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politicalbetting.com » Blog Archive » So the Deal’s going down. Then what?

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  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,133

    Nope, it will be 2-3 years. Not a decade.

    We will have independence in some areas and codependence in others, outside the federal union. I'm comfortable with that.
    We shall see, I reckon that Leavers should take note of how much more effectve than us the EU team is. We can only agree quickly, if it is on their terms, and it is unlikely to be concluded in one Parliament. The next government may have other different objectives.
    We shall adapt to vassalage with barely a whimper.

    Of course, all this is contingent on it passing. Government paralysis is very possible.
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 24,188
    alex. said:

    I am wondering though, why current Dover users are tied to that port once it doesn't become a viable option. There are other routes into the country.
    But those other ports will also have the same problems, and all the other ships will also be trying all the other ports. The overall speed of ingress will slow, and that results in queues. The problem is not insuperable (and indeed will be solved!) but it takes time and money.
  • alex.alex. Posts: 4,658

    We could have left the CFP andthe CAP by replicating Norway’s deal. We didn’t need the mess May has concocted to do that. As we don’t know what’s going to replace them and we’ve sold out fisheries twice - when we joined and for the transition, if we get a transition - any benefit is theoretical at this stage and May might well sell fisheries out again together trade deal during the transition. Gove has already said farmers will get equivalent grants to the CAP and May isgoung the common external tariff so I struggle to see what benefits we’ll get from actually being outside the CAP in practice.

    Immigration hasn’t been resolved and might well be raised during the trade talks, if we get that far, as part of what May describes as her mobility framework in Chequers.

    As trade hasn’t been discussed neither has paying for trade which EEA members make so we have no certainty that future payments will cease that I can see.
    The backstop contain the conditions for ongoing trade post transition, until a formal trade deal is agreed. There are no payments involved AFAIK.
  • alex.alex. Posts: 4,658
    viewcode said:

    But those other ports will also have the same problems, and all the other ships will also be trying all the other ports. The overall speed of ingress will slow, and that results in queues. The problem is not insuperable (and indeed will be solved!) but it takes time and money.
    Spreads the load though. Nobody is saying that nothing will get through Dover. Just that everything going through Dover as it does at present will cause gridlock.
  • MortimerMortimer Posts: 14,187

    If that's true it's very unlikely there will be a vote at all now.
    This is what I hear, too.

    If they haven’t got there yet, I don’t think they’re going to get there.

    Off to Vienna tomorrow - quite looking forward to being away from the febrile atmosphere for a few days.
  • Danny565Danny565 Posts: 8,091
    Mortimer said:

    This is what I hear, too.

    If they haven’t got there yet, I don’t think they’re going to get there.

    Off to Vienna tomorrow - quite looking forward to being away from the febrile atmosphere for a few days.
    A May vs Corbyn rematch at the next election is almost nailed on at this point.
  • alex. said:

    The backstop contain the conditions for ongoing trade post transition, until a formal trade deal is agreed. There are no payments involved AFAIK.
    The backstop has got all sorts of problems associated with it so I don’t think anyone should be relying on that.
  • MortimerMortimer Posts: 14,187
    Danny565 said:

    A May vs Corbyn rematch at the next election is almost nailed on at this point.
    I was really pleasantly surprised at the laughter Labour’s Brexit position was getting on QT on a Thursday. The sitting atop the fence game might finally be up for them.

  • logical_songlogical_song Posts: 10,031
    notme said:

    Was it not the newyorker that projected the claims of some sack clothed green nut jobs that Britain was all stocking up on spam?

    "something we never wanted and repeatedly wanted to fail might fail"
    https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2018/aug/09/im-already-stockpiling-readers-preparing-for-a-messy-brexit
  • RogerRoger Posts: 20,399
    edited November 2018
    Foxy said:

    We shall see, I reckon that Leavers should take note of how much more effectve than us the EU team is. We can only agree quickly, if it is on their terms, and it is unlikely to be concluded in one Parliament. The next government may have other different objectives.
    We shall adapt to vassalage with barely a whimper.

