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politicalbetting.com » Blog Archive » The echoes of 2008? A cartoon first published in 2008 and it c

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  • Options
    TGOHF said:

    "serious disruptions to the food chain are to be expected."

    I strongly suspect if this comes to pass then Leave voters will suddenly be thinner on the ground and Boris and Gove and the Tory right will be politically slaughtered.

    Will nobody other than Ken Clarke call time on this madness?

    Shortages so bad that "A shopping trolley will be thrown through a window" by the end of week 1 is the prediction of a senior industry representative.
    Don't confuse lobbying with predictions. Our food supplies do not depend on a free-trade agreement with the European Union.

    The worst that could happen - if, for instance, there was zero notice of no deal - is that this could require some radical changes to supermarket's existing supply and business arrangements that might cause short-term disruption.

    It would also be a big opportunity for others.
    So the greenhouses of Spain and Holland will still be able to send fresh produce on a just-in-time supply chain basis without any hinderance from trade issues or customs hold ups or transactions costs?

    You sure about that?
    Which of the two governments do you think will be keener to cause a delay - Spain or the Uk ?
    Neither might be keen, but will have no choice due to a set of circumstances that we are heading towards thanks to the driverless government.
  • Options
    TGOHFTGOHF Posts: 21,633
    Scott_P said:

    TGOHF said:

    Would be to one of your retweets of some Euro funded think tank/journos.

    So you have no link to your made up bullshit.

    Noted...
    So For future reference when will this apocalypse triggered by the earth shattering event of leaving a trading cartel happen ?
  • Options
    RoyalBlueRoyalBlue Posts: 3,223
    FF43 said:

    RoyalBlue said:


    You think it's a nonsense. Why?

    1) we stay in the Single Market, so trade disruption will be minimal compared to other conceivable Brexits

    2) we're out of the CAP

    3) we're out of the CFP

    4) we can legally discriminate between British citizens and all other nationalities e.g. for welfare purposes

    5) we will have our own seat in forums like the WTO

    It's not exactly what I want, but it's better than the status quo.

    Why do I think the EEA is nonsense? Because it gives us a large part, but by no means all, of the benefits of the EU with obligations that are almost the same. But it will be on a take it or leave it, do as we tell you, basis. In that case, why not take all the benefits of EU membership and have a real say in what happens to you?

    That's not how the Single Market works. If you read Richard North's work, you'd realise that the EU is often a passthrough for global regulation, rather than its source. Leaving allows us to take our place in those forums where much of the regulation originates (e.g. UNECE) rather than rely on the common representation of an EU figure who may not care overly for our interests.

    We enjoy partial benefits in exchange for partial compliance. Not ideal, but hardly 'nonsense'.
  • Options
    Scott_P said:
    The Independent must be losing some serious market share of its eighteen readers to The New European.
  • Options
    Scott_PScott_P Posts: 51,453
    TGOHF said:

    So For future reference when will this apocalypse triggered by the earth shattering event of leaving a trading cartel happen ?

    You should know. You made it up
  • Options
    OchEyeOchEye Posts: 1,469

    "serious disruptions to the food chain are to be expected."

    I strongly suspect if this comes to pass then Leave voters will suddenly be thinner on the ground and Boris and Gove and the Tory right will be politically slaughtered.

    Will nobody other than Ken Clarke call time on this madness?

    Shortages so bad that "A shopping trolley will be thrown through a window" by the end of week 1 is the prediction of a senior industry representative.
    Don't confuse lobbying with predictions. Our food supplies do not depend on a free-trade agreement with the European Union.

    The worst that could happen - if, for instance, there was zero notice of no deal - is that this could require some radical changes to supermarket's existing supply and business arrangements that might cause short-term disruption.

    It would also be a big opportunity for others.
    And pigs will be flying in to save our bacon....
  • Options
    archer101auarcher101au Posts: 1,612

    TGOHF said:

    Brexit will be like the millennium bug - a lot of wailing over nothing. But with £350m a week compensation.

    We have been through this canard on PB. There was only not a problem because of years of code checking in preparation.
    Not exactly. The bug was incredibly easy to fix. The IT community made an absolute fortune pretending it was difficult and threatening everyone with the consequences if they did not get their own way. Does sound familiar....
  • Options
    TGOHFTGOHF Posts: 21,633

    TGOHF said:

    "serious disruptions to the food chain are to be expected."

    I strongly suspect if this comes to pass then Leave voters will suddenly be thinner on the ground and Boris and Gove and the Tory right will be politically slaughtered.

    Will nobody other than Ken Clarke call time on this madness?

    Shortages so bad that "A shopping trolley will be thrown through a window" by the end of week 1 is the prediction of a senior industry representative.
    Don't confuse lobbying with predictions. Our food supplies do not depend on a free-trade agreement with the European Union.

    The worst that could happen - if, for instance, there was zero notice of no deal - is that this could require some radical changes to supermarket's existing supply and business arrangements that might cause short-term disruption.

    It would also be a big opportunity for others.
    So the greenhouses of Spain and Holland will still be able to send fresh produce on a just-in-time supply chain basis without any hinderance from trade issues or customs hold ups or transactions costs?

    You sure about that?
    Which of the two governments do you think will be keener to cause a delay - Spain or the Uk ?
    Neither might be keen, but will have no choice due to a set of circumstances that we are heading towards thanks to the driverless government.
    So the Spanish farmers, Sainsbury’s , the transporters , HMG and the Spanish government will all be on the side of fresh tomatoes arriving but it won’t happen ?

    Right.

    Perhaps the Euro navy will take a break from ferrying migrants over from Libya and sink the flotilla of tomato boats ?
  • Options
    Scott_PScott_P Posts: 51,453
    SeanT said:

    But life will get better

    Much better for these folk

    https://twitter.com/aureliebonal/status/933821648557494274
  • Options
    TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 41,298
    SeanT said:

    nielh said:

    SeanT said:

    nielh said:

    SeanT said:

    SeanT said:

    jayfdee said:

    This makes me count my blessings.

    I'm also glad I was raised by parents who view debt as the eighth deadliest sin.

    .
    people will think they know what the causation is.
    The rest of the EU is not booming.

    Recent IMF predictions for EU 2017 GDP growth

    Netherlands: 2.2%
    Germany: 1.8%
    UK: 1.6%
    France: 1.5%
    Italy: 1.1%
    I meant post Brexit, if we're doing badly and they are doing well then some people will think it is the fault of Brexit.

    I fully concede it could be other things, but I think people will blame Brexit.
    Meh. And if we dorked for a supersoft Brexit. That was achievable. Probably not now.
    The problem w cars on the road it'll all be worth it.
    Much of

    Germany has all this waiting, btw, the recent advance of the AFD is just the early sign.
    I think that's true, but it doesn't bode well for our long term future. In about 15 years we've gone from the idea that the world is following our example and moving towards the embrace of free markets and liberal democracy, to the (probably flawed) idea that we can build a fortress around ourselves and maintain our own living standards whilst not investing in our army etc, and whilst surrounded by totalitarian regimes at a time when there is increasing competition for resources. If I'm right were really fucked.
    We're not fucked. The world improves. But it will not be run by us. It will be run by China, then the USA, India, and the EU

    Personally I think, like many nutters, that we should unite with Canada, Oz and NZ. A liberal union under the crown.

    But life will get better
    Tonga. Don't forget Tonga. Therein will be the source of our future trade agreements and influence.
  • Options
    TGOHFTGOHF Posts: 21,633
    Scott_P said:

    TGOHF said:

    So For future reference when will this apocalypse triggered by the earth shattering event of leaving a trading cartel happen ?

    You should know. You made it up
    So you’ve changed your mind and there won’t be a Brexit triggered crisis ?
  • Options
    Sean_FSean_F Posts: 35,836
    SeanT said:

    FF43 said:

    SeanT said:

    Talked today to someone close to (but not actually part of) the British side of the Brexit talks: he expects a December agreement to proceed, but thinks Britain is disastrously unprepared for the kind of Canada+ agreement that we seem to be seeking, to the point that serious disruptions to the food chain are to be expected. He thinks very long transition period (5 years plus) is essential.

    He's a trade technician, not a politician, with no detectable views on Brexit per se. And technicians tend to overestimate the importance of technical arrangement. But nonetheless...hmm.

    Brexit is gonna HURT. Like having a BABY. Anyone who thought otherwise is a fool. Who didn't read my Spectator piece.

    https://blogs.spectator.co.uk/2016/10/brexit-just-like-baby/
    I read your piece. Stripping away all the arguments and rhetoric to get to the essential, Brexit is a disconnection. That's the opposite of having a baby.

    You were onto something with Brexit being the Reformation while the EU is the Catholic Church however.
    I think it's a mix of the two, actually. In brute psychosocial terms - how it will affect the psyche of the UK - it is "having a baby"

    Ideologically, yes, it is very akin to the Reformation. Sometimes spookily so.

    Incidentally (you may not be surprised) I think having kids is generally a splendid move (it's certainly the best "decision") I ever made) and the Reformation was an even better idea: the absolute making of England, then Britain, then the British Empire.

    I'm in two minds. I love the old English religion, hate the corruption of the Catholic Church.
  • Options
    rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 53,979
    SeanT said:

    AndyJS said:

    SeanT said:

    jayfdee said:

    This makes me count my blessings.

    I'm also glad I was raised by parents who view debt as the eighth deadliest sin.

    Me too. I am relieved that I can ride out Brexit with impunity, and have sorted my offspring as well, and sorted my finance.
    Are we at tipping point yet re Brexit?
    I am a remainer, and the self inflicted damage we are receiving will only grow. Yes I am old, a northerner, time to come out and declare.
    Not tipping point yet.

    Leavers knew there'd be job losses once Brexit happens but they still voted for it.

    I suspect tipping point will be a long post Brexit slump (and the rest of the EU is booming), people will think they know what the causation is.
    The rest of the EU is not booming.

    Recent IMF predictions for EU 2017 GDP growth

    Netherlands: 2.2%
    Germany: 1.8%
    UK: 1.6%
    France: 1.5%
    Italy: 1.1%
    The problem is laziness and complacency in most European countries, regardless of whether they're in the EU or the Euro. That's why productivity is not increasing. But most people prefer to blame their governments rather than themselves.
    It's not laziness or complacency. It's just the rest of the world finally catching up with the West, and enjoying all the techno and industrial advantages we take for granted. A Bangladeshi metal basher is just as good as a Birkenhead metal basher, there is no difference. So why should the latter earn ten times the former?!

    Read across for any number of professions/vocations.

    The rest of the world has caught up with the West. We are no longer an army of muskets facing tribes with spears. So our growth slows as theirs powers ahead. Note that America now has a predicted growth rate of about 1.8% per annum. Barely better than the UK.

