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"I am sure Westminster Parliament voted to ensure that there would not be a NO Deal Brexit. So why is it now being reported after this vote, that it is becoming more likely as each day passes, that there is a good chance of a NO deal Brexit. can someone explain this? thank you in advance " The vote the other evening was not binding so, unless a binding motion is passed, the law says we leave at 23:00 on 29 March 19 whether we have a deal or not. There were votes the other evening that, if passed, would have been binding and could have stopped a 'no deal' but they weren't passed. However it's not definite either way as we'll be going through the whole thing again on 14 February. | |||
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"I am sure Westminster Parliament voted to ensure that there would not be a NO Deal Brexit. So why is it now being reported after this vote, that it is becoming more likely as each day passes, that there is a good chance of a NO deal Brexit. can someone explain this? thank you in advance The vote the other evening was not binding so, unless a binding motion is passed, the law says we leave at 23:00 on 29 March 19 whether we have a deal or not. There were votes the other evening that, if passed, would have been binding and could have stopped a 'no deal' but they weren't passed. However it's not definite either way as we'll be going through the whole thing again on 14 February. " thanks for that, it helps explain. but what was the point of that vote? if it is not binding and basically means nothing? I am asking, as I simply do not know myself | |||
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"I am sure Westminster Parliament voted to ensure that there would not be a NO Deal Brexit. So why is it now being reported after this vote, that it is becoming more likely as each day passes, that there is a good chance of a NO deal Brexit. can someone explain this? thank you in advance The vote the other evening was not binding so, unless a binding motion is passed, the law says we leave at 23:00 on 29 March 19 whether we have a deal or not. There were votes the other evening that, if passed, would have been binding and could have stopped a 'no deal' but they weren't passed. However it's not definite either way as we'll be going through the whole thing again on 14 February. " Apparently the referendum was non binding too It is my opinion that no deal is simply a non workable imposibility The UK would need to DEAL certain aspects of its EU relations, flights medical and nuclear will all need a DEAL of some description | |||
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"I am sure Westminster Parliament voted to ensure that there would not be a NO Deal Brexit. So why is it now being reported after this vote, that it is becoming more likely as each day passes, that there is a good chance of a NO deal Brexit. can someone explain this? thank you in advance " The legislation states the UK will leave the EU on March 29. The Act is not dependent on a withdrawal agreement being in place. To avoid a hard exit, Parliament would need to amend the legislation. The amendment passed the other night does not do that. It was simply an expression of opinion. | |||
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"I am sure Westminster Parliament voted to ensure that there would not be a NO Deal Brexit. So why is it now being reported after this vote, that it is becoming more likely as each day passes, that there is a good chance of a NO deal Brexit. can someone explain this? thank you in advance The legislation states the UK will leave the EU on March 29. The Act is not dependent on a withdrawal agreement being in place. To avoid a hard exit, Parliament would need to amend the legislation. The amendment passed the other night does not do that. It was simply an expression of opinion. " thank you _ara j | |||
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"Hope we just leave without a deal. After we leave then we negotiate. " Is that whilst British industry is heading abroad at a rate of knots to avoid a situation created by the likes of Rees Mogg and BoZo Johnson? | |||
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"Hope we just leave without a deal. After we leave then we negotiate. " Yeah. That’ll show them. You been asleep the last two years? Or have you not noticed that we seem to be unable to negotiate our way out of a paper bag right now. -Matt | |||
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"Hope we just leave without a deal. After we leave then we negotiate. " And the country in the meantime experiences what? You've seen the failure of just the conservative party to decide what it wants, taking almost 3 years - no extrapolate that to much more complex arrangements that would need to be negotiated... whilst the conservatives still haven't decided amongst themselves | |||
