European Union leaders have said the Brexit withdrawal agreement is "not open for renegotiation", despite appeals from Theresa May.
We know that leave won — S
No they haven't. It takes two sides to negotiate and the EU have flat out refused to renegotiate the agreed text. There may be renogotiations if there's an election as I said earlier, but this deal will not be renogotiated with May. — Baden
Yes, that's what I mean. And seeing as you're not willing to put in the mental effort to try to understand that basic distinction, and continue to harp on the red herring of an imagined inconsistency, we're done. — Baden
One can only reach that conclusion if one limits consideration to immediate consequences, and ignores longer term consequences.
The reason the EU would rather suffer a worse impact itself than make the deal better for the UK is that, the less penal the deal is for the UK, the greater the risk that other valued members may at some stage vote to leave. So it's in the interest of the EU to make the deal as bad as possible, even if it causes short term pain for the EU. — andrewk
The reason the EU would rather suffer a worse impact itself than make the deal better for the UK is that, the less penal the deal is for the UK, the greater the risk that other valued members may at some stage vote to leave. So it's in the interest of the EU to make the deal as bad as possible, even if it causes short term pain for the EU.
— andrewk
Maybe you're right. I get the incentive for that, but I'm not convinced that it's the overriding incentive. I'd have to think it on it, and maybe do some more reading on the subject to see if anyone shares that view. — S
Perhaps someone can explain what will happen to the Irish border in the event of no deal? Because my own primary concern is not the economy but peace. The civil war in Ireland spilling over to the mainland as I remember was 'rather unpleasant', and I would guess, worse than the possible unrest that would result from another referendum or even the revocation of article 50. The defusing of the issue of the partitioning of Ireland is for me one of the most important benefits of the EU, and yet the issue was hardly mentioned during the campaign, and is still little understood on the mainland, let alone abroad. — unenlightened
I don't understand how anyone can claim a second referendum would undermine democracy when the first referendum nullified 40 years worth of democratic decisions at a stroke, and was as crooked as a dog's hind leg! — karl stone
You do realise that over 30 million people voted, right? And I actually think that it being a relatively close call would, in a sense, make it even worse to rerun it, because that would mean that it was hard to win the first time. And remember, it's not the fault of those who voted to leave, and were declared winners, that the Vote Leave campaign overspent, or that politicians on either side put out false or misleading claims. Sure, punish the cheaters, condemn the liars, but don't penalise all of the innocent people who came out to vote leave and won. — S
Are those who voted leave to be barred from voting in a second referendum? Surely not! They will be allowed to vote. So you must be saying they would not be offered a Leave option? Again, surely they would! It's the will of the majority that's being established - on something that's now specific, rather than entirely theoretical. — karl stone
No, of course they're not barred, but they'd be penalised through no fault of their own by having their win rendered invalid and by being exposed to the risk of losing again. