those countries, will the UK have to follow suit ? This is a particularly thorny issue when it comes down to standards and certification. The UK sells widgets to Country X based on the Country X/EU widget standard. Country X and the EU comes to an agreement to update the widget standard, the UK has to follow suit or risk losing a market.
Copy & paste is the only way not to violate the EU treaties and still be able to do that "within seconds" of leaving the EU. And if he means it literally, it implies they're static and don't follow the EU trade arrangements.The Secretary of State for International Trade insisted the UK would easily be able to copy and paste all 40 of the EU's external trade deals "the second after midnight" on Brexit day in March 2019.
"We're going to replicate the 40 EU free trade agreements that exist before we leave the European Union so we've got no disruption of trade," Fox told a Conservative party fringe event in Manchester.
It's the number of EU trade deals. So he's confident he can replicate them all? I like to know what he's smoking.It also assumes that countries will be willing to roll deals over (it's interesting that the number quoted in this article from early September - 40 - is the same).
From that link:http://www.politico.eu/article/brex...n-does-not-have-capacity-to-strike-deals-now/
As ever, of course, the elephants in the room will be the EU and the US which between them account for 60% of UK exports.
Isn't that in violation with the EU treaties?The U.K. and the U.S. have set up a trade working group to lay the groundwork for an agreement which could be signed soon after Britain’s exit in March 2019.
Isn't that in violation with the EU treaties?
"Talk" can still be dismissed as informal, but setting up a formal working group somehow feels like crossing a line.Don't know. I guess they're not actually agreeing a trade deal and signing on the dotted line, but Fox has been discussing trade deals for some time all over the world.
It sounds like he can talk about these things, but whether he get an agreement set up and signed, dated to start straight after Brexit is something that would need to be confirmed.
The BusinessInsider link said:
I think that Liam Fox is out of his tiny mind if he think all 40 countries will give the UK the same sweet deal as the EU but in any case, we were repeatedly told that we would have better trade deals post-Brexit, not deals which are the same, but maybe a little bit worse![]()
You don't say? I'm shocked. Shocked!It's almost as if the whole Leave campaign and the entire Brexit process is completely riddled with lies......![]()