Originally posted by meridian
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The big day is here
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Old Greg - In search of acceptance since Mar 2007. Hoping each leap will be his last. -
Originally posted by Yorkie62 View PostHe did say, and is very true of what happened last night, there are some who no matter what have no Interest in the project and will do their up most to derail the project. In that case opm said the project would be cancelled.
The skill is to take everyone on the journey to make the project a success. It's not always easy, and may require compromise. Brexiters however don't seem to want to compromise (we want to leave now on WTO, and sod the economy!!!); no remainer will buy into that. Many remainers however are accepting that we are leaving, but the deal has to be right for the country. Remainers seem to be ready to compromise (OK, not all, but you're looking to win hearts and minds here to get the terms of the project agreed).
Originally posted by Yorkie62 View PostHowever, just because of what happened last night I do not think that the Brexit process should be cancelled because 400 want to overturn democracy.
Further, of those 400 many were Brexiters who very much want to leave the EU so claim to be supporting the 'will of the people'.
It sounds like you and OPM think MPs should have supported May last night. This is the problem though; you both voted leave, but you are both at odds with what the majority of leave voters say they want in the polls.
Originally posted by Yorkie62 View PostWrt no deal. It is still an option that is entrenched in an act of parliament. If we reach March29th with no agreed deal we leave on WTO rules and no deal. To state that no deal is not an option is wrong as it is currently a fact of law.I am what I drink, and I'm a bitter manComment
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Originally posted by Zigenare View PostEverything! Every single thing. Every bloody item that the EU conceded needs to be renegotiated after we've left.Comment
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Originally posted by meridian View PostThat sounds like you don't want a Withdrawal Agreement? You would rather have the chaos of citizen's rights, borders, outstanding liabilities, and geographical indicators left in the air with no agreement?Old Greg - In search of acceptance since Mar 2007. Hoping each leap will be his last.Comment
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Originally posted by Whorty View PostThere are always people in orgs against projects, for varying and personal/selfish reasons. Should we therefore just give up on projects then? Not a great way to becoming a successful PM contractor.
The skill is to take everyone on the journey to make the project a success. It's not always easy, and may require compromise. Brexiters however don't seem to want to compromise (we want to leave now on WTO, and sod the economy!!!); no remainer will buy into that. Many remainers however are accepting that we are leaving, but the deal has to be right for the country. Remainers seem to be ready to compromise (OK, not all, but you're looking to win hearts and minds here to get the terms of the project agreed).
But do 400 want to overthrow democracy? Polls show that the majority of the public, whether they voted leave or remain were against the May deal, so you could argue that 400 are respecting democracy but 250 are not.
Further, of those 400 many were Brexiters who very much want to leave the EU so claim to be supporting the 'will of the people'.
It sounds like you and OPM think MPs should have supported May last night. This is the problem though; you both voted leave, but you are both at odds with what the majority of leave voters say they want in the polls.
Give it a day or so and this will no longer be an option, don't worry. And as you seem to be suggesting that MPs should have backed May, then you wouldn't want to leave on WTO terms anyway so it would suit you that no deal is removed for good as an option.
True the A50 end date can be postponed but this still does not take no deal off the table. If we reach the end date with no agreed deal we leave with no deal and an extension would need agreement of all 27 EU members. The EU has elections in May so A50 extension will only be of limited duration.
Sent from my SM-G955F using Contractor UK Forum mobile appComment
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Originally posted by Zigenare View PostIf the Remainers won, the Brexiters would demand another vote!Originally posted by Zigenare View PostIf the Brexiters won, even by a higher majority, would that be enough to appease the Remainers?
The issue with the last ref was that leave wasn't clear about what it meant.See You Next TuesdayComment
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Originally posted by Zigenare View PostEverything! Every single thing. Every bloody item that the EU conceded needs to be renegotiated after we've left.
99.99999% of the UK voting public have absolutely no idea of the details of May's WA but loads spout cr@p about it not being right, we're shafted by the EU blah blah blah, because they believe every headline and soundbite they read and hear.
Was May's deal any good .... you know what, I have no idea. I do know it would have taken us out of the EU (as was voted for in 2016) and would give us 2 years to agree this wonderful FTA that leavers say is so easy to get. I'd have accepted May's deal. I'll accept Norway. I'll accept staying in the EU if needs be. But I won't accept the childish, "let's leave on WTO and screw the EU" games being played as that helps no one, least of all the UK.I am what I drink, and I'm a bitter manComment
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Originally posted by Zigenare View PostDoes it?
Keep deflecting, don't commit to anything, but sit back and moan if things don't go your way (which nobody can tell until after the fact because you're being so obtuse).Comment
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Originally posted by Whorty View PostApart from the backstop, name another point in the deal that you think needs changing and give your logic for that assertion. Or are you just reading Wail headlines?
99.99999% of the UK voting public have absolutely no idea of the details of May's WA but loads spout cr@p about it not being right, we're shafted by the EU blah blah blah, because they believe every headline and soundbite they read and hear.
Was May's deal any good .... you know what, I have no idea. I do know it would have taken us out of the EU (as was voted for in 2016) and would give us 2 years to agree this wonderful FTA that leavers say is so easy to get. I'd have accepted May's deal. I'll accept Norway. I'll accept staying in the EU if needs be. But I won't accept the childish, "let's leave on WTO and screw the EU" games being played as that helps no one, least of all the UK.
- End free movement
- leave the single market
- end ECJ jurisdiction
The compromises ....
- The backstop (Ireland seemed to have been forgotten during the campaign).
- the transition (which makes sense as agreeing a future deal was always going to take time)
All in all, given those constraints the compromises were quite generous to the UK gov.
So yes it's a good deal. Not as good as cancelling this whole tulipshow. Not as good as a Norway or Swiss deal.
Let's be very clear..... The bill failed for 2 reasons only...
- Swivel eyed *****
- Remainers who reckon we can get to stay in or get a Norway/Swiss deal
any other suggestion is just politickingSee You Next TuesdayComment
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Originally posted by Lance View PostYes I think it was a good deal given the constraints. They were....
- End free movement
- leave the single market
- end ECJ jurisdiction
The compromises ....
- The backstop (Ireland seemed to have been forgotten during the campaign).
- the transition (which makes sense as agreeing a future deal was always going to take time)
All in all, given those constraints the compromises were quite generous to the UK gov.
So yes it's a good deal. Not as good as cancelling this whole tulipshow. Not as good as a Norway or Swiss deal.
Let's be very clear..... The bill failed for 2 reasons only...
- Swivel eyed *****
- Remainers who reckon we can get to stay in or get a Norway/Swiss deal
any other suggestion is just politicking
The backstop is temporary, and dependent on the UK coming up with an agreed solution. As we've heard so often from Brexiters over the past two years they have all the answers (technology, etc) so it should be a no-brainer for the Brexiters to design and implement in the two-year transition.
As for the transition, even with no deal as the future state it makes sense to have 2 years to prepare fully for that.Comment
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