ChatterBank1 min ago
There You Go Barnier That's How You Do It........
19 Answers
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by ToraToraTora. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.No mention of a great new deal on Cheese, so I expect Liz Truss lost that one.
https:/ /www.da ilymail .co.uk/ news/ar ticle-8 616133/ Cheese- demands -blamed -delays -sealin g-post- Brexit- pact-Ja pan.htm l
https:/
//Makes a bit of a mockery of UK independence though.//
As indicated by youngmaf, the UK has the option to agree to the deal or not. There are many EU trade deals and tariffs which are detrimental to the UK. I'm sure the UK is not alone because trying to devise an agreement which will be in the best interests of 28 very disparate nations is impossible. That's why in that respect (and quite a few others) membership of the EU often means everybody gets what nobody really wants.
As indicated by youngmaf, the UK has the option to agree to the deal or not. There are many EU trade deals and tariffs which are detrimental to the UK. I'm sure the UK is not alone because trying to devise an agreement which will be in the best interests of 28 very disparate nations is impossible. That's why in that respect (and quite a few others) membership of the EU often means everybody gets what nobody really wants.
2016: - “EU Trade deals are good for the EU but bad for Britain, so we need to leave the EU and do our own trade deals to get a better outcome for the UK.”
2020: - “We are too stupid or lazy to improve on the EU deal, so we will just copy it and spin it as a great deal for the UK (even though it’s the same as the EU deal)”.
2020: - “We are too stupid or lazy to improve on the EU deal, so we will just copy it and spin it as a great deal for the UK (even though it’s the same as the EU deal)”.
That's How You Do It
that's how Barnier (and his colleagues) have done it already. It's basically the same as the deal the EU already has with Japan, except for some minor changes - to Britain's detriment - in agricultural trade. Brussels' own deal with Japan contains quotas; Britain just gets to use any quotas left over by the EU.
that's how Barnier (and his colleagues) have done it already. It's basically the same as the deal the EU already has with Japan, except for some minor changes - to Britain's detriment - in agricultural trade. Brussels' own deal with Japan contains quotas; Britain just gets to use any quotas left over by the EU.