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Posted
4 minutes ago, Cameroni said:

 

It has nothing to do with broadmindedness in Frankfurt or Paris. 

 

It's just that German and French banks are used to doing business in London, and  to force them not do it, would require a Trump and neither Germany nor France have one. Yet.

No

Posted
12 minutes ago, newbee2022 said:

No

 

Oh yes, previous attempts to take on London as a financial centre were half-hearted and amateurish, weak even. They failed because they were sabotaged by German and French banks. It would need strong leadership to push through the required legal changes that would force German and French banks to do business in the EU rather than the UK.

 

It could be done.

Posted
8 hours ago, Cameroni said:

 

With settlements now a very moderate deal was reached, the EU only requires a modest percentage of settlements to be made in the EU. However, the EU could have mandated a far greater precentage of settlements has to be made in the EU. That would have substantially reduced the business the City does in terms of settlements. US banks located in London would have had to use EU clearing houses, they'd have had no choice. So the major UK clearing houses would not have had that business anymore. It would not have applied "equally" to the US sector, because US clearing houses in the US would not have been affected, only the UK's clearing houses would have. Could some US banks in the UK have decided the extra cost of Frankfurt clearing houses would make them cease operations in Europe alltogether, yes, but extremely unlikely. They'd just have paid the Frankfurt fees for settlements.

 

This is what I mean, this would have benefitted Frankfurt as a financial centre.

 

Equally with foreign exchange business btw, the EU could mandate a few things and that business would migrate from London to Frankfurt or Paris, because it would have to due to new regulations.

 

What type of regulation have you in mind? Can you give a specific example?

 

The EU can only regulate the affairs of its' member states or companies which wish to operate within the bloc. If the EU makes it more difficult for third country companies to do business within the EU, they will either look outside the bloc or, alternatively, pass on the opportunity. Neither outcome is in the EU's interest. Moreover, how could an EU regulation prevent US and Japanese financial companies, negotiating a settlement in Euros, doing so through London if they so wished?

 

I don't see how applying increased regulation to EU financial institutions will improve their competitiveness and increase market share.

Posted
7 hours ago, Cameroni said:

 

Oh yes, previous attempts to take on London as a financial centre were half-hearted and amateurish, weak even. They failed because they were sabotaged by German and French banks. It would need strong leadership to push through the required legal changes that would force German and French banks to do business in the EU rather than the UK.

 

It could be done.

 

Not without an outcry from the French and German banking sectors, and the considerable risk of negative effects to the EU economy.

Posted
9 hours ago, frank83628 said:

 

I seem to remember people complaining that a win at 51% wasn't good enough and there should be a 2nd vote, but here 55% in a poll is proof People didint want Brexit.

 

 

2+2=5.

 

Your comment has nothing whatsoever to do with the accuracy of this latest poll.

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Posted
38 minutes ago, johng said:

I agree I would have given you one for the above.

@frank83628 is correct it was remainer politicians that did everything in their power to delay and hinder the will of the population that voted to leave.

Yup, a idea of a second referendum would not have even been entertained had the vote been to remain, would not have even made page 7 of a tabloid, instead, just as you say, all the remain politicians dragged their feet, whinged & whined nonstop and undermined the will of the people at every possible opportunity. Made the UK look a laughing stock to the world... and now stamer, who won by 34%, is going to do his best to reverse everything. 

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Posted
2 minutes ago, frank83628 said:

and now stamer, who won by 34%, is going to do his best to reverse everything.

I think and hope that he will fail miserably in that endeavor.

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Posted
1 hour ago, johng said:

I agree I would have given you one for the above.

@frank83628 is correct it was remainer politicians that did everything in their power to delay and hinder the will of the population that voted to leave.

 

Absolute tosh.

 

What did you expect to happen? That we would wake up on 24 June 2016, and we would be out of the EU and everything would be sorted?

 

In any event, we now have Brexit but some of the loudest moaners about it are not remainers but Brexiters.

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Posted
35 minutes ago, frank83628 said:

Yes, well, if you could think outside your bubble you wouldnt be so confused

 

😂 Says the bloke who dismissed the findings of a survey without any good reason simply because it doesn't fit his narrative.

 

Some things you just can't make up.

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Posted
28 minutes ago, frank83628 said:

Yup, a idea of a second referendum would not have even been entertained had the vote been to remain, would not have even made page 7 of a tabloid, instead, just as you say, all the remain politicians dragged their feet, whinged & whined nonstop and undermined the will of the people at every possible opportunity. Made the UK look a laughing stock to the world... and now stamer, who won by 34%, is going to do his best to reverse everything. 

 

Whinging and whining about an event which didn't happen (and was a non-starter from the outset).

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Posted
8 minutes ago, RayC said:

 

Heaven forbid that the UK government should try to forge a better diplomatic and trading relationship with our closest neighbours.

There was no reason why that couldnt have been done straight away after the brexit vote result was in.

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Posted
On 5/12/2025 at 7:34 PM, RayC said:

 

Absolute tosh.

 

What did you expect to happen? That we would wake up on 24 June 2016, and we would be out of the EU and everything would be sorted?

