Brexit - The UK's EU Referendum & Withdrawal
Re: Brexit - The UK's EU Referendum & Withdrawal
11:50 Theresa May is giving her Brexit speech now/
12:00 The Pound is rising
12:32 May's speech ends. Pound is still rising.
12:00 The Pound is rising
12:32 May's speech ends. Pound is still rising.
Re: Brexit - The UK's European Union Referendum
I want...
I want...
I want...
I want...
Sorry May, you're going to find yourself sorely disappointed if you think you're getting your cake and will be allowed to eat it.
Unfortunately, this is what the UK voted for, so this is what it gets. Well done people.
I want...
I want...
I want...
Sorry May, you're going to find yourself sorely disappointed if you think you're getting your cake and will be allowed to eat it.
Unfortunately, this is what the UK voted for, so this is what it gets. Well done people.
Re: Brexit - The UK's European Union Referendum
Well, at least we're getting a running commentary on this clusterfuck, even if it's only as a distraction from the crisis in our health and social care services.
- Galloglass
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Re: Brexit - The UK's European Union Referendum
Listened to Mrs. May just now........"Trexbi Smena Trexbi"
Frankly she seems scared to me......I doubt she will get "Article 50" through Westminster. (Supreme Court willing)
Frankly she seems scared to me......I doubt she will get "Article 50" through Westminster. (Supreme Court willing)
Re: Brexit - The UK's European Union Referendum
If it fails to go through Westminster, then her only option would be to move for a General Election under the provisions in the Fixed Term Parliament Act (losing a major Government policy vote sort of mandates that). To avoid a General Election that would probably result in a lot of anti-Brexit MPs losing their seats (on all sides of the House), Labour would be faced with the prospect of having to vote to keep the Tories in power until 2020! Which could be interpreted as refreshing May's (parliamentary) mandate. An amusing thought.
On the other hand, of course, TM might appeal to the European Court - whichever way they adjudicate, it would simply re-inforce the Brexiters "lack of sovereignty" argument. Interesting times ahead!
On the other hand, of course, TM might appeal to the European Court - whichever way they adjudicate, it would simply re-inforce the Brexiters "lack of sovereignty" argument. Interesting times ahead!
The pessimist sees difficulty in every opportunity. The optimist sees the opportunity in every difficulty.
Winston Churchill
Winston Churchill
Re: Brexit - The UK's European Union Referendum
Pound on track for best day since 2008. The pound is the strongest performing currency in the G10 today, after Theresa May unveiled her 12 point Brexit plan. The Pound (vs USD) closed yesterday at $1.19. It closed today at $1.24
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Re: Brexit - The UK's European Union Referendum
Sorry to disappoint, it will be voted through by a massive majorityGalloglass wrote:Listened to Mrs. May just now........"Trexbi Smena Trexbi"
Frankly she seems scared to me......I doubt she will get "Article 50" through Westminster. (Supreme Court willing)
Did Canada "get its cake and eat it", or the other countries that have free trade or custom union agreements with he EU?SDL wrote:I want...
I want...
I want...
I want...
Sorry May, you're going to find yourself sorely disappointed if you think you're getting your cake and will be allowed to eat it.
Unfortunately, this is what the UK voted for, so this is what it gets. Well done people.
No country, or trading bloc (including the EU), says you must have freedom of movement, subservience of courts and parliament and large membership fees for a free trade deal. If so, Canada et al. would not have signed such trade deals with the EU.
Don't confuse membership of the EU's internal market with a mutually beneficial free trade deal.
Re: Brexit - The UK's European Union Referendum
The usual suspects Nicole Krankie and Tim Farron will be maximising their various causes.
Re: Brexit - The UK's European Union Referendum
Question Time should be interesting on Thursday evening, as well as PMQ's in the HoC, tomorrow.
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Re: Brexit - The UK's European Union Referendum
The interesting revelation from today is that Parliament will get to vote on the deal. How will that work? Presumably (??), the options will be 1) take the negotiated arrangement (whatever it is), or 2) reject the deal and go to WTO favoured nation tariffs. I'm really quite surprised nobody has really pressed Davis or May on this today.