    Of course, all this is contingent on it passing. Government paralysis is very possible.
    An ad agency were asked for the purposes of a TV prog to think of a campaign to rehabilitate the Tory party shortly after they had been defeated in 1997. After a week they came back and said they wouldn't be able to accept the brief because the product was beyond repair. I have a feeling that the same will be true of Brexit. Those involved will be seen as irredeemable and they will have to spend the rest of their days in the political wilderness
  • RecidivistRecidivist Posts: 4,679
    Doing a bit of light work this afternoon and an email has just popped up on my business account. It's from a company offering cheap stock from Turkey thanks to the fall in the value of the Turkish lira. That should help the Turks with their current cash flow problem. Capitalism is a great system in many ways - generating actions that solve problems very quickly.

    So I am not worried about the shelves emptying in the event of a no deal Brexit. But it is a reminder of just how humiliating it would be. Imagine emails like that one going around to potential carpet baggers around the world to take advantage of the weakness of GBP.
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 34,537
    I strongly suspect that a CFP which satisfies the bigger fishing organisations will be very unsatisfactory as far as smaller local, and individual, fisherman are concerned. Unless I've totally misunderstood, that was the difficulty which caused the individuals complaints in the first place.
  • MortimerMortimer Posts: 14,187

    The backstop has got all sorts of problems associated with it so I don’t think anyone should be relying on that.
    But it avoids a cliff edge. It is an elegant solution that neither party want; which means it is a good position from which to agree a swift trade deal.
  • alex.alex. Posts: 4,658
    What's going on on the London Bridges, btw?
  • alex.alex. Posts: 4,658
    Roger said:

    An ad agency were asked for the purposes of a TV prog to think of a campaign to rehabilitate the Tory party shortly after they had been defeated in 1997. After a week they came back and said they wouldn't be able to accept the brief because the product was beyond repair. I have a feeling that the same will be true of Brexit. Those involved will be seen as irredeemable and they will have to spend the rest of their days in the political wilderness
    Got the Tory party wrong, didn't they? ;)
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,051
    Pulpstar said:

    Whats so wrong with it ?
    The fact that we are stuck with NI problem and unable to get out otherwise. Plus real key is it stuffs Scotland for any investment by making NI part of Europe and putting us out on our erchies.
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 24,188
    alex. said:

    Spreads the load though. Nobody is saying that nothing will get through Dover. Just that everything going through Dover as it does at present will cause gridlock.
    It depends if the space capacity of the other ports offsets the attrited capacity of Dover, assuming that they are not themselves attrited.




  • Except, politically, it stinks like a rotten kipper. Imagine trying to sell a deal to the public or HoC that ends with automatic reentry to a Union 17 million people voted to leave. Plus the ERG would laugh it out of the house, why would they agree to something like that? They can't be sure that in 2 years time they'd have the power to retrigger A50.

    They could call it the hokey cokey clause: if this happened we would literally be in, out, in, out!

    Stinks less than backstop. A50 applies to all standard members. There is no added risk for the EU or ERG.



    The risk to the ERG is that in 2 years, with politics as unpredicable as it is, there won't be a majority to trigger A50 again. So why would they agree to that?

    Are you telling me that in 2020, 4 years after the initial vote, Remain MPs (of whom there is an inbuilt majority) would roll over and agree to trigger A50 again because the negotiations had failed when they would much rather see us back in the Union?

    That's why it has no legs, because such a move would look like a remainer stitch-up.
  • If - and it's still a big if - Theresa survives the ERG's no-confidence shenanigans, then it will amount to an act of self-castration by Rees-Mogg, and he's unlikely to be taken seriously again. With luck we'll never have to endure his silly moon face or grating voice again, and the reputation of yet another Leaver will be in tatters.
  • Doing a bit of light work this afternoon and an email has just popped up on my business account. It's from a company offering cheap stock from Turkey thanks to the fall in the value of the Turkish lira. That should help the Turks with their current cash flow problem. Capitalism is a great system in many ways - generating actions that solve problems very quickly.

    So I am not worried about the shelves emptying in the event of a no deal Brexit. But it is a reminder of just how humiliating it would be. Imagine emails like that one going around to potential carpet baggers around the world to take advantage of the weakness of GBP.

    It's why the single currency was a mistake too.
  • Dr. Foxy, a lot of that is a combination of May's incompetence and the time limit being stupidly short which plays into the EU's hands.
  • RogerRoger Posts: 20,399

    Dr. Foxy, a lot of that is a combination of May's incompetence and the time limit being stupidly short which plays into the EU's hands.

