Workingman wrote:So, we have a part pregnant, half in-half out, hokey-cokey, already trashed by the EU deal, or no deal; neither of which a majority voted for. Oh, and one other thing, that is unless a future PM decides to 'alter the relationship', as Michael Gove said at the weekend and which was agreed today by a No10 spokesperson.
Indeed. What was it people hoped for when they voted? That we would leave the EU and still retain all the benefits of the EU? I don't think Brexit voters voted for that. But the people on the airwaves wanted us to remain in the EU, so they keep on blathering on about the "uncertainty" of getting that when it was never what the voters wanted in the first place.
As for Gove's statement? That is exactly what Leave voters voted for. Namely that the power to decide what the UK would and would not, do, in order to retain trade relations with the EU, resides with the elected government of the UK and not the "faceless men" of Brussels.
In the final analysis, the first time this happens, every leave voter will recognise, all over again, what they voted for.
Gove's rather subtle reminder is quite skilful and the Remain leaning press are trying to use it as a stick to beat Leavers with.
As we close in on achieving what was voted for those who believe in "Remain at any cost" are becoming more and more strident because they thought that if they just made enough noise and went to court enough times and bleated loud enough, then they'd get what they wanted. Because this is what they have learned over the last 45 years. Namely that a loud and vociferous minority can get what it wants and the silent majority will just have to lump it.
May is standing fast and insisting on delivering on what people voted for. I believe this is a good thing because if people voted Leave but really didn't mean it, they need to understand the consequences of their actions.
As for the deal? Smoke Screen. The EU were always going to "give" us whatever provides the EU with the most advantage and the UK the least advantage as they have done for the last 4 decades. What is most vital is understanding that the Machiavellian intrigue of Brussels, in negotiating the UK exit from the EU, will stand precisely as long as a UK government wishes it to stand and no longer. Witness what Trump is doing to NAFTA.
If you ask an American if they thought NAFTA was going to last forever, they'd say to you "don't be stupid, it's a trade deal". If, however, you asked them whether being a member state of the United Sates of America would last forever, they'd look at you as if you were crazy, after all they fought a war to decide that one.
This is the difference between the two and people need to understand it. Remaining in the EU was forever, warts and all, with almost no chance of the UK changing what it was or how it works.
A trade deal? What's all the fuss about? We can change that in 2021 if we want to, that will be up to us. Countries, truly sovereign countries, create trade deals all the time. Member states make the decision; once; in? Well; ONCE.
There is no chance of getting that discussion going in the press or the media prior to April 2019, but I do hope that, shortly after, more sober heads prevail. I've had enough of the histrionics of the Unionists. In the US the Unionists won, in Scotland the Unionists won. In the EU they lost. Time to get over it and start working for the benefit of the newly emergent UK. Not that I'll hold my breath.