To Brexit
#21
Posted 2019-August-16, 01:03
#22
Posted 2019-August-16, 02:54
Lovera, on 2019-August-16, 01:03, said:
I bow to your superior knowledge of the English language. Unfortunately my limited vocabulary only knows the word surplace from French and Italian so I will need to head back to school in order to join in the conversation any further.
#23
Posted 2019-August-16, 03:08
Zelandakh, on 2019-August-16, 02:54, said:
https://en.m.wikiped...iki/Track_stand
#24
Posted 2019-August-16, 03:32
Zelandakh, on 2019-August-15, 11:03, said:
Lovera, on 2019-August-16, 01:03, said:
Zelandakh, on 2019-August-16, 02:54, said:
Lovera, on 2019-August-16, 03:08, said:
Read back and digest. You might then have part of the answer why almost noone here responds to your posts in any meaningful way.
#25
Posted 2019-August-16, 06:10
Lovera, on 2019-August-16, 01:03, said:
Surplace is not an English word (or at least not one English people use). Much like Dutch people speaking English use the word egoistic, which is basically the Dutch word and perfectly correct English, although native English use the word selfish instead.
#26
Posted 2019-August-16, 06:51
#27
Posted 2019-August-16, 17:42
#28
Posted 2019-August-18, 11:00
https://youtu.be/zkgiXLixFV8
and what he said today (on SkyNews in "Sophie Ridge on Sunday"):https://youtu.be/1-YONhd_tDI
#29
Posted 2019-August-19, 14:34
With Johnson gone, there will be a vote between "repeal article 50" and "May's deal Brexit"... "Repeal" might just mean that UK will file Brexit again at a later time, just to get two more years out of the EU, but I feel that there is a less than 1% chance of a "No Deal" Brexit. Just too many people who don't want that.
#31
Posted 2019-August-21, 18:10
#32
Posted 2019-August-22, 02:28
Lovera, on 2019-August-21, 18:10, said:
And you would be wrong. The British government has an excellent legal team available.
#33
Posted 2019-August-22, 03:10
Cyberyeti, on 2019-August-19, 14:50, said:
This is a persistent myth, but it is myth - very wrong indeed. The EU didn't want a UK-wide backstop. And in fact it is quite a concession by the EU as it could reasonably be interpreted as cherry-picking among the "four freedoms", which the EU absolutely did not want.
May's negotiating team was very successful, it just turned out that parliament didn't agree with the goal of the negotiation.
The problem here is not the EU, it's the UK. Because the UK does not know what it wants - not parliament, not government, and certainly not the public.
#34
Posted 2019-August-22, 06:15
cherdano, on 2019-August-22, 03:10, said:
May's negotiating team was very successful, it just turned out that parliament didn't agree with the goal of the negotiation.
The problem here is not the EU, it's the UK. Because the UK does not know what it wants - not parliament, not government, and certainly not the public
I agree. The UK is almost entirely responsible for this mess. The backstop was mostly put in place based on a UK demand; news at that time featured videos of EU negotiators saying that they "agreed to the backstop because the UK Govt. needs it to maintain the Good Friday agreement".
The UK Govt. has never been clear what they want and how they will (try to) make a success our of Brexit. At all points in the negotiation, it appeared like the EU negotiators knew what they were doing, how they wanted to negotiate and what their expectations were. In contrast, the UK negotiators never once appeared like they knew what they were doing or why they were even there.
*** "Brexit means Brexit"
*** "Red White and Blue Brexit"
*** "Right deal for the United Kingdom is also the right deal for the EU"
*** "We import more than we export -- the German automobile industry will force EU to negotiate a deal"
are all myths perpetuated by our political class who never had a clue on what Brexit should mean. We now have reached a stage where domiciled EU nationals' rights are being jeopardised by the perfidy of our Home Secretary.
#35
Posted 2019-August-22, 07:15
Here the press conference in Berlin between Merkel and Johnson:https://youtu.be/ObyAIoeyTM8
#36
Posted 2019-August-22, 07:55
cherdano, on 2019-August-22, 03:10, said:
May's negotiating team was very successful, it just turned out that parliament didn't agree with the goal of the negotiation.
The problem here is not the EU, it's the UK. Because the UK does not know what it wants - not parliament, not government, and certainly not the public.
No, May was always a remainer and never wanted to leave and this was sabotaging Brexit because she KNEW is would never get past some conservatives and the DUP.
#37
Posted 2019-August-22, 08:45
Gerben42, on 2019-August-19, 14:34, said:
Not as I understand. If Johnson goes, as things stand it will be a Labour led government with Corbyn as prime minister. Where does your "too many people don't want it" (no deal) come from? Less than a week ago it was reported (https://www.telegrap...rbyn-government) that a YouGov poll found "Nearly half of the public - 48 per cent - said they would prefer to see the country crash out of the EU than the Labour leader implement his own approach to Brexit" with 48% in favour of no deal, and 35% in favour of Corbyn, who has eventually agreed a policy of a second referendum.
That's a pretty decisive margin, and it is not Labour policy to either repeal article 50 or accept May's deal.
However, unfortunately it is looking as if Boris is trying to resurrect the May agreement, with added tweaks. I really hope he does not succeed.
#38
Posted 2019-August-22, 09:57
fromageGB, on 2019-August-22, 08:45, said:
That's a pretty decisive margin, and it is not Labour policy to either repeal article 50 or accept May's deal.
However, unfortunately it is looking as if Boris is trying to resurrect the May agreement, with added tweaks. I really hope he does not succeed.
Except that the danger is that Corbyn can't get a confidence vote through either, a general election is called and we leave with no deal before we have a government.
#39
Posted 2019-August-23, 14:48
"Boris Johnson says people 'shouldn't get hopes up too soon' about prospects of Brexit deal
Boris Johnson has played down hopes of an early breakthrough in talks with the EU intended to resolve the Brexit crisis. In comments that suggest he thinks some of the reporting of what he achieved this week has been over-optimistic, he said that while the "mood music" when he visited Berlin and Paris was "very good", people "shouldn't necessarily get their hopes up too soon".
Speaking to reporters on a visit to Devon, he said:
But I want to caution everybody, OK? Because this is not going to be a cinch, this is not going to be easy. We will have to work very hard to get this thing done ...
We have to have an arrangement that allows the whole UK to come out of the EU and have frictionless trade at the border in Northern Ireland. There are lots of ways that we can make sure that happens. But to persuade our EU friends and partners, who are very, very, very hard over against it, will take some time ...
I'm afraid we will have to prepare to come out without an agreement and we can do that, we are very confident that we will be OK because we will have all sorts of preparations in place.
We are making progress but I am just telling people not to hold their breath, because I have seen the way these Brussels negotiations work.
[From The Guardian on Fri 23 Aug 2019]