    Well they need us more than we need them so should that matter?
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 24,188
    alex. said:

    What's going on on the London Bridges, btw?

    Are they falling down, my fair Alex?
  • Mr. Thompson, unless you're Germany. Then you have a permanently, artificially weakened exchange rate which hugely helps your massive exports.
  • Mr. Roger, because a longer time period enables more preparation and less time pressure...
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 34,537
    edited November 2018

    If the ERG cannot gwt the 48 letters they'll be seen as a minor group of windbags.
  • Mortimer said:

  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,133
    Roger said:

    An ad agency were asked for the purposes of a TV prog to think of a campaign to rehabilitate the Tory party shortly after they had been defeated in 1997. After a week they came back and said they wouldn't be able to accept the brief because the product was beyond repair. I have a feeling that the same will be true of Brexit. Those involved will be seen as irredeemable and they will have to spend the rest of their days in the political wilderness
    It took 13 years and Dave Cameron to detoxify the party, and another 5 years to get a majority. He did a pretty convincing job, even I voted Tory in 2010.

    It took only a couple of years to retoxify the party though, and I can see that Brexit will retoxify, much as Thatcher did for Scottish Tories for a generation.

  • glwglw Posts: 10,349


    If the ERG cannot gwt the 48 letters they'll be seen as a minor group of windbags.

    I think May would be better off with a VONC, as it would reveal the true depth of support for the ERG.
  • Any ideas for a collective noun for the members of the ERG?

    A wingnut of ERGs.
    The erg has not been a valid unit since 1 January 1978[13] when the EEC ratified a directive of 1971 which implemented the International System (SI)


    She screwed up the election just like she has screwed up everything

    “Appease”. Listen to yourself. Brexitshire really is the home of halfwits.

    So you think it’s a good deal do you. For what possible reason ?

    Leaving CFP, leaving CAP, getting rid of FoM, continued ability to trade with Europe with no trade barriers on an ongoing basis, without any ongoing payments...

    The European Parliament will probably vote it down.

    We could have left the CFP andthe CAP by replicating Norway’s deal. We didn’t need the mess May has concocted to do that. As we don’t know what’s going to replace them and we’ve sold out fisheries twice - when we joined and for the transition, if we get a transition - any benefit is theoretical at this stage and May might well sell fisheries out again together trade deal during the transition. Gove has already said farmers will get equivalent grants to the CAP and May isgoung the common external tariff so I struggle to see what benefits we’ll get from actually being outside the CAP in practice.

    Immigration hasn’t been resolved and might well be raised during the trade talks, if we get that far, as part of what May describes as her mobility framework in Chequers.

    As trade hasn’t been discussed neither has paying for trade which EEA members make so we have no certainty that future payments will cease that I can see.

    The backstop contain the conditions for ongoing trade post transition, until a formal trade deal is agreed. There are no payments involved AFAIK.

    The backstop has got all sorts of problems associated with it so I don’t think anyone should be relying on that.

    But it avoids a cliff edge. It is an elegant solution that neither party want; which means it is a good position from which to agree a swift trade deal.

    There won’t be a quick negotiation based on what we’ve seen and fear of the cliffedge isn’t a good reason to enter into such a poor deal. Better to spend the money preparing for no deal.
  • NotchNotch Posts: 145
    edited November 2018
    FPT
    alex. said:

    What's going on on the London Bridges, btw?

    It's a protest by "Extinction Rebellion", green activists who envisage a possible "mass extinction" but who seem to assume that the financial system will last long enough for the payments they ask supporters to make to their account at a Steinerite bank to clear.

    What's the symbol that some of them are displaying on flags?
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,368
    Notch said:

    FPT

    It's a protest by "Extinction Rebellion", green activists who envisage a possible "mass extinction" but who seem to assume that the financial system will last long enough for the payments they ask supporters to make to their account at a Steinerite bank to clear.

    What's the symbol that some of them are displaying on flags?
    An egg timer.
  • NotchNotch Posts: 145
    ydoethur said:

    An egg timer.
    So it is! I bet its connotations stretch further than that though.
  • justin124justin124 Posts: 11,527
    ydoethur said:

    Did people like Nabarro? That might be one explanation.
    ydoethur said:

    Did people like Nabarro? That might be one explanation.
    He was seen as quite an eccentric figure but that does not explain why the court did not give him a custodial sentence similar to that imposed on Huhne.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,368
    justin124 said:

    He was seen as quite an eccentric figure but that does not explain why the court did not give him a custodial sentence similar to that imposed on Huhne.
    Surely the key point was Huhne had lied and as a result evaded punishment? Whereas Nabarro's story was rejected so he was punished. If everybody who pleaded not guilty in court and told unconvincing lies was jailed for perjury, our jails would burst.

