Hampster Gull
Well-known member
- Dec 22, 2010
- 13,465
Can someone who knows please explain why we have to pay a brexit bill for leaving.
The brexiteer line is we don't owe anything, so anything is uni,pressive, anything in £bin is a disaster
Can someone who knows please explain why we have to pay a brexit bill for leaving.
Can someone who knows please explain why we have to pay a brexit bill for leaving.
Well The brexiteer line is we don't owe anything, so anything is a failure, anything above £1bn is a disaster for them and unfortunately us
Seems the clearest overview
'It says Britain's budget obligations include:
Outstanding commitments to the EU's previous budgets and the current budget, up to the point Britain leaves
Commitments Britain has made covering the period after it leaves in 2019, up to the end of the current 7-year budget period in 2020
Liabilities such as pensions for EU officials
Contingent liabilities to cover things such as the risk of countries ranging from Ukraine to Ireland defaulting on an EU loan
Costs related to the withdrawal process, such as the cost of relocating the two EU agencies currently located in Britain; the European Banking Authority and the European Medicines Agency
- It also wants Britain to pay costs associated with ending its membership of EU institutions and funds, including the European Investment Bank, European Central Bank and European Development Fund.
- Other commitments the EU wants Britain to honour include the funding of British teachers seconded to European schools until 2021, and the cost of obligations undertaken by bodies such as the European Defence Agency, before it leaves the bloc.'
all this does is higlight the problems of being in the EU: the annual bill for membership is apparently just a fraction of the finance commitment, that the EU is taking billions of cash behind the scenes. why arent EU pensions funded? why are we paying anything into ECB when we arent in the Euro? investment and development funds outside the EU budget? the whole enterprise is corrupt.
Seems the clearest overview
'It says Britain's budget obligations include:
Outstanding commitments to the EU's previous budgets and the current budget, up to the point Britain leaves
Commitments Britain has made covering the period after it leaves in 2019, up to the end of the current 7-year budget period in 2020
Liabilities such as pensions for EU officials
Contingent liabilities to cover things such as the risk of countries ranging from Ukraine to Ireland defaulting on an EU loan
Costs related to the withdrawal process, such as the cost of relocating the two EU agencies currently located in Britain; the European Banking Authority and the European Medicines Agency
- It also wants Britain to pay costs associated with ending its membership of EU institutions and funds, including the European Investment Bank, European Central Bank and European Development Fund.
- Other commitments the EU wants Britain to honour include the funding of British teachers seconded to European schools until 2021, and the cost of obligations undertaken by bodies such as the European Defence Agency, before it leaves the bloc.'
1. How can we owe on previous budgets.
2. So we pay till 2020.
3. Pensions?? surely that ends in 2020 when there budget ends?
4. That EU loan WE would of paid some of that so i assume if they did not default then were owed money? If they did default then we have lost the money already put in.
5. Understandable moving costs money.
6. Do we not already pay in the pot for this so surely it ends in 2020?
7. Fair enough.
Surely that does not add up to 70 billion though.
Labour could keep Britain in single market forever, says Tom Watson
Tom Watson, deputy leader of the Labour Party, has suggested that Britain could retain access to the single market and the customs union even after a transitional period leading to withdrawing from the EU.
https://www.thetimes.co.uk/edition/...e-permanent-says-labours-tom-watson-6r0gf07tq
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/201...y-remain-single-market-customs-union-labours/
https://youtu.be/g4okLzPWPAE
https://youtu.be/21fH-wgsn0o
https://youtu.be/JAct5g6siN4
By Labour's own definitions, they are misleading voters and not respecting the referendum result.
because I canI did state someone who knows, not to sure why you replied.
because I can
regards
DR
tell me someone who doeswhilst not disputing what you say, tom watson doesn't really speak for labour these days.
TIME FOR MEDS NIBBLEYou really can't, Bushy you Din.
TBTC
TIME FOR MEDS NIBBLE
regards
DR
Labour could keep Britain in single market forever, says Tom Watson
Tom Watson, deputy leader of the Labour Party, has suggested that Britain could retain access to the single market and the customs union even after a transitional period leading to withdrawing from the EU.
By Labour's own definitions, they are misleading voters and not respecting the referendum result.
all this does is higlight the problems of being in the EU: the annual bill for membership is apparently just a fraction of the finance commitment, that the EU is taking billions of cash behind the scenes. why arent EU pensions funded? why are we paying anything into ECB when we arent in the Euro? investment and development funds outside the EU budget? the whole enterprise is corrupt.
"Speaking to business groups in Washington DC on Friday, Mr Davis said the EU had presented the UK with "a large bill" and the UK had "very good lawyers" who would go through it "line by line".
Are these the same lawyers who advised in the Gina Miller case?