    This sounds bad for us, but it is great for humanity as a whole: global poverty levels are plummeting. We should stop whingeing. We aren't exactly starving, and across Asia and parts of Africa BILLIONS are being lifted from desperate poverty. At last.
    Spot on.

    (But don't forget we're also getting f*cked by demographics.)
  • Options
    DavidLDavidL Posts: 51,271

    Golly, reading this thread is upsetting. I did not realise when I voted for Brexit that I was voting for my wife and son to go hungry.

    Starvation, planes grounded, deep recession, collapsed pound, food banks for all, and third world status at the very least according to the remain camp
    I’m going to stock up with some montagnolo just in case. And maybe some Chablis to go with it. Otherwise I think we’ll be fine.
  • Options

    "serious disruptions to the food chain are to be expected."

    I strongly suspect if this comes to pass then Leave voters will suddenly be thinner on the ground and Boris and Gove and the Tory right will be politically slaughtered.

    Will nobody other than Ken Clarke call time on this madness?

    Shortages so bad that "A shopping trolley will be thrown through a window" by the end of week 1 is the prediction of a senior industry representative.
    Don't confuse lobbying with predictions. Our food supplies do not depend on a free-trade agreement with the European Union.

    The worst that could happen - if, for instance, there was zero notice of no deal - is that this could require some radical changes to supermarket's existing supply and business arrangements that might cause short-term disruption.

    It would also be a big opportunity for others.
    So the greenhouses of Spain and Holland will still be able to send fresh produce on a just-in-time supply chain basis without any hinderance from trade issues or customs hold ups or transactions costs?

    You sure about that?
    Let's take a worst case - no deal under WTO rules: there would be extra customs exports/imports checks at European/British ports (let's say 12 hours total, extra) and there would be additional import tariffs maybe (let's say 10% on everything).

    That means supermarkets need to either raise prices slightly, or order slightly more on slightly longer lead times to keep their shelves supplied, and buy a few more lorries and vans. Or source more from overseas suppliers (like they already do) from Africa or Asia, as the UK disapplies CAP, or strikes other deals with them. Check the sticker on your Sainsbury's avocado.

    Either way there is plenty of fresh produce from all over the world hitting the shelves, just a slightly higher price from the EU, which may then be undercut from others importing from outside the EU.

    This is lobbying. The quantity of the bullshit is in direct proportion to the level of effort required to refute it.

    No-one is going to go hungry.
  • Options
    Sean_F said:

    SeanT said:

    FF43 said:

    SeanT said:

    Talked today to someone close to (but not actually part of) the British side of the Brexit talks: he expects a December agreement to proceed, but thinks Britain is disastrously unprepared for the kind of Canada+ agreement that we seem to be seeking, to the point that serious disruptions to the food chain are to be expected. He thinks very long transition period (5 years plus) is essential.

    He's a trade technician, not a politician, with no detectable views on Brexit per se. And technicians tend to overestimate the importance of technical arrangement. But nonetheless...hmm.

    Brexit is gonna HURT. Like having a BABY. Anyone who thought otherwise is a fool. Who didn't read my Spectator piece.

    https://blogs.spectator.co.uk/2016/10/brexit-just-like-baby/
    I read your piece. Stripping away all the arguments and rhetoric to get to the essential, Brexit is a disconnection. That's the opposite of having a baby.

    You were onto something with Brexit being the Reformation while the EU is the Catholic Church however.
    I think it's a mix of the two, actually. In brute psychosocial terms - how it will affect the psyche of the UK - it is "having a baby"

    Ideologically, yes, it is very akin to the Reformation. Sometimes spookily so.

    Incidentally (you may not be surprised) I think having kids is generally a splendid move (it's certainly the best "decision") I ever made) and the Reformation was an even better idea: the absolute making of England, then Britain, then the British Empire.

    I'm in two minds. I love the old English religion, hate the corruption of the Catholic Church.
    I like the institutional independence of the English church from Rome, and it's decidedly English (or British, if you prefer) Elizabethan compromise that set it up in the first place.
  • Options
    DavidLDavidL Posts: 51,271

    Scott_P said:
    The Independent must be losing some serious market share of its eighteen readers to The New European.
    We may have just doubled the number of people who will see their front page. What a public service this site is.
  • Options
    TGOHFTGOHF Posts: 21,633
    Brixton is Thatcherism revisited - the shackles of the controlling statist machine are being taken off - technology will bypass ever less relevant governments- it’s already happening.
  • Options
    SeanT said:

    nielh said:

    SeanT said:

    nielh said:

    SeanT said:

    SeanT said:

    jayfdee said:

    This makes me count my blessings.

    I'm also glad I was raised by parents who view debt as the eighth deadliest sin.

    .
    people will think they know what the causation is.
    The rest of the EU is not booming.

    Recent IMF predictions for EU 2017 GDP growth

    Netherlands: 2.2%
    Germany: 1.8%
    UK: 1.6%
    France: 1.5%
    Italy: 1.1%
    I meant post Brexit, if we're doing badly and they are doing well then some people will think it is the fault of Brexit.

    I fully concede it could be other things, but I think people will blame Brexit.
    Meh. And if we dorked for a supersoft Brexit. That was achievable. Probably not now.
    The problem w cars on the road it'll all be worth it.
    Much of

    Germany has all this waiting, btw, the recent advance of the AFD is just the early sign.
    I think that's true, but it doesn't bode well for our long term future. In about 15 years we've gone from the idea that the world is following our example and moving towards the embrace of free markets and liberal democracy, to the (probably flawed) idea that we can build a fortress around ourselves and maintain our own living standards whilst not investing in our army etc, and whilst surrounded by totalitarian regimes at a time when there is increasing competition for resources. If I'm right were really fucked.
    We're not fucked. The world improves. But it will not be run by us. It will be run by China, then the USA, India, and the EU

    Personally I think, like many nutters, that we should unite with Canada, Oz and NZ. A liberal union under the crown.

    But life will get better
    Just China and India.
  • Options
    TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 41,298
    rcs1000 said:

    SeanT said:

    AndyJS said:

    SeanT said:

    jayfdee said:

    This makes me count my blessings.

    I'm also glad I was raised by parents who view debt as the eighth deadliest sin.

    Me too. I am relieved that I can ride out Brexit with impunity, and have sorted my offspring as well, and sorted my finance.
    Are we at tipping point yet re Brexit?
    I am a remainer, and the self inflicted damage we are receiving will only grow. Yes I am old, a northerner, time to come out and declare.
    Not tipping point yet.

    Leavers knew there'd be job losses once Brexit happens but they still voted for it.

    I suspect tipping point will be a long post Brexit slump (and the rest of the EU is booming), people will think they know what the causation is.
    The rest of the EU is not booming.

    Recent IMF predictions for EU 2017 GDP growth

    Netherlands: 2.2%
    Germany: 1.8%
    UK: 1.6%
    France: 1.5%
    Italy: 1.1%
    The problem is laziness and complacency in most European countries, regardless of whether they're in the EU or the Euro. That's why productivity is not increasing. But most people prefer to blame their governments rather than themselves.
    It's not laziness or complacency. It's just the rest of the world finally catching up with the West, and enjoying all the techno and industrial advantages we take for granted. A Bangladeshi metal basher is just as good as a Birkenhead metal basher, there is no difference. So why should the latter earn ten times the former?!

    Read across for any number of professions/vocations.

    The rest of the world has caught up with the West. We are no longer an army of muskets facing tribes with spears. So our growth slows as theirs powers ahead. Note that America now has a predicted growth rate of about 1.8% per annum. Barely better than the UK.

    This sounds bad for us, but it is great for humanity as a whole: global poverty levels are plummeting. We should stop whingeing. We aren't exactly starving, and across Asia and parts of Africa BILLIONS are being lifted from desperate poverty. At last.
    Spot on.

    (But don't forget we're also getting f*cked by demographics.)
    And so surely not the time to be cutting ourselves adrift from leading a large trading bloc that will move forward in this new paradigm.
  • Options
    Scott_PScott_P Posts: 51,453

    (let's say 12 hours total, extra)

    LOL

    ROFL

    ROFLMAO

    PMSL

    No, but seriously...
  • Options
    FF43FF43 Posts: 15,710
    RoyalBlue said:

    FF43 said:

    RoyalBlue said:


    You think it's a nonsense. Why?

    1) we stay in the Single Market, so trade disruption will be minimal compared to other conceivable Brexits

    2) we're out of the CAP

    3) we're out of the CFP

    4) we can legally discriminate between British citizens and all other nationalities e.g. for welfare purposes

    5) we will have our own seat in forums like the WTO

    It's not exactly what I want, but it's better than the status quo.

    Why do I think the EEA is nonsense? Because it gives us a large part, but by no means all, of the benefits of the EU with obligations that are almost the same. But it will be on a take it or leave it, do as we tell you, basis. In that case, why not take all the benefits of EU membership and have a real say in what happens to you?

    That's not how the Single Market works. If you read Richard North's work, you'd realise that the EU is often a passthrough for global regulation, rather than its source. Leaving allows us to take our place in those forums where much of the regulation originates (e.g. UNECE) rather than rely on the common representation of an EU figure who may not care overly for our interests.

    We enjoy partial benefits in exchange for partial compliance. Not ideal, but hardly 'nonsense'.
    Unfortunately not. Partial benefits in exchange for nearly complete compliance (especially when you take our previous opt-outs into account). And as a Remainer, funnily enough, I do care about sovereignty. The EEA doesn't give us any say over what happens to us. Membership also gives us influence in dealing with third parties.

    Don't get me wrong. The EEA is the best of the Brexit options and I think the country can live with it, unlike the other options. The lack of say is definitely a problem, though. We're not Norway, which is happy to outsource its foreign relations to third parties
  • Options
    Ishmael_ZIshmael_Z Posts: 8,981

    TGOHF said:

    Brexit will be like the millennium bug - a lot of wailing over nothing. But with £350m a week compensation.

    We have been through this canard on PB. There was only not a problem because of years of code checking in preparation.
    Not exactly. The bug was incredibly easy to fix. The IT community made an absolute fortune pretending it was difficult and threatening everyone with the consequences if they did not get their own way. Does sound familiar....
    Let's not forget that the IT community created the unbelievably foreseeable problem in the first place. How hard can it be, to predict what year is going to follow 1999?
  • Options
    RoyalBlueRoyalBlue Posts: 3,223
    DavidL said:

    Golly, reading this thread is upsetting. I did not realise when I voted for Brexit that I was voting for my wife and son to go hungry.

    Starvation, planes grounded, deep recession, collapsed pound, food banks for all, and third world status at the very least according to the remain camp
    I’m going to stock up with some montagnolo just in case. And maybe some Chablis to go with it. Otherwise I think we’ll be fine.
    Don't forget the tinned artichoke hearts to accompany.
  • Options
    OchEye said:

    "serious disruptions to the food chain are to be expected."

