Howdy, Stranger!

It looks like you're new here. Sign in or register to get started.

politicalbetting.com » Blog Archive » Now you can bet on how many LAB MPs will quit as during 2017

124

Comments

  • PongPong Posts: 4,693
    edited January 2017
    Really interesting May has chosen to leak the speech.

    Some mega spinning going on.

  • Scott_PScott_P Posts: 51,453
    SeanT said:

    Yes. In purely political terms (wherever you stand on Brexit) the timing is right.

    Depends on the size of the "market correction".

    How big would it have to be for the Brexiteers in Government to get the collywobbles?
  • AlastairMeeksAlastairMeeks Posts: 30,340
    SeanT said:

    We really are OUT. It's quite a THING.

    Some of us have been saying for months that soft and even semi-soft Brexit were non-starters. And now you're excited because your preferred and fallback forms of Brexit, touted as recently as 24 hours ago, have been ruled out? You're too pitiful to mock.
  • foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548

    The timing is interesting. Before the Supreme Court and within days of Trump taking office. Perhaps she's trying to create maximum panic in Brussels.

    Why would Brussels panic? May has just agreed to their negotiating position on Hard Brexit.

  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 53,267
    John_M said:

    This is just stating directly what she's hinted at in every speech from the beginning. I still think it's fundamentally a negotiation bluff, and the market reaction will be very interesting to watch.

    I think it's positioning as the article implies. We'd love to stay in the Single Market (the 'Have Cake, Eat Cake' gambit), but if FoM is truly non-negotiable, then we're prepared to, and will, leave it ('with heavy hearts due to EU27 intransigence').
    It's the correct negotiating position.

    It's also the correct political position.

  • frpenkridgefrpenkridge Posts: 670
    edited January 2017
    Will crooks pinch BMWs abroad and drive them to UK?
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 53,267

    BREAKING: Nottingham Forest sack head coach Philippe Montanier:

    BREXIT has started

    There was a time we ruled Europe....
    1966 the World

    2017 not so much but barricade them borders
    I was thinking Forest.

    But I can imagine why you wouldn't think club-wide..... ;-)
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 22,770
    edited January 2017

    hence the fact that the pound lost seven cents against the dollar in the period after the October 2nd conference speech, but is only off about one cent since the Sophy Ridge interview last Sunday.

    From memory, GBP went from £1=$1.5 at 10pm when the polls closed to about £1=$1,32 in short order, then rebounded to about £1=$1.35, then after the conference speech it went to £1=$1.21 in one-two weeks, then it rebounded to around £1=$1.25 until last week until - yes - she spoke again and it went to, what, £1=$1.22?

    On an not-entirely-unrelated point, I'm plowing thru clips of "Margin Call" on youtube.

    It isn't easy viewing...
  • glw said:

    John_M said:

    This is just stating directly what she's hinted at in every speech from the beginning. I still think it's fundamentally a negotiation bluff, and the market reaction will be very interesting to watch.

    I think it's positioning as the article implies. We'd love to stay in the Single Market (the 'Have Cake, Eat Cake' gambit), but if FoM is truly non-negotiable, then we're prepared to, and will, leave it ('with heavy hearts due to EU27 intransigence').
    Indeed, the complete opposite of that muppet Cameron's negotiation 'tactics'.
    Cameron should have done this - it is good to see a British PM telling the EU for once to take it or leave it.
  • FloaterFloater Posts: 14,207
    Scott_P said:

    Good politics to get it out at the weekend and to see just how the markets react on monday and tuesday.

    However can anyone really say they did not expect this having listened to Theresa May since she became PM

    "Downing Street expect her remarks to cause a 'market correction'..."
    Obviously not Scott as we have not left yet or even triggered article 50.

    oh wait - your default argument was inconsistent and a pile of horse shit.

  • AlastairMeeksAlastairMeeks Posts: 30,340
    SeanT said:

    SeanT said:

    We really are OUT. It's quite a THING.

    Some of us have been saying for months that soft and even semi-soft Brexit were non-starters. And now you're excited because your preferred and fallback forms of Brexit, touted as recently as 24 hours ago, have been ruled out? You're too pitiful to mock.
    Heh, We're OUT!!!

    Suck it up, you creepy anal sea-cucumber.
    I realise that you would rather eat your own excrement than admit that I have been right for the last six months while you have been pitifully deluded until as recently as last night. But that, tonight, is what you have to do, in the deepest recesses of what once might have been a heart.
  • bigjohnowlsbigjohnowls Posts: 22,767

    glw said:

    John_M said:

    This is just stating directly what she's hinted at in every speech from the beginning. I still think it's fundamentally a negotiation bluff, and the market reaction will be very interesting to watch.

    I think it's positioning as the article implies. We'd love to stay in the Single Market (the 'Have Cake, Eat Cake' gambit), but if FoM is truly non-negotiable, then we're prepared to, and will, leave it ('with heavy hearts due to EU27 intransigence').
    Indeed, the complete opposite of that muppet Cameron's negotiation 'tactics'.
    Cameron should have done this - it is good to see a British PM telling the EU for once to take it or leave it.
    Except if they say take it
  • The timing is interesting. Before the Supreme Court and within days of Trump taking office. Perhaps she's trying to create maximum panic in Brussels.

    Why would Brussels panic? May has just agreed to their negotiating position on Hard Brexit.

    They will panic - the clever bit is that the PM has got her red line in first and if the EU do not negotiate the Brits will just walk away. Up to you Juncker
  • glwglw Posts: 10,011

    Cameron should have done this - it is good to see a British PM telling the EU for once to take it or leave it.

    It seems sort of obvious really, if you aren't willing to walk away you will never get a good deal. Cameron badly bungled that.
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 22,770
    isam said:
    Bless you. I've been making that joke all week and NOBODY GOT IT...
  • surbitonsurbiton Posts: 13,549

    dr_spyn said:
    We are therefore leaving the Single Market.

    This looks very much like a smokescreen, to enable/convince some soft Brexit-leaning voters to blame our departure on the EU being unreasonable, rather than the PM. In point of fact, given that May has already stated quite categorically that the "authority of EU law in Britain will end" - i.e. the UK will be removed from the jurisdiction of the ECJ - it's impossible to see how we could've remained fully engaged anyway.

    It's simple logic, really, and has been obvious for months - hence the fact that the pound lost seven cents against the dollar in the period after the October 2nd conference speech, but is only off about one cent since the Sophy Ridge interview last Sunday. The markets know that this is coming, and have already priced it in.

