Workingman wrote:I can't see 'Call me Dave' getting served crumbs never mind a cold buffet. So that will mean him campaigning for "Out": won't it?
It is amusing isn't it. I wonder what kind of mental gymnastics will be pulled in order to allow Cameron to "support" staying in the EU. Germany, for instance, is interested in controlling immigration, but only the kind which bothers them, namely extra EU. They have no interest at all in controlling cross EU working migrancy but are interested in denying benefits to migrant non workers. So if Germany want's it then it is likely to happen.
On the flip side, today, Merkel and Hollande have ganged together to get ready to demand harmonisation of a base rate of corporation tax so they can stop companies bleeding over to lower tax regimes. QMV on taxation issues was one of the key differences between the EU constitution and the Lisbon Treaty. The UK can veto and as Cameron has clearly stated that the ability to incentivise British businesses through advantageous tax rates is key to sustained UK recovery, everyone would expect the UK to veto. Especially as there is 10% - 13% difference between the UK rate and Germany, France and Spain.
Of course Ireland is 15% and Luxemburg has a special deal with <6% for certain royalties payments.
Now an able EU operator would ensure that the UK voted last. Also an able EU operator would ensure that the base was set at, say, 22%, something he could stand behind in the UK for a while. Then, after Ireland and Luxemburg had voted yes, expecting the UK to veto it, he could also vote yes.
That able EU operator would then work on the smaller countries to tell them that if they don't support him in treaty changes, which would allow him to unilaterally undo the 22% tax rate, then he would support even more legislation which was somewhat benign to the UK but damaging to them. Leaving them with little choice but to be the "bad partner" and veto themselves before the UK sunk them by allowing it through.
For far too long the UK has been cast as the "bad partner" in the EU, whilst the EU has used and abused UK influence abroad which has never been acknowledged.
Sadly we don't have able EU operators because they don't understand the EU. Which is why I believe that we belong out. Because by the time our politicians wake up to the realities of the EU, they will have given away every ability to change anything.