    I strongly suspect if this comes to pass then Leave voters will suddenly be thinner on the ground and Boris and Gove and the Tory right will be politically slaughtered.

    Will nobody other than Ken Clarke call time on this madness?

    Shortages so bad that "A shopping trolley will be thrown through a window" by the end of week 1 is the prediction of a senior industry representative.
    Don't confuse lobbying with predictions. Our food supplies do not depend on a free-trade agreement with the European Union.

    The worst that could happen - if, for instance, there was zero notice of no deal - is that this could require some radical changes to supermarket's existing supply and business arrangements that might cause short-term disruption.

    It would also be a big opportunity for others.
    And pigs will be flying in to save our bacon....
    Hard border. Required if we are a 3rd party. Our trucks held in endless queue by the French. Huge cost/delay. Meaning our trucks can't get back here with produce as stuck trying to head out. Which means we run out of things quickly. As we have 3 days of fresh food here.
  • Options
    TGOHFTGOHF Posts: 21,633

    "serious disruptions to the food chain are to be expected."

    I strongly suspect if this comes to pass then Leave voters will suddenly be thinner on the ground and Boris and Gove and the Tory right will be politically slaughtered.

    Will nobody other than Ken Clarke call time on this madness?

    Shortages so bad that "A shopping trolley will be thrown through a window" by the end of week 1 is the prediction of a senior industry representative.
    Don't confuse lobbying with predictions. Our food supplies do not depend on a free-trade agreement with the European Union.

    The worst that could happen - if, for instance, there was zero notice of no deal - is that this could require some radical changes to supermarket's existing supply and business arrangements that might cause short-term disruption.

    It would also be a big opportunity for others.
    So the greenhouses of Spain and Holland will still be able to send fresh produce on a just-in-time supply chain basis without any hinderance from trade issues or customs hold ups or transactions costs?

    You sure about that?
    Let's take a worst case - no deal under WTO rules: there would be extra customs exports/imports checks at European/British ports (let's say 12 hours total, extra) and there would be additional import tariffs maybe (let's say 10% on everything).

    That means supermarkets need to either raise prices slightly, or order slightly more on slightly longer lead times to keep their shelves supplied, and buy a few more lorries and vans. Or source more from overseas suppliers (like they already do) from Africa or Asia, as the UK disapplies CAP, or strikes other deals with them. Check the sticker on your Sainsbury's avocado.

    Either way there is plenty of fresh produce from all over the world hitting the shelves, just a slightly higher price from the EU, which may then be undercut from others importing from outside the EU.

    This is lobbying. The quantity of the bullshit is in direct proportion to the level of effort required to refute it.

    No-one is going to go hungry.
    If the EU snarls up tomato shipping causing Mr Waitrose to buy from outside the EU the Spanish farmers aren’t going to shrug their shoulders and move on.
  • Options
    DavidLDavidL Posts: 51,271
    RoyalBlue said:

    DavidL said:

    Golly, reading this thread is upsetting. I did not realise when I voted for Brexit that I was voting for my wife and son to go hungry.

    Starvation, planes grounded, deep recession, collapsed pound, food banks for all, and third world status at the very least according to the remain camp
    I’m going to stock up with some montagnolo just in case. And maybe some Chablis to go with it. Otherwise I think we’ll be fine.
    Don't forget the tinned artichoke hearts to accompany.
    I’ll pass on that. But montagnolo is a seriously good cheese. As rich as Camembert but with some bite.
  • Options
    TGOHFTGOHF Posts: 21,633

    OchEye said:

    "serious disruptions to the food chain are to be expected."

    I strongly suspect if this comes to pass then Leave voters will suddenly be thinner on the ground and Boris and Gove and the Tory right will be politically slaughtered.

    Will nobody other than Ken Clarke call time on this madness?

    Shortages so bad that "A shopping trolley will be thrown through a window" by the end of week 1 is the prediction of a senior industry representative.
    Don't confuse lobbying with predictions. Our food supplies do not depend on a free-trade agreement with the European Union.

    The worst that could happen - if, for instance, there was zero notice of no deal - is that this could require some radical changes to supermarket's existing supply and business arrangements that might cause short-term disruption.

    It would also be a big opportunity for others.
    And pigs will be flying in to save our bacon....
    Hard border. Required if we are a 3rd party. Our trucks held in endless queue by the French. Huge cost/delay. Meaning our trucks can't get back here with produce as stuck trying to head out. Which means we run out of things quickly. As we have 3 days of fresh food here.
    Nobody outside the EU can breed pigs ? The EU needs a slick border or the Uk will shop elsewhere.
  • Options
    NickPalmerNickPalmer Posts: 21,334

    Talked today to someone close to (but not actually part of) the British side of the Brexit talks: he expects a December agreement to proceed, but thinks Britain is disastrously unprepared for the kind of Canada+ agreement that we seem to be seeking, to the point that serious disruptions to the food chain are to be expected. He thinks very long transition period (5 years plus) is essential.

    He's a trade technician, not a politician, with no detectable views on Brexit per se. And technicians tend to overestimate the importance of technical arrangement. But nonetheless...hmm.

    I don't see any problems with the food chain. We get JIT deliveries from all over the world today, including produce from Africa and the Americas in 36 hours.
    His belief is that during the period between leaving and signing fresh trade agreements, we will need extensive procedures for checking food at the borders, and there is little sign of preparation for them. He says the worst-case recourse is to open the border to imports from 3rd parties without quality checks, which would be unprecedented.

    This isn't from me - I absolutely have little idea of what's needed or whether we've prepared for it.
  • Options
    foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548
    nielh said:

    "serious disruptions to the food chain are to be expected."

    I strongly suspect if this comes to pass then Leave voters will suddenly be thinner on the ground and Boris and Gove and the Tory right will be politically slaughtered.

    Will nobody other than Ken Clarke call time on this madness?

    Shortages so bad that "A shopping trolley will be thrown through a window" by the end of week 1 is the prediction of a senior industry representative.
    I don’t need this kind of stress.
    I think it is more likely that prices go up as opposed to food shortages.
    Look on the bright side. Food shortages will help cure the nation's obesity epidemic...
  • Options
    archer101auarcher101au Posts: 1,612
    Will May even survive until Christmas? The word seems to be that she will back down and offer the EU 40bn without an explicit link to a trade agreement, or even a clear link to talks, nor an agreement that this is the final amount. This is the exact opposite of what Boris and Gove apparently agreed.

    If she backs this up with a concession on ECJ jurisdiction then she is finished. The great Brexit betrayal is just beginning...
  • Options
    RoyalBlueRoyalBlue Posts: 3,223
    FF43 said:

    RoyalBlue said:

    FF43 said:

    RoyalBlue said:


    You think it's a nonsense. Why?

    1) we stay in the Single Market, so trade disruption will be minimal compared to other conceivable Brexits

    2) we're out of the CAP

    3) we're out of the CFP

    4) we can legally discriminate between British citizens and all other nationalities e.g. for welfare purposes

    5) we will have our own seat in forums like the WTO

    It's not exactly what I want, but it's better than the status quo.

    Why do I think the EEA is nonsense? Because it gives us a large part, but by no means all, of the benefits of the EU with obligations that are almost the same. But it will be on a take it or leave it, do as we tell you, basis. In that case, why not take all the benefits of EU membership and have a real say in what happens to you?

    That's not how the Single Market works. If you read Richard North's work, you'd realise that the EU is often a passthrough for global regulation, rather than its source. Leaving allows us to take our place in those forums where much of the regulation originates (e.g. UNECE) rather than rely on the common representation of an EU figure who may not care overly for our interests.

    We enjoy partial benefits in exchange for partial compliance. Not ideal, but hardly 'nonsense'.
    Unfortunately not. Partial benefits in exchange for nearly complete compliance (especially when you take our previous opt-outs into account). And as a Remainer, funnily enough, I do care about sovereignty. The EEA doesn't give us any say over what happens to us. Membership also gives us influence in dealing with third parties.

    Don't get me wrong. The EEA is the best of the Brexit options and I think the country can live with it, unlike the other options. The lack of say is definitely a problem, though. We're not Norway, which is happy to outsource its foreign relations to third parties
    You're just quoting propaganda from the Remain campaign about 'fax democracy'. There's not really much point continuing.

    Please read what Richard North has to say on the Norway option.
  • Options
    RoyalBlueRoyalBlue Posts: 3,223

    Will May even survive until Christmas? The word seems to be that she will back down and offer the EU 40bn without an explicit link to a trade agreement, or even a clear link to talks, nor an agreement that this is the final amount. This is the exact opposite of what Boris and Gove apparently agreed.

    If she backs this up with a concession on ECJ jurisdiction then she is finished. The great Brexit betrayal is just beginning...

    The kind of Brexiteers who foam at the mouth at any kind of concession are not well represented in the Commons. May will be fine.
  • Options
    TGOHF said:

    OchEye said:

    "serious disruptions to the food chain are to be expected."

    I strongly suspect if this comes to pass then Leave voters will suddenly be thinner on the ground and Boris and Gove and the Tory right will be politically slaughtered.

    Will nobody other than Ken Clarke call time on this madness?

    Shortages so bad that "A shopping trolley will be thrown through a window" by the end of week 1 is the prediction of a senior industry representative.
    Don't confuse lobbying with predictions. Our food supplies do not depend on a free-trade agreement with the European Union.

    The worst that could happen - if, for instance, there was zero notice of no deal - is that this could require some radical changes to supermarket's existing supply and business arrangements that might cause short-term disruption.

    It would also be a big opportunity for others.
    And pigs will be flying in to save our bacon....
    Hard border. Required if we are a 3rd party. Our trucks held in endless queue by the French. Huge cost/delay. Meaning our trucks can't get back here with produce as stuck trying to head out. Which means we run out of things quickly. As we have 3 days of fresh food here.
    Nobody outside the EU can breed pigs ? The EU needs a slick border or the Uk will shop elsewhere.
    They can! At significantly greater cost
  • Options
    Sean_FSean_F Posts: 35,836

    Sean_F said:

    SeanT said:

    FF43 said:

    SeanT said:

    Talked today to someone close to (but not actually part of) the British side of the Brexit talks: he expects a December agreement to proceed, but thinks Britain is disastrously unprepared for the kind of Canada+ agreement that we seem to be seeking, to the point that serious disruptions to the food chain are to be expected. He thinks very long transition period (5 years plus) is essential.

    He's a trade technician, not a politician, with no detectable views on Brexit per se. And technicians tend to overestimate the importance of technical arrangement. But nonetheless...hmm.