    (The pound will probably take another tumble this coming week now, just to spite me...)
    This hapless woman will ruin the country.
  • Scott_PScott_P Posts: 51,453
    Floater said:

    Obviously not Scott as we have not left yet or even triggered article 50.

    oh wait - your default argument was inconsistent and a pile of horse shit.

    Oh dear, I think you need to check your script...

    We have not left the EU. We are still members of every organisation that the Brexiteers said were stifling our economy and hampering growth.

    The ECJ still has jurisdiction.

    We are still "paying £350m a week" (sic)

    So the economic figures the Brexiteers are cheering are "despite" being a member of the EU. It's the remainer line that these are good things. The Brexiteers still want to throw it all away.

    Now Tezza has confirmed that throwing it all away is her default option, "Downing Street expect her remarks to cause a 'market correction'..."

    That's Downing Street expect. I am not Downing Street...
  • DromedaryDromedary Posts: 1,194
    edited January 2017

    SeanT said:

    SeanT said:

    SeanT said:

    WINE RECOMMENDATION

    For anyone on a bit of a budget, but wanting a big wine experience

    THIS:

    http://www.wine.com/v6/Concha-y-Toro-Marques-de-Casa-Concha-Syrah-2011/wine/130576/Detail.aspx?state=CA


    It tastes like a SuperTuscan, it tastes like a £30 Barossa shiraz, it has depth, fruit, power and finish, it has been in the world's top 100 wines 5 times over, and right now you can buy it for.... £9, from Ocado

    https://www.ocado.com/webshop/product/Marques-de-Casa-Concha-Syrah/231046011

    Really. BUY THIS at that price. I just got a dozen. Gorgeous wine. Open it a few hours before you drink, ideally with steak, game, funky cheeses.

    Here Endeth The Sermon.

    Chilean wine is IMO the best value in the world.
    I agree. And I've been to the Chilean winelands to see how they do it.

    It is the new Australia. They have it all: western coasts facing intriguing microclimates, lots of bright, determined wine making people, cheap land, cheapish labour, no hang-ups.

    They are now making great great wine.

    If I'd tasted this wine blind I would have priced it at £20-£30. Apparently Tesco recently offered it for £6!
    Want to know a way to annoy a lefty ?

    After giving them some nice Chilean wine say that the Chilean wine industry wouldn't exist with Pinochet and that the Pinochet family are part owners of the brand they've just been drinking.
    The Chileans understand this. They are very very ambivalent about Pinochet. He's not the Hitler figure we perceive in the West. They realise without him they could be Venezuela.
    The reason why Pinochet is hated by Western lefties is that he was successful. He was best compared to the leaders of South Korea, Taiwan etc rather than the standard Latin American dictators.
    Pinochet murdered ("disappeared") thousands, tortured tens of thousands, and exiled hundreds of thousands.

    Latin America did not lack for military strong men and other dictators oppressing their people but who were given a free pass by leftwingers in the West.

    For example this general

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Juan_Velasco_Alvarado

    who overthrew the democratically elected Peruvian government and installed himself as head of a military junta followed by the jailing of political opponents, the closure of newspapers and a massive military build-up.

    Opponents mainly bourgeois or what? What did he do that was wrong? You can't make an omelette without breaking eggs.

  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 61,257
    Delicious.

    But, as other posters have pointed out, it's the opening political and negotiating position.

    100..

    50..

    Ok, 90...

    60.. tops.

    80. Low as I'll go.

    70. Not a penny more.

    78.

    72.

    Seventy-EIGHT.

    72.

    76. Or I walk.

    Ok... deal.
  • isamisam Posts: 41,118
    edited January 2017
    I can feel the nervous anticipation of the remainers from here... 'this is what we've been waiting for... our big moment... pleeeease let it all go wrong!'
  • welshowlwelshowl Posts: 4,464

    John_M said:

    This is just stating directly what she's hinted at in every speech from the beginning. I still think it's fundamentally a negotiation bluff, and the market reaction will be very interesting to watch.

    I think it's positioning as the article implies. We'd love to stay in the Single Market (the 'Have Cake, Eat Cake' gambit), but if FoM is truly non-negotiable, then we're prepared to, and will, leave it ('with heavy hearts due to EU27 intransigence').
    It's the correct negotiating position.

    It's also the correct political position.

    Quite so. Clearly as soft as possible with FOM restrictions is essentially what we want ( well maybe minus the French racket called the CAP too), but if the EU insist that's not on (because they're terrified of "contagion" i.e. consent for the EU is wafer thin and they think too many others will look at the Brits and think "that's a good idea"), then we must be prepared to walk. That was Dave's error, everyone knew that wasn't really a possibility.

    Wonder if Boris's trip to the US last week was a nudge to a harder option (IF this report is true), if the US really is very keen on a deal? Trump to mention in passing on Friday?
  • surbiton said:

    dr_spyn said:
    We are therefore leaving the Single Market.

    This looks very much like a smokescreen, to enable/convince some soft Brexit-leaning voters to blame our departure on the EU being unreasonable, rather than the PM. In point of fact, given that May has already stated quite categorically that the "authority of EU law in Britain will end" - i.e. the UK will be removed from the jurisdiction of the ECJ - it's impossible to see how we could've remained fully engaged anyway.

    It's simple logic, really, and has been obvious for months - hence the fact that the pound lost seven cents against the dollar in the period after the October 2nd conference speech, but is only off about one cent since the Sophy Ridge interview last Sunday. The markets know that this is coming, and have already priced it in.

    (The pound will probably take another tumble this coming week now, just to spite me...)
    This hapless woman will ruin the country.
    She may just do the opposite - no one knows how this will play
  • Scott_PScott_P Posts: 51,453
    isam said:

    I can feel the nervous anticipation of the remainers from here... 'this is what we've been waiting for... our big moment... pleeeease let it all go wrong!'

    Compared to the Brexiteers like SeanT?

    "This is not what I want, this is not what I want, this is not what I want. THIS IS THE BEST THING EVER!!!!!!!!"

    There will be tears...
  • Scott_PScott_P Posts: 51,453
    @BethRigby: Out of single market/customs union/ECJ jurisdiction. May also wants 'transitional deal' (as per her promise to bis of avoiding cliff edge) twitter.com/hendopolis/sta…

    Ummmm, is Tezza willing to walk away, or has she promised Bis (Nissan) something else?
  • Has SeanT just been banned ???
  • isamisam Posts: 41,118
    Scott_P said:

    isam said:

    I can feel the nervous anticipation of the remainers from here... 'this is what we've been waiting for... our big moment... pleeeease let it all go wrong!'

    Compared to the Brexiteers like SeanT?

    "This is not what I want, this is not what I want, this is not what I want. THIS IS THE BEST THING EVER!!!!!!!!"

