Is it PotG?
Thrifty non-licker
Do ya reckon?I think we can all agree that we need to rejoin the EU, everyone is at least together on that one.
I know it’s hot out there but….
Do ya reckon?I think we can all agree that we need to rejoin the EU, everyone is at least together on that one.
Not necessarily so WZ - I thought this was interesting in The Times this week:Unfortunately you can't leave Brexit where it is. Apart from the fact that, as part of the deal, it has to be reviewed every 5 years, there's the simple fact that on day 1 the EU had the same laws as the UK. Now everytime a rule on animal welfare, husbandry, medicines, agricultural fertilisers, fungicides, weedkillers, medicines, chemical additives and a million and one other regulations gets changed, it means lots of new processes, tests and documentation are required for anything which is exported or imported from/to the EU.
If Brexit had been left 'as it was' and various regulations not been changed already, we would be spending tens of millions million less than we are on regulating imports (or as JRM put it 'An act of self harm') which is increasing every month, as the UK and EU diverge. Brexit didn't stop when the referendum took place or when Johnson 'Got it done'
Well, all the sane ones want to rejoin the single market and to get freedom of movement back.Do ya reckon?
I know it’s hot out there but….
You were right. Rejoining the EU has been ruled out.When I voted for Keir, I thought he was clear about leaving Brexit as it was, has he changed on this?
I am really no Brexit fan, but I also don't want the country arguing about this for another eight years.
For nowYou were right. Rejoining the EU has been ruled out.
Everything in the present plans is now. Anything in the future that digresses from the present plans is speculation.For now
Softly softly catchy monkey.Everything in the present plans is now. Anything in the future that digresses from the present plans is speculation.
We will need a national clamour to trigger a negotiation to join (not rejoin - the bond is broken). Farage doesn't have much traction, but he certainly would do if Labour mad it an aim.
I'm not objecting to your vision. But you will agree there is a lot of wood and a lot of trees in the way of the sunny lowlands.Softly softly catchy monkey.
It wouldn’t be easy. There’s a lot of thickos still left.I'm not objecting to your vision. But you will agree there is a lot of wood and a lot of trees in the way of the sunny lowlands.
100%Like it or not, we HAVE to rejoin the EU. We’ll probably be offered crap terms, but we could strive to change club rules from within. We have to get there first !
Each and every one of us, our children and their children have been shafted by a bunch of self righteous, pig ignorant shisters. I don’t know about you, but I’m reluctant to wait another 25 years for one apparent benefit of Brexit to become apparent.
The first thing we have to do is to make them realise they've ben conned. At the moment a lot of Brexiters still think it'll come good and, no matter how mush the evidence stacks up, we're better off out of it.It wouldn’t be easy. There’s a lot of thickos still left.
Not necessarily so WZ - I thought this was interesting in The Times this week:
The theory, worked up by pro-European think tanks, is that if we voluntarily aligned with the EU on industrial rules or veterinary and agricultural standards, and agreed to adopt and observe many regulations from Brussels in key areas, trade would become easier and we’d get pulled up by the mighty bloc next door.
The theory doesn’t work so well when you look at the numbers. This month EU industrial production data is flashing a red alarm. It is down by 2.9 per cent in the euro area and by 2.5 per cent in the EU compared with May last year. This worrying development — industrial decline tends to increase political instability — may be down to the aftermath of the energy shock after the full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022.
Unfortunately, it is about to be followed by the impact of President Biden’s Inflation Reduction Act, which subsidises US industry and technology with $360 billion. That great sucking sound is the disastrous de-industrialisation of the Continent getting under way as the US state aid bonanza sucks jobs and production out of an uncompetitive EU — and, if we are not careful, the UK too.
The EU leadership knows it has a serious problem, which is why Mario Draghi, a former prime minister of Italy, was drafted in to come up with a competitiveness plan. His delayed report, anticipated in September, is expected to recommend cutting through the ever-growing thicket of regulations that hinder growth.
Rees-Mogg is having a hissy fit, but he’s irrelevant now.Rejoining the EU is not going to happen for a generation closer working cooperatively makes sense for everyone except Fararge
Are you saying that unless one is in government then they shouldn't have a view?Rees-Mogg is having a hissy fit, but he’s irrelevant now.
Like it or not, we HAVE to rejoin the EU. We’ll probably be offered crap terms, but we could strive to change club rules from within. We have to get there first !
Each and every one of us, our children and their children have been shafted by a bunch of self righteous, pig ignorant shisters. I don’t know about you, but I’m reluctant to wait another 25 years for one apparent benefit of Brexit to become apparent.
Indeed, it's all going so swimmingly.But once we voted to leave other countries would do the same and the whole EU would collapse within 10 years, I read it on here
So we'd better be bloody quick if we want to rejoin the CU, SM or EU
Indeed, it's all going so swimmingly.
https://www.ft.com/content/9f2a3fdc-f91e-4e59-a4f1-f9b63f152d2e