Workingman wrote:Stop bellyaching, roll your sleeves up, and get to work. I will wholeheartedly support you if that is what you do. What I will not do is buy in to all the whingeing and moaning.
Personally, for me, I think this is another EU miscalculation and I think it's a good one.
Had they chosen a soft approach middle of the road person who is compelling and hard to refuse, the UK could have been talked into losing ever so much that the Brexit crowd promised.
With this negotiator there is going to be so much in your face and so much conflict that the UK won't be sweet talked into giving up much at all. In fact it will probably be the worst of both worlds for both sides.
For me that's great. Clean break and get on with it. Also, for me, it's great. It shows, yet again, the contempt that the EU institutions hold for the UK. Of course the institutions are not going to pay the price, are they! They think that a hard faced negotiator, after Davis was chosen as their adversary and Davis is a reasonable man, is the best way to get what they want.
I wonder just how many ways they will underestimate the UK. All over again. They thought that Brexit wouldn't happen if they held firm, threatened the people of the UK and lied their backsides off about how insignificant the UK would be out of the EU and that would do the job. Major oops time. Now they think that by pushing in an anti UK hard nosed Federalist as the negotiator they'll force the UK to give concession after concession until they get every single thing they want.
What the EU are most likely to get is a hard stop after two years with little or nothing agreed and the whole world open to the UK and the EU closed to the UK.
I leave everyone to consider how that will play out..
Because the biggest risk to the EU is that the UK ends the 2 year divorce with no settlement and the rest of the world is knocking on the door with better terms. Then the EU may find that the UK is quite happy with WTO rates with the EU and making deals with the rest of the world for what the UK wants to consume and sell.
There may be two losers in that picture but only one long term loser and it won't be the UK.
As I said before, I think it's great.