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ERG press conference Nov 2018
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And yet that is a compromise which in my view most leavers (if not the loudest) would still accept. Out of the political structures, in the SM. It seems something we need to get back to.
The reality is that leaving the single market creates unsolvable problems at the Irish border, while staying in the single market leaves the Leave campaign's central pillar of ending free movement unachieved. What a mess!
Great header by the way.
I get the political need but he has left himself absolutely no wiggle room.
What is the game plan?
What we don't have to worry about right now is tariffs. A FTA can achieve this as well. More importantly we have a structure that facilitates mutual regulation equivalence. So someone operating a financial service in this country has the absolute right to sell that product through the SM. For me this has always been the key feature. On what basis do we achieve sufficient regulatory equivalence to retain that access? It will require a high degree of alignment, hence what David reminds us the Joint Report provided for.
If this is true then it was a really poor misjudgement. The DUP is always motivated first and foremost by Unionism, and this has been blatantly clear since the time of Rev Paisley. On Brexit the DUP are toleraters rather than active supporters.
You do not need to be Mo Mowlam or Geroge Mitchell to know this.
Interesting article, Mr. Herdson.
But my original point is that a lot of UK exports could be just as easily sourced from another EU country. Especially if there is a No Deal Brexit it is brave to assume that most of these overseas importers will simply stay with the UK suppliers rather than chose another supplier from within the same market that they have been trading with for years.
This needs resolved and soon or the economy may tank on uncertainty.
I am not sure what the evidence is that the EU is willing to split up the four freedoms, either. They are allowing NI to stay in the single market for goods, but NI and the Republic already have a common travel area so there is free movement - and all NI born people can have Irish passports so can travel anywhere else in the EU too (lucky bastards!)
Brexiteers: Economy has tanked because we have not got Brexit.
I bet Domski has already wargamed that excuse.
But the indivisibility of the four freedoms is not up for discussion, and never will be, it is probably the most central tenet of the whole construct.
What makes you believe you "had success in getting the EU to accept the contrary"?
This is a great triumph of her negotiation that sadly she wasn't really able to take credit for because half her own side was against her.
Which is probably spot on.
On the one hand it seems like a dumb idea to raise expectations with your supporters that something is possible, only to disappoint them and tell them it's impossible, which risks some of them thinking you were right the first time and you failed to follow through because you're not really on their side. But on the other hand you may be able to win by taking a very uncompromising position and then making you feel that your defeat is their defeat, and it just goes to show the perfidiousness of the enemy; That's what Tsipras managed to get away with, at least for a couple of years.
And neither does the EU-Switzerland relation, there are a lot of barriers and controls on EU-Switzerland borders, even with relatively extensive freedom-of-movements obligations/rights.
The doctrine of sacred indivisibility, like much EU law, materialised Into being, magically.
Have you apologized to everyone for spreading that ridiculous lie about Michael Gove at the German embassy?
A single market is a single regulatory regime. You don’t need free movement for that.
You may need visa free travel for up to six months.
The single market is not about religion, it's about commerce, about making money, competing in the global economy by creating a deep home market like China or the US. The nationalistic desire to keep people out and survive on our own - the Brexiteer project - has much more of the flavour of religion to it. That's why sceptical, practical people like me, who are more interested in raising our families and making a living than in theological discussions, find it so unatractive.
It is of course possible that the ERG and others didn’t bother reading the Joint Report or, if they did, they didn’t understand it. They seem to have little understanding about many aspects of the EU, its laws and Britain’s involvement. So why assume that they understood this?
One links to the theme of the header, actually- the tendency of people in general, and of Team Brexit in particular, to think exactly one step ahead, and no more.
The deliberately vague Vote Leave campaign made it easier to win the referendum but made its implementation insanely difficult.
The 2017 Joint Report was celebrated at the time, because it unlocked the fun future relationship talks, and the ERG were so bedazzled by that, they didn't think what they had signed up to.
Do or Die won the premiership for BJ, but seems likely to make him look a fool at the end of this month. (Though if it leads to an exit by, say, Christmas, that will be forgiven.)
So that's one possibility. The other is that he has outsourced his thinking to a group of people who are already convinced that British government is fundamentally rubbish, and needs destruction and replacement. If Boris visibly fails, that just proves to the public how decedent the state is. And if the failure destroys Boris? Whatevs. He's just the front man.
Other countries like France were historically more wary of the two things - accession and the single market - that eventually drove us from the EU. Ironic, really.
That is until yesterday when I went to a see doctor. He asked if I'd prefer French or English. "English' I said and he laughed and asked what i thought of Boris Johnson? I told him I thought he was a disaster 'What about you/' i asked. 'I think he's funny!'."Funny?' I repeated.'Yes. Very very funny!' and then laughed heartily
In that simple encounter I think I got what the Europeans (or the French at least) think of it. They believe we've become a country to ridicule and they're enjoying it. I liked him and his reaction very much. They don't care less about Brexit but they're loving our arrogance being pricked..
In both instances they didn't understand what they were commenting on and so took their cues from others.
They're followers who wish to be idolised, not leaders.
You may need a flexible and generous visa system, and an immigration system that welcomes talent, but that's not the same thing.
