Originally posted by d000hg
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Reply to: What's the betting now?
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Previously on "What's the betting now?"
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Originally posted by darmstadt View PostThe UK government won't extend and have said so numerous times in the past few weeks, including this week. Talks resume next week and there will be no extension unless the EU decide to request one but that will require and act of Parliament
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Originally posted by Cirrus View PostIt's hard to find where to start when a post is wrong on just about every point AND displays such partisan, daft viewpoints
Well it's not too hard actually. It's touching that you think Boris could have a position on this. It's touching you think he has the slightest idea about the difference between his arse and his elbow.
Homo Brexitis love him but the Government, such as it is, is run by Dominic Cummings.
Boris worked hard on his dumb buffoon act, well enough to fool you it seems. And repeating stupid phrases like "homo brexitus" doesn't make them any less stupid. I'm sure you're dreadfully pleased with the phrase.
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Unsurprisingly, Cummings has restated he won't obey any rules. So that leaves us with no-deal or with the EU caving in and giving the UK loads of Brexit privileges, perhaps in return for keeping the fishing status quo. However both have problems: the EU don't look to be weakening and UK Industry may put up a big fight. Still, difficult to call...
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Today's latest comment from no. 10:
We will not ask to extend the transition. And, if the EU asks, we will say no. Extending the transition would simply prolong the negotiations, prolong business uncertainty, and delay the moment of control of our borders. It would also keep us bound by EU legislation at a point where we need economic and legislative flexibility to manage the UK response to the coronavirus pandemic.
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Originally posted by d000hg View PostIt's hard to find where to start when a post is wrong on just about every point AND displays such partisan, daft viewpoints.
So ignoring all that to focus on the central question... the government's extremely healthy majority means the more extreme factions like ERG are no longer driving policy. Boris is not an ardant no-deal fanatic and his party will want a good outcome even if he were.
CV is the perfect opportunity to extend talks without losing face. You just throw words like 'unprecedented' around to justify it. It's clearly far too early to be hinting at that to the media but it seems pretty likely given neither side wants a bad deal and both sides have an excellent excuse that absolves them of blame for a delay.
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Boris is not an ardant no-deal fanatic and his party will want a good outcome even if he were.
Well it's not too hard actually. It's touching that you think Boris could have a position on this. It's touching you think he has the slightest idea about the difference between his arse and his elbow.
Homo Brexitis love him but the Government, such as it is, is run by Dominic Cummings.
Cummings drove the whole Brexit thing and although a bit simplistic he fully realises that Brexit means Brexit. And he fully wants that. He loathes existing bureaucracies. For him the only 'good outcome' is total ditching of any of the constraints of the EU.
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Originally posted by Cirrus View PostSo, Coronavirus has slowed things down (almost to a standstill) and the EU have got much bigger fish to fry. Do you think that means they'll just stick with take-it-or-leave-it soft Brexit on the grounds they just can't be bothered any more, or will they cave in and let Cummings have his Canada+++ because ... they just can't be bothered any more?
My suspicion is Cummings will refuse to delay. Despite making poor decisions and generally appearing even more of a buffoon than normal, Boris's approval ratings are sky high. This 'Tally-Ho/We'll fight them on the Beaches' plays really well with Homo Brexitis. And of course if GDP goes down 2-5% and productivity falls even further behind, the Conservatives have got the perfect camouflage.
So I'm with hard Brexit end of December. Strap on your safety belts...
So ignoring all that to focus on the central question... the government's extremely healthy majority means the more extreme factions like ERG are no longer driving policy. Boris is not an ardant no-deal fanatic and his party will want a good outcome even if he were.
CV is the perfect opportunity to extend talks without losing face. You just throw words like 'unprecedented' around to justify it. It's clearly far too early to be hinting at that to the media but it seems pretty likely given neither side wants a bad deal and both sides have an excellent excuse that absolves them of blame for a delay.
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Anybody's Guess
I guess one of the gotchas is Cummings would get back fishing as part of a no-deal crash-out but the fishermen could not sell any. It all currently goes to the EU and the general view is friction would kill that business. Beyond that, a lot of big businesses would go ape-tulip if they saw hard Brexit closing in on them.
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Never Mind the Brexit (Bollocks), Here's the Coronavirus
Never Mind the Bollocks, Here's the Sex Pistols - Wikipedia
Cue... Anarchy in the UK
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Makes you proud to be British
We shall spin on the beaches, we shall spin on the landing grounds, we shall spin in the fields and in the streets, we shall spin in the hills; we shall never surrender.
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