Taki ljudje, kot ja Farage, se bojijo samo ene stvari - namreč, da bodo prišli v situacijo, ko bodo morali z dejanji podkrepiti svoje besede.
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Uporabnik pinkobalinko pravi:
Taki ljudje, kot ja Farage, se bojijo samo ene stvari - namreč, da bodo prišli v situacijo, ko bodo morali z dejanji podkrepiti svoje besede.
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Uporabnik franZanton pravi:
Pijanček ga je nekaj vprašal:
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Have been running around the City of London last few days. Here's an update.
Merkel and Brussels have outright already refused an EEA+ agreement that gives UK migration control, passporting and single market access. What is passporting? All banks registered in UK have a "passport" that allows them to do business with whole EU. The City depends on it. Base case is Berlin and Brussels plan to insist on an EEA- (i.e. a worse deal than Norway) that excludes passporting, migration controls. This would however allow services to continue to have access to the singoe market. But not financial services. Mass migration continues. This is formal offer. But Paris is planning a turn of cynical brilliance - that could at a stroke smite London and restore Paris to glory. France cynicallly intends to offer Britain an EEA- that excludes passporting, but givs them a migration cap, and single market access. This is a brilliant move: "you get less Poles, but we want your banks." It would be in France's interests to encourage UK out to get banks. This would leave some stuff shirt like Crabb in a disastrous position: Paris and Berlin would have handed him a deal only "bad for bankers." But the cynical French deal would be exactly the kind of cap migration, free movement for us and single market deal that the public want. The next Tory muchkin leader would then be a hideous position: have his tax base slasshed at by loss of banks as his voters rejoice. Paris and Frankfurt would emerge as enormous winners by ending passporting. Hugely boosting popularity of French and German leadership. British public will be left moronically clapping the huge triumph of a few less Poles and the punishment for "bankers" and tax base slashed. City analysts I met look with unbrindled distain on a Tory leadership class they think are simply muppets. No clue what's about to hit them.
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The Brexit camp claims breezily that a Britain “unshackled” from Brussels will have no trouble maintaining access to the intricate network of trade agreements to which, as an EU member state, it is now party.
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Because the European Commission has taken the lead in trade negotiations since the 1970s, the UK simply does not have people with the right technical knowledge. When I was a negotiator at the commission in the late 1990s, handling everything from telecoms to transport, officials from the UK and other member states would sit behind commission negotiators as deals were thrashed out. They were known back then as the “mother-in-law committee”, able to comment but not themselves negotiating — allowing negotiators to speak with the clout of the world’s largest trading bloc and member states to know exactly what is going on. The outcome is that the UK benefits from 80 or so EU trade bilateral and regional agreements, either already in force or being formalised. Negotiations are under way, too, with more than 15 countries, from the US to Brazil and Japan. The agreements provide EU companies with access to these countries’ markets on more favourable terms than those secured by World Trade Organisation membership. They cover myriad provisions, from origin denominations to phytosanitary rule — all carefully crafted to ensure UK companies face as few obstacles as possible.
It is a long process: given that trade agreements have grown increasingly sophisticated, concluding negotiations in five years is a real achievement. Typically about 20 commission negotiators backed by 25-40 technical experts are involved. That may sound a lot but EU negotiators are known for their quality and manage with fewer people than most nations or trading blocs.
If the UK leaves the EU, the government will need to renegotiate these agreements for itself. Non-EU countries have given UK companies access to their markets in exchange for their companies having access to the 500m customers in the EU. Since the UK market on offer after a Brexit will be only 67m consumers, it is only natural that those nations will want to renegotiate; Brexit would represent a breach of contract. In addition, the government will need to play catch-up on the negotiations under way between the EU and countries such as the US, India or Brazil.
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The fact that Michael Gove, the justice secretary, widely considered one of the brightest of the Brexit camp, thinks the relationship between the EU and the UK can mirror the one between the EU and Albania demonstrates the enormity of the challenge.
Business people are often shocked to hear all this would be needed, not to improve market access conditions for UK companies, but simply to keep things as they are. No wonder they find it hard to understand why the government is exposing the country to such risk.
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Uporabnik franZanton pravi:
Da bi Škotska šla sama v EU ? Zakaj ? Imajo nafto, imajo ribe, isto kot Norvežani, ki jim na kraj pameti ne pade da bi se pridružili EU
Ne se hecat... Blokirali bodo samostojno državo, ki se želi vključiti?? Mislim, da jim ne bi niti na misel prišlo.Citat:
Uporabnik hgard pravi:
Španci bodo blokirali vstop Škotske v EU. Ker potem imajo sami problem s Katalonijo.
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Scotland’s hopes of remaining in the EU after Brexit have hit a major hurdle after Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy said he will block any negotiations between Brussels and Edinburgh.