Chippy_boy
Well-Known Member
Spot on apart from the spell checker changing Barnier to Barnet ;-)Your final para is spot on
Spot on apart from the spell checker changing Barnier to Barnet ;-)Your final para is spot on
I agree with your analysis. I said weeks ago that I think he will shaft the ERG, but of course I don't know whether he will and we will see.Why would he go for anything other than the softest Brexit he can get away with. He wants, and to be fair, has always wanted a FTA with the EU while being able to trade with other blocks that and some form of restiction on FOM are about all he wanted. He will know full well he will need to make compromises the ERG won't like, as he's never really liked the ERG , he won't mind stabbing them in the back, because now he can.
If you go back to before the referendum you'll remember he wrote 2 peices one for staying one for leaving and took a while to decide, he's nowhere near as hardline as Rees Mogg ETC.
That's me speaking as someone that doesn't trust or like Johnson and would never vote for him, but if he was going to win a big majority is better than pandering to the ERG.
Why would he go for anything other than the softest Brexit he can get away with. He wants, and to be fair, has always wanted a FTA with the EU while being able to trade with other blocks that and some form of restiction on FOM are about all he wanted. He will know full well he will need to make compromises the ERG won't like, as he's never really liked the ERG , he won't mind stabbing them in the back, because now he can.
If you go back to before the referendum you'll remember he wrote 2 peices one for staying one for leaving and took a while to decide, he's nowhere near as hardline as Rees Mogg ETC.
That's me speaking as someone that doesn't trust or like Johnson and would never vote for him, but if he was going to win a big majority is better than pandering to the ERG.
Wait and see whose right, you are ignoring the fact he has made a lot of expensive promises, he needs a strong economy. I don't think anyone even the hardline Brexitters deny the harder the Brexit the harder the damage to the economy and the longer to see any benefit. Won't have to wait long to see the direction he takes he has given himself another cliff edge deadline so the softer the Brexit also the quicker he can get agreement.You are completely ignoring the conservative manifesto and pretty much everything he’s said over the last year. We will be leaving the single market, the customs union and will be after trade deals.
You are also ignoring the fact the tories have become much more of a pro brexit party. The remainers have basically been purged and most of the seats they’ve won in the north are from very heavy leave voting areas.
I think a lot of posters/ remainers like yourself are hoping for the softest brexit possible and are convincing yourselves that’s what’s going to happen

Wait and see whose right, you are ignoring the fact he has made a lot of expensive promises, he needs a strong economy. I don't think anyone even the hardline Brexitters deny the harder the Brexit the harder the damage to the economy and the longer to see any benefit. Won't have to wait long to see the direction he takes he has given himself another cliff edge deadline so the softer the Brexit also the quicker he can get agreement.
Fair enough. I said it before though the only people who want a soft brexit are remainers
All the conditions are now in play for the UK - if Johnson is ambitious enough - to secure a bespoke deal that we are active in designing and the EU accepting - not the other way around
As you say - "….. with a big majority and the eurozone gradually sliding towards a recession..." are 2 factors that are in our favour and there are several others
Varhadkar said the right things - but his face showed the trepidation he must be feeling inside - gone was the smug look
Barnier is saying the obvious things - but being a top professional he will be involved in a host of preparatory meetings to establish the EU's negotiation outcomes and strategy - in the knowledge that he can no longer rely on Westminster to undermine the UK
It will all depend on who Johnson selects as the lead negotiators - surely he will not appoint some fuckwit like Robbins
I've said much the same myself. He isn't going to want to do anything which makes him being remembered as the PM who broke the country. If he can get control of immigration and ability to strike new trade deals, i.e. no customs union membership, then personally I think everything else is on the table. So he'll concede agreeing to level playing field and regulatory alignment rules - the two things the EU are most keen upon - in return for the above. And he'll get it because he will be threatening no deal and walking away on December 31st 2020 unless they agree. The regulatory alignment bit will make US trade deals more difficult but not impossible and the likes of Francois, Farage and Rees Mogg will scream about it, but no-one else will give a toss.Wait and see whose right, you are ignoring the fact he has made a lot of expensive promises, he needs a strong economy. I don't think anyone even the hardline Brexitters deny the harder the Brexit the harder the damage to the economy and the longer to see any benefit. Won't have to wait long to see the direction he takes he has given himself another cliff edge deadline so the softer the Brexit also the quicker he can get agreement.
