Workingman wrote:Many non EU countries partake in the single market, including Norway, Iceland, some Balkan states and other accession candidates - they have no problems. Stop making out that the UK could never be included.
They all suffer from the same thing. You access the markets you accept CJEU decisions and commission directives.
As for other bilateral trade deals? They are also subject to Commission and CJEU decisions.
NI is in this position, the rest of the UK is not. It is why the separation took so long.
This is not banging a drum or doing down the EU. This is a simple fact of life. It is the bargain you make in exchange for full access to the EU markets.
Every other trade deal sets up independent arbiters to oversee the deal. Only the EU demands that the Commission and the CJEU are the final arbiters of all trade disputes. It is why CETA took so long, because Canada refused that and they had to agree to neutral oversight.
I am not blind to the benefits as I am not blind to how the EU works.
But let us face facts, the EU is growing slowly with weak growth, it is the third largest economy in the world and if India ever gets its act together fully it will become the fourth. CPTPP, onece UK, South Korea and Taiwan succession happens, will be larger than the EU. If the US ever rejoins it will be so large that nobody will be able to compete with it on a level field.
These are the realities of the world the UK is now trading in. The focus on the EU needs to be put in its proper perspective. That of One large market to whom we can trade with. Not The large market. Its slow growth also makes it a poor target for UK growth. If the UK wishes to grow its economy more rapidly it needs to look away from the EU and to places in the world which are also growing more rapidly.
When you take off the shackles you need to run free. There was this big argument during the slave days about how slaves were "safe" because their owners fed and housed them. When they were freed they suddenly had to fend for themselves in the world and many did extremely well.
The parallel is not exactly the same but it is close enough that it has to be seen.
The biggest opportunities facing the UK are without the EU, not within it. If we wish to partake of these opportunities, the last thing we want to do is bind ourselves any closer to the EU. That only has one path.