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The thinking is that the EU can and should compromise further in the fishing area since we are just talking numbers and percentages. UK must do so for the level playing field since this is the basis of trade in EU. The third one is really only there because UK threatened to break international law so the EU does not trust that this will not happen with the Brexit deal. There is no good faith left in this negotiation so an arbitrator is necessary.
And they’re all political (mostly internal UK politics at that). The negotiators are deadlocked until Johnson moves on his red lines. If he shifts, the negotiators will sort out the detail. But are his red lines real, in which case it’s no deal. Or is he playing chicken and trying to force their hand but will backdown at the last possible moment if the EU don’t budge?
I’ve no idea which way it’ll go. He’s probably gambling of a huge win to get the EU to backdown (keeps the most people happy here in the UK). If the EU stick firm, it’s a choice between changing our demands to limit the economic damage or no deal to keep his ERG headbangers happy.
Easiest deal in history the idiots said. We hold all the cards. All bullsh*t that anyone should have had the sense to see through.
A chinese company also purchased a unit ion the same industrial site.
The current situation is no worse than predicted years ago. Reaching agreement with the EU wal always going to be difficult if not impossible.We will survive....
A chinese company also purchased a unit ion the same industrial site.
The current situation is no worse than predicted years ago. Reaching agreement with the EU wal always going to be difficult if not impossible.We will survive....
Of course you will survive but there will be a lot of unnecessary hardship from this. Great news for Suffolk but are you suggesting that Brexit had anything to do with it either way? There may be a lot more warehouses because of the more restricted movement of goods but that must be an extra cost which will be passed on to customers.