Hubert Cumberdale
Graduate Poster
- Joined
- Sep 18, 2008
- Messages
- 1,141
The open border between Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland existed long before the EU.
The UK has pledged repeatedly that it won't build a hard border - this would be in breach of the Good Friday agreement (which again was not primarily an EU matter).
The EU is being presumptive in the extreme by suggesting that the UK now needs a new legal commitment to not erect a hard border. It would be okay if the EU were prepared to do the same - if they're not it's just another example of the sort of bully-boy tactics the EU likes to engage in and just one more reason why it's a good thing that the UK is leaving.
I'm pretty sure this has been explained to you many times before, but since you're hard of learning, I'll do it again.
WTO rules state that unless you have an FTA or are in a CUSTOMS UNION then the tariffs you impose on any WTO member must be applied to all other WTO members.
Thus, there has to be a hard border if there is no FTA or Customs Union because both the UK and the EU would be in breach of the WTO rules you leavers are so fond of.
Is this even registering with you?
How have you not internalized this yet?