 

In any event, we now have Brexit but some of the loudest moaners about it are not remainers but Brexiters.

 

Your comment is tosh. It was plain to see that the PM, most of her cabinet, along with the Civil Service, dithered, dallied and made all best efforts to stop the UK leaving the EU. They only succeeded in part but the result is the dog's dinner we still have to eat now.

Posted
4 hours ago, nauseus said:

 

Your comment is tosh. It was plain to see that the PM, most of her cabinet, along with the Civil Service, dithered, dallied and made all best efforts to stop the UK leaving the EU. They only succeeded in part but the result is the dog's dinner we still have to eat now.

 

Here we go again. The same old Brexit tune: The reason Brexit isn't a success is because it was sabotaged by everyone from the 'Man in the Moon' to 'The Jolly Green Giant'.

 

Here's a recap of the FACTS for you. Your hero, Boris Johnson, signed the Withdrawal Agreement not Theresa May. What went on during her watch was basically irrelevant. If Johnson thought that the Withdrawal Agreement was the 'Dogs Dinner' you suggest, then he should not have signed it. No one could have coerced him into doing so: Not the EU; not the Civil Service; no one. 

 

Your side got what it wanted: We left the EU. Its' your side's responsibility and you are accountable for the outcome. You knew what you were voting for, or so you kept telling us Remainers.

 

Stop blaming others for a situation which you created.

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Posted
1 hour ago, RayC said:

 

Here we go again. The same old Brexit tune: The reason Brexit isn't a success is because it was sabotaged by everyone from the 'Man in the Moon' to 'The Jolly Green Giant'.

 

Here's a recap of the FACTS for you. Your hero, Boris Johnson, signed the Withdrawal Agreement not Theresa May. What went on during her watch was basically irrelevant. If Johnson thought that the Withdrawal Agreement was the 'Dogs Dinner' you suggest, then he should not have signed it. No one could have coerced him into doing so: Not the EU; not the Civil Service; no one. 

 

Your side got what it wanted: We left the EU. Its' your side's responsibility and you are accountable for the outcome. You knew what you were voting for, or so you kept telling us Remainers.

 

Stop blaming others for a situation which you created.

 

Your so-called facts are rather a joke. Your assumptions about who my heroes and what I "created" are are quite wrong.  

 

So, here we go again. 

 

May never got the opportunity to sign "her" deal - that was the only good thing to emerge from the whole (incomplete) mess of a dubious process. Boris was full of bull shine and bluster: his affable nature calmed many down for a while but we can see, now, that he was far from heroic, with that act.

 

Boris's "oven-ready" deal was in fact a weak tweak of May's Chequers Agreement, which emerged suddenly, just after she flitted off to Germany at some insultingly ungodly hour to see her Mutti in Berlin. I believe this shows us who had the real power over the EU and also the weakness and gullibility of the UK governments of the day.

 

My "side" did not get what it wanted, which was a reset back to pre EU status. There were few conditions prior to joining (bar de Gaulle, mainly) but seemingly thousands of the buggers when it was exit time. I didn't create any situation - the EEC/EU was allowed to morph into a foul political cesspool over time.

 

 

 

 

Posted
15 minutes ago, nauseus said:

 

Your so-called facts are rather a joke. Your assumptions about who my heroes and what I "created" are are quite wrong.  

 

So, here we go again. 

 

May never got the opportunity to sign "her" deal - that was the only good thing to emerge from the whole (incomplete) mess of a dubious process. Boris was full of bull shine and bluster: his affable nature calmed many down for a while but we can see, now, that he was far from heroic, with that act.

 

Boris's "oven-ready" deal was in fact a weak tweak of May's Chequers Agreement, which emerged suddenly, just after she flitted off to Germany at some insultingly ungodly hour to see her Mutti in Berlin. I believe this shows us who had the real power over the EU and also the weakness and gullibility of the UK governments of the day.

 

My "side" did not get what it wanted, which was a reset back to pre EU status. There were few conditions prior to joining (bar de Gaulle, mainly) but seemingly thousands of the buggers when it was exit time. I didn't create any situation - the EEC/EU was allowed to morph into a foul political cesspool over time.

 

 

Complete and utter nonsense.

 

'My' facts are just that, facts. There is nothing in your self-pitying post to refute them.

 

To give you some credit, you have done a complete volte-face wrt Johnson. I seem to recall that you had his face as your emoji and singing his praises? Still, I'm pleased that you now realise just what a charlatan he is. Better late than never.

 

Whether Johnson's deal was a tweak of May's and/or whether Merkel was the real power in the EU is completely irrelevant. No one forced Johnson to sign the Withdrawal Agreement. That is a FACT. It is as simple as that.

 

Just as the UK is never going to regain its' position circa 1850 as the world's dominant power, the EU was - and is - never going to return to its' 1970s self. If this is what you wanted then you were always destined to be disappointed.

 

If you have another vision of what the world post-Brexit should have looked like then can you please explain what it is: I've asked this question numerous times but have yet to receive a direct answer, so I've steeled myself for yet another disappointment.

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