    There will be tears...
    Looks as though there have been some...
  • Floater said:
    The EU is desperate, May has smelt blood and is going for the kill.
  • John_MJohn_M Posts: 7,503
    Scott_P said:

    @BethRigby: Out of single market/customs union/ECJ jurisdiction. May also wants 'transitional deal' (as per her promise to bis of avoiding cliff edge) twitter.com/hendopolis/sta…

    Ummmm, is Tezza willing to walk away, or has she promised Bis (Nissan) something else?

    She's allegedly promised Nissan tariff support & compensation for NTBs iirc.
  • Scott_PScott_P Posts: 51,453

    The EU is desperate, May has smelt blood and is going for the kill.

    Has the boss of Nissan been on the phone yet?
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 124,696
    welshowl said:

    John_M said:

    This is just stating directly what she's hinted at in every speech from the beginning. I still think it's fundamentally a negotiation bluff, and the market reaction will be very interesting to watch.

    I think it's positioning as the article implies. We'd love to stay in the Single Market (the 'Have Cake, Eat Cake' gambit), but if FoM is truly non-negotiable, then we're prepared to, and will, leave it ('with heavy hearts due to EU27 intransigence').
    It's the correct negotiating position.

    It's also the correct political position.

    Quite so. Clearly as soft as possible with FOM restrictions is essentially what we want ( well maybe minus the French racket called the CAP too), but if the EU insist that's not on (because they're terrified of "contagion" i.e. consent for the EU is wafer thin and they think too many others will look at the Brits and think "that's a good idea"), then we must be prepared to walk. That was Dave's error, everyone knew that wasn't really a possibility.

    Wonder if Boris's trip to the US last week was a nudge to a harder option (IF this report is true), if the US really is very keen on a deal? Trump to mention in passing on Friday?
    Trump's likely EU Ambassador, Ted Malloch, has today not only suggested a trade deal will be offered to the UK but other bilateral agreements will be offered to individual EU nations with the US scrapping the proposed EU-US trade deal
    http://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/we-can-be-your-rich-uncle-us-envoy-tells-britain-2d9rdln79
  • DromedaryDromedary Posts: 1,194
    edited January 2017
    Hard Brexit plus independent Scotland in EU => customs posts on the border and Brits who aren't Scottish citizens needing visas to go to Scotland, so you couldn't blame rUK for requiring Scots who petulantly renounced their British citizenship to get visas to come to England. The border would be a hard external EU one. Hardly anyone in Scotland wants that crap, other than a few bottomfeeders thinking they'd get big grants from the EU.

    It would be funny to watch Scottish nationalists whinge about Brussels rather than London telling them what to do, making them clean up their rooms, etc., but seriously nobody is going to vote YesNP in a second independence referendum.
  • Scott_PScott_P Posts: 51,453
    John_M said:

    She's allegedly promised Nissan tariff support & compensation for NTBs iirc.

    If we are out of the customs union, that will be expensive. Very expensive.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 124,696
    surbiton said:

    dr_spyn said:
    We are therefore leaving the Single Market.

    This looks very much like a smokescreen, to enable/convince some soft Brexit-leaning voters to blame our departure on the EU being unreasonable, rather than the PM. In point of fact, given that May has already stated quite categorically that the "authority of EU law in Britain will end" - i.e. the UK will be removed from the jurisdiction of the ECJ - it's impossible to see how we could've remained fully engaged anyway.

    It's simple logic, really, and has been obvious for months - hence the fact that the pound lost seven cents against the dollar in the period after the October 2nd conference speech, but is only off about one cent since the Sophy Ridge interview last Sunday. The markets know that this is coming, and have already priced it in.

    (The pound will probably take another tumble this coming week now, just to spite me...)
    This hapless woman will ruin the country.
    No she represents the country, who by 41% to 32% according to Opinium tonight put ending free movement to the UK ahead of access to the single market (though May will obviously still try and get as much access as she can to the latter)
  • foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548
    edited January 2017

    The timing is interesting. Before the Supreme Court and within days of Trump taking office. Perhaps she's trying to create maximum panic in Brussels.

    Why would Brussels panic? May has just agreed to their negotiating position on Hard Brexit.

    They will panic - the clever bit is that the PM has got her red line in first and if the EU do not negotiate the Brits will just walk away. Up to you Juncker
    So she concedes everything to the EU and agrees with their baseline, and that is victory?

    Nothing left to concede should make the rest of the negotiations easy!
  • I have been warning for a while not to judge TM until her speech this month.

    If the reports are true she is decisive and willing to make the tough decisions.

    This will have problems with MP's who are predominantly remain but should go down very well with the voters
  • PongPong Posts: 4,693
    edited January 2017
    isam said:

    I can feel the nervous anticipation of the remainers from here... 'this is what we've been waiting for... our big moment... pleeeease let it all go wrong!'

    I really hope it doesn't go wrong.

    But the odds of it going right are very long indeed.

    Ask any expert.
  • John_MJohn_M Posts: 7,503
    Scott_P said:

    John_M said:

    She's allegedly promised Nissan tariff support & compensation for NTBs iirc.

    If we are out of the customs union, that will be expensive. Very expensive.
    The UK will have quite a large tariff income due to our colossal trade deficit with the EU27. Too tired to see if anyone has run the numbers based on the current CET, but I'll have a butchers tomorrow.
  • bigjohnowlsbigjohnowls Posts: 22,767

    Delicious.

    But, as other posters have pointed out, it's the opening political and negotiating position.

    100..

    50..

    Ok, 90...

    60.. tops.

    80. Low as I'll go.

    70. Not a penny more.

    78.

    72.

    Seventy-EIGHT.

    72.

    76. Or I walk.

    Ok... deal.

    But May aint good with numbers less than 100k ends up as 335k
  • chestnutchestnut Posts: 7,341
    edited January 2017
    isam said:
    I thought I was popping Out, and before I knew it I was Out Out.....

    (and the Out Out days/nights/nights-that-blur-into-days are always the most memorable and enjoyable)
  • Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 64,124
    edited January 2017

    The timing is interesting. Before the Supreme Court and within days of Trump taking office. Perhaps she's trying to create maximum panic in Brussels.

    Why would Brussels panic? May has just agreed to their negotiating position on Hard Brexit.

    They will panic - the clever bit is that the PM has got her red line in first and if the EU do not negotiate the Brits will just walk away. Up to you Juncker
    So she concedes everything to the EU and agrees with their baseline, and that is victory?

    Nothing left to concede should make the rest of the negotiations easy!
    I thought you wanted out anyway. The EU will be in panic - make no mistake they have 100 billion of trade and jobs on this.

    If the report tonight is true that the US will only do individual trade deals with individual EU nations they will be in even more of a panic
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 124,696

    The timing is interesting. Before the Supreme Court and within days of Trump taking office. Perhaps she's trying to create maximum panic in Brussels.

    Why would Brussels panic? May has just agreed to their negotiating position on Hard Brexit.

    They will panic - the clever bit is that the PM has got her red line in first and if the EU do not negotiate the Brits will just walk away. Up to you Juncker
    So she concedes everything to the EU and agrees with their baseline, and that is victory?

    Nothing left to concede should make the rest of the negotiations easy!
    No, conceding everything would be agreeing to leave free movement exactly as now in order to keep full single market membership
  • John_MJohn_M Posts: 7,503
    HYUFD said:

    surbiton said:

    dr_spyn said:
    We are therefore leaving the Single Market.

    This looks very much like a smokescreen, to enable/convince some soft Brexit-leaning voters to blame our departure on the EU being unreasonable, rather than the PM. In point of fact, given that May has already stated quite categorically that the "authority of EU law in Britain will end" - i.e. the UK will be removed from the jurisdiction of the ECJ - it's impossible to see how we could've remained fully engaged anyway.

    It's simple logic, really, and has been obvious for months - hence the fact that the pound lost seven cents against the dollar in the period after the October 2nd conference speech, but is only off about one cent since the Sophy Ridge interview last Sunday. The markets know that this is coming, and have already priced it in.

    (The pound will probably take another tumble this coming week now, just to spite me...)
    This hapless woman will ruin the country.
    No she represents the country, who by 41% to 32% according to Opinium tonight put ending free movement to the UK ahead of access to the single market (though May will obviously still try and get as much access as she can to the latter)
    The trouble is that most people (including, apparently, journalists and politicians) wouldn't recognise the Single Market if it bit them on the arse. Sir Humphrey would be beside himself.
  • Pong said:

    isam said:

    I can feel the nervous anticipation of the remainers from here... 'this is what we've been waiting for... our big moment... pleeeease let it all go wrong!'

    I really hope it doesn't go wrong.

    But the odds of it going right are very long indeed.

    Ask any expert.
    Are you serious - ask an expert
  • Scott_PScott_P Posts: 51,453
    John_M said:

    The UK will have quite a large tariff income due to our colossal trade deficit with the EU27. Too tired to see if anyone has run the numbers based on the current CET, but I'll have a butchers tomorrow.

    That's not really the problem. It's the supply chain.

    As discussed previously, 50% of a Jag comes in boxes from Germany. Tariffs would be bad, but getting stuck in customs for a day while the paperwork is checked would kill the supply chain.

    Without the customs union, car manufacturing is in deep, deep trouble
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 22,770
    John_M said:

    Scott_P said:

    John_M said:

    She's allegedly promised Nissan tariff support & compensation for NTBs iirc.

    If we are out of the customs union, that will be expensive. Very expensive.
    The UK will have quite a large tariff income due to our colossal trade deficit with the EU27. Too tired to see if anyone has run the numbers based on the current CET, but I'll have a butchers tomorrow.
    TARIFFS. ARE. NOT. INCOME. THEY. ARE. COSTS.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 124,696
    John_M said:

    HYUFD said:

    surbiton said:

    dr_spyn said:
    We are therefore leaving the Single Market.

    This looks very much like a smokescreen, to enable/convince some soft Brexit-leaning voters to blame our departure on the EU being unreasonable, rather than the PM. In point of fact, given that May has already stated quite categorically that the "authority of EU law in Britain will end" - i.e. the UK will be removed from the jurisdiction of the ECJ - it's impossible to see how we could've remained fully engaged anyway.

    It's simple logic, really, and has been obvious for months - hence the fact that the pound lost seven cents against the dollar in the period after the October 2nd conference speech, but is only off about one cent since the Sophy Ridge interview last Sunday. The markets know that this is coming, and have already priced it in.

    (The pound will probably take another tumble this coming week now, just to spite me...)
    This hapless woman will ruin the country.
    No she represents the country, who by 41% to 32% according to Opinium tonight put ending free movement to the UK ahead of access to the single market (though May will obviously still try and get as much access as she can to the latter)
    The trouble is that most people (including, apparently, journalists and politicians) wouldn't recognise the Single Market if it bit them on the arse. Sir Humphrey would be beside himself.
    They do recognise though that they voted Leave to get back sovereignty and control of UK borders and they are not going to give that up
  • John_MJohn_M Posts: 7,503
    HYUFD said:

    John_M said:

    HYUFD said:

    surbiton said:

    dr_spyn said:
    We are therefore leaving the Single Market.

    This looks very much like a smokescreen, to enable/convince some soft Brexit-leaning voters to blame our departure on the EU being unreasonable, rather than the PM. In point of fact, given that May has already stated quite categorically that the "authority of EU law in Britain will end" - i.e. the UK will be removed from the jurisdiction of the ECJ - it's impossible to see how we could've remained fully engaged anyway.

    It's simple logic, really, and has been obvious for months - hence the fact that the pound lost seven cents against the dollar in the period after the October 2nd conference speech, but is only off about one cent since the Sophy Ridge interview last Sunday. The markets know that this is coming, and have already priced it in.

    (The pound will probably take another tumble this coming week now, just to spite me...)
    This hapless woman will ruin the country.
    No she represents the country, who by 41% to 32% according to Opinium tonight put ending free movement to the UK ahead of access to the single market (though May will obviously still try and get as much access as she can to the latter)
    The trouble is that most people (including, apparently, journalists and politicians) wouldn't recognise the Single Market if it bit them on the arse. Sir Humphrey would be beside himself.
    They do recognise though that they voted Leave to get back sovereignty and control of UK borders and they are not going to give that up
    Oh yes, I do agree with that. I voted to leave reluctantly (worried about the economy), felt it was in our medium-long term interest, but May is clearly primed for a cleaner Brexit than I'd hoped.
  • PongPong Posts: 4,693
    edited January 2017

    Pong said:

    isam said:

    I can feel the nervous anticipation of the remainers from here... 'this is what we've been waiting for... our big moment... pleeeease let it all go wrong!'

    I really hope it doesn't go wrong.

    But the odds of it going right are very long indeed.

    Ask any expert.
    Are you serious - ask an expert
    Very serious.

    Standards of living will very likely take a big hit.

    Serious social unrest is quite likely.
  • Pong said:

    Pong said:

    isam said:

    I can feel the nervous anticipation of the remainers from here... 'this is what we've been waiting for... our big moment... pleeeease let it all go wrong!'

    I really hope it doesn't go wrong.

    But the odds of it going right are very long indeed.

