ToxicBunny
Oi! Leave me out of this...
The mind boggles....
No Deal is a fark storm for the UK, period.
No Deal is a fark storm for the UK, period.
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The UK wants a hard brexxit which requires a hard border between it and the EU, if the EU and the UK are under different customs regimes this means there need to be checks on both sides of the border, one by EU customs and one by UK customs.
The mind boggles....
No Deal is a fark storm for the UK, period.
Yes, free trade is 100% possible. Between the Republic and Northern Ireland. The fact that it falls outside of the Custom Union lies with the EU. So the EU, and Republic of Ireland needs to come up with some sort of a way to comply with ITA and free trade between Northern Ireland. You guys are complicating the issue way more than it needs to be.
The EU doesn't want free trade with Northern Ireland as goods will come to the UK via Northern Ireland duty free. (That's what I would have done if I was running the UK) So changes nothing to the UK/England when it comes to duties on goods as there will be none). If the EU wants duties on these goods because they will end up in the Uk/England anyway duty free, THEY need to come up with a solution to it.
The main reason for the UK leaving the UK is because of disagreement with EU rules and laws pertaining to open borders for PEOPLE. The people of the UK voted to not be part of the EU passport laws where they have zero control of who enters. EU passport holder can walk in freely... The politicians, and the remoaners are trying to use this as some sort of punishment for the UK leaving the EU. For the EU to send goods to the Republic of Ireland duty free will be a violation of the ITA due to no custom check between the Republic and Northern Ireland.
This is 100% a problem for the EU and Republic of Ireland, doesn't phase the UK at all. No-Deal will be a fark storm for the EU and Republic of Ireland.
Explain it to me?
It can't be that hard if it's boggling your mind...
Yes, free trade is 100% possible. Between the Republic and Northern Ireland. The fact that it falls outside of the Custom Union lies with the EU.
I don't see how this is the UKs problem.
There is no ITA between Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland, or between the UK and the EU.Maybe go read the international Trade agreement. But like I said, I could be understanding it wrong.
you say free trade is 100% possible. Between the Republic (EU) and Northern Ireland (UK). The UK doesn't want a free trade agreement with the EU, remember?
There is no ITA between Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland, or between the UK and the EU.
There is no hard border between NI and the republic at the moment by virtue of the fact that both entities belong to the EU.
The UK, wants control of it's borders. Simple as that. There is zero issue with having a border between NR and RI. The responsibility to enforce custom duties and the likes will be the EUs responsibility if they want to continue duty free trade with RI. If the EU wants to have duty with NI/UK, it's the responsibility of RI and the EU to regulate and control these goods.
The RI and NI Belfast agreement is about Governing. Simple as that.
Everyone in here is trying to make these issues more complicated than they should be.
Sunderland is a dangerous place, y'all. With the dodgiest people. They don't want the cars to be stolen off the assembly line.Bacause they’ve just signed a FTA and can build and import from Japan to the EU with no import duties?
Moving the line into Europe would have cost investment (which they’d already done at Sunderland) and if Sunderland is now a doubt and likely to have increased costs they may as well move it to where there is capacity without needing to spend more money.
The Nissan car transporters already do the Europe (from Sunderland) to Far East route, now it’ll just be bringing more cars back to Europe rather than delivering them to Japan/the Far East.
Which means doing away with the Belfast Agreement, which the UK doesn't want. How can this be so difficult to understand? Do you really think this would be the primary stumbling block for Brexit negotiations if there was an easy solution? The Belfast Agreement isn't just about trade, it also guarantees free movement of people and business between NI and Ireland.And I fully agree.
You now have a border at RI and NI, where NI can control who enters their borders
You're all wasting your time. Facts have no place in this discussionThe part that boggles my mind is how you can't see that this is the UKs problem..
Yes the EU as well to a degree, but predominantly the UKs problem since THEY initiated Brexit.
No, the responsibility is BOTH sides, not just the EU.
And I fully agree.
You now have a border at RI and NI, where NI can control who enters their borders, RI and EU will have to manage the custom side of things as that seems to be their issue. For the free trade between RI and EU to remain and for them to keep with ITA they will need to make sure goods entering NI are controlled and duties applied. NI/UK can't give a shyte if it comes through with or without duties, they will just not be responsible for it, and they don't have too. not their responsibility.
Which means doing away with the Belfast Agreement, which the UK doesn't want. How can this be so difficult to understand? Do you really think this would be the primary stumbling block for Brexit negotiations if there was an easy solution? The Belfast Agreement isn't just about trade, it also guarantees free movement of people and business between NI and Ireland.
When the UK leaves the EU on 29 March there will be no trade agreement in place between the 2 entities.
The withdrawal agreement negotiated by May is an interim agreement which keeps the UK temporarily in the customs union pending a negotiated trade agreement.
Leaving with no deal means leaving with no agreement in place.
In both cases a permanent trade agreement will have to be concluded in future.
If the UK leaves without an interim arrangement which avoids a hard land border on the Irish island, that action will logically result in a hard border.
There is no precedent anywhere on the planet where neighbouring countries don't enforce a hard border without being part of the same customs union.
Thus the action of leaving the EU without an agreement (temporary or permanent) puts the UK in breach of the Good Friday agreement.
The EU needs to comply with this in order to keep other EU members Happy as per the EU customs union.
NI/UK can't give a shyte if it comes through with or without duties, they will just not be responsible for it, and they don't have too. not their responsibility.