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"I am sure Westminster Parliament voted to ensure that there would not be a NO Deal Brexit. So why is it now being reported after this vote, that it is becoming more likely as each day passes, that there is a good chance of a NO deal Brexit. can someone explain this? thank you in advance The vote the other evening was not binding so, unless a binding motion is passed, the law says we leave at 23:00 on 29 March 19 whether we have a deal or not. There were votes the other evening that, if passed, would have been binding and could have stopped a 'no deal' but they weren't passed. However it's not definite either way as we'll be going through the whole thing again on 14 February. Apparently the referendum was non binding too It is my opinion that no deal is simply a non workable imposibility The UK would need to DEAL certain aspects of its EU relations, flights medical and nuclear will all need a DEAL of some description " All that has been done deal or no deal | |||
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"Hope we just leave without a deal. After we leave then we negotiate. Is that whilst British industry is heading abroad at a rate of knots to avoid a situation created by the likes of Rees Mogg and BoZo Johnson?" What industry is leaving that wouldn’t have been lured away with EU manipulation anyway? If we are to have any chance of having a manufacturing industry here then we need to look after ourselves and look out to the rest of the world. | |||
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"Hope we just leave without a deal. After we leave then we negotiate. " Negotiate what? Better deals that we already have? Not a chance. Deals as good as what we already have? Extremely unlikely. When will Brexiters understand this? Bunch of crack pots. | |||
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"Hope we just leave without a deal. After we leave then we negotiate. Is that whilst British industry is heading abroad at a rate of knots to avoid a situation created by the likes of Rees Mogg and BoZo Johnson? What industry is leaving that wouldn’t have been lured away with EU manipulation anyway? If we are to have any chance of having a manufacturing industry here then we need to look after ourselves and look out to the rest of the world. " And yet, after 40 years of being in the EU we are currently the 6th largest manufacturing nation in the world. And the largest market for out manufactured goods is the EU. Maybe you can explain to me and everyone else how, making it harder to sell our manufactured goods to our largest market and over 60 other smaller markets, is going to help look after our manufacturing base? | |||
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"One big thing to remember, a no deal is not good for us all all. But if we leave with a no deal then the Germans lose out more than we do. " I really don't follow your logic there. How does use losing a large amount of our business with 27 EU countries and 60 other non EU countries while Germany possibly losing a large amount of business with 1 work out that Germany is losing more than us? | |||
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"One big thing to remember, a no deal is not good for us all all. But if we leave with a no deal then the Germans lose out more than we do. I really don't follow your logic there. How does use losing a large amount of our business with 27 EU countries and 60 other non EU countries while Germany possibly losing a large amount of business with 1 work out that Germany is losing more than us?" I second this questioning of your illogical statement. | |||
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"One big thing to remember, a no deal is not good for us all all. But if we leave with a no deal then the Germans lose out more than we do. I really don't follow your logic there. How does use losing a large amount of our business with 27 EU countries and 60 other non EU countries while Germany possibly losing a large amount of business with 1 work out that Germany is losing more than us?" Just add it to the pile of unsubstantiated Brexit bullshit we've been subjected to for the last fuck knows how long | |||
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"One big thing to remember, a no deal is not good for us all all. But if we leave with a no deal then the Germans lose out more than we do. " German exports are worth some £1.4 trillion. Of that, about £75bn goes to the UK. The new free trade agreement between the EU and Japan opens up a big new market. The UK is walking away from that, Germany is not. I do not understand what makes you think the UK leaving the single market will be more damaging for the Germans than the British. | |||
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"Hope we just leave without a deal. After we leave then we negotiate. Is that whilst British industry is heading abroad at a rate of knots to avoid a situation created by the likes of Rees Mogg and BoZo Johnson? What industry is leaving that wouldn’t have been lured away with EU manipulation anyway? If we are to have any chance of having a manufacturing industry here then we need to look after ourselves and look out to the rest of the world. " Germany is in the EU and sells far more to the rest of the world through over 60 EU international trade deals. It has a trade surplus with China with the help of EU agreements. How will is leaving the EU help our manufacturing? How will it help our raw material and component prices? The UK looks after finance and services. How will Brexit change that? The EU have lured nobody away. Blaming someone else again. What's your actual plan? | |||