    Ask any expert.
    Are you serious - ask an expert
    I was being sarcastic.
    Sorry - good on you
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 22,770

    The timing is interesting. Before the Supreme Court and within days of Trump taking office. Perhaps she's trying to create maximum panic in Brussels.

    Why would Brussels panic? May has just agreed to their negotiating position on Hard Brexit.

    They will panic - the clever bit is that the PM has got her red line in first and if the EU do not negotiate the Brits will just walk away. Up to you Juncker
    So she concedes everything to the EU and agrees with their baseline, and that is victory?

    Nothing left to concede should make the rest of the negotiations easy!
    I thought you wanted out anyway. The EU will be in panic - make no mistake they have 100 billion of trade and jobs on this.

    If the report tonight is true that the US will only do individual trade deals with individual EU nations they will be in even more of a panic
    I genuinely don't care about whether the EU panic or not: it's not my problem. I do care if British interests are fucked up. Leaving the single market and the customs union will make life more difficult in Britain for British people. That's important.
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 78,654
    viewcode said:

    John_M said:

    Scott_P said:

    John_M said:

    She's allegedly promised Nissan tariff support & compensation for NTBs iirc.

    If we are out of the customs union, that will be expensive. Very expensive.
    The UK will have quite a large tariff income due to our colossal trade deficit with the EU27. Too tired to see if anyone has run the numbers based on the current CET, but I'll have a butchers tomorrow.
    TARIFFS. ARE. NOT. INCOME. THEY. ARE. COSTS.
    One man's income are another man's costs though...
  • Why has SeanT been banned?
  • John_MJohn_M Posts: 7,503
    Pulpstar said:

    viewcode said:

    John_M said:

    Scott_P said:

    John_M said:

    She's allegedly promised Nissan tariff support & compensation for NTBs iirc.

    If we are out of the customs union, that will be expensive. Very expensive.
    The UK will have quite a large tariff income due to our colossal trade deficit with the EU27. Too tired to see if anyone has run the numbers based on the current CET, but I'll have a butchers tomorrow.
    TARIFFS. ARE. NOT. INCOME. THEY. ARE. COSTS.
    One man's income are another man's costs though...
    Here's the linky for how the EU is funded. Note the bit about import duties. Night night all.

    https://europa.eu/european-union/about-eu/money/revenue-income_en
  • John_MJohn_M Posts: 7,503
    viewcode said:

    John_M said:

    Scott_P said:

    John_M said:

    She's allegedly promised Nissan tariff support & compensation for NTBs iirc.

    If we are out of the customs union, that will be expensive. Very expensive.
    The UK will have quite a large tariff income due to our colossal trade deficit with the EU27. Too tired to see if anyone has run the numbers based on the current CET, but I'll have a butchers tomorrow.
    TARIFFS. ARE. NOT. INCOME. THEY. ARE. COSTS.
    I beg to differ. I've provided a perfectly serviceable example elsewhere on thread.
  • welshowlwelshowl Posts: 4,464
    Scott_P said:

    John_M said:

    The UK will have quite a large tariff income due to our colossal trade deficit with the EU27. Too tired to see if anyone has run the numbers based on the current CET, but I'll have a butchers tomorrow.

    That's not really the problem. It's the supply chain.

    As discussed previously, 50% of a Jag comes in boxes from Germany. Tariffs would be bad, but getting stuck in customs for a day while the paperwork is checked would kill the supply chain.

    Without the customs union, car manufacturing is in deep, deep trouble
    Stock. It's a wonderful old fashioned concept. Just a couple of days worth while customs stamp the paperwork, and Bob's your uncle. Not as efficient as pure just in time delivery but maybe a Kanban could get round that pretty easily. Add in a lower corporate tax rate and a bit of "compensation " from the tariffs ( if the EU is nuts enough to introduce), or from the billions we are not then sending to Brussels and you're ok enough.

  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 124,696
    HYUFD said:

    surbiton said:

    dr_spyn said:
    We are therefore leaving the Single Market.

    This looks very much like a smokescreen, to enable/convince some soft Brexit-leaning voters to blame our departure on the EU being unreasonable, rather than the PM. In point of fact, given that May has already stated quite categorically that the "authority of EU law in Britain will end" - i.e. the UK will be removed from the jurisdiction of the ECJ - it's impossible to see how we could've remained fully engaged anyway.

    It's simple logic, really, and has been obvious for months - hence the fact that the pound lost seven cents against the dollar in the period after the October 2nd conference speech, but is only off about one cent since the Sophy Ridge interview last Sunday. The markets know that this is coming, and have already priced it in.

    (The pound will probably take another tumble this coming week now, just to spite me...)
    This hapless woman will ruin the country.
    No she represents the country, who by 41% to 32% according to Opinium tonight put ending free movement to the UK ahead of access to the single market (though May will obviously still try and get as much access as she can to the latter)
    Tories put ending free movement ahead of access to the single market by 55% to 25%, UKIP voters by 72% to 8%. Labour voters put access to the single market ahead of ending free movement by 53% to 26%, LDs by 53% to 36% and SNP by 44% to 22%.

    English voters put controlling free movement first by 42% to 31% and Welsh voters by 39% to 32% and Scots by 37% to 36% and NI voters by 32% to 29%. Looks like we may be a United Kingdom over this after all!
    http://opinium.co.uk/political-polling-10th-january-2017/
  • Scott_PScott_P Posts: 51,453
    welshowl said:

    Stock. It's a wonderful old fashioned concept.

    And fundamentally much, much more expensive, which is why nobody on the planet does it anymore.

    The madness is catching...
  • chestnutchestnut Posts: 7,341
    viewcode said:

    John_M said:

    Scott_P said:

    John_M said:

    She's allegedly promised Nissan tariff support & compensation for NTBs iirc.

    If we are out of the customs union, that will be expensive. Very expensive.
    The UK will have quite a large tariff income due to our colossal trade deficit with the EU27. Too tired to see if anyone has run the numbers based on the current CET, but I'll have a butchers tomorrow.
    TARIFFS. ARE. NOT. INCOME. THEY. ARE. COSTS.
    Explain the cost to HMRC please. Oh, and STOP SHOUTING
  • PBModeratorPBModerator Posts: 665
    edited January 2017
    SeanT and other posters

    Threatening/wishing death or violence to other PBers/politicians is a no no on PB.

    Any comments like that see PBers have their ability to instantly publish revoked until they agree not to post such comments like that in the future.
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 78,654

    Why has SeanT been banned?

    Voted leave :p
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 22,770
    Pulpstar said:

    viewcode said:

    John_M said:

    Scott_P said:

    John_M said:

    She's allegedly promised Nissan tariff support & compensation for NTBs iirc.

    If we are out of the customs union, that will be expensive. Very expensive.
    The UK will have quite a large tariff income due to our colossal trade deficit with the EU27. Too tired to see if anyone has run the numbers based on the current CET, but I'll have a butchers tomorrow.
    TARIFFS. ARE. NOT. INCOME. THEY. ARE. COSTS.
    One man's income are another man's costs though...
    Oh dear god, it's capitalism 101.

    Two people meet. Each has something they don't want and the other has something that they do want. They swap those things and the increase in value is called "wealth".

    That is basically it. This is how we build pyramids, roads, steamships and ion rockets. Wealth is created when assets are moved from low-value to high-value uses. Anything that gets in the way of that decreases wealth. Tariffs are impedance to trade and they are always a cost: they reduce the value of the trade and are always a cost overall.

    To explain by analogy: if you put a tariff of one hundred billion dollars on ipads, you do not gain one hundred billion dollars, you just destroy the market for ipads. Nobody wins.

  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 124,696
    John_M said:

    HYUFD said:

    John_M said:

    HYUFD said:

    surbiton said:

    dr_spyn said:
    We are therefore leaving the Single Market.

    This looks very much like a smokescreen, to enable/convince some soft Brexit-leaning voters to blame our departure on the EU being unreasonable, rather than the PM. In point of fact, given that May has already stated quite categorically that the "authority of EU law in Britain will end" - i.e. the UK will be removed from the jurisdiction of the ECJ - it's impossible to see how we could've remained fully engaged anyway.

    It's simple logic, really, and has been obvious for months - hence the fact that the pound lost seven cents against the dollar in the period after the October 2nd conference speech, but is only off about one cent since the Sophy Ridge interview last Sunday. The markets know that this is coming, and have already priced it in.

    (The pound will probably take another tumble this coming week now, just to spite me...)
    This hapless woman will ruin the country.
    No she represents the country, who by 41% to 32% according to Opinium tonight put ending free movement to the UK ahead of access to the single market (though May will obviously still try and get as much access as she can to the latter)
    The trouble is that most people (including, apparently, journalists and politicians) wouldn't recognise the Single Market if it bit them on the arse. Sir Humphrey would be beside himself.
    They do recognise though that they voted Leave to get back sovereignty and control of UK borders and they are not going to give that up
    Oh yes, I do agree with that. I voted to leave reluctantly (worried about the economy), felt it was in our medium-long term interest, but May is clearly primed for a cleaner Brexit than I'd hoped.
    Yes, she is ready to seize the bull by the horns
  • welshowlwelshowl Posts: 4,464
    edited January 2017
    Scott_P said:

    welshowl said:

    Stock. It's a wonderful old fashioned concept.

    And fundamentally much, much more expensive, which is why nobody on the planet does it anymore.

    The madness is catching...
    Bollocks. Utter bollocks. Screaming bollocks. We do it, so do our customers. By the way I've got two Queens's awards for export on my wall, so clearly I don't have a clue.
  • foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548

    The timing is interesting. Before the Supreme Court and within days of Trump taking office. Perhaps she's trying to create maximum panic in Brussels.

    Why would Brussels panic? May has just agreed to their negotiating position on Hard Brexit.

    They will panic - the clever bit is that the PM has got her red line in first and if the EU do not negotiate the Brits will just walk away. Up to you Juncker
    So she concedes everything to the EU and agrees with their baseline, and that is victory?

    Nothing left to concede should make the rest of the negotiations easy!
    I thought you wanted out anyway. The EU will be in panic - make no mistake they have 100 billion of trade and jobs on this.

    If the report tonight is true that the US will only do individual trade deals with individual EU nations they will be in even more of a panic
    I do want hard Brexit as a planned event rather than a carcrash hard Brexit where nothing happens til the last minute.

    Agreeing with the EU starting position is hardly tough negotiating.

    Juncker: No single market if no free movement!

    May: Anything you say sir, Anything else I can do for you?

    Juncker: my shoes need cleaning, can you lick them clean while my 27 friends indulge in watersports?

    May gets down on all fours...
  • Scott_PScott_P Posts: 51,453
    welshowl said:

    We do it, so do our customers. By the way I've got two Queens's awards for export on my wall, so clearly I don't have a clue.

    And which car manufacturer are you?

    Oh...

    To keep 2 days stock car plants would have to double in size
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 124,696

    The timing is interesting. Before the Supreme Court and within days of Trump taking office. Perhaps she's trying to create maximum panic in Brussels.

    Why would Brussels panic? May has just agreed to their negotiating position on Hard Brexit.

    They will panic - the clever bit is that the PM has got her red line in first and if the EU do not negotiate the Brits will just walk away. Up to you Juncker
    So she concedes everything to the EU and agrees with their baseline, and that is victory?

    Nothing left to concede should make the rest of the negotiations easy!
    I thought you wanted out anyway. The EU will be in panic - make no mistake they have 100 billion of trade and jobs on this.

    If the report tonight is true that the US will only do individual trade deals with individual EU nations they will be in even more of a panic
    I do want hard Brexit as a planned event rather than a carcrash hard Brexit where nothing happens til the last minute.

    Agreeing with the EU starting position is hardly tough negotiating.

    Juncker: No single market if no free movement!

    May: Anything you say sir, Anything else I can do for you?

    Juncker: my shoes need cleaning, can you lick them clean while my 27 friends indulge in watersports?

    May gets down on all fours...
    She has not said she wants no single market access just that she could be prepared to give up full membership of the single market to control free movement. If she showed she was not willing to do so the EU would inevitably try to force the UK to capitulate instead she has made clear the boundaries within which both sides will be working for any trade deal
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 22,770
    chestnut said:

    viewcode said:

    John_M said:

    Scott_P said:

    John_M said:

    She's allegedly promised Nissan tariff support & compensation for NTBs iirc.

    If we are out of the customs union, that will be expensive. Very expensive.
    The UK will have quite a large tariff income due to our colossal trade deficit with the EU27. Too tired to see if anyone has run the numbers based on the current CET, but I'll have a butchers tomorrow.
    TARIFFS. ARE. NOT. INCOME. THEY. ARE. COSTS.
    Explain the cost to HMRC please. Oh, and STOP SHOUTING
    It was a Terry Pratchett reference.
  • glwglw Posts: 10,011

    I do want hard Brexit as a planned event rather than a carcrash hard Brexit where nothing happens til the last minute.

    Agreeing with the EU starting position is hardly tough negotiating.

    Juncker: No single market if no free movement!

    May: Anything you say sir, Anything else I can do for you?