    Brexit is gonna HURT. Like having a BABY. Anyone who thought otherwise is a fool. Who didn't read my Spectator piece.

    https://blogs.spectator.co.uk/2016/10/brexit-just-like-baby/
    I read your piece. Stripping away all the arguments and rhetoric to get to the essential, Brexit is a disconnection. That's the opposite of having a baby.

    You were onto something with Brexit being the Reformation while the EU is the Catholic Church however.
    I think it's a mix of the two, actually. In brute psychosocial terms - how it will affect the psyche of the UK - it is "having a baby"

    Ideologically, yes, it is very akin to the Reformation. Sometimes spookily so.

    Incidentally (you may not be surprised) I think having kids is generally a splendid move (it's certainly the best "decision") I ever made) and the Reformation was an even better idea: the absolute making of England, then Britain, then the British Empire.

    I'm in two minds. I love the old English religion, hate the corruption of the Catholic Church.
    I like the institutional independence of the English church from Rome, and it's decidedly English (or British, if you prefer) Elizabethan compromise that set it up in the first place.
    Pre-Reformation, England was The Land of the Bells. Our churches were things of wonder and beauty. Yet, the hierarchy made a rotten parody of Christianity. I hate the destruction of images that took place in the Reformation, yet I understand why feelings ran so high.
  • Options
    BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 31,667

    Will May even survive until Christmas? The word seems to be that she will back down and offer the EU 40bn without an explicit link to a trade agreement, or even a clear link to talks, nor an agreement that this is the final amount. This is the exact opposite of what Boris and Gove apparently agreed.

    If she backs this up with a concession on ECJ jurisdiction then she is finished. The great Brexit betrayal is just beginning...

    Ah what a lovely thought. Cheered me up immensely.

    If only...
  • Options
    DavidLDavidL Posts: 51,271

    Will May even survive until Christmas? The word seems to be that she will back down and offer the EU 40bn without an explicit link to a trade agreement, or even a clear link to talks, nor an agreement that this is the final amount. This is the exact opposite of what Boris and Gove apparently agreed.

    If she backs this up with a concession on ECJ jurisdiction then she is finished. The great Brexit betrayal is just beginning...

    She is looking stronger now than at any time since that catastrophic election result. Good for at least another 2 years I reckon and I don’t say that with any particular enthusiasm.
  • Options
    This thread is beyond depressing
  • Options
    AndyJSAndyJS Posts: 29,395
    Greg Clark getting an applause on QT from Colchester than he wouldn't have got in London.
  • Options
    DavidL said:

    Golly, reading this thread is upsetting. I did not realise when I voted for Brexit that I was voting for my wife and son to go hungry.

    Starvation, planes grounded, deep recession, collapsed pound, food banks for all, and third world status at the very least according to the remain camp
    I’m going to stock up with some montagnolo just in case. And maybe some Chablis to go with it. Otherwise I think we’ll be fine.
    Maybe a pistol as well just in case

    The crescendo of remain noise just now is astonishing and maybe the panic relates to the next few days when TM gives her ultimatum as she is in a win win with it. EU accepts and progress to trade talks or TM leaves with the backing of the majority of the Country
  • Options
    foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548
    Sean_F said:

    Sean_F said:

    SeanT said:

    FF43 said:

    SeanT said:

    Talked today to someone close to (but not actually part of) the British side of the Brexit talks: he expects a December agreement to proceed, but thinks Britain is disastrously unprepared for the kind of Canada+ agreement that we seem to be seeking, to the point that serious disruptions to the food chain are to be expected. He thinks very long transition period (5 years plus) is essential.

    He's a trade technician, not a politician, with no detectable views on Brexit per se. And technicians tend to overestimate the importance of technical arrangement. But nonetheless...hmm.

    Brexit is gonna HURT. Like having a BABY. Anyone who thought otherwise is a fool. Who didn't read my Spectator piece.

    https://blogs.spectator.co.uk/2016/10/brexit-just-like-baby/
    I read your piece. Stripping away all the arguments and rhetoric to get to the essential, Brexit is a disconnection. That's the opposite of having a baby.

    You were onto something with Brexit being the Reformation while the EU is the Catholic Church however.
    I think it's a mix of the two, actually. In brute psychosocial terms - how it will affect the psyche of the UK - it is "having a baby"

    Ideologically, yes, it is very akin to the Reformation. Sometimes spookily so.

    Incidentally (you may not be surprised) I think having kids is generally a splendid move (it's certainly the best "decision") I ever made) and the Reformation was an even better idea: the absolute making of England, then Britain, then the British Empire.

    I'm in two minds. I love the old English religion, hate the corruption of the Catholic Church.
    I like the institutional independence of the English church from Rome, and it's decidedly English (or British, if you prefer) Elizabethan compromise that set it up in the first place.
    Pre-Reformation, England was The Land of the Bells. Our churches were things of wonder and beauty. Yet, the hierarchy made a rotten parody of Christianity. I hate the destruction of images that took place in the Reformation, yet I understand why feelings ran so high.
    Churches are organisations of people, not temples of idolatry. Graven images do not belong.
  • Options
    DavidLDavidL Posts: 51,271

    DavidL said:

    Golly, reading this thread is upsetting. I did not realise when I voted for Brexit that I was voting for my wife and son to go hungry.

    Starvation, planes grounded, deep recession, collapsed pound, food banks for all, and third world status at the very least according to the remain camp
    I’m going to stock up with some montagnolo just in case. And maybe some Chablis to go with it. Otherwise I think we’ll be fine.
    Maybe a pistol as well just in case

    The crescendo of remain noise just now is astonishing and maybe the panic relates to the next few days when TM gives her ultimatum as she is in a win win with it. EU accepts and progress to trade talks or TM leaves with the backing of the majority of the Country
    Nah this is Britain. We should leave that gun nonsense to our American cousins.
  • Options
    FF43FF43 Posts: 15,710
    RoyalBlue said:

    FF43 said:

    RoyalBlue said:

    FF43 said:

    RoyalBlue said:


    You think it's a nonsense. Why?

    1) we stay in the Single Market, so trade disruption will be minimal compared to other conceivable Brexits

    2) we're out of the CAP

    3) we're out of the CFP

    4) we can legally discriminate between British citizens and all other nationalities e.g. for welfare purposes

    5) we will have our own seat in forums like the WTO

    It's not exactly what I want, but it's better than the status quo.

    Why do I think the EEA is nonsense? Because it gives us a large part, but by no means all, of the benefits of the EU with obligations that are almost the same. But it will be on a take it or leave it, do as we tell you, basis. In that case, why not take all the benefits of EU membership and have a real say in what happens to you?

    That's not how the Single Market works. If you read Richard North's work, you'd realise that the EU is often a passthrough for global regulation, rather than its source. Leaving allows us to take our place in those forums where much of the regulation originates (e.g. UNECE) rather than rely on the common representation of an EU figure who may not care overly for our interests.

    We enjoy partial benefits in exchange for partial compliance. Not ideal, but hardly 'nonsense'.
    Unfortunately not. Partial benefits in exchange for nearly complete compliance (especially when you take our previous opt-outs into account). And as a Remainer, funnily enough, I do care about sovereignty. The EEA doesn't give us any say over what happens to us. Membership also gives us influence in dealing with third parties.

    Don't get me wrong. The EEA is the best of the Brexit options and I think the country can live with it, unlike the other options. The lack of say is definitely a problem, though. We're not Norway, which is happy to outsource its foreign relations to third parties
    You're just quoting propaganda from the Remain campaign about 'fax democracy'. There's not really much point continuing.

    Please read what Richard North has to say on the Norway option.
    I don't think I am "just quoting propaganda from the Remain campaign about 'fax democracy' ". Equally I am not trying to convince you of the merits or demerits of an arrangement that I think is doable but highly suboptimal. The lack of say is a problem for me, but more importantly I think it would be a problem for the British generally. Thing is, the problems of the other plausible outcomes are bigger. The EEA is relatively easy and it removes some big headaches (eg Irish border).
  • Options
    RoyalBlueRoyalBlue Posts: 3,223

    Sean_F said:

    Sean_F said:

    SeanT said:

    FF43 said:

    SeanT said:

    Talked today to someone close to (but not actually part of) the British side of the Brexit talks: he expects a December agreement to proceed, but thinks Britain is disastrously unprepared for the kind of Canada+ agreement that we seem to be seeking, to the point that serious disruptions to the food chain are to be expected. He thinks very long transition period (5 years plus) is essential.

    He's a trade technician, not a politician, with no detectable views on Brexit per se. And technicians tend to overestimate the importance of technical arrangement. But nonetheless...hmm.

    Brexit is gonna HURT. Like having a BABY. Anyone who thought otherwise is a fool. Who didn't read my Spectator piece.

    https://blogs.spectator.co.uk/2016/10/brexit-just-like-baby/
    I read your piece. Stripping away all the arguments and rhetoric to get to the essential, Brexit is a disconnection. That's the opposite of having a baby.

    You were onto something with Brexit being the Reformation while the EU is the Catholic Church however.
    I think it's a mix of the two, actually. In brute psychosocial terms - how it will affect the psyche of the UK - it is "having a baby"

    Ideologically, yes, it is very akin to the Reformation. Sometimes spookily so.

    Incidentally (you may not be surprised) I think having kids is generally a splendid move (it's certainly the best "decision") I ever made) and the Reformation was an even better idea: the absolute making of England, then Britain, then the British Empire.

    I'm in two minds. I love the old English religion, hate the corruption of the Catholic Church.
    I like the institutional independence of the English church from Rome, and it's decidedly English (or British, if you prefer) Elizabethan compromise that set it up in the first place.
    Pre-Reformation, England was The Land of the Bells. Our churches were things of wonder and beauty. Yet, the hierarchy made a rotten parody of Christianity. I hate the destruction of images that took place in the Reformation, yet I understand why feelings ran so high.
    Churches are organisations of people, not temples of idolatry. Graven images do not belong.
    There is the small problem of Protestantism being the gateway drug to unbelief...
  • Options
    BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 31,667

    DavidL said:

    Golly, reading this thread is upsetting. I did not realise when I voted for Brexit that I was voting for my wife and son to go hungry.

    Starvation, planes grounded, deep recession, collapsed pound, food banks for all, and third world status at the very least according to the remain camp
    I’m going to stock up with some montagnolo just in case. And maybe some Chablis to go with it. Otherwise I think we’ll be fine.
    Maybe a pistol as well just in case

    The crescendo of remain noise just now is astonishing and maybe the panic relates to the next few days when TM gives her ultimatum as she is in a win win with it. EU accepts and progress to trade talks or TM leaves with the backing of the majority of the Country
    "TM gives her ultimatum" = "TM gives her latest concession"
  • Options
    MortimerMortimer Posts: 13,942
    AndyJS said:

    Greg Clark getting an applause on QT from Colchester than he wouldn't have got in London.