Re: Brexit - The UK's European Union Referendum
It's actually the least revelatory thing from today. Under the Constitutional Reform and Governance Act 2010, treaties can only be ratified with parliamentary approval.dmereifield wrote:The interesting revelation from today is that Parliament will get to vote on the deal. How will that work? Presumably (??), the options will be 1) take the negotiated arrangement (whatever it is), or 2) reject the deal and go to WTO favoured nation tariffs. I'm really quite surprised nobody has really pressed Davis or May on this today.
Re: Brexit - The UK's European Union Referendum
Theresa May's 12-Point Brexit Plan
1. Provide certainty about the process of leaving the EU.
2. Control of our own laws. Leaving the European Union will mean that our laws will be made in Westminster, Edinburgh, Cardiff and Belfast.
3. Strengthen the Union between the four nations of the United Kingdom.
4. Deliver a practical solution that allows the maintenance of the Common Travel Area with the Republic of Ireland.
5. Brexit must mean control of the number of people who come to Britain from Europe.
6. Protect rights for EU nationals in Britain and British nationals in the EU. We want to guarantee rights of EU citizens living in Britain and the rights of British nationals in other member states, as early as we can.
7. Protect workers' rights. Not only will the government protect the rights of workers set out in European legislation, we will build on them.
8. Free trade with European markets through a bold and ambitious free trade agreement with the European Union.
9. New trade agreements with other countries. It is time for Britain to get out into the world and rediscover its role as a great, global, trading nation.
10. The best place for science and innovation. We will welcome agreement to continue to collaborate with our European partners on major science, research and technology initiatives.
11. Co-operation in the fight against crime and terrorism. We will continue to work closely with our European allies in foreign and defence policy even as we leave the EU itself.
12. A smooth, orderly Brexit. We believe a phased process of implementation will be in the interests of Britain, the EU institutions and member states.
1. Provide certainty about the process of leaving the EU.
2. Control of our own laws. Leaving the European Union will mean that our laws will be made in Westminster, Edinburgh, Cardiff and Belfast.
3. Strengthen the Union between the four nations of the United Kingdom.
4. Deliver a practical solution that allows the maintenance of the Common Travel Area with the Republic of Ireland.
5. Brexit must mean control of the number of people who come to Britain from Europe.
6. Protect rights for EU nationals in Britain and British nationals in the EU. We want to guarantee rights of EU citizens living in Britain and the rights of British nationals in other member states, as early as we can.
7. Protect workers' rights. Not only will the government protect the rights of workers set out in European legislation, we will build on them.
8. Free trade with European markets through a bold and ambitious free trade agreement with the European Union.
9. New trade agreements with other countries. It is time for Britain to get out into the world and rediscover its role as a great, global, trading nation.
10. The best place for science and innovation. We will welcome agreement to continue to collaborate with our European partners on major science, research and technology initiatives.
11. Co-operation in the fight against crime and terrorism. We will continue to work closely with our European allies in foreign and defence policy even as we leave the EU itself.
12. A smooth, orderly Brexit. We believe a phased process of implementation will be in the interests of Britain, the EU institutions and member states.
Re: Brexit - The UK's European Union Referendum
Galloglass wrote:Listened to Mrs. May just now........"Trexbi Smena Trexbi"
Frankly she seems scared to me......I doubt she will get "Article 50" through Westminster. (Supreme Court willing)
We'll be fine and whatever the deal we get or don't get, it will be immeasurably better than being a subservient client state of the EU having to live with policies dreamt up German & French bureaucrats.
It's Ireland that should be scared now you're going to be without the shield of the UK in the EU.
Re: Brexit - The UK's European Union Referendum
The Supreme Court is to give its judgment in the legal battle over Brexit on Tuesday 24th January 2017. The court will decide whether to reject or allow a Government appeal against a High Court ruling blocking royal prerogative being used to trigger Article 50
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article ... rexit.html
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article ... rexit.html
Re: Brexit - The UK's European Union Referendum
After yesterdays speech it's irrelevant, they're now getting a vote anyway.SKB wrote:The Supreme Court is to give its judgment in the legal battle over Brexit on Tuesday 24th January 2017. The court will decide whether to reject or allow a Government appeal against a High Court ruling blocking royal prerogative being used to trigger Article 50
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article ... rexit.html
- Galloglass
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Re: Brexit - The UK's European Union Referendum
Anyone with any sense in Ireland is "scared" of another attempt at imposing a hard border across the country. But if an EU border is imposed any ship wishing to visit Derry will have to do so through EU (Irish) waters as "Lough Foyle" will have to be "partitioned" in accordance with international law....(That alone could take a decade to "agree").....As for your "shield", I can't say I ever noticed it so won't miss it.Cooper wrote:Galloglass wrote:Listened to Mrs. May just now........"Trexbi Smena Trexbi"
Frankly she seems scared to me......I doubt she will get "Article 50" through Westminster. (Supreme Court willing)
We'll be fine and whatever the deal we get or don't get, it will be immeasurably better than being a subservient client state of the EU having to live with policies dreamt up German & French bureaucrats.
