The EU: In, out, shake it all about.... (120 Viewers)

As of right now, how are thinking of voting? In or out

  • Remain

    Votes: 23 37.1%
  • Leave

    Votes: 35 56.5%
  • Undecided

    Votes: 3 4.8%
  • Not registered or not intention to vote

    Votes: 1 1.6%

  • Total voters
    62
  • Poll closed .

Mucca Mad Boys

Well-Known Member
There’s a small difference though in that one side voted for the whole process to get a better deal.

Yes, but, if the UK government has well and truly sold the fishing industry out, surely the Irish and French fishing industries would be happy. But they’re not, and both sides are saying they capitulated to the other - which doesn’t make sense. Compromises have been made by both sides.

Well, depends how you look at it. They get 25% more than they would have within the EU - over a 5 and a half year transition. Then fishing quotas are negotiated between UK-EU in the same way the EU negotiates with Norway. Is

The only way they could control 100% of the catch in UK water is with no deal. In theory, this is good for the UK fishing community. However, you have extra tariffs on those catches as well as even more paperwork to do - so it’s not a good thing.

Sturgeon was rightly mocked for saying Scottish fishing had been ‘sold out’ as if she’s anti-EU now. A lot of Remainers I know are disingenuously showing concern for the fishing industry.

Frankly, fishing makes up 0.1% of our GDP, it clearly isn’t worth risking a ‘no deal’ scenario for.
 

skybluetony176

Well-Known Member
Yes, but, if the UK government has well and truly sold the fishing industry out, surely the Irish and French fishing industries would be happy. But they’re not, and both sides are saying they capitulated to the other - which doesn’t make sense. Compromises have been made by both sides.

Well, depends how you look at it. They get 25% more than they would have within the EU - over a 5 and a half year transition. Then fishing quotas are negotiated between UK-EU in the same way the EU negotiates with Norway. Is

The only way they could control 100% of the catch in UK water is with no deal. In theory, this is good for the UK fishing community. However, you have extra tariffs on those catches as well as even more paperwork to do - so it’s not a good thing.

Sturgeon was rightly mocked for saying Scottish fishing had been ‘sold out’ as if she’s anti-EU now. A lot of Remainers I know are disingenuously showing concern for the fishing industry.

Frankly, fishing makes up 0.1% of our GDP, it clearly isn’t worth risking a ‘no deal’ scenario for.
Only one side sold out. You just have to refer back to what Boris and Gove are on the record saying repeatedly during the leave campaign compared to what they’ve delivered. There’s no resemblance to what they promised to what they delivered. A lot of families have borrowed millions to buy new trawlers ahead of the expected 100% control bonanza they were expected. Bet they had a real shitty Xmas.
 

Mucca Mad Boys

Well-Known Member
Only one side sold out. You just have to refer back to what Boris and Gove are on the record saying repeatedly during the leave campaign compared to what they’ve delivered. There’s no resemblance to what they promised to what they delivered. A lot of families have borrowed millions to buy new trawlers ahead of the expected 100% control bonanza they were expected. Bet they had a real shitty Xmas.

Again, finishing communities in the EU disagree with you - they feel the EU has let them down in the same way our fishing communities feel let down by our government.

You raise a good point there - our fishing fleet probably isn’t even big enough to take advantage of having 100% control of fishing waters. So a transition period makes sense.

5 and a half years is not a long time either, mind you.
 

Brighton Sky Blue

Well-Known Member
Just like buying a house.

Costs a lot of money to start with. You then have extra costs of upkeep. But the further down the line the more beneficial it becomes. You can choose what it looks like. You can expand it. And you always have the choice of going back to renting if you want.

Let’s hope so. Because if nothing fundamentally changes it has just caused division and cost a ton of money.
 

Brighton Sky Blue

Well-Known Member
I care about fishermen as they are people who have been fucked over and many forced into poverty.

A lot of the jobs in my missus’ neck of the woods are tied to the fishing industry. As close as a Scottish region came to supporting Brexit because of that alone
 

skybluetony176

Well-Known Member


Seems a silly oversight not negotiating exemptions for musicians.

They’ll be more. Just look at the withdrawal agreement, this bunch of chancers are way out of their depth and get shafted without realising it at the time and then it’s months after the event before they understand what they’ve agreed.
If you ask me they’ve deliberately ran the clock down to avoid proper parliamentary scrutiny.
 

Astute

Well-Known Member
Let’s hope so. Because if nothing fundamentally changes it has just caused division and cost a ton of money.
Of course things will change.

The one problem I do see is what rules we have signed up to which make future deals more difficult. This will continue until future talks are completed.

As you will know I have called the majority of this shitfest correctly. The next part of what I saw was us getting closer to the EU again. They want close ties with us. We want close ties with the EU. Maybe continue to pay money into the system. Keep everything aligned. Things eventually smoothed out to be similar as they are presently. Only out in name.
 

shmmeee

Well-Known Member
Of course things will change.

The one problem I do see is what rules we have signed up to which make future deals more difficult. This will continue until future talks are completed.

As you will know I have called the majority of this shitfest correctly. The next part of what I saw was us getting closer to the EU again. They want close ties with us. We want close ties with the EU. Maybe continue to pay money into the system. Keep everything aligned. Things eventually smoothed out to be similar as they are presently. Only out in name.

