Political relations between UK-EU

Mate, I did the German figures compared to UK and that was dismissed, overall reduction in trade also discounted, along with a side order of ‘who cares about imports’, and an invitation to eat salad because KFC and others have run out out of the staple that pretty much is their reason for being.

No amount of information be it the UK Quality Mark nonsense, our refusal to entertain temporary visas for truck drivers or care home staff or a hundred and one other things is going to make a difference to the Brexit faithful.

And if you fully agree that trade barriers make trade harder and/of more expensive and then voted to make that happen, then what is the point in having the discussion? We agree. The only difference is I voted not to raise trade barriers with Europe. You did.

But, unless I am mistaken, the figures were H1 2020 compared to H1 2021 - which would be first lockdown COVID when economies tanked 20+% in a month to now (far fewer/no lockdowns). Anyroads no matters.

I voted leave because of TTIPs and I stand by my reasoning for my decision. And I would vote leave again tomorrow. Without the whiff of TTIPs I would have voted remain. No question.

And yes mate I can absolutely see the shit show that has unfolded, we’ve got the complexities of Brexit but on top of that we’ve got politicians on both sides playing silly buggers. Unfortunately the relationship has turned a little toxic with grandstanding on both sides, hopefully a more cordial relationship can be found for all our sakes.
 
But, unless I am mistaken, the figures were H1 2020 compared to H1 2021 - which would be first lockdown COVID when economies tanked 20+% in a month to now (far fewer/no lockdowns). Anyroads no matters.

I voted leave because of TTIPs and I stand by my reasoning for my decision. And I would vote leave again tomorrow. Without the whiff of TTIPs I would have voted remain. No question.

And yes mate I can absolutely see the shit show that has unfolded, we’ve got the complexities of Brexit but on top of that we’ve got politicians on both sides playing silly buggers. Unfortunately the relationship has turned a little toxic with grandstanding on both sides, hopefully a more cordial relationship can be found for all our sakes.

It was always going to turn toxic, especially once a Europhobic Govt was elected that is trying to pretend trade gravity and proximity isn’t a thing.

We’ve chosen our path. Outside of Europe, somewhat in the cold with the US and the pivot to China went tits over Hong Kong.

The one thing we managed to crow about was vaccines. Today, France (apparently) overtook us in single and double doses. You reckon the EU is going to forget Johnson reneging on his promise to work with Europe on Covid and then fixing the AZ contract to ‘UK first’ while still taking 20m doses from the EU?

There will be a working relationship, proximity dictates that. But you can forget cordial—too many flashpoints. We will spend the rest of days being bitter at the EU and blaming them for all our ills.

As a country we are a Daily Express headline.
 
But, unless I am mistaken, the figures were H1 2020 compared to H1 2021 - which would be first lockdown COVID when economies tanked 20+% in a month to now (far fewer/no lockdowns). Anyroads no matters.

I voted leave because of TTIPs and I stand by my reasoning for my decision. And I would vote leave again tomorrow. Without the whiff of TTIPs I would have voted remain. No question.

And yes mate I can absolutely see the shit show that has unfolded, we’ve got the complexities of Brexit but on top of that we’ve got politicians on both sides playing silly buggers. Unfortunately the relationship has turned a little toxic with grandstanding on both sides, hopefully a more cordial relationship can be found for all our sakes.
Would that be the TTIP that was binned off in 2016 because it would have given multinational corporations the power to override numerous regulations that benefit workers and the ability for them to sue governments if they try and implement legislation that negatively impacts them?

You do realise that we’re much more likely to sign up for something like that now that we’re desperate for trade deals to replace lost trade with the EU.
 
.....it was this harsh mistress that did for the UK Quality Mark, will likely do for our attempt to impose full custom borders and is currently ensuring I cannot get a KFC bucket....
So there are some sunlit uplands.
 
Last edited:
I remember a few years back - think it was Arriva buses in Stoke were being criticised for hiring drivers from Poland because there were no qualified drivers locally. I always thought the answer was for Arriva, or the UK state, to pay for training - it could have been part of a loan scheme like they do for students and it would have been returned out of wages.
All tried. You can't make people drive buses if there are more attractive jobs around. Expect cuts to bus services soon as turnover in the industry is very high. And driving tests for recruits way behind.
 
Would that be the TTIP that was binned off in 2016 because it would have given multinational corporations the power to override numerous regulations that benefit workers and the ability for them to sue governments if they try and implement legislation that negatively impacts them?