    Clark has been my outside tip for next leader for the past few years.
  • Options
    DavidLDavidL Posts: 51,271
    RoyalBlue said:

    Sean_F said:

    Sean_F said:

    SeanT said:

    FF43 said:

    SeanT said:

    Talked today to someone close to (but not actually part of) the British side of the Brexit talks: he expects a December agreement to proceed, but thinks Britain is disastrously unprepared for the kind of Canada+ agreement that we seem to be seeking, to the point that serious disruptions to the food chain are to be expected. He thinks very long transition period (5 years plus) is essential.

    He's a trade technician, not a politician, with no detectable views on Brexit per se. And technicians tend to overestimate the importance of technical arrangement. But nonetheless...hmm.

    Brexit is gonna HURT. Like having a BABY. Anyone who thought otherwise is a fool. Who didn't read my Spectator piece.

    https://blogs.spectator.co.uk/2016/10/brexit-just-like-baby/
    I read your piece. Stripping away all the arguments and rhetoric to get to the essential, Brexit is a disconnection. That's the opposite of having a baby.

    You were onto something with Brexit being the Reformation while the EU is the Catholic Church however.
    I think it's a mix of the two, actually. In brute psychosocial terms - how it will affect the psyche of the UK - it is "having a baby"

    Ideologically, yes, it is very akin to the Reformation. Sometimes spookily so.

    Incidentally (you may not be surprised) I think having kids is generally a splendid move (it's certainly the best "decision") I ever made) and the Reformation was an even better idea: the absolute making of England, then Britain, then the British Empire.

    I'm in two minds. I love the old English religion, hate the corruption of the Catholic Church.
    I like the institutional independence of the English church from Rome, and it's decidedly English (or British, if you prefer) Elizabethan compromise that set it up in the first place.
    Pre-Reformation, England was The Land of the Bells. Our churches were things of wonder and beauty. Yet, the hierarchy made a rotten parody of Christianity. I hate the destruction of images that took place in the Reformation, yet I understand why feelings ran so high.
    Churches are organisations of people, not temples of idolatry. Graven images do not belong.
    There is the small problem of Protestantism being the gateway drug to unbelief...
    Like.
  • Options
    MortimerMortimer Posts: 13,942
    edited November 2017
    Hogan Howe comes across well, too. Better than I was expecting and far better than Lord Rose.
  • Options
    BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 31,667
    DavidL said:

    RoyalBlue said:

    DavidL said:

    Golly, reading this thread is upsetting. I did not realise when I voted for Brexit that I was voting for my wife and son to go hungry.

    Starvation, planes grounded, deep recession, collapsed pound, food banks for all, and third world status at the very least according to the remain camp
    I’m going to stock up with some montagnolo just in case. And maybe some Chablis to go with it. Otherwise I think we’ll be fine.
    Don't forget the tinned artichoke hearts to accompany.
    I’ll pass on that. But montagnolo is a seriously good cheese. As rich as Camembert but with some bite.
    Never mind the Montagnolo, once we are independent again we could resurrect Lymeswold!
  • Options
    archer101auarcher101au Posts: 1,612
    RoyalBlue said:

    Will May even survive until Christmas? The word seems to be that she will back down and offer the EU 40bn without an explicit link to a trade agreement, or even a clear link to talks, nor an agreement that this is the final amount. This is the exact opposite of what Boris and Gove apparently agreed.

    If she backs this up with a concession on ECJ jurisdiction then she is finished. The great Brexit betrayal is just beginning...

    The kind of Brexiteers who foam at the mouth at any kind of concession are not well represented in the Commons. May will be fine.
    These are not 'any type of concession', they are a fundamental abdication of the nations interests.

    There are more than enough patriotic Tory MPs to deny May a majority, but ultimately it comes down to the Leavers in the cabinet. If they resign in protest she is gone.

    I suspect Gove and Boris allowing her to make the new offer linked to trade was just about giving her enough rope to hang herself. They can say that they supported a compromise but that in the end the EU failed to recognise that the bill had to be linked to an FTA and that May failed by refusing to insist on it.
  • Options

    Will May even survive until Christmas? The word seems to be that she will back down and offer the EU 40bn without an explicit link to a trade agreement, or even a clear link to talks, nor an agreement that this is the final amount. This is the exact opposite of what Boris and Gove apparently agreed.

    If she backs this up with a concession on ECJ jurisdiction then she is finished. The great Brexit betrayal is just beginning...

    Not according to the paper review. The offer is explicit on trade talks and an exchange of letters
  • Options
    foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548
    RoyalBlue said:

    Sean_F said:

    Sean_F said:

    SeanT said:

    FF43 said:

    SeanT said:

    Talked today to someone close to (but not actually part of) the British side of the Brexit talks: he expects a December agreement to proceed, but thinks Britain is disastrously unprepared for the kind of Canada+ agreement that we seem to be seeking, to the point that serious disruptions to the food chain are to be expected. He thinks very long transition period (5 years plus) is essential.

    He's a trade technician, not a politician, with no detectable views on Brexit per se. And technicians tend to overestimate the importance of technical arrangement. But nonetheless...hmm.

    Brexit is gonna HURT. Like having a BABY. Anyone who thought otherwise is a fool. Who didn't read my Spectator piece.

    https://blogs.spectator.co.uk/2016/10/brexit-just-like-baby/
    I read your piece. Stripping away all the arguments and rhetoric to get to the essential, Brexit is a disconnection. That's the opposite of having a baby.

    You were onto something with Brexit being the Reformation while the EU is the Catholic Church however.
    I think it's a mix of the two, actually. In brute psychosocial terms - how it will affect the psyche of the UK - it is "having a baby"

    Ideologically, yes, it is very akin to the Reformation. Sometimes spookily so.

    Incidentally (you may not be surprised) I think having kids is generally a splendid move (it's certainly the best "decision") I ever made) and the Reformation was an even better idea: the absolute making of England, then Britain, then the British Empire.

    I'm in two minds. I love the old English religion, hate the corruption of the Catholic Church.
    I like the institutional independence of the English church from Rome, and it's decidedly English (or British, if you prefer) Elizabethan compromise that set it up in the first place.
    Pre-Reformation, England was The Land of the Bells. Our churches were things of wonder and beauty. Yet, the hierarchy made a rotten parody of Christianity. I hate the destruction of images that took place in the Reformation, yet I understand why feelings ran so high.
    Churches are organisations of people, not temples of idolatry. Graven images do not belong.
    There is the small problem of Protestantism being the gateway drug to unbelief...
    Not true, Protestantism is booming :)

    https://twitter.com/foxinsoxuk/status/928520906170871808
  • Options
    Sean_FSean_F Posts: 35,836

    Sean_F said:

    Sean_F said:

    SeanT said:

    FF43 said:

    SeanT said:

    Talked today to someone close to (but not actually part of) the British side of the Brexit talks: he expects a December agreement to proceed, but thinks Britain is disastrously unprepared for the kind of Canada+ agreement that we seem to be seeking, to the point that serious disruptions to the food chain are to be expected. He thinks very long transition period (5 years plus) is essential.

    He's a trade technician, not a politician, with no detectable views on Brexit per se. And technicians tend to overestimate the importance of technical arrangement. But nonetheless...hmm.

    Brexit is gonna HURT. Like having a BABY. Anyone who thought otherwise is a fool. Who didn't read my Spectator piece.

    https://blogs.spectator.co.uk/2016/10/brexit-just-like-baby/
    I read your piece. Stripping away all the arguments and rhetoric to get to the essential, Brexit is a disconnection. That's the opposite of having a baby.

    You were onto something with Brexit being the Reformation while the EU is the Catholic Church however.
    I think it's a mix of the two, actually. In brute psychosocial terms - how it will affect the psyche of the UK - it is "having a baby"

    Ideologically, yes, it is very akin to the Reformation. Sometimes spookily so.

    Incidentally (you may not be surprised) I think having kids is generally a splendid move (it's certainly the best "decision") I ever made) and the Reformation was an even better idea: the absolute making of England, then Britain, then the British Empire.

    I'm in two minds. I love the old English religion, hate the corruption of the Catholic Church.
    I like the institutional independence of the English church from Rome, and it's decidedly English (or British, if you prefer) Elizabethan compromise that set it up in the first place.
    Pre-Reformation, England was The Land of the Bells. Our churches were things of wonder and beauty. Yet, the hierarchy made a rotten parody of Christianity. I hate the destruction of images that took place in the Reformation, yet I understand why feelings ran so high.
    Churches are organisations of people, not temples of idolatry. Graven images do not belong.
    It's possible to think that change is required, while still regretting the things that get destroyed along the way.
  • Options
    rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 53,979

    Will May even survive until Christmas? The word seems to be that she will back down and offer the EU 40bn without an explicit link to a trade agreement, or even a clear link to talks, nor an agreement that this is the final amount. This is the exact opposite of what Boris and Gove apparently agreed.

    If she backs this up with a concession on ECJ jurisdiction then she is finished. The great Brexit betrayal is just beginning...

    Would this be the "word" that you've just made up, by any chance?

    Nothing is decided until everything is decided. There is no "cheque" until everything is sorted.

    And while I think we should have pushed harder against EU sequencing, it does change the power dynamic somewhat. Imagine we've agreed to pay (say) €40bn. So, the EU keeps spending in it's own merry way, and it's now six months from Brexit and we say "this trade deal on the table is not enough...", then suddenly they're the people worrying about getting their €40bn.

    As an aside, and given its the story you keep pushing, how about a small bet.

    If we pay (say) €40bn or more and don't enter into an FTA - or a transition to an FTA - after Brexit day, then I pay you £1,000.

    If we pay €40bn, and do, then you pay me just £500.

    I'm confident enough to offer you 2-1.

    Only a fool wouldn't take it.

    (Bet void in the event of no payment.)
  • Options
    Mortimer said:

    Hogan Howe comes across well, too. Better than I was expecting and far better than Lord Rose.

    Is that the Lord Rose who thought the bid advantage of being in the EU was that it stopped pay rises for the workers ?
  • Options
    BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 31,667

    RoyalBlue said:

    Will May even survive until Christmas? The word seems to be that she will back down and offer the EU 40bn without an explicit link to a trade agreement, or even a clear link to talks, nor an agreement that this is the final amount. This is the exact opposite of what Boris and Gove apparently agreed.

    If she backs this up with a concession on ECJ jurisdiction then she is finished. The great Brexit betrayal is just beginning...

    The kind of Brexiteers who foam at the mouth at any kind of concession are not well represented in the Commons. May will be fine.
    These are not 'any type of concession', they are a fundamental abdication of the nations interests.

    There are more than enough patriotic Tory MPs to deny May a majority, but ultimately it comes down to the Leavers in the cabinet. If they resign in protest she is gone.

