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Johnson warns EU against any 'Napoleonic' tariffs in no-deal Brexit


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38 minutes ago, stephenterry said:

Quite right. We need a PM who has sufficient gravitus and a grasp of the immense difficulties that would arise in this role. Unfortunately, Boris will be found out to be left wanting...  

         Oh, come on, your  be wanting Corbyn next.

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2 minutes ago, puipuitom said:

Time to search on Internet with Google. It is NOT an exit fee, but the UK's share in Mutual commitments from the past.

Some things are done together in the EU, like EFSA, RASFF, CE, EMA and a LOT more.

The UK signed a LOT of long time agreements, they now want to walk away.

And this would be a migraine for the government should a no-deal be driven through parliment. Ergo, you cannot leave without consequences. And without any plan as to deal with it.

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If the "hard" BREXIX happens it has been predicted that the UKP will crash by at least 10% of its value. The economy will also take a nose-dive since most core business are owned by foreign investors.

 

EU are in a very strong position, and they are holding all the cards. If high tariffs are imposed on British exports, then the country is in serious trouble.

 

EU doesn't have to engage with the UK at all until it settles its bill, and sort out the backstop. 

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40 minutes ago, grumpy 4680 said:

    Don't forget it was a World War, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, India etc, etc. etc.

    When they are more concerned about Britain.

Yes, helps a lot...  The hundereds of millions of the USA ( + their Industrial capacity) and Sovjet Union ( sent massively to their deaths) compared by the millions of Canada , Australia and.. especially… New Zealand. You forgot the British Bahamas… and the Free French, especially in Africa + Polish forces, so criminally and treacherously sacrified at Arnhem and South-West Netherlands by the Brits.

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1 minute ago, the guest said:

If the "hard" BREXIX happens it has been predicted that the UKP will crash by at least 10% of its value. The economy will also take a nose-dive since most core business are owned by foreign investors.

 

EU are in a very strong position, and they are holding all the cards. If high tariffs are imposed on British exports, then the country is in serious trouble.

 

EU doesn't have to engage with the UK at all until it settles its bill, and sort out the backstop. 

Debated already. A dearth of agreement on these issues. The bottom line is that the UK government has NO PLAN in place to mitigate the economic disaster from leaving. Zilch.

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6 hours ago, grumpy 4680 said:

       Why can't we just return to how it was before we entered the common market, so we can tear up the pathetic EU laws, If Ireland and Scotland don't like it, Dump them, England would be better off looking after its self, as its the English tax payer that supports them.

yes, and go by sailing ship again… and two-horses carriage...

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6 hours ago, grumpy 4680 said:

    If the EU wants to start a trade war, so be it, we either buy or don't buy, It's up to the fat cat bosses to get off there backsides, and earn their salaries finding new markets, (they have had 3 years to prepare), and as for the car industries, so what, if the greens have their way, cars will become extinct anyway, britain could always do what the Germans did, and build a peoples car, that runs on Hydrogen, Then there would be NO smelly exhaust fumes, or billions of toxic batteries to be disposed of eventually if cars all go electric

And which German / Japanese / Chinese car maker has to do that in the UK, as.. British car makers… hardly exist. Thanks to redicoulous demands of the Unions all went bankrumpt ( same attitude as now Brexit) and were sold to foreign car makes. See German Mini.. leaving for Borne-NL or Honda, returning to Japan. Even Bentley and Rolls Royce are German , see 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Automotive_industry_in_the_United_Kingdom

The UK is still the engine manufacturer, till 31 Oct, when the WTO-import duty tariffs come in place, so + 10% = bye,  https://www.theguardian.com/business/2019/may/30/uk-car-production-plunges-amid-untold-damage-of-brexit-chaos and  https://www.theguardian.com/business/2019/jan/31/british-car-production-slumps-to-five-year-low  and 

https://ec.europa.eu/taxation_customs/dds2/taric/taric_consultation.jsp?Lang=en&Taric=8700000000&Expand=true&Area=&SimDate=20190627&GoodsText=&OrderNum=&StartPub=&EndPub=&Regulation=&LastSelectedCode=

What do you as manufacturer do, when you plant to leave a market = Br-exit? yes, you stop with investments. see 

  and 

https://www.bbc.com/news/business-47055188

 

Just a few years, and there will be only capacity to make 2-horses carriages… 

 

Edited by puipuitom
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2 hours ago, JonnyF said:

So did Gunther Oetthinger, the EU budget chief. But the TV Remainers know more than him apparently.

