catsmate
No longer the 1
- Joined
- Apr 9, 2007
- Messages
- 34,788
Hopefully not in Genoa.Also, I've recently come into possession of a bridge and am entertaining offers.
Hopefully not in Genoa.Also, I've recently come into possession of a bridge and am entertaining offers.
Hopefully not in Genoa.
Too soon?
It looks like there is going to be a judicial review of Brexit from today's news. I don't know if it will just lead nowhere as usual:
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/brex...it-legal-challenge/ar-BBM2TVV?ocid=spartanntp
Presumably we will set up new departments to administer the process.
Even Belgium Customs have a site dedicated to Brexit.
https://finances.belgium.be/fr/douanes_accises/entreprises/brexit
no deal papers out
Haven't read them all but from what I can tell-
There will be a land border in Ireland and there will need to be declarations for all goods crossing that and the other borders.
Where we can maintain the status quo on financial services we will but the EU might not so EU banks and citizens can carry on here unaffected but UK banks will not be able to trade in Europe and UK citizens won't get access to their money while abroad.
Charges for using credit cards will rise.
There will be no relaxing of the state aid rules (sorry Jezza)
All new medicines will need to be approved by a UK body as well as an EU one.
All the money the EU gives us back in grants for things like farming education will in future be paid by the UK. Presumably we will set up new departments to administer the process.
Complete with English language option.
Literally the only options i see to avood chaos now are
1. stop the whole thing
2. ask for an extension to the deadline
3. negotiate some kind of BRINO deal where we would no longer be a member but keep all existing rights and obligations for a petiod of say 5 years. so effectively nothing would change
Of course all 3 of these would at a minute cost May her job so not going to happen.
It should be the "easiest in human History". Although to be fair to Liam Fox when he said that, he was working on the assumption that we would keep all the benefits and trade terms we currently have and all that was needed was for the UK to no longer pay a contribution to Brussels. How was he to know that international trade has rules about borders and tarrifs and that the EU's objective was not to cut off its nose to spite its face?Who knew Brexit was so complicated?
Speeding it up is the no deal option. We could do that tomorrow. When do you think the UK economy would recover from that? Rees Mogg suggested 50 years.Extension will only prolong the pain. There was a two year interval from triggering Article 50 till leaving, but now here we are seven months remaining and people crying that there's not enough time left to prepare. If there's an extension of a year, or two, or three the same thing will happen over again. Get on with it.