    I suspect Gove and Boris allowing her to make the new offer linked to trade was just about giving her enough rope to hang herself. They can say that they supported a compromise but that in the end the EU failed to recognise that the bill had to be linked to an FTA and that May failed by refusing to insist on it.
    Just about sums up this wonderful government!
  • Options
    DavidL said:

    DavidL said:

    Golly, reading this thread is upsetting. I did not realise when I voted for Brexit that I was voting for my wife and son to go hungry.

    Starvation, planes grounded, deep recession, collapsed pound, food banks for all, and third world status at the very least according to the remain camp
    I’m going to stock up with some montagnolo just in case. And maybe some Chablis to go with it. Otherwise I think we’ll be fine.
    Maybe a pistol as well just in case

    The crescendo of remain noise just now is astonishing and maybe the panic relates to the next few days when TM gives her ultimatum as she is in a win win with it. EU accepts and progress to trade talks or TM leaves with the backing of the majority of the Country
    Nah this is Britain. We should leave that gun nonsense to our American cousins.
    The pistol was for single use to the owner
  • Options
    foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548
    Sean_F said:

    Sean_F said:

    Sean_F said:

    SeanT said:

    FF43 said:

    SeanT said:

    Talked today to someone close to (but not actually part of) the British side of the Brexit talks: he expects a December agreement to proceed, but thinks Britain is disastrously unprepared for the kind of Canada+ agreement that we seem to be seeking, to the point that serious disruptions to the food chain are to be expected. He thinks very long transition period (5 years plus) is essential.

    He's a trade technician, not a politician, with no detectable views on Brexit per se. And technicians tend to overestimate the importance of technical arrangement. But nonetheless...hmm.

    Brexit is gonna HURT. Like having a BABY. Anyone who thought otherwise is a fool. Who didn't read my Spectator piece.

    https://blogs.spectator.co.uk/2016/10/brexit-just-like-baby/
    I read your piece. Stripping away all the arguments and rhetoric to get to the essential, Brexit is a disconnection. That's the opposite of having a baby.

    You were onto something with Brexit being the Reformation while the EU is the Catholic Church however.
    I think it's a mix of the two, actually. In brute psychosocial terms - how it will affect the psyche of the UK - it is "having a baby"

    Ideologically, yes, it is very akin to the Reformation. Sometimes spookily so.

    Incidentally (you may not be surprised) I think having kids is generally a splendid move (it's certainly the best "decision") I ever made) and the Reformation was an even better idea: the absolute making of England, then Britain, then the British Empire.

    I'm in two minds. I love the old English religion, hate the corruption of the Catholic Church.
    I like the institutional independence of the English church from Rome, and it's decidedly English (or British, if you prefer) Elizabethan compromise that set it up in the first place.
    Pre-Reformation, England was The Land of the Bells. Our churches were things of wonder and beauty. Yet, the hierarchy made a rotten parody of Christianity. I hate the destruction of images that took place in the Reformation, yet I understand why feelings ran so high.
    Churches are organisations of people, not temples of idolatry. Graven images do not belong.
    It's possible to think that change is required, while still regretting the things that get destroyed along the way.
    Put them in a museum.
  • Options
    MortimerMortimer Posts: 13,942
    rcs1000 said:

    Will May even survive until Christmas? The word seems to be that she will back down and offer the EU 40bn without an explicit link to a trade agreement, or even a clear link to talks, nor an agreement that this is the final amount. This is the exact opposite of what Boris and Gove apparently agreed.

    If she backs this up with a concession on ECJ jurisdiction then she is finished. The great Brexit betrayal is just beginning...

    Would this be the "word" that you've just made up, by any chance?

    Nothing is decided until everything is decided. There is no "cheque" until everything is sorted.

    And while I think we should have pushed harder against EU sequencing, it does change the power dynamic somewhat. Imagine we've agreed to pay (say) €40bn. So, the EU keeps spending in it's own merry way, and it's now six months from Brexit and we say "this trade deal on the table is not enough...", then suddenly they're the people worrying about getting their €40bn.

    As an aside, and given its the story you keep pushing, how about a small bet.

    If we pay (say) €40bn or more and don't enter into an FTA - or a transition to an FTA - after Brexit day, then I pay you £1,000.

    If we pay €40bn, and do, then you pay me just £500.

    I'm confident enough to offer you 2-1.

    Only a fool wouldn't take it.

    (Bet void in the event of no payment.)
    Chapeau.

    I agree with this; we're currently at our weakest, but money has always been our biggest carrot.
  • Options

    DavidL said:

    Golly, reading this thread is upsetting. I did not realise when I voted for Brexit that I was voting for my wife and son to go hungry.

    Starvation, planes grounded, deep recession, collapsed pound, food banks for all, and third world status at the very least according to the remain camp
    I’m going to stock up with some montagnolo just in case. And maybe some Chablis to go with it. Otherwise I think we’ll be fine.
    Maybe a pistol as well just in case

    The crescendo of remain noise just now is astonishing and maybe the panic relates to the next few days when TM gives her ultimatum as she is in a win win with it. EU accepts and progress to trade talks or TM leaves with the backing of the majority of the Country
    "TM gives her ultimatum" = "TM gives her latest concession"
    The cabinet of remainers and leavers is united on the offer - it is only if trade talks are agreed
  • Options
    MortimerMortimer Posts: 13,942
    edited November 2017

    Mortimer said:

    Hogan Howe comes across well, too. Better than I was expecting and far better than Lord Rose.

    Is that the Lord Rose who thought the bid advantage of being in the EU was that it stopped pay rises for the workers ?
    :)
  • Options

    RoyalBlue said:

    Will May even survive until Christmas? The word seems to be that she will back down and offer the EU 40bn without an explicit link to a trade agreement, or even a clear link to talks, nor an agreement that this is the final amount. This is the exact opposite of what Boris and Gove apparently agreed.

    If she backs this up with a concession on ECJ jurisdiction then she is finished. The great Brexit betrayal is just beginning...

    The kind of Brexiteers who foam at the mouth at any kind of concession are not well represented in the Commons. May will be fine.
    These are not 'any type of concession', they are a fundamental abdication of the nations interests.

    There are more than enough patriotic Tory MPs to deny May a majority, but ultimately it comes down to the Leavers in the cabinet. If they resign in protest she is gone.

    I suspect Gove and Boris allowing her to make the new offer linked to trade was just about giving her enough rope to hang herself. They can say that they supported a compromise but that in the end the EU failed to recognise that the bill had to be linked to an FTA and that May failed by refusing to insist on it.
    I think you will find that if May goes so dors Brexit. She is the one holding it together
  • Options
    RoyalBlueRoyalBlue Posts: 3,223

    RoyalBlue said:

    Sean_F said:

    Sean_F said:

    SeanT said:

    FF43 said:

    SeanT said:

    Talked today to someone close to (but not actually part of) the British side of the Brexit talks: he expects a December agreement to proceed, but thinks Britain is disastrously unprepared for the kind of Canada+ agreement that we seem to be seeking, to the point that serious disruptions to the food chain are to be expected. He thinks very long transition period (5 years plus) is essential.

    He's a trade technician, not a politician, with no detectable views on Brexit per se. And technicians tend to overestimate the importance of technical arrangement. But nonetheless...hmm.

    Brexit is gonna HURT. Like having a BABY. Anyone who thought otherwise is a fool. Who didn't read my Spectator piece.

    https://blogs.spectator.co.uk/2016/10/brexit-just-like-baby/
    I read your piece. Stripping away all the arguments and rhetoric to get to the essential, Brexit is a disconnection. That's the opposite of having a baby.

    You were onto something with Brexit being the Reformation while the EU is the Catholic Church however.
    I think it's a mix of the two, actually. In brute psychosocial terms - how it will affect the psyche of the UK - it is "having a baby"

    Ideologically, yes, it is very akin to the Reformation. Sometimes spookily so.

    Incidentally (you may not be surprised) I think having kids is generally a splendid move (it's certainly the best "decision") I ever made) and the Reformation was an even better idea: the absolute making of England, then Britain, then the British Empire.

    I'm in two minds. I love the old English religion, hate the corruption of the Catholic Church.
    I like the institutional independence of the English church from Rome, and it's decidedly English (or British, if you prefer) Elizabethan compromise that set it up in the first place.
    Pre-Reformation, England was The Land of the Bells. Our churches were things of wonder and beauty. Snip
    Churches are organisations of people, not temples of idolatry. Graven images do not belong.
    There is the small problem of Protestantism being the gateway drug to unbelief...
    Not true, Protestantism is booming :)

    https://twitter.com/foxinsoxuk/status/928520906170871808
    Only if you think organised hysteria bears some relation to the theology of Luther, Zwingli and Calvin. I have my doubts.
  • Options
    another_richardanother_richard Posts: 25,076
    edited November 2017
    Are we really back onto food shortages scare stories ???

    A look back at the PB pages of 17 months ago will show that the same people were predicting immediate and total economic collapse.

    The highlight, IMO, being ***** predicting a disintegration in house prices and then getting somewhat aggravated at the idea that falling house prices would help renters to own their own homes.
  • Options
    RoyalBlueRoyalBlue Posts: 3,223

    Sean_F said:

    Sean_F said:

    Sean_F said:

    SeanT said:

    FF43 said:

    SeanT said:

    Talked today to someone close to (but not actually part of) the British side of the Brexit talks: he expects a December agreement to proceed, but thinks Britain is disastrously unprepared for the kind of Canada+ agreement that we seem to be seeking, to the point that serious disruptions to the food chain are to be expected. He thinks very long transition period (5 years plus) is essential.

    He's a trade technician, not a politician, with no detectable views on Brexit per se. And technicians tend to overestimate the importance of technical arrangement. But nonetheless...hmm.

    Brexit is gonna HURT. Like having a BABY. Anyone who thought otherwise is a fool. Who didn't read my Spectator piece.

    https://blogs.spectator.co.uk/2016/10/brexit-just-like-baby/
    I read your piece. Stripping away all the arguments and rhetoric to get to the essential, Brexit is a disconnection. That's the opposite of having a baby.

    You were onto something with Brexit being the Reformation while the EU is the Catholic Church however.
    I think it's a mix of the two, actually. In brute psychosocial terms - how it will affect the psyche of the UK - it is "having a baby"

    Ideologically, yes, it is very akin to the Reformation. Sometimes spookily so.

    Incidentally (you may not be surprised) I think having kids is generally a splendid move (it's certainly the best "decision") I ever made) and the Reformation was an even better idea: the absolute making of England, then Britain, then the British Empire.