 

https://www.express.co.uk/news/uk/1140103/Brexit-news-UK-EU-Brexit-bill-budget-Boris-Johnson-next-prime-minister-update

 

image.png.b1b4c96fcbb19f8ab6e4c48b052f57ca.png

 

 

Thank you for that information. I knew that I had read it somewhere but I couldn't remember where.

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1 minute ago, billd766 said:

Thank you for that information. I knew that I had read it somewhere but I couldn't remember where.

what about the famous UK gentleman's agreement

noun

an agreement that, although unenforceable at law, is binding as a matter of personal honor.
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1 hour ago, stephenterry said:

Quite right. We need a PM who has sufficient gravitus and a grasp of the immense difficulties that would arise in this role. Unfortunately, Boris will be found out to be left wanting...  

So what does that make Teresa May after 3 YEARS of trying?

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2 minutes ago, billd766 said:

A gentleman's agreement is fine if both parties are honest and it is between the two of them but TM did NOT have the right to commit the UK to the payment on her own. It has to go to parliament for ratification where it was rejected 3 times.

 

FYI

 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gentlemen's_agreement

 

A gentlemen's agreement or gentleman's agreement is an informal and legally non-binding agreement between two or more parties. It is typically oral, though it may be written, or simply understood as part of an unspoken agreement by convention or through mutually beneficial etiquette. The essence of a gentlemen's agreement is that it relies upon the honor of the parties for its fulfillment, rather than being in any way enforceable. It is, therefore, distinct from a legal agreement or contract.

 

I have put the emphasis on the last 2 sentences.

 let's wait and see how they will honor TM commitment

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10 minutes ago, Mavideol said:

and I thought he was being sued over these lies 555.....liar, liar burn on fire

They tried but the case was quickly kicked out of court. 555....off to the Premiership with you Boris.

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1 minute ago, Loiner said:

Don't wait for too long, because she isn't a gentleman and we've ditched it already.

still, she acted on behalf of the country didn't she, regardless if gentleman's or gentlelady's she committed to a deal or are you trying to imply that any and all deals she made will not be honored because she quit, not ditched, (she won the confidence vote, thus not ditched) she quit or she resigned  big difference

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3 minutes ago, Loiner said:

They tried but the case was quickly kicked out of court. 555....off to the Premiership with you Boris.

not so fast my friend, still has to explain his burst and that will not be an easy one 555

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3 hours ago, luckyluke said:

Does that mean that  the successor of Mr. Johnson (assuming he becomes P. M.) can eventually withdraw the decisions made by Mr. Johnson; and so further on. 

means.. the sigfnature of a British PM is even not worth the ink spent on it.

I tought a British commitment would last only 20 years, see the Good Friday Agreement.. 

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10 hours ago, stevenl said:

They don't pay them, the consumer pays them. And with considerably more dependence of UK on exports to EU than the other way round you have a clear disadvantage there.

 

The UK has a trade deficit with the EU.

 

Quote

The EU, taken as a whole is the UK's largest trading partner. In 2017, UK exports to the EU were £274 billion (44% of all UK exports). UK imports from the EU were £341 billion (53% of all UK imports). ... A surplus of £28 billion on trade in services was outweighed by a deficit of -£95 billion on trade in goods.

 

https://researchbriefings.parliament.uk/ResearchBriefing/Summary/CBP-7851

 

 

 

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Brexit
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