    I think his illness was probably also a factor.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,368
    Notch said:

    So it is! I bet its connotations stretch further than that though.
    When it comes to protests, better egg timers than eggsplosions.
  • justin124justin124 Posts: 11,527
    ydoethur said:

    Surely the key point was Huhne had lied and as a result evaded punishment? Whereas Nabarro's story was rejected so he was punished. If everybody who pleaded not guilty in court and told unconvincing lies was jailed for perjury, our jails would burst.

    I think his illness was probably also a factor.
    Nabarro's illness developed following his conviction. He pleaded not guilty but was disbelieved by the jury. In the end Huhne pleaded guilty.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,368
    edited November 2018
    justin124 said:

    Nabarro's illness developed following his conviction. He pleaded not guilty but was disbelieved by the jury. In the end Huhne pleaded guilty.
    I think you're confusing two issues. Nabarro was prosecuted for dangerous driving, told a story that was not believed, found guilty and sentenced for that crime. He did appeal later, while ill, and his conviction was quashed. Huhne falsified a document to avoid a penalty, was caught and was prosecuted for that. Not for the original driving offence.
  • RecidivistRecidivist Posts: 4,679
    ydoethur said:

    I think you're confusing two issues. Nabarro was prosecuted for dangerous driving, told a story that was not believed, found guilty and sentenced for that crime. He did appeal later, while ill, and his conviction was quashed. Huhne falsified a document to avoid a penalty, was caught and was prosecuted for that. Not for the original driving offence.
    Good point.
  • justin124justin124 Posts: 11,527
    ydoethur said:

    I think you're confusing two issues. Nabarro was prosecuted for dangerous driving, told a story that was not believed, found guilty and sentenced for that crime. He did appeal later, while ill, and his conviction was quashed. Huhne falsified a document to avoid a penalty, was caught and was prosecuted for that. Not for the original driving offence.
    Fair enough!
  • geoffwgeoffw Posts: 9,005
    James Forsythe says there is only one way for Mrs May to break the link between how she has handled Brexit so far and the issue of what Parliament should do now.

    "She [May] should say that as soon as the withdrawal legislation is through the Commons, she will stand down as Prime Minister. This would enable MPs to vote for the deal without that being an endorsement of her handling of Brexit or an invitation for her to negotiate the next stage of Brexit, the UK/EU trade deal."

    https://www.thesun.co.uk/news/brexit/7762268/pm-should-stand-down-after-brexit-james-forsyth/
  • shiney2shiney2 Posts: 672
    edited November 2018



    She screwed up the election just like she has screwed up everything

    snip

    There won’t be a quick negotiation based on what we’ve seen and fear of the cliffedge isn’t a good reason to enter into such a poor deal. Better to spend the money preparing for no deal.

    ----------

    Have to agree with the last point.

    MrsMay's 'deal' is in two parts: The legally binding WA (585p) and the bit of non binding flannel (14p &not yet finished) known as the Future Relationship containing various possibilities for a future trade deal.

    When Mogg called her out in the Commons he listed WA articles where her promises were contradicted. Her response was 'Consider the Future Relationship'.. and went on to list as achievements eg leaving CAP, CF, FoM etc things that she has specifically NOT got agreement to.

    She's a fucking charlatan.

    Mogg&Co are doing exactly the right thing in making clear the size of the committed opposition. I kind of hope they leave her twisting in the wind with 40 letters and thus paralyse the executive power.

    Obviously a Brexit PM would be better but this HoC is never going to allow that.
  • CiceroCicero Posts: 3,390
    justin124 said:

    He was seen as quite an eccentric figure but that does not explain why the court did not give him a custodial sentence similar to that imposed on Huhne.
    He was seen as a faintly ludicrous figure... Parodied in the radio and tv comedy of the time. He was the Michael Fabricant of 1971, with even more ridiculous hair (admittedly on his face, not scalp)
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