by Workingman » 21 Nov 2017, 17:56
How, exactly, are WE being shafted?
WE held a fair and open binary referendum and the EU did not try to stop us. When the largest number of those who voted decided to leave it was accepted that WE would leave, the EU did not challenge us. When WE invoked A50, at a time of OUR choosing, the EU did not send it back. The problems WE are now going through are largely of OUR making.
Way back in 2014, long before the format and date of the referendum were known, WE had signed up to the Multiannual Financial Framework (MFF) as members of the EU. Those responsibilities run until 2020 and the next EU budget. Some, such as pension payments to UK MEPs and UK staff working for the EU, will go on long after, but will gradually get less as people die off. This list of our responsibilities is of 'known, knowns' and will be similar for both sides.... more later.
If we now leap forward to the invoking of A50 WE can see how the above has played against us. Had we held A50 back till about May (I think) 2020 our responsibilities to the EU, apart from the pensions, would end at about the same time as we leave, negating a large part of this Divorce Bill malarkey. We could then have taken on the pensions payments without the need to funnel the money through the EU. All that would be left is the legality, or otherwise, of our debt to the likes of CFP and CAP and environmental projects running beyond 2020.
The irony of where we are now goes back to Autumn last year when 'spurts on both sides of the Channel were coming up with estimates of what the size of the Divorce Bill would be if we invoked A50 on (pick a date). They ranged from something like £17bn to £75bn, the £100bn picked out of nowhere came much later: a rough average would be £46bn. Yesterday we learned that ministers had come to an agreement to pay £40bn ish. Had we stumped that sort of money up during the summer we could be well on our way to a trade deal by now.
FOM and the role of the ECJ having some role in looking after their interests during any implementation period is almost sorted. One suggestion is for a tribunal of the ECJ and the UK Supreme Court. The NI border problem will also be resolved. I read some time ago that it would be technologically monitored for flows of goods with 'customs checks' being done by bills of lading and manifests at source. The only likely visible sign of a 'hard border' will be ANPR and CCTV cameras at crossing points. I have also seen work being done on digital tachographs with GPS, active RFID transponder/receiver, route taken, start and stop times, vehicle health etc. and all monitored in real time. Only politicians are making a big thing of the border, and then only for political point scoring.