    Juncker: my shoes need cleaning, can you lick them clean while my 27 friends indulge in watersports?

    May gets down on all fours...

    Well that's one biased take, but you could as easily say that May is not afraid of Juncker's threat of "no single market". Basically May's doing what Cameron should have done.
  • Scott_PScott_P Posts: 51,453
    HYUFD said:

    She has not said she wants no single market access just that she could be prepared to give up full membership of the single market to control free movement.

    She has said she would be willing to cut her leg off to avoid shooting herself in the foot...

    With such awesome negotiating skillz, Brexit will be BRILLIANT!
  • welshowlwelshowl Posts: 4,464
    Scott_P said:

    welshowl said:

    We do it, so do our customers. By the way I've got two Queens's awards for export on my wall, so clearly I don't have a clue.

    And which car manufacturer are you?

    Oh...

    To keep 2 days stock car plants would have to double in size
    Not everyone makes cars. Some of us make other things. So for me my statement is 100% true.
  • foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548
    HYUFD said:

    The timing is interesting. Before the Supreme Court and within days of Trump taking office. Perhaps she's trying to create maximum panic in Brussels.

    Why would Brussels panic? May has just agreed to their negotiating position on Hard Brexit.

    They will panic - the clever bit is that the PM has got her red line in first and if the EU do not negotiate the Brits will just walk away. Up to you Juncker
    So she concedes everything to the EU and agrees with their baseline, and that is victory?

    Nothing left to concede should make the rest of the negotiations easy!
    I thought you wanted out anyway. The EU will be in panic - make no mistake they have 100 billion of trade and jobs on this.

    If the report tonight is true that the US will only do individual trade deals with individual EU nations they will be in even more of a panic
    I do want hard Brexit as a planned event rather than a carcrash hard Brexit where nothing happens til the last minute.

    Agreeing with the EU starting position is hardly tough negotiating.

    Juncker: No single market if no free movement!

    May: Anything you say sir, Anything else I can do for you?

    Juncker: my shoes need cleaning, can you lick them clean while my 27 friends indulge in watersports?

    May gets down on all fours...
    She has not said she wants no single market access just that she could be prepared to give up full membership of the single market to control free movement. If she showed she was not willing to do so the EU would inevitably try to force the UK to capitulate instead she has made clear the boundaries within which both sides will be working for any trade deal
    It is not tough negotiating to agree the other parties starting position.

    It is probably for the best, probably inevitable, and probably quicker to conclude; but tough, my arse!
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 53,267

    SeanT and other posters

    Threatening/wishing death or violence to other PBers/politicians is a no no on PB.

    Any comments like that see PBers have their ability to instantly publish revoked until they agree not to post such comments like that in the future.

    Threatening/wishing death or violence to the UK economy - where does that stand?
  • Scott_PScott_P Posts: 51,453
    welshowl said:

    Not everyone makes cars. Some of us make other things. So for me my statement is 100% true.

    We were discussing cars. When I said nobody, I meant no car manufacturers. I thought that was obvious. Apparently not.
  • The timing is interesting. Before the Supreme Court and within days of Trump taking office. Perhaps she's trying to create maximum panic in Brussels.

    Why would Brussels panic? May has just agreed to their negotiating position on Hard Brexit.

    They will panic - the clever bit is that the PM has got her red line in first and if the EU do not negotiate the Brits will just walk away. Up to you Juncker
    So she concedes everything to the EU and agrees with their baseline, and that is victory?

    Nothing left to concede should make the rest of the negotiations easy!
    I thought you wanted out anyway. The EU will be in panic - make no mistake they have 100 billion of trade and jobs on this.

    If the report tonight is true that the US will only do individual trade deals with individual EU nations they will be in even more of a panic
    I do want hard Brexit as a planned event rather than a carcrash hard Brexit where nothing happens til the last minute.

    Agreeing with the EU starting position is hardly tough negotiating.

    Juncker: No single market if no free movement!

    May: Anything you say sir, Anything else I can do for you?

    Juncker: my shoes need cleaning, can you lick them clean while my 27 friends indulge in watersports?

    May gets down on all fours...
    Or

    May: No single market if no immigration controls!

    Junker: Anything you say sir, Anything else I can do for you?

    May: my shoes need cleaning, can you lick them clean while my 27 friends indulge in watersports?

    Junker gets down on all fours
  • glwglw Posts: 10,011
    Scott_P said:

    HYUFD said:

    She has not said she wants no single market access just that she could be prepared to give up full membership of the single market to control free movement.

    She has said she would be willing to cut her leg off to avoid shooting herself in the foot...

    With such awesome negotiating skillz, Brexit will be BRILLIANT!
    It will certainly be better than anything Remainers could conceivably negotiate judging by their hysterical behaviour.
  • Scott_PScott_P Posts: 51,453
    glw said:

    It will certainly be better than anything Remainers could conceivably negotiate judging by their hysterical behaviour.

    Who is hysterical?

    The only one banned so far was a Brexiteer...
  • foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548

    The timing is interesting. Before the Supreme Court and within days of Trump taking office. Perhaps she's trying to create maximum panic in Brussels.

    Why would Brussels panic? May has just agreed to their negotiating position on Hard Brexit.

    They will panic - the clever bit is that the PM has got her red line in first and if the EU do not negotiate the Brits will just walk away. Up to you Juncker
    So she concedes everything to the EU and agrees with their baseline, and that is victory?

    Nothing left to concede should make the rest of the negotiations easy!
    I thought you wanted out anyway. The EU will be in panic - make no mistake they have 100 billion of trade and jobs on this.

    If the report tonight is true that the US will only do individual trade deals with individual EU nations they will be in even more of a panic
    I do want hard Brexit as a planned event rather than a carcrash hard Brexit where nothing happens til the last minute.

    Agreeing with the EU starting position is hardly tough negotiating.

    Juncker: No single market if no free movement!

    May: Anything you say sir, Anything else I can do for you?

    Juncker: my shoes need cleaning, can you lick them clean while my 27 friends indulge in watersports?

    May gets down on all fours...
    Or

    May: No single market if no immigration controls!

    Junker: Anything you say sir, Anything else I can do for you?

    May: my shoes need cleaning, can you lick them clean while my 27 friends indulge in watersports?

    Junker gets down on all fours
    May doesn't have 27 friends so it doesn't work that way.

