it would coincide with the end of the current EU multiannual financial framework (2014-2020) which would alleviate a lot of anxiety about the UK having to pay for the budget items they agreed on...
I like your "..."; Afterall it goes with the excellent insight.it would coincide with the end of the current EU multiannual financial framework (2014-2020) which would alleviate a lot of anxiety about the UK having to pay for the budget items they agreed on...
If a 21 month expansion is actually the eu 's idea (and not just a typo) then would it coincide with the end of current gov time line?
At any rate imo the suggestion is beyond ridiculous. Pretending & extending.
It is not likely anyone in the uk cares about staying until that timeline ends. Do you honestly think any party in the uk bothers with that bit? Either the uk pays or not, no one would seriously care to stay up until the time paid for officially ends.It coincides with the current EU budget neatly solving one issue, should the UK pay what it had already agreed to.
For me the backstop solution on the Irish border issue proposed by the EU was good enough: NI in the (Ireland) trade EU-zone and the border to the UK in the Irish Sea: three ports involved with on average 9 inspections per day according to the rulebook.
We assume that the UK will remain a WTO member and that trade agreements with third parties countries remain.
And IF... if Westminster would not have a majority for that FTA, and a compromise with Labour was inevitably needed (that Customs Union), imo the EU would have gladly changed tack for a Customs Union, already in March 2018. It would have put much less pressure on a lot of investments in the UK especially around the "just in time" car industry needing that Customs Union.
It was that or break the Good Friday Agreement.Demanding that a country create an internal border as part of trade deal is totally unacceptable. That demand was meant to be rejected.
It was that or break the Good Friday Agreement.
You know well that the good Friday agreement doesn't cover goods because the single market already existed and the parties didn't need to and practically couldn't as it was an EU competence.No it wasn't. The GFA does not set an open border for the EU, only that the UK and Republic of Ireland will allow each other's citizens in Ireland unimpeded crossing and the right to work across the border and be mostly treated as a local.
The UK leaving the EU does not prevent the UK from fulfilling its obligations under the GFA. Whether the RoI will fulfill hers is a problem for them to sort out with the EU.
The issue was what would be part of a customs union. The EU was demanding that the UK automatically accept any and all EU legislation and regulations, which was really a BINO, and would be politically impossible to maintain in the UK.
I know Corbyn kept talking about a customs union, but it was talk for the domestic politics, to "avoid splitting the party". It couldn't be done.
Will the erg (acronym for elect reese-mogg) gain anything by this?
I doubt the tories are fit to run for re-election.
You know well that the good Friday agreement doesn't cover goods because the single market already existed and the parties didn't need to and practically couldn't as it was an EU competence.
You know that the UK is required to control its border or risk being in default of WTO rules.
You know well that the UK is the one changing the relationship, the UK is the one with the disputed region that it has had to deploy troops into.
I'm not sure why I bothered to type that out - you just don't care - the EU is always wrong.
For what it's worth the GFA doesn't even do what you claim - the right to live work and passport free travel predates it by a lot.
I don't think you could have any more strongly how little you understand the situation in Northern Ireland if you'd pointed at a mural of King Billy and asked "so that's the Pope, then, is it?"As NI natural can hold both nationalities they can avoid any legal barriers to employment and are not subject to restrictions.
Gossip, a feint, or real ?
The Tories are accumulating party donations. Word is that meetings are held to prepare for elections (during the last months).
I don't think you could have any more strongly how little you understand the situation in Northern Ireland if you'd pointed at a mural of King Billy and asked "so that's the Pope, then, is it?"
The secure way forward for the Brexiteer Tories is to get the May-deal + that 3-year window in control.
Rees-Mogg is already back-peddling from his theological purity against the backstop. Better 1 bird in your hand than 10 in the sky.
In exchange he demands in public internal Tory elections for a new Tory PM (May can have "her" deal if she resigns).
The Nationalists feel very strongly that they are Irish, to the exclusion of being British. The Unionists feel very strongly that they are British, to the exclusion of being Irish. (At least, not without strong qualification.) Declaring that both communities can simply enjoy the benefits of dual-citizenship seems to suggest, not simply that you're unsure why people might feel strongly enough about this that it should lead to armed conflict, but that you don't quite grasp that they do.What is the situation then?