ChatterBank1 min ago
Past The Point Of No Return?
17 Answers
If the government came up with concrete policies against immigration, fishing policy, etc, would you consider that Brexit wouldn't need to happen?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ."The main reason people decided to leave the EU" always seems different depending on who's answering -- and coincidentally always seems to coincide with that person's own reasons.
Anyway, I should say it's a bit late now to try and find a Bremain cop-out. Try and shape Brexit, for sure, but accept that the result in 2016 stands.
Anyway, I should say it's a bit late now to try and find a Bremain cop-out. Try and shape Brexit, for sure, but accept that the result in 2016 stands.
Marshwarble - In terms of its immigration policy, the UK will not be required to receive approval from the EU, which was something of a driving force in getting the UK out of the EU in the first place.
As far as fishing rights, where territorial waters are involved, then yes, negations will be required, but the UK can now negotiate as a separate entity, which will give it a far greater bargaining position that if it simply had to go along with what the EU decided because the UK was a member, with no choice.
As far as fishing rights, where territorial waters are involved, then yes, negations will be required, but the UK can now negotiate as a separate entity, which will give it a far greater bargaining position that if it simply had to go along with what the EU decided because the UK was a member, with no choice.
No. Because Bretix is more than just a few fishing policies and migration, that we are not allowed to make unilateral decisions on in any case.
DC did his best to get changes and they were not worth the fag packet they were scrawled hastily on the back of. So a meaningful renegotiation is not possible. Anyone who thinks soft Bretix is possible without HUGE compromises and payments on our part is in coud Cuckoo land.
DC did his best to get changes and they were not worth the fag packet they were scrawled hastily on the back of. So a meaningful renegotiation is not possible. Anyone who thinks soft Bretix is possible without HUGE compromises and payments on our part is in coud Cuckoo land.
OK, on that basis - since negotiating with the EU has landed us in a bureaucratic nightmare of limitless immigration, and laws made and enforced from Brussels, I think that the UK government's policies, concrete or otherwise, would always have to be run past and ratified by the EU, so I for one am delighted that we are escaping at last.