    I'm in two minds. I love the old English religion, hate the corruption of the Catholic Church.
    I like the institutional independence of the English church from Rome, and it's decidedly English (or British, if you prefer) Elizabethan compromise that set it up in the first place.
    Pre-Reformation, England was The Land of the Bells. Our churches were things of wonder and beauty. Yet, the hierarchy made a rotten parody of Christianity. I hate the destruction of images that took place in the Reformation, yet I understand why feelings ran so high.
    Churches are organisations of people, not temples of idolatry. Graven images do not belong.
    It's possible to think that change is required, while still regretting the things that get destroyed along the way.
    Put them in a museum.
    Religious art in a museum is like listening to odd movements from symphonies. Fish out of water.
  • Options
    Labour hold Parkfield and Oxbridge on Stockton on Tees
  • Options
    LibDem got 37 votes...
  • Options

    Sean_F said:

    Sean_F said:

    SeanT said:

    FF43 said:

    SeanT said:

    Talked today to someone close to (but not actually part of) the British side of the Brexit talks: he expects a December agreement to proceed, but thinks Britain is disastrously unprepared for the kind of Canada+ agreement that we seem to be seeking, to the point that serious disruptions to the food chain are to be expected. He thinks very long transition period (5 years plus) is essential.

    He's a trade technician, not a politician, with no detectable views on Brexit per se. And technicians tend to overestimate the importance of technical arrangement. But nonetheless...hmm.

    Brexit is gonna HURT. Like having a BABY. Anyone who thought otherwise is a fool. Who didn't read my Spectator piece.

    https://blogs.spectator.co.uk/2016/10/brexit-just-like-baby/
    I read your piece. Stripping away all the arguments and rhetoric to get to the essential, Brexit is a disconnection. That's the opposite of having a baby.

    You were onto something with Brexit being the Reformation while the EU is the Catholic Church however.
    I think it's a mix of the two, actually. In brute psychosocial terms - how it will affect the psyche of the UK - it is "having a baby"

    Ideologically, yes, it is very akin to the Reformation. Sometimes spookily so.

    Incidentally (you may not be surprised) I think having kids is generally a splendid move (it's certainly the best "decision") I ever made) and the Reformation was an even better idea: the absolute making of England, then Britain, then the British Empire.

    I'm in two minds. I love the old English religion, hate the corruption of the Catholic Church.
    I like the institutional independence of the English church from Rome, and it's decidedly English (or British, if you prefer) Elizabethan compromise that set it up in the first place.
    Pre-Reformation, England was The Land of the Bells. Our churches were things of wonder and beauty. Yet, the hierarchy made a rotten parody of Christianity. I hate the destruction of images that took place in the Reformation, yet I understand why feelings ran so high.
    Churches are organisations of people, not temples of idolatry. Graven images do not belong.
    While not being religous I agree.

    There's certainly a difference between a church as an organisation of people and the cultural show-off place which physical churches are.
  • Options
    MortimerMortimer Posts: 13,942

    Are we really back onto food shortages scare stories ???

    A look back at the PB pages of 17 months ago will show that the same people were predicting immediate and total economic collapse.

    The highlight, IMO, being ***** predicting a disintegration in house prices and then getting somewhat aggravated at the idea that falling house prices would help renters to own their own homes.

    Haha, yes I remember the chap who kept changing his username getting very hot under the collar about talking about falling house prices upsetting people with mortgages.
  • Options
    rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 53,979

    Are we really back onto food shortages scare stories ???

    A look back at the PB pages of 17 months ago will show that the same people were predicting immediate and total economic collapse.

    The highlight, IMO, being ***** predicting a disintegration in house prices and then getting somewhat aggravated at the idea that falling house prices would help renters to own their own homes.

    I'm a notorious bear on prime UK house prices. But that may just be because I own a large and expensive house in Hampstead.
  • Options
    Interesting that the paper review said that London is the most productive City in Europe.

    So basically it has failed to spread its prosperity to the regions and hence Brexit
  • Options
    MortimerMortimer Posts: 13,942

    LibDem got 37 votes...

    'Winning here'
  • Options

    Labour hold Parkfield and Oxbridge on Stockton on Tees

    Increase or decrease in their vote share
  • Options
    foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548
    RoyalBlue said:

    RoyalBlue said:

    Sean_F said:

    Sean_F said:

    SeanT said:

    FF43 said:

    SeanT said:

    Talked today to someone close to (but not actually part of) the British side of the Brexit talks: he expects a December agreement to proceed, but thinks Britain is disastrously unprepared for the kind of Canada+ agreement that we seem to be seeking, to the point that serious disruptions to the food chain are to be expected. He thinks very long transition period (5 years plus) is essential.

    He's a trade technician, not a politician, with no detectable views on Brexit per se. And technicians tend to overestimate the importance of technical arrangement. But nonetheless...hmm.

    Brexit is gonna HURT. Like having a BABY. Anyone who thought otherwise is a fool. Who didn't read my Spectator piece.

    https://blogs.spectator.co.uk/2016/10/brexit-just-like-baby/
    I read your piece. Stripping away all the arguments and rhetoric to get to the essential, Brexit is a disconnection. That's the opposite of having a baby.

    You were onto something with Brexit being the Reformation while the EU is the Catholic Church however.
    I think it's a mix of the two, actually. In brute psychosocial terms - how it will affect the psyche of the UK - it is "having a baby"

    Ideologically, yes, it is very akin to the Reformation. Sometimes spookily so.

    Incidentally (you

    I'm in two minds. I love the old English religion, hate the corruption of the Catholic Church.
    I like the institutional independence of the English church from Rome, and it's decidedly English (or British, if you prefer) Elizabethan compromise that set it up in the first place.
    Pre-Reformation, England was The Land of the Bells. Our churches were things of wonder and beauty. Snip
    Churches are organisations of people, not temples of idolatry. Graven images do not belong.
    There is the small problem of Protestantism being the gateway drug to unbelief...
    Not true, Protestantism is booming :)

    https://twitter.com/foxinsoxuk/status/928520906170871808
    Only if you think organised hysteria bears some relation to the theology of Luther, Zwingli and Calvin. I have my doubts.
    Sure, but Charismatic and Pentacostalist churches are booming, and getting the young in to churches in Britain as well as the developing world.

    Not to everyones taste perhaps, but the Holy Spirit beats dusty statues any day.
  • Options

    DavidL said:

    Golly, reading this thread is upsetting. I did not realise when I voted for Brexit that I was voting for my wife and son to go hungry.

    Starvation, planes grounded, deep recession, collapsed pound, food banks for all, and third world status at the very least according to the remain camp
    I’m going to stock up with some montagnolo just in case. And maybe some Chablis to go with it. Otherwise I think we’ll be fine.
    Maybe a pistol as well just in case

    The crescendo of remain noise just now is astonishing and maybe the panic relates to the next few days when TM gives her ultimatum as she is in a win win with it. EU accepts and progress to trade talks or TM leaves with the backing of the majority of the Country
    It has been rather shrill of late, perhaps for the reasons you outline.

    There's also been a curious lack of pasted tweets regarding car production and retail sales recently.
  • Options

    Labour hold Parkfield and Oxbridge on Stockton on Tees

    Increase or decrease in their vote share
    1.5% swing Con to Lab
  • Options
    sladeslade Posts: 1,931
    PC hold in Neath, Lab hold in Leicester, and Con hold in Cotswold.
  • Options
    With no UKIP candidate this time
  • Options
    foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548

    Interesting that the paper review said that London is the most productive City in Europe.

    So basically it has failed to spread its prosperity to the regions and hence Brexit

    The major reasons our productivity as a nation has stagnated is the decline of the oil and gas industries and financial services. These greatly increased our economy. Neither looks very rosy now.
  • Options
    foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548

    DavidL said:

    Golly, reading this thread is upsetting. I did not realise when I voted for Brexit that I was voting for my wife and son to go hungry.

    Starvation, planes grounded, deep recession, collapsed pound, food banks for all, and third world status at the very least according to the remain camp
    I’m going to stock up with some montagnolo just in case. And maybe some Chablis to go with it. Otherwise I think we’ll be fine.
    Maybe a pistol as well just in case

    The crescendo of remain noise just now is astonishing and maybe the panic relates to the next few days when TM gives her ultimatum as she is in a win win with it. EU accepts and progress to trade talks or TM leaves with the backing of the majority of the Country
    It has been rather shrill of late, perhaps for the reasons you outline.

    There's also been a curious lack of pasted tweets regarding car production and retail sales recently.
    You may enjoy this one:

    https://twitter.com/pswidlicki/status/933652948223176704
  • Options

    Labour hold Parkfield and Oxbridge on Stockton on Tees

    Increase or decrease in their vote share
    1.5% swing Con to Lab
    Thanks
  • Options
    rcs1000 said:

    Are we really back onto food shortages scare stories ???

    A look back at the PB pages of 17 months ago will show that the same people were predicting immediate and total economic collapse.

    The highlight, IMO, being ***** predicting a disintegration in house prices and then getting somewhat aggravated at the idea that falling house prices would help renters to own their own homes.

    I'm a notorious bear on prime UK house prices. But that may just be because I own a large and expensive house in Hampstead.
    You didn't decide to flog it at the peak of the market ?

    What have you done with it if you don't mind me asking ? If you didn't like your neighbours you could rent it out to 'undesirables' :wink:
  • Options

    Labour hold Parkfield and Oxbridge on Stockton on Tees

    Increase or decrease in their vote share
    1.5% swing Con to Lab
    Is that from 2015 ?

    Not that you should read much into local byelections.
  • Options
    Mortimer said:

    LibDem got 37 votes...

    'Winning here'
    'Whining here'
  • Options
    foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548
    Big swing from UKIP to LD and Lab in WWC Eyres Monsell:

    https://twitter.com/britainelects/status/933835125539864576
  • Options
    FF43FF43 Posts: 15,710
    rcs1000 said:

    Will May even survive until Christmas? The word seems to be that she will back down and offer the EU 40bn without an explicit link to a trade agreement, or even a clear link to talks, nor an agreement that this is the final amount. This is the exact opposite of what Boris and Gove apparently agreed.

    If she backs this up with a concession on ECJ jurisdiction then she is finished. The great Brexit betrayal is just beginning...

    Would this be the "word" that you've just made up, by any chance?

    Nothing is decided until everything is decided. There is no "cheque" until everything is sorted.

    And while I think we should have pushed harder against EU sequencing, it does change the power dynamic somewhat. Imagine we've agreed to pay (say) €40bn. So, the EU keeps spending in it's own merry way, and it's now six months from Brexit and we say "this trade deal on the table is not enough...", then suddenly they're the people worrying about getting their €40bn.

    As an aside, and given its the story you keep pushing, how about a small bet.

    If we pay (say) €40bn or more and don't enter into an FTA - or a transition to an FTA - after Brexit day, then I pay you £1,000.

    If we pay €40bn, and do, then you pay me just £500.

    I'm confident enough to offer you 2-1.

    Only a fool wouldn't take it.