You do realise that we’re much more likely to sign up for something like that now that we’re desperate for trade deals to replace lost trade with the EU.

Yes it was binned off but by the Trump administration not the EU. The EU remained in favour of allowing corporations to override things like domestic healthcare priorities.

“Particularly in Germany, Austria, and Luxembourg, public resistance to TTIP was intense, but scepticism has also been running high in France and Italy. In October 2015, Berlin saw its largest protests in decades, with hundreds of thousands taking to the streets in to protest against TTIP.

The European Commission had long ignored this criticism, insisting on the legal mandate that it had been given by the member states to negotiate the deal. It maintained that it was not obliged to listen to civil society. But the anti-TTIP mood turned, to a certain degree, into an anti-EU-mood. To the TTIP-sceptics, the Commission’s stance became a symbol of all that was wrong with the EU: aloof bureaucrats in Brussels negotiating corporate-friendly deals at the European level without listening to people’s concern.

It is fair to say that because of this negative public mood, there was actually quite some relief in a number of national capitals, such as Berlin, when Donald Trump’s initial comments on TTIP last year enabled policymakers to shelve the negotiations without having to bear the blame for the negotiations ending.”
 
So its the EU's fault that we will have harmed our own legal system by becoming a 3rd country? The Express is just a joke,


Well actually it’s bonkers that the EU won’t recognise UK rulings as enforceable in the EU given the vast vast majority of all contracts are governed by UK law. I’m not sure what the EUs end game is here. Will people and firms have to sue in both the UK courts and then, if successful, a court that the EU does recognise as equivalent? That’ll make justice easier won’t it? Long term affect on UK might be EU domicile companies asking to transitioning contracts away from using UK law but I don’t see anyone outside the EU agreeing to this readily.
 
Yes it was binned off but by the Trump administration not the EU. The EU remained in favour of allowing corporations to override things like domestic healthcare priorities.

“Particularly in Germany, Austria, and Luxembourg, public resistance to TTIP was intense, but scepticism has also been running high in France and Italy. In October 2015, Berlin saw its largest protests in decades, with hundreds of thousands taking to the streets in to protest against TTIP.

The European Commission had long ignored this criticism, insisting on the legal mandate that it had been given by the member states to negotiate the deal. It maintained that it was not obliged to listen to civil society. But the anti-TTIP mood turned, to a certain degree, into an anti-EU-mood. To the TTIP-sceptics, the Commission’s stance became a symbol of all that was wrong with the EU: aloof bureaucrats in Brussels negotiating corporate-friendly deals at the European level without listening to people’s concern.

It is fair to say that because of this negative public mood, there was actually quite some relief in a number of national capitals, such as Berlin, when Donald Trump’s initial comments on TTIP last year enabled policymakers to shelve the negotiations without having to bear the blame for the negotiations ending.”
I am aware that Trump put the final nail in the coffin, but TTIP never really stood a chance of going through in the form that the US originally wanted because of the hostility across Europe that you have mentioned in your quote. Whatever the EU Commission thought, it would never have got past the EU Council or the EU Parliament that represents the individual governments and individual voters respectively, unless there were huge changes to the rights given to the multinationals. As an economic equal to the US, the EU had the clout to be able to resist those pressures if Trump hadn't knocked it on the head for other reasons. If and when we, as an individual country, are in a similar position in trade negotiations with the US, do you trust our government not to lie down and accept those terms? I certainly don't, especially as we'll still desperately be trying to make up for the downturn in trade with our nearest neighbours due to the trade barriers our government has insisted on implementing as a result of our vote to leave.
 
Well actually it’s bonkers that the EU won’t recognise UK rulings as enforceable in the EU given the vast vast majority of all contracts are governed by UK law. I’m not sure what the EUs end game is here. Will people and firms have to sue in both the UK courts and then, if successful, a court that the EU does recognise as equivalent? That’ll make justice easier won’t it? Long term affect on UK might be EU domicile companies asking to transitioning contracts away from using UK law but I don’t see anyone outside the EU agreeing to this readily.
Isn’t it just a straight case of us being left out in the cold while they harvest our markets?
 

Don't have an account? Register now and see fewer ads!

SIGN UP
Back
Top
  AdBlock Detected
Bluemoon relies on advertising to pay our hosting fees. Please support the site by disabling your ad blocking software to help keep the forum sustainable. Thanks.