Yes I know you have , I thought the result would be a lot closer and he would be ERG reliant still. The only bit I disagree with is I don't beleive without the ERG pressure he would walk away with no deal and the deadline he's given himself will help the EU . IMO he needs a strong economy to match his promises to risk a downturn for however long no deal in 12 months would bring.I've said much the same myself. He isn't going to want to do anything which makes him being remembered as the PM who broke the country. If he can get control of immigration and ability to strike new trade deals, i.e. no customs union membership, then personally I think everything else is on the table. So he'll concede agreeing to level playing field and regulatory alignment rules - the two things the EU are most keen upon - in return for the above. And he'll get it because he will be threatening no deal and walking away on December 31st 2020 unless they agree. The regulatory alignment bit will make US trade deals more difficult but not impossible and the likes of Francois, Farage and Rees Mogg will scream about it, but no-one else will give a toss.
Hard, soft and whatever other nick name they give are nothing but remainer constructs that they thought up post brexit in an attempt to try and get their way.
Everyone knew a vote to leave meant leaving the SM and the CU and the then PM also said it would mean trading under WTO but thats ignored as if it never happened now.
Interesting piece indeed.Good piece on how Brexit has been a disaster for Unionists in NI. You need a heart of stone not to laugh.
https://www.newsletter.co.uk/news/o...it-has-been-a-disaster-for-unionism-1-9174738
That's pretty much the size of it and is the outcome what I feel most of the country is in favour of.I've said much the same myself. He isn't going to want to do anything which makes him being remembered as the PM who broke the country. If he can get control of immigration and ability to strike new trade deals, i.e. no customs union membership, then personally I think everything else is on the table. So he'll concede agreeing to level playing field and regulatory alignment rules - the two things the EU are most keen upon - in return for the above. And he'll get it because he will be threatening no deal and walking away on December 31st 2020 unless they agree. The regulatory alignment bit will make US trade deals more difficult but not impossible and the likes of Francois, Farage and Rees Mogg will scream about it, but no-one else will give a toss.
Yes they did, That is preciesly what the Remain Campaign Stronger IN, the celebluvvies, and our own Prime Minister David Cameron explicitly stated.Everyone didn’t know. Mainly because the Leave campaign said it wasn’t necessarily so. Leave campaign also said the future relationship would be negotiated prior to leaving. This didn’t happen either. In fairness it wasn’t through lack of trying but the EU insisted on sequencing talks to maximise leverage and we caved.
The WA itself is an agreement that guarantees continued membership of the SM and CU so clearly leave did not automatically mean leaving the SM and CU or trading under WTO terms.
Finally under the WA Northern Ireland retains membership of the SM for certain industrial and agricultural sectors and operates under the EU customs Union as well as our own.
You mis-read my postWhich part of the WA is a UK designed bespoke deal that the EU were obliged to accept?
Varadkar got his main requirement. No land border in NI and we accepted the only possible alternative. A customs border down the Irish Sea.
The E27 have already agreed protocols for the second phase.
The EU is not as concerned about a no deal outcome at the end of 2020 as they were about a no deal outcome at the conclusion of A50 negotiations. The WA will still apply and there will be no land border in NI.
The first major issue will be fish and the second will be tariffs. Most fish is caught in Scottish waters and most U.K. fish sold to EU market. Tariffs will be a blow to the the U.K. fishing industry. The political situation in Scotland is an added complication. What is the likeliest outcome?
It's like 2016 all over again, this...
Yes they did, That is preciesly what the Remain Campaign Stronger IN, the celebluvvies, and our own Prime Minister David Cameron explicitly stated.
The Leave campaign was against the idea that leaving the EU means we can never ever trade with the EU, tarriff free if we leave. The leave campaigns message was about how we don't have to leave the Single Market permanently if we want to continue trading on the same terms, which isn't the same as leaving the Customs Union. We could negotiate single market access on current terms or on a new bespoke deal like Canada, and gave examples like Norway. It's like 2016 all over again, this...