View attachment 113633
So 17 hours to Cherbourg,then 5 hours to Lille.More than twice the UK route time.You're the europhile,so you would know about any Tunnel.
never realised all Irish exports had to go through Lille ? every days a school day !
View attachment 113633
So 17 hours to Cherbourg,then 5 hours to Lille.More than twice the UK route time.You're the europhile,so you would know about any Tunnel.
She hates England with a passion, nasty piece of work, I hope Ruth Davidson sits on her.
Could we have an extra 'h' in there please?
As a statement of fact London voted remain, as did Brighton.
Indeed, you are repeating yourself. You also generalised stating 'the sticks and the north' voting leave as if London and Brighton were the only votes for remain
No, that’s you extrapolating
As a statement of fact London voted remain, as did Brighton.
Irrelevant ,most thick constituencies in the country voted leave
Regards
DR
Back Door Boris escapes out the back again , this time in Wales. I wonder how the Irish are going to welcome him
Probably get a better welcome than your boy, wherever he goes in the UK ...
... if only 'don't know' was Leader of the Labour Party.
Irrelevant ,most constituencies in the country voted leave
Back Door Boris escapes out the back again , this time in Wales. I wonder how the Irish are going to welcome him
Apparently the Harland and Wolff shipyard workers protesting about their yard potentially closing chanted at him: "1, 2, 3, 4, Boris Johnson come out the door; 5, 6, 7, 8, meet us at the shipyard gate."
Other than that we've had:
Sinn Fein say that it would be "unthinkable" not to have a border poll after a no deal Brexit and say "He’s not in a position to rule it out because it’s a provision of the Good Friday Agreement. He describes himself as a student of the Good Friday Agreement, he’s fully conversant with its provisions, so he has argued with us a matter of timing I would say, rather than a matter of substance."
The SDLP say "We went into this meeting concerned that he would have a limited understanding of the complexities and fragility of this place and those concerns have been confirmed."
The Alliance say: "I don’t know if the prime minister has a plan; if he does he certainly disguises it well."
US Democrat Representative Richard Neal said: "He needs to be reminded that this is not about a return to empire. You’d be hard pressed to find everybody else who has been saying the things he has been saying as related to the backstop provision. Presidents don’t write trade agreements, members of Congress do. There is no way that Congress is going to take up the agreement if the Good Friday Agreement is jeopardised."
To which US Democrat Congressman Dan Kildee added: "It is important that whatever decisions the UK decides to make about Brexit that they recognise that they should not return to the notion of a hard border and undo the successes of the Good Friday Agreement. The idea that because the UK is making this decision about their own future doesn’t mean that they get to impose that on an agreement that has significant value in crafting peace. Our message to the UK leadership is – don’t expect a bilateral agreement with the US if the implementation of Brexit weakens the Good Friday Agreement in any way."
I get the impression that all-in-all it hasn't gone too well.
Apparently the Harland and Wolff shipyard workers protesting about their yard potentially closing chanted at him: "1, 2, 3, 4, Boris Johnson come out the door; 5, 6, 7, 8, meet us at the shipyard gate."
Other than that we've had:
Sinn Fein say that it would be "unthinkable" not to have a border poll after a no deal Brexit and say "He’s not in a position to rule it out because it’s a provision of the Good Friday Agreement. He describes himself as a student of the Good Friday Agreement, he’s fully conversant with its provisions, so he has argued with us a matter of timing I would say, rather than a matter of substance."
The SDLP say "We went into this meeting concerned that he would have a limited understanding of the complexities and fragility of this place and those concerns have been confirmed."
The Alliance say: "I don’t know if the prime minister has a plan; if he does he certainly disguises it well."
US Democrat Representative Richard Neal said: "He needs to be reminded that this is not about a return to empire. You’d be hard pressed to find everybody else who has been saying the things he has been saying as related to the backstop provision. Presidents don’t write trade agreements, members of Congress do. There is no way that Congress is going to take up the agreement if the Good Friday Agreement is jeopardised."
To which US Democrat Congressman Dan Kildee added: "It is important that whatever decisions the UK decides to make about Brexit that they recognise that they should not return to the notion of a hard border and undo the successes of the Good Friday Agreement. The idea that because the UK is making this decision about their own future doesn’t mean that they get to impose that on an agreement that has significant value in crafting peace. Our message to the UK leadership is – don’t expect a bilateral agreement with the US if the implementation of Brexit weakens the Good Friday Agreement in any way."
I get the impression that all-in-all it hasn't gone too well.
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