Youve got to assume the gravity of Europe will pull us closer. I can see future governments having rejoining schemes like Eurasmus and Galileo as part of their manifestos. If not full single market access.
 

skybluetony176

Well-Known Member
And how is this taking back control?
“In fact, the 1,255-page text says “temporary” sanctions can be imposed in many areas – not only fish, but subsidy controls, regulatory cooperation, law enforcement coordination and the return of cultural property – where tribunals are specifically barred.”

 

David O'Day

Well-Known Member
No surprise. Given it’s the deal Boris “man of his word” Johnson stood up at a DUP conference to a fanfare and declared “no British PM should ever accept.


But some weirdo on this thread said foster loved the deal. Please don't tell me he was lying?
 

Astute

Well-Known Member
Youve got to assume the gravity of Europe will pull us closer. I can see future governments having rejoining schemes like Eurasmus and Galileo as part of their manifestos. If not full single market access.
You got it 👍

My reasoning has always come from comparing the average voter, the average Tory plan and the average Labour plan.

The average voter wants what is best for them. They say about being happy to pay more in tax but put their x elsewhere. The average Labour Party wants what is best for the poor/lower paid. The Tories announce their best parts, keep quiet on those the majority wouldn't like and expand on those that other parties have where the voters might not like and make them sound worse. There goes your policies and party political broadcasts.

The Tories won't be shouting about our future with the EU. They will condition the voters first. Once the majority wants what their aims are they will happen.

Let's go back to this last minute deal and it being planned in advance. Within a few days 27 countries got through a lot of paperwork and agreed to it. Does anyone really believe this paperwork was sorted and agreed in a few days? I am sure it was planned well in advance. Macron even put his reputation on the line in France and got exactly what he stated he would. We got conditioned to expect the worst and at the last minute got a deal.

So the conditioning will continue. The Tories will continue to let us know what their aims are. We will get most of what they say but will compromise in other areas. But we will be happy because we get what we want. Eventually we will have the vast majority of what we had previously but not in name. It will be known as 'a special deal'
 

skybluetony176

Well-Known Member

Fuck me Boris got sewn up like a kipper

“Anton Bailey: ‘The Europeans always get what they want.
His main gripe is that under the deal EU boats will be able to operate up to six miles off the UK coast while British boats will have to remain 12 miles off the beaches of mainland Europe. “How is that fair? We’re not allowed inside their 12, I don’t see why they should be allowed up to our six.”
 
D

Deleted member 5849

Guest
Platitudes are worth exactly fuck all at the moment though. Would he rather no deal?
That's the thing isn't it. No deal would be catastrophic for what he hopes for. Therefore it's grit teeth and vote this deal through, and hope to sort out the mess at some stage in the future, when the mess is at least resolvable!
 

Astute

Well-Known Member
He's right on one level. Unfortunately, voting down the deal would mean even more of what he's worried about, and a harder task to reverse it.
All he has done is what most modern day politicians do. Go against the opposition even if it isn't the best thing to do.

He had his chance as leader of Labour to try and shape what happened with Brexit. But he just sat on the fence for as long as he could. It gave the Tories an easy time. But it wasn't a surprise as he often stated he wanted out of the EU before the referendum.
 

fernandopartridge

Well-Known Member
Platitudes are worth exactly fuck all at the moment though. Would he rather no deal?
He abstained. The reality is less would you want no deal or this deal, more would you rather be seen to support the abysmal deal put forward by the Tories.

I find it quite bizarre that forensic genius Starmer whipped the party to vote for it when a) the tories have a huge majority, and b) the actual draft legislation only appeared a day or two ago. His first critique (if he can manage a bit of opposition) will just be beaten down with a "well you voted for the deal" and they'd be spot on.
 

Skybluefaz

Well-Known Member
He abstained. The reality is less would you want no deal or this deal, more would you rather be seen to support the abysmal deal put forward by the Tories.

I find it quite bizarre that forensic genius Starmer whipped the party to vote for it when a) the tories have a huge majority, and b) the actual draft legislation only appeared a day or two ago. His first critique (if he can manage a bit of opposition) will just be beaten down with a "well you voted for the deal" and they'd be spot on.
If Labour abstained it would still look like they aren't accepting of the referendum and they'd be hit with that stick again. This I believe is an attempt to win those red wall voters back.
 

Grendel

Well-Known Member
If Labour abstained it would still look like they aren't accepting of the referendum and they'd be hit with that stick again. This I believe is an attempt to win those red wall voters back.

Didn't they abstain from the Tier strategy?
 

Ian1779

Well-Known Member
He abstained. The reality is less would you want no deal or this deal, more would you rather be seen to support the abysmal deal put forward by the Tories.

I find it quite bizarre that forensic genius Starmer whipped the party to vote for it when a) the tories have a huge majority, and b) the actual draft legislation only appeared a day or two ago. His first critique (if he can manage a bit of opposition) will just be beaten down with a "well you voted for the deal" and they'd be spot on.

Starmer just confirmed today that he is actually fucking useless, and still fails to see 2 overwhelmingly huge flaws in his approach. Firstly - he was a chief component in the PV vote campaign, and that will be dragged up whenever they feel like exposing his hypocrisy if he tries to puback on parts of the new deal
going forward. Secondly - as you have quite rightly said, he will have to own this deal too - he backed it.

If he had at least stuck to form by abstaining - he could legitimately detach himself from the deal. The PV thing will never go away - he could alleviate this by publicly apologising for trying to circumvent democracy in 2019.
 

Users who are viewing this thread

Top