    (Bet void in the event of no payment.)
    I agree there will be almost certainly be an A50 withdrawal agreement that mentions a preferential trade agreement or partnership agreement. More likely than not we will never get that FTA. So a "transition to an FTA" in the Withdrawal Agreement, but one that gets overtaken by events and never happens.
  • Options
    Tom Newton Dunn. Theresa May has set a rapid transistion deal as her price for a 40 billion divorce deal offer at the December Council Meeting

    The stakes are rising and she must be prepared in her own mind to withdraw from talks if they say no deal

    This is coming to crunch time
  • Options
    dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 27,957

    Big swing from UKIP to LD and Lab in WWC Eyres Monsell:

    https://twitter.com/britainelects/status/933835125539864576

    Can't really be a "swing" if they don't stand though? More accurately, the Tories didn't pick up many Kippers, and lost some of their own voters.
  • Options
    DanSmithDanSmith Posts: 1,215
    Creepy end to Question Time
  • Options
    williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 48,057
    FF43 said:

    rcs1000 said:

    Will May even survive until Christmas? The word seems to be that she will back down and offer the EU 40bn without an explicit link to a trade agreement, or even a clear link to talks, nor an agreement that this is the final amount. This is the exact opposite of what Boris and Gove apparently agreed.

    If she backs this up with a concession on ECJ jurisdiction then she is finished. The great Brexit betrayal is just beginning...

    Would this be the "word" that you've just made up, by any chance?

    Nothing is decided until everything is decided. There is no "cheque" until everything is sorted.

    And while I think we should have pushed harder against EU sequencing, it does change the power dynamic somewhat. Imagine we've agreed to pay (say) €40bn. So, the EU keeps spending in it's own merry way, and it's now six months from Brexit and we say "this trade deal on the table is not enough...", then suddenly they're the people worrying about getting their €40bn.

    As an aside, and given its the story you keep pushing, how about a small bet.

    If we pay (say) €40bn or more and don't enter into an FTA - or a transition to an FTA - after Brexit day, then I pay you £1,000.

    If we pay €40bn, and do, then you pay me just £500.

    I'm confident enough to offer you 2-1.

    Only a fool wouldn't take it.

    (Bet void in the event of no payment.)
    I agree there will be almost certainly be an A50 withdrawal agreement that mentions a preferential trade agreement or partnership agreement. More likely than not we will never get that FTA. So a "transition to an FTA" in the Withdrawal Agreement, but one that gets overtaken by events and never happens.
    That's one possibility, and that position of purgatory would be the ideal staging post to Scottish independence and Irish reunification.
  • Options

    DavidL said:

    Golly, reading this thread is upsetting. I did not realise when I voted for Brexit that I was voting for my wife and son to go hungry.

    Starvation, planes grounded, deep recession, collapsed pound, food banks for all, and third world status at the very least according to the remain camp
    I’m going to stock up with some montagnolo just in case. And maybe some Chablis to go with it. Otherwise I think we’ll be fine.
    Maybe a pistol as well just in case

    The crescendo of remain noise just now is astonishing and maybe the panic relates to the next few days when TM gives her ultimatum as she is in a win win with it. EU accepts and progress to trade talks or TM leaves with the backing of the majority of the Country
    It has been rather shrill of late, perhaps for the reasons you outline.

    There's also been a curious lack of pasted tweets regarding car production and retail sales recently.
    You may enjoy this one:

    https://twitter.com/pswidlicki/status/933652948223176704
    Manufacturing seems to be doing well everywhere at present.

    But the one poor PMI was for German services - still growth but lower than expected and with last month downgraded.

    https://www.forexfactory.com/

    The Germans will not consume what they should.
  • Options
    MortimerMortimer Posts: 13,942

    FF43 said:

    rcs1000 said:

    Will May even survive until Christmas? The word seems to be that she will back down and offer the EU 40bn without an explicit link to a trade agreement, or even a clear link to talks, nor an agreement that this is the final amount. This is the exact opposite of what Boris and Gove apparently agreed.

    If she backs this up with a concession on ECJ jurisdiction then she is finished. The great Brexit betrayal is just beginning...

    Would this be the "word" that you've just made up, by any chance?

    Nothing is decided until everything is decided. There is no "cheque" until everything is sorted.

    And while I think we should have pushed harder against EU sequencing, it does change the power dynamic somewhat. Imagine we've agreed to pay (say) €40bn. So, the EU keeps spending in it's own merry way, and it's now six months from Brexit and we say "this trade deal on the table is not enough...", then suddenly they're the people worrying about getting their €40bn.

    As an aside, and given its the story you keep pushing, how about a small bet.

    If we pay (say) €40bn or more and don't enter into an FTA - or a transition to an FTA - after Brexit day, then I pay you £1,000.

    If we pay €40bn, and do, then you pay me just £500.

    I'm confident enough to offer you 2-1.

    Only a fool wouldn't take it.

    (Bet void in the event of no payment.)
    I agree there will be almost certainly be an A50 withdrawal agreement that mentions a preferential trade agreement or partnership agreement. More likely than not we will never get that FTA. So a "transition to an FTA" in the Withdrawal Agreement, but one that gets overtaken by events and never happens.
    That's one possibility, and that position of purgatory would be the ideal staging post to Scottish independence and Irish reunification.
    Back in the real world, all of those are tremendously unlikely.
  • Options
    DanSmith said:

    Creepy end to Question Time

    In what way
  • Options
    williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 48,057
    Mortimer said:

    FF43 said:

    rcs1000 said:

    Will May even survive until Christmas? The word seems to be that she will back down and offer the EU 40bn without an explicit link to a trade agreement, or even a clear link to talks, nor an agreement that this is the final amount. This is the exact opposite of what Boris and Gove apparently agreed.

    If she backs this up with a concession on ECJ jurisdiction then she is finished. The great Brexit betrayal is just beginning...

    Would this be the "word" that you've just made up, by any chance?

    Nothing is decided until everything is decided. There is no "cheque" until everything is sorted.

    And while I think we should have pushed harder against EU sequencing, it does change the power dynamic somewhat. Imagine we've agreed to pay (say) €40bn. So, the EU keeps spending in it's own merry way, and it's now six months from Brexit and we say "this trade deal on the table is not enough...", then suddenly they're the people worrying about getting their €40bn.

    As an aside, and given its the story you keep pushing, how about a small bet.

    If we pay (say) €40bn or more and don't enter into an FTA - or a transition to an FTA - after Brexit day, then I pay you £1,000.

    If we pay €40bn, and do, then you pay me just £500.

    I'm confident enough to offer you 2-1.

    Only a fool wouldn't take it.

    (Bet void in the event of no payment.)
    I agree there will be almost certainly be an A50 withdrawal agreement that mentions a preferential trade agreement or partnership agreement. More likely than not we will never get that FTA. So a "transition to an FTA" in the Withdrawal Agreement, but one that gets overtaken by events and never happens.
    That's one possibility, and that position of purgatory would be the ideal staging post to Scottish independence and Irish reunification.
    Back in the real world, all of those are tremendously unlikely.
    Indeed. I can't see us getting the outcome that FF43 predicts. Brexit will hit the buffers well before then.
  • Options
    foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548

    DavidL said:

    Golly, reading this thread is upsetting. I did not realise when I voted for Brexit that I was voting for my wife and son to go hungry.

    Starvation, planes grounded, deep recession, collapsed pound, food banks for all, and third world status at the very least according to the remain camp
    I’m going to stock up with some montagnolo just in case. And maybe some Chablis to go with it. Otherwise I think we’ll be fine.
    Maybe a pistol as well just in case

    The crescendo of remain noise just now is astonishing and maybe the panic relates to the next few days when TM gives her ultimatum as she is in a win win with it. EU accepts and progress to trade talks or TM leaves with the backing of the majority of the Country
    It has been rather shrill of late, perhaps for the reasons you outline.

    There's also been a curious lack of pasted tweets regarding car production and retail sales recently.
    You may enjoy this one:

    https://twitter.com/pswidlicki/status/933652948223176704
    Manufacturing seems to be doing well everywhere at present.

    But the one poor PMI was for German services - still growth but lower than expected and with last month downgraded.

    https://www.forexfactory.com/

    The Germans will not consume what they should.
    Booming German industry is helping our manufacturing exports. Good news for us unless we do something that puts up new borders...
  • Options
    MortimerMortimer Posts: 13,942

    DanSmith said:

    Creepy end to Question Time

    In what way
    Had to be curtailed because a lady in the audience was taken ill.
  • Options
    FF43FF43 Posts: 15,710
    https://twitter.com/britainelects/status/933835125539864576

    I think the local byelection previews on Britain Elects are just wonderful. Andrew Teale goes deep into each ward that is up for election, describing its geography, demographic make up, the candidates and election history. A true labour of love.
  • Options
    Mortimer said:

    DanSmith said:

    Creepy end to Question Time

    In what way
    Had to be curtailed because a lady in the audience was taken ill.
    Sorry to hear that
  • Options
    MortimerMortimer Posts: 13,942

    Mortimer said:

    FF43 said:

    rcs1000 said:

    Will May even survive until Christmas? The word seems to be that she will back down and offer the EU 40bn without an explicit link to a trade agreement, or even a clear link to talks, nor an agreement that this is the final amount. This is the exact opposite of what Boris and Gove apparently agreed.

    If she backs this up with a concession on ECJ jurisdiction then she is finished. The great Brexit betrayal is just beginning...

    Would this be the "word" that you've just made up, by any chance?

    Nothing is decided until everything is decided. There is no "cheque" until everything is sorted.

    And while I think we should have pushed harder against EU sequencing, it does change the power dynamic somewhat. Imagine we've agreed to pay (say) €40bn. So, the EU keeps spending in it's own merry way, and it's now six months from Brexit and we say "this trade deal on the table is not enough...", then suddenly they're the people worrying about getting their €40bn.

    As an aside, and given its the story you keep pushing, how about a small bet.

    If we pay (say) €40bn or more and don't enter into an FTA - or a transition to an FTA - after Brexit day, then I pay you £1,000.

    If we pay €40bn, and do, then you pay me just £500.

    I'm confident enough to offer you 2-1.

    Only a fool wouldn't take it.

    (Bet void in the event of no payment.)
    I agree there will be almost certainly be an A50 withdrawal agreement that mentions a preferential trade agreement or partnership agreement. More likely than not we will never get that FTA. So a "transition to an FTA" in the Withdrawal Agreement, but one that gets overtaken by events and never happens.
    That's one possibility, and that position of purgatory would be the ideal staging post to Scottish independence and Irish reunification.
    Back in the real world, all of those are tremendously unlikely.
    Indeed. I can't see us getting the outcome that FF43 predicts. Brexit will hit the buffers well before then.
    I see the La La Land Remainers are still struggling with this concept of 'real world'.
This discussion has been closed.