“These are decisive days. I cannot tell you today if in the end there will be a deal. There has been genuine progress on important questions. However, there are still three issues that can make the difference between a deal & no-deal.”
“We will do all in our power to reach an agreement. We are ready to be creative. But we are not ready to put into question the integrity of the Single Market. The main safeguard for European prosperity and wealth.”
“The EU is well prepared for a no-deal scenario but of course we prefer to have an agreement. One thing is clear: whatever the outcome, there has to be and there will be a clear difference between being a full member of the [European Union] and just being a valued partner.”
Bird on a Fire wrote: Wed Nov 25, 2020 10:47 am
They always just sound exasperated, like they've had to explain this 1000 times already in 1000 different ways.
They just haven't realized yet that we hold all the cards.
Bird on a Fire wrote: Wed Nov 25, 2020 10:47 am
They always just sound exasperated, like they've had to explain this 1000 times already in 1000 different ways.
They just haven't realized yet that we hold all the cards.
I'm not an expert on card games or anything, but is holding cards enough to win? I thought you had to play them correctly as well.
We have the right to a clean, healthy, sustainable environment.
However, there are still three issues that can make the difference between a deal & no-deal.”
Let me guess:-
1. State Aid
2. Northern Ireland
3. Fishy-fishies
In much the same way that, although I've made significant progress, there are still three issues in me becoming the 2020 National BMX Champion of Finland namely:-
1. I'm not Finnish
2. I can't ride a bike
3. I haven't entered.
... but other than it is pretty much nailed on.
This place is not a place of honor, no highly esteemed deed is commemorated here, nothing valued is here.
What is here was dangerous and repulsive to us.
This place is best shunned and left uninhabited.
Bird on a Fire wrote: Wed Nov 25, 2020 10:47 am
They always just sound exasperated, like they've had to explain this 1000 times already in 1000 different ways.
They just haven't realized yet that we hold all the cards.
Or they've tried explaining that Mr Bun the Baker, a birthday card, an out of date NUS card, Blockbuster video card and a joker doesn't make a straight flush, and David Frost is still bluffing.
It’s just mood music. Looks like they will have to fudge all three areas. I’m guessing fishing is easiest with a temporary arrangement, the others will need some clever wordplay to describe whatever halfway house they agree. I’ll still be really surprised if it’s No Deal.
London’s dominance of the multi-trillion dollar global derivatives market is at risk after a regulator said on Wednesday banks in the EU will have to use trading platforms within the bloc after the completion of Brexit on Dec. 31.
plodder wrote: Wed Nov 25, 2020 5:23 pm
It’s just mood music. Looks like they will have to fudge all three areas. I’m guessing fishing is easiest with a temporary arrangement, the others will need some clever wordplay to describe whatever halfway house they agree. I’ll still be really surprised if it’s No Deal.
I hope so. Problem is that on the level playing field and governance there appears to be very little common ground.
What’s changed is the Internal Market Bill. It’s destroyed what trust there was and so the EU27 want commitments to be stated explicitly and clear procedures if the UK reneges. There isn’t much room for fudge and ambiguity.
The problem is that Johnson sees himself as Churchill whereas he thinks that if he agrees to what the EU want he’ll be portrayed as a Chamberlain.
Woodchopper wrote: Thu Nov 26, 2020 7:33 am
The problem is that Johnson sees himself as Churchill whereas he thinks that if he agrees to what the EU want he’ll be portrayed as a Chamberlain.
The problem is the Nazis. They turned out so off-the-scale evil that in hindsight they made Churchill right to fight on when doing a deal was the logical option for Britain. Now British people see everything through that lens, intoxicated with the idea that stubborn defiance is noble and any compromise is weak and foolish (and some even assume the EU will turn out to be super-evil villains).
The "men will still say: this was their finest hour" speech turned out to be true, but it's a bit of a millstone.
Woodchopper wrote: Thu Nov 26, 2020 7:33 am
The problem is that Johnson sees himself as Churchill whereas he thinks that if he agrees to what the EU want he’ll be portrayed as a Chamberlain.
If Johnson cannot distinguish von der Leyen from Hitler I do question the quality of his education.
Woodchopper wrote: Thu Nov 26, 2020 7:33 am
The problem is that Johnson sees himself as Churchill whereas he thinks that if he agrees to what the EU want he’ll be portrayed as a Chamberlain.
If Johnson cannot distinguish von der Leyen from Hitler I do question the quality of his education.
Woodchopper wrote: Thu Nov 26, 2020 7:33 am
The problem is that Johnson sees himself as Churchill whereas he thinks that if he agrees to what the EU want he’ll be portrayed as a Chamberlain.
If Johnson cannot distinguish von der Leyen from Hitler I do question the quality of his education.
I think Johnson has made a more fundamental error in identifying which current leader is going against international norms to threaten freedom in Europe in support of Nationalist ideological purity.
Farmers in England face losing at least half of the subsidies they receive under the EU system by 2024 under post-Brexit transition plans to be unveiled on Monday by the UK government.
Ministers plan to cut so-called basic payments, which were the main source of funding under the EU’s Common Agricultural Policy, by a minimum of 50 per cent in four years’ time, according to documents seen by the Financial Times and two people briefed on the matter.
December is tomorrow, and the last day of transition is December the 31st. At about the end of this week we run out of the time bought by the EU Parliament's willingness to have a special ratification session at the end of December. After that it would require provisional ratification of parts of a deal by the EU Council pending ratification later. But doing so would require a lot of goodwill. It would also get very complicated if a member state objected
On the positive side, it looks like neither side wants to be the ones who stop the negotiations.