It's Ireland that should be scared now you're going to be without the shield of the UK in the EU.
Re: Brexit - The UK's European Union Referendum
..that was the whole point of it, but over the coming months and years you're about to find out just what it did for you.Galloglass wrote:As for your "shield", I can't say I ever noticed it so won't miss it.
Re: Brexit - The UK's European Union Referendum
Gotta admit, the dismissive 'Oh we'll be fine' claim is beyond old now.Cooper wrote:Galloglass wrote:Listened to Mrs. May just now........"Trexbi Smena Trexbi"
Frankly she seems scared to me......I doubt she will get "Article 50" through Westminster. (Supreme Court willing)
We'll be fine and whatever the deal we get or don't get, it will be immeasurably better than being a subservient client state of the EU having to live with policies dreamt up German & French bureaucrats.
It's Ireland that should be scared now you're going to be without the shield of the UK in the EU.
Re: Brexit - The UK's European Union Referendum
Not as old as the somewhat pathetic defeatist drama queen act that so many of you go in for.SDL wrote: Gotta admit, the dismissive 'Oh we'll be fine' claim is beyond old now.
Re: Brexit - The UK's European Union Referendum
And if Leave had used facts about how things would be better and not hidden behind false bus signs and suspect claims about immigrants, then those of us who are still concerned about Brexit might actually have some answers and have our concerns wiped away.Cooper wrote:Not as old as the somewhat pathetic defeatist drama queen act that so many of you go in for.SDL wrote: Gotta admit, the dismissive 'Oh we'll be fine' claim is beyond old now.
Re: Brexit - The UK's European Union Referendum
ZZZzzzz.SDL wrote: And if Leave had used facts about how things would be better and not hidden behind false bus signs and suspect claims about immigrants, then those of us who are still concerned about Brexit might actually have some answers and have our concerns wiped away.
Go away, grow up and learn how to respect a democratic decision.
Hint: It doesn't always go the way you want.
Re: Brexit - The UK's European Union Referendum
Respecting a democratic decision doesn't mean stopping making your case. That's not how representative democracy works. If it did there'd have been no one putting forward the case to leave the EU as the matter had been democratically decided in 1975.Cooper wrote:ZZZzzzz.SDL wrote: And if Leave had used facts about how things would be better and not hidden behind false bus signs and suspect claims about immigrants, then those of us who are still concerned about Brexit might actually have some answers and have our concerns wiped away.
Go away, grow up and learn how to respect a democratic decision.
Hint: It doesn't always go the way you want.
Re: Brexit - The UK's European Union Referendum
The result is the result, doesn't mean that those that don't agree should just STFU and go away.Cooper wrote:ZZZzzzz.SDL wrote: And if Leave had used facts about how things would be better and not hidden behind false bus signs and suspect claims about immigrants, then those of us who are still concerned about Brexit might actually have some answers and have our concerns wiped away.
Go away, grow up and learn how to respect a democratic decision.
Hint: It doesn't always go the way you want.
Hint : You can respect a democratic decision and still be concerned about the outcome... also, it never helps a person's case when they block genuine debate with insults and stupidity...
Re: Brexit - The UK's European Union Referendum
I've added in the entire live BBC coverage of the 23rd June 2016 EU referendum back on page 24 of this thread.
http://ukdefenceforum.net/viewtopic.php ... &start=345
http://ukdefenceforum.net/viewtopic.php ... &start=345
Re: Brexit - The UK's European Union Referendum
The Supreme Court has ruled that the government must consult Parliament before triggering Article 50 - the clause in the EU Treaty that will formally start the Brexit process.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-38730402
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-38730402