- Joined
- Dec 18, 2014
- Location
- Balcony
"Brexit: What is the Irish border backstop?" (bbc)
The backstop is a position of last resort, to maintain a seamless border on the island of Ireland. [the uk has stated it has no intention of making changes to the current border arrangements, so it can only be the eu and the republic planning to enforce border checks otherwise there is no issue or threat to the seamless border]
It would involve the UK retaining a very close relationship with the EU for an indefinite period.
It will apply if the UK and EU have not agreed a final deal at the end of a standstill transition period or if that final deal does not guarantee a soft border.
[one has to ask, what would be the likelihood of this if the eu and uk remainer civil service can see the prize of a backstop around the corner where the uk would be tied to the eu indefinitely]
....attorney general Geoffrey Cox, concluded that "the legal risk remains unchanged" that if a post-Brexit trade agreement cannot be reached due to genuinely "intractable differences", the UK would have "no internationally lawful means" of leaving the backstop without EU agreement.
Who in their right mind would agree to such terms, prior to trade deal negotiations, that gave you no legal right to exit and locked you in to an arrangement which took away sovereignty
The EU is using the troubles in N.Ireland and the sensitive issue of the border for political gain, keeping their federalist project going. And it's likely remainers in the higher echelons of the british civil service assisted the EU to come up with this machiavellian plan. All it needed was labour's approval, I can only think it was the lack of a 'free movement of people' clause that meant they chose not to back it.
The EU won't even compromise to set a time limit on a backstop; let's just get out on the 31st and live with tariffs, that's how we trade with most of the rest of the world anyway. The big german and french brands will suffer and I'm sure they won't be happy about that. There is plenty of anti EU sentiment in europe, likely to grow when the EU's mask slips a bit more.
You keep blaming everyone except the party who has the majority in the government and led the negotiations. And those started far before May became PM.
How convenient!


in the country's 2nd largest city pmsl.