    At least we know where we stand., and at least we have all that lovely £350 million per week for the NHS to look forward to.
  • ...
    If the report tonight is true that the US will only do individual trade deals with individual EU nations they will be in even more of a panic

    There's not a snowflake's chance in hell of that happening (it would be completely illegal under EU law and directly contrary to the EU treaties). So either the report is garbage, or the Trump people claiming that are half-wits.
  • GIN1138GIN1138 Posts: 22,448
    Theresa throwing down the gauntlet to the Commons and Lords to vote out A50 so she can call an election?
  • GIN1138GIN1138 Posts: 22,448
    edited January 2017

    ...
    If the report tonight is true that the US will only do individual trade deals with individual EU nations they will be in even more of a panic

    There's not a snowflake's chance in hell of that happening (it would be completely illegal under EU law and directly contrary to the EU treaties). So either the report is garbage, or the Trump people claiming that are half-wits.
    Well what if the US just said, to hell with EU law. This is what we're doing take it or leave it?

    I mean, who is going to tell USA they can't do that?
  • foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548

    ...
    If the report tonight is true that the US will only do individual trade deals with individual EU nations they will be in even more of a panic

    There's not a snowflake's chance in hell of that happening (it would be completely illegal under EU law and directly contrary to the EU treaties). So either the report is garbage, or the Trump people claiming that are half-wits.
    There is plenty of evidence that they are half wits!
  • Scott_P said:

    John_M said:

    The UK will have quite a large tariff income due to our colossal trade deficit with the EU27. Too tired to see if anyone has run the numbers based on the current CET, but I'll have a butchers tomorrow.

    That's not really the problem. It's the supply chain.

    As discussed previously, 50% of a Jag comes in boxes from Germany. Tariffs would be bad, but getting stuck in customs for a day while the paperwork is checked would kill the supply chain.

    Without the customs union, car manufacturing is in deep, deep trouble
    Why would we put tariffs on things we don't want to? Quite easy to place massive tariffs on manufactured goods without touching supply chain for our own manufacturers.
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 78,654
    Scott_P said:

    glw said:

    It will certainly be better than anything Remainers could conceivably negotiate judging by their hysterical behaviour.

    Who is hysterical?

    The only one banned so far was a Brexiteer...
    You're shown 3 doors, Tony Romo is behind the one the host opens...
  • One thing which Theresa May has got right, and most of her critics have got wrong, comes back to 'Brexit means Brexit'. That is it: we are leaving the EU. As she rightly pointed out a few days ago, that means we are not trying to keep some bits of EU membership (no cherry-picking!). Instead, as a non-member of the EU, we will want to have a good relationship with the EU, from the outside.
  • foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548
    Scott_P said:

    glw said:

    It will certainly be better than anything Remainers could conceivably negotiate judging by their hysterical behaviour.

    Who is hysterical?

    The only one banned so far was a Brexiteer...
    Is SeanT a Brexiteer this week? he changes his mind so often that it is hard to keep up...
  • Scott_PScott_P Posts: 51,453
    Pulpstar said:

    You're shown 3 doors, Tony Romo is behind the one the host opens...

    So you know where at least 1 goat is...
  • Scott_PScott_P Posts: 51,453

    Why would we put tariffs on things we don't want to? Quite easy to place massive tariffs on manufactured goods without touching supply chain for our own manufacturers.

    It's not about tariffs. It's about customs checks. Unless we are part of the customs union, every component will need to be checked. The JIT supply chain will be fcked.
  • GIN1138 said:

    Well what if the US just said, to hell with EU law. This is what we're doing take it or leave it!

    I mean, who is going to tell USA they can't do that?

    No-one, but you can't agree a deal with a counterparty who is legally incapable of agreeing it, not to mention politically completely unwilling.
  • isamisam Posts: 41,118
    Scott_P said:

    glw said:

    It will certainly be better than anything Remainers could conceivably negotiate judging by their hysterical behaviour.

    Who is hysterical?

    The only one banned so far was a Brexiteer...
    Haha I don't think that is a fair measure! Has a non Nat Remainer ever been banned?
  • ...
    If the report tonight is true that the US will only do individual trade deals with individual EU nations they will be in even more of a panic

    There's not a snowflake's chance in hell of that happening (it would be completely illegal under EU law and directly contrary to the EU treaties). So either the report is garbage, or the Trump people claiming that are half-wits.
    There is plenty of evidence that they are half wits!
    Rather more that they aren't, imo.
  • glwglw Posts: 10,011

    One thing which Theresa May has got right, and most of her critics have got wrong, comes back to 'Brexit means Brexit'. That is it: we are leaving the EU.

    She's been quite consistent about that, and it still hasn't sunk in.
  • Scott_PScott_P Posts: 51,453

    There is plenty of evidence that they are half wits!

    https://twitter.com/zorasuleman/status/820416369854468096
  • welshowlwelshowl Posts: 4,464
    GIN1138 said:

    ...
    If the report tonight is true that the US will only do individual trade deals with individual EU nations they will be in even more of a panic

    There's not a snowflake's chance in hell of that happening (it would be completely illegal under EU law and directly contrary to the EU treaties). So either the report is garbage, or the Trump people claiming that are half-wits.
    Well what if the US just said, to hell with EU law. This is what we're doing take it or leave it!

    I mean, who is going to tell USA they can't do that?
    Ireland must be getting to the point where they are watching events from behind the sofa. This is just nightmare stuff for them. What if Trump offered them a deal that segued with us and potentially conflicted with their EU position? I hope they (we?) can emerge ok from all this - it's a mess for them.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 52,898
    GIN1138 said:

    ...
    If the report tonight is true that the US will only do individual trade deals with individual EU nations they will be in even more of a panic

    There's not a snowflake's chance in hell of that happening (it would be completely illegal under EU law and directly contrary to the EU treaties). So either the report is garbage, or the Trump people claiming that are half-wits.
    Well what if the US just said, to hell with EU law. This is what we're doing take it or leave it?

    I mean, who is going to tell USA they can't do that?
    The EU will.

    If Trump's people think the EU is like NAFTA or ASEAN they need to be educated.
  • isamisam Posts: 41,118

    One thing which Theresa May has got right, and most of her critics have got wrong, comes back to 'Brexit means Brexit'. That is it: we are leaving the EU. As she rightly pointed out a few days ago, that means we are not trying to keep some bits of EU membership (no cherry-picking!). Instead, as a non-member of the EU, we will want to have a good relationship with the EU, from the outside.

    Yes exactly. Richard I applaud your fair mindedness in the post referendum era, a rarity on PB.

    The EU is a foreign country now like any other
  • glw said:

    One thing which Theresa May has got right, and most of her critics have got wrong, comes back to 'Brexit means Brexit'. That is it: we are leaving the EU.

    She's been quite consistent about that, and it still hasn't sunk in.
    Yes, it's weird. In particular, the financial markets still don't seem to have got it.
This discussion has been closed.