by Suff » 17 Oct 2017, 08:00
Yes I've noticed the swinging backwards and forwards. However I've also noticed that the FT has had a fairly strong editorial line on that, not allowing any of the hard brexit style articles and virtually 95% of the time talking down the economy, business impact and everything else in terms of requiring a soft brexit.
Personally, from my perspective, I never expected anything else than hard brexit. Essentially because the Commission is flexing it's muscles and has bound the states into a "suicide pact" to try and derail the UK from fragmenting EU opinion. The 27 states are still following that line as they have been guaranteed that if they all hold firm the UK _MUST_ cave and then they'll get anything they want.
Pity they didn't assess the political realities of that approach in the UK. No party that allows the EU to walk all over the UK will survive the fall out at the next election. Everyone knows that, no matter what they are saying today.
It will be far too late when the 27 states realise that this approach is not working, that the UK is not going to simply keep on paying into all the EU schemes for the next 10 years and that UK borders are going back up to EU citizens; one way or another. Simply because it will be a bigger impact to businesses, driven to make provision for hard brexit due to EU intransigence and UK unwillingness to just surrender, to go for soft brexit late in the day; than it will be to just be British and tell the EU to shove it where the Sun don't shine.
The Commission never had any intention of negotiating any more than the ECB did with the PIIGS. It worked once, why shouldn't it work again??? Perhaps because the PIIGS, economically speaking, were far less valuable to the EU than the UK, something that the Commission should have factored in. Which is quite a big thing given that the GDP of the PIIGS is larger than Germany, let alone the UK.
I saw the mushy statements which came out of the May/Juncker meeting last night. That, to me, means no change in the status quo.
So, I wonder, does the Tory Government have the sheer Chutzpa to do what needs to be done. Simply put, if the EU council meeting, this week, demands more progress before they allow Barnier to talk about trade; then the UK walks away from the table and tells the EU they'll come back when they talk about trade. The UK can then, unilaterally, tell the EU what it is going to do about funding and the NI border and telling the EU that the UK will reciprocate on ANY decision made for UK citizens in the EU, for EU citizens in the UK.
We'll see. Unilaterally setting conditions for the NI border is an interesting one. Because if we decide to keep it open, but the EU is not happy with how, then the EU will have to deploy it's border force to enforce a different solution; thereby endangering the Good Friday agreement themselves in total opposition to their stated aims.
There is a lot the UK can do to change this situation. Wringing it's hands and begging for "largesse" is not one of them. Greece proved that fairly comprehensively to everyone involved.
There are 10 types of people in the world:
Those who understand Binary and those who do not.