They say 3 things must be sorted out first. Our exit bill, the rights of EU residents that have come here to live and what will happen with the border in Ireland.
Correct and I think that's a reasonable stance as if any of those can't be agreed the process fails.
So the exit bill. We will be in the EU until 2019 minimum. The budget was set until 2020. So if we stay until 2020 what bill will there be?
IMO we agreed funding until 2020, if we were going to have a referendum and potentially leave then the point at which the budget was being prepared was the time to bring that up. Once we had agreed to the budget we have a duty to pay what we have agreed.
Then you have the EIB. They have now said that we have to pay towards projects for years to come. This includes projects not even started or agreed on. This is a massive amount. So how can this be under funds already agreed? How many tens of billions could this become? And whilst in the EU we are a member. But when we leave the EU we can't be a member anymore. But although we can't be a member they still want the full 16.1% off us. So how many more.dodgy looking loans do you think they can give out in the next 8 years or so? Then you have the piss take. They have stopped most investments in the UK. So we can't be a member, no investments in the UK but we are up for the funds for many years to come.
The EIB is separate to the EU. We have a 16.1% stake in the EIB. The EIB has €63.3bn in funds but also €469bn in liabilities. If you net that out then we'd have to hand over €65.3bn to leave the EIB. What has been suggested is rather than having to pay out a single payment when we leave we can agree to cover our share of the liabilities if the need arises, ie: existing loans are not repaid. Once those outstanding liabilities cease the balance will be returned to us - assuming the liabilities called up are lower than the funds in hand.
Barnier is now saying that we must pay our 14% cost of running the EU.
Where has this been stated as the EU's position? Is it not more the case that we have always paid 14% but have had a rebate and that upon leaving our legal right to any rebate will cease. That means that the rebate would not be a consideration during the negotiation of any future payments to be made after leaving.
Immigrants rights? This should be sorted out and signed straight away.
This should have been sorted before the vote, or at least our intentions made clear so people knew what they were voting on. It seems to me that the issues with this are more on the UK side as we don't seem prepared to offer a similar level of rights those currently in the country have.
Again this is something we should have detailed our position on prior to the vote. How can we claim to be leaving and 'taking control of our borders' but then have a free for all between the ROI and NI? But put in a hard border and you create all sorts of problems. Just shows how badly things were thought through. But again this is more on the UK to propose a solution than the EU as it is us who desire to take control.
I don't trust any political party to change how many houses are being built. The government will be either Labour or the Tories. They have done nothing about the situation.
That's not down to the EU, that's under our control already. The numbers coming in to the country are unlikely to drop. As we've already seen with India counties will seek to make it easier for people to settle in the UK as part of any trade agreements we negotiate.
Immigrants don't come here to live. We don't have homeless people on the streets. House prices are cheap in some areas. Properties start at about 40k in some areas. You can get a 6 bed house for just over 100k in some areas. Skilled wages are high. Crime is low.
Hard to comment on this as you seem to be saying that in Cumbria the NHS hasn't been impacted by austerity cuts and runs more efficiently than anywhere else, there is a wealth of highly paid jobs and housing is plentiful and cheap meaning nobody is homeless.
If that is the case I'm not sure why anyone there would be unhappy and voting to change things!
If that is the case it certainly warrants much closer inspection to see what is so different there to every other part of the country. Looking at the figures its certainly not down to a lack of immigrants in the area.