Workingman wrote:You then go on with your tying the hands of parliament proposal. and I do agree with most of that. Where we obviously differ is with revoking A50. If, after such a length of time, we look no nearer to a solution I am minded to think that unilaterally revoking A50 could be accepted by most of the public.
Workingman wrote:In the early days the EU offered a Norway style deal. The UK rejected it. May then went over the head of Davis and came up with the Chequers plan - her plan. It contained the backstop at the behest of May and both sides signed up to it. What is even more shocking is that she signed up to it before asking parliament.
When presenting the plan, May addressed the Irish border question, stating that there would be "[n]o hard border between Northern Ireland and Ireland, and no border in the UK".[8] A "facilitated customs agreement" would remove the need for customs checks by treating the UK and EU "as if a combined customs territory". The UK would apply EU's tariffs and trade policy on goods intended for the bloc but would control its own tariffs and trade for the domestic market.[7]
Workingman wrote:I was not attempting to rewrite history, I simply made a factual error. The fact remains, though, that the deal with the backstop was signed and sealed but not delivered. That is why we are where we are.
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