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"Hope we just leave without a deal. After we leave then we negotiate. Is that whilst British industry is heading abroad at a rate of knots to avoid a situation created by the likes of Rees Mogg and BoZo Johnson? What industry is leaving that wouldn’t have been lured away with EU manipulation anyway? If we are to have any chance of having a manufacturing industry here then we need to look after ourselves and look out to the rest of the world. Germany is in the EU and sells far more to the rest of the world through over 60 EU international trade deals. It has a trade surplus with China with the help of EU agreements. How will is leaving the EU help our manufacturing? How will it help our raw material and component prices? The UK looks after finance and services. How will Brexit change that? The EU have lured nobody away. Blaming someone else again. What's your actual plan?" The trade Secretary today on Sky addressed TWO "If WTO was that good, nations wouldn't do trade deals" Rest my case! (Liam Fox - brexiteer ) | |||
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"Hope we just leave without a deal. After we leave then we negotiate. Negotiate what? Better deals that we already have? Not a chance. Deals as good as what we already have? Extremely unlikely. When will Brexiters understand this? Bunch of crack pots. " You have very low self esteem you need a more positive attitude | |||
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"Hope we just leave without a deal. After we leave then we negotiate. Negotiate what? Better deals that we already have? Not a chance. Deals as good as what we already have? Extremely unlikely. When will Brexiters understand this? Bunch of crack pots. You have very low self esteem you need a more positive attitude" What? A positive attitude doesn't make our economy as big as the EU when it comes to a trade negotiation does it? Just stay why any country would negotiate a trade deal with us on the same terms as with the entire EU? Some logical progression that brings you to that conclusion. | |||
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"Hope we just leave without a deal. After we leave then we negotiate. Negotiate what? Better deals that we already have? Not a chance. Deals as good as what we already have? Extremely unlikely. When will Brexiters understand this? Bunch of crack pots. " I'm afraid your hitting your head against a brick wall. They don't look at the big picture it's a case of me myself and I. | |||
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"One big thing to remember, a no deal is not good for us all all. But if we leave with a no deal then the Germans lose out more than we do. " ha I'm not sure how you work that out. No one can but you. | |||
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"Just for clarity: As it stands were still leaving the EU on March 29th and I'm very much looking forward to it. " I have little doubt you are correct, if for no other reason than the implementation on April 1 of the EU crackdown on tax avoidance. | |||
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"Just for clarity: As it stands were still leaving the EU on March 29th and I'm very much looking forward to it. I have little doubt you are correct, if for no other reason than the implementation on April 1 of the EU crackdown on tax avoidance." Sara - i hope you are not implying that centy is in favour of tax avoidance or other such cowboy behaviour? As I understand it he is a fine upstanding spokesman for his community and should be treated with the due deference that his all encompassing wisdom deserves! Love your posts by the way! | |||
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"Just for clarity: As it stands were still leaving the EU on March 29th and I'm very much looking forward to it. I have little doubt you are correct, if for no other reason than the implementation on April 1 of the EU crackdown on tax avoidance. Sara - i hope you are not implying that centy is in favour of tax avoidance or other such cowboy behaviour? As I understand it he is a fine upstanding spokesman for his community and should be treated with the due deference that his all encompassing wisdom deserves! Love your posts by the way! " Is this an intentional and cheeky miss reading ? | |||
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" Sara - i hope you are not implying that centy is in favour of tax avoidance or other such cowboy behaviour " He consistently shows such concern for the wellbeing of others less fortunate than himself that I am sure he is an enthusiastic contributor to the services those people rely on. | |||