Several times I have given a real life example on here. I won't repeat the details but just to say that several decades ago I ran a bid for the Europe Africa division of a very large US company in a country that is now in the EU and wasn't then and anyway the current level of freedoms were not in place then anyway. We were competing against a company in the same position (US based, UK based Europe Africa division). The carnet issues on specialist equipment just about broke us. Fortunately it did the same to our competitor. I'm 100% sure if we were not in the same boat we would have lost. It is difficult to believe we won anyway bearing in mind the terrible job I did.
So if we leave any sane organisation will move its Europe Africa division from the UK to the EU, even if most of the countries and companies it is dealing with are outside of the EU, which of course a number are currently doing so that it doesn't lose the business of the EU based organisations.
So this does impact non EU trade.
Also what about all those internal UK organisations that provide goods and services entirely internally to those companies who have just moved out. That is the supply chain and then to all the businesses who supply goods and services to those companies, etc.
HYUFD you are living in a simple world. The impact is far from those who export directly to the EU.
I hope it is because, sadly, I wouldn’t want it to be terminal for him.
The government you had voted into office did not.
That does not mean that EU law has any magic qualities, and it does not mean that the principle of indivisibility can be unilaterally rejected.
By contrast, the French elite simply ignored the French vote on the EU Constitution, and rammed the damn thing through parliament instead.
Some French historians believe that that terrible betrayal of democratic trust, between ruled and rulers, led directly to the rise of the FN and the anger of the gilet jaunes
If so, can Boris simply refuse to agree to it (having discharged his legal responsibility by requesting it) which will result in us leaving on October 31st without a deal?
If I recall right, then it appears the four freedoms are indivisible until they aren’t?
https://twitter.com/philipjcowley/status/1180315119340806145
https://twitter.com/AlbertoNardelli/status/1180386333749137408
https://twitter.com/CER_Grant/status/1180390821671116801
Goes back to looking at how Boris Houdini gets out of this one.
Johnson himself is fond of the rugby team metaphor, with him as captain. Which displays a wilful ignorance of the nature of government.
The default is to accept unless the Commons, at the government's prompting, refused.
I think that leaving the EU is a strategic error of the highest order, but I would accept Norway+ status as a reasonable compromise and the first step in dialling down the civil war mentality. I think the UK would have to clearly commit to maintaining that status for at least 10 years (i.e. no rejoining, no diverging), with an even greater reiteration of doing whatever it takes (a good European phrase that) to ensure satisfactory arrangements for the island of Ireland.
Domestically we would then have to clear up the mess that pandering to nativism has unleashed, and address some of the underlying structural issues, but we would at least not have blown up the economy and our international reputation.
Those marvellous trade deals with Fiji and Saudi Arabia will have to wait.
The entire mess of Brexit would pale in comparison.
https://www.nytimes.com/2019/10/04/opinion/trump-impeach.html?action=click&module=Opinion&pgtype=Homepage
There is a fundamental and unresolvable contradiction to Brexit. People voted Leave to be masters of their own ship and to get an unloved institution out of their lives, at no cost. However any Project Fearless Brexit requires a very close relationship with the EU, necessarily on its terms. We still have to follow the rules but no longer have any agency over them. EU aggravation increases exponentially. Brexit delivers the opposite of what people voted for.
All the argument since 2017 is that unresolvable contradiction staying unresolved.
Back to December 2017, Brexiteers were still bound up in their campaign rhetoric, but treaties are hard and fast commitments. The implications took time to filter through.
It's difficult to imagine being in a country 22 miles from our shores at the heart of the EU and trying to understand why something which is totally obsessing us appears invisible to them. If the gilet jaunes set off a few fireworks in Paris the coffee bars of Hartlepool would be buzzing. South Molton St would be painted yellow. Barnier can't be the only Frenchman with an opinion.
My post was not an attempt to ridicule the UK just an attempt to cast a chink of light into an area of darkness.
I suspect Boris still doesn't have the numbers.
A quarter-final floptacular beckons.
So nothing to say we cannot survive leaving the EU even with No Deal despite the views of those who would betray the biggest vote in peacetime British history
Games is not over..
https://www.conservativehome.com/platform/2019/10/david-trimble-and-roderick-crawford-the-governments-new-proposals-meet-the-eus-original-aims-better-than-the-backstop.html
That was the Vote Leave platform and must be delivered
Opposition will vote against the governments Queens Speech yes?
Government loses QS.
Under FTPA QS are not VONC but as good as. Nevertheless I suspect that after defeating the government on the QS the Opposition would be forced to lay down a VONC which the government is also likely to lose.
At that point an election would have to be agreed as no one else has the numbers to get a QS through either...
I suppose we could find ourselves with the extraordinary spectacle of the Opposition being so fri they actually vote for the governments Queens Speech but that would be very odd...
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/EGDJqC7W4AAJte2?format=jpg&name=medium
Which is being challenged in the courts as the equivalent of frustrating the benn act. If it holds up then bunging hungry for example a few billion would be perceived as frustrating the act. The rebel alliance may, in the event, the court rules against Maugham, have to pass a specific act to outlaw it or no confidence the government.