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" Sara - i hope you are not implying that centy is in favour of tax avoidance or other such cowboy behaviour He consistently shows such concern for the wellbeing of others less fortunate than himself that I am sure he is an enthusiastic contributor to the services those people rely on. " So the latest jibe is Brexiteers are tax dodgers For the record I pay income tax on what I earn I can't afford to pay fancy lawers to dodge tax and get around tax laws like big businesses who want to stay in the EU. | |||
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" Sara - i hope you are not implying that centy is in favour of tax avoidance or other such cowboy behaviour He consistently shows such concern for the wellbeing of others less fortunate than himself that I am sure he is an enthusiastic contributor to the services those people rely on. So the latest jibe is Brexiteers are tax dodgers For the record I pay income tax on what I earn I can't afford to pay fancy lawers to dodge tax and get around tax laws like big businesses who want to stay in the EU. " Lol. You do realise that one of the main reasons it appears that ‘the elite’ are voting for Brexit is to get out before the EU anti tax avoidance laws come into effect. -Matt | |||
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" Sara - i hope you are not implying that centy is in favour of tax avoidance or other such cowboy behaviour He consistently shows such concern for the wellbeing of others less fortunate than himself that I am sure he is an enthusiastic contributor to the services those people rely on. So the latest jibe is Brexiteers are tax dodgers For the record I pay income tax on what I earn I can't afford to pay fancy lawers to dodge tax and get around tax laws like big businesses who want to stay in the EU. Lol. You do realise that one of the main reasons it appears that ‘the elite’ are voting for Brexit is to get out before the EU anti tax avoidance laws come into effect. -Matt" It's mainly big business who avoid tax rather than individuals though. The majority of big business remainers keep telling us want to stay in the EU. | |||
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" Sara - i hope you are not implying that centy is in favour of tax avoidance or other such cowboy behaviour He consistently shows such concern for the wellbeing of others less fortunate than himself that I am sure he is an enthusiastic contributor to the services those people rely on. So the latest jibe is Brexiteers are tax dodgers For the record I pay income tax on what I earn I can't afford to pay fancy lawers to dodge tax and get around tax laws like big businesses who want to stay in the EU. Lol. You do realise that one of the main reasons it appears that ‘the elite’ are voting for Brexit is to get out before the EU anti tax avoidance laws come into effect. -Matt It's mainly big business who avoid tax rather than individuals though. The majority of big business remainers keep telling us want to stay in the EU. " So you’re actually saying that all the ultra rich uk business owners, ie Aaron Banks, and the ultra wealthy Rees-Mogg types, have motives for promoting Brexit entirely unrelated to the incoming tax avoidance rules the EU are bringing in. Is it merely coincidence? | |||
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" Sara - i hope you are not implying that centy is in favour of tax avoidance or other such cowboy behaviour He consistently shows such concern for the wellbeing of others less fortunate than himself that I am sure he is an enthusiastic contributor to the services those people rely on. So the latest jibe is Brexiteers are tax dodgers For the record I pay income tax on what I earn I can't afford to pay fancy lawers to dodge tax and get around tax laws like big businesses who want to stay in the EU. Lol. You do realise that one of the main reasons it appears that ‘the elite’ are voting for Brexit is to get out before the EU anti tax avoidance laws come into effect. -Matt" I'd say that would only possibly apply to rich individuals who's businesses are relatively unaffected by Brexit. | |||
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" Sara - i hope you are not implying that centy is in favour of tax avoidance or other such cowboy behaviour He consistently shows such concern for the wellbeing of others less fortunate than himself that I am sure he is an enthusiastic contributor to the services those people rely on. So the latest jibe is Brexiteers are tax dodgers For the record I pay income tax on what I earn I can't afford to pay fancy lawers to dodge tax and get around tax laws like big businesses who want to stay in the EU. Lol. You do realise that one of the main reasons it appears that ‘the elite’ are voting for Brexit is to get out before the EU anti tax avoidance laws come into effect. -Matt" I do realise this however I'm not totally convinced. I think it's more of a secondary issue. As in "I want to Leave and if we Leave we may as well go before I get caught by the new tax rules". After all in order to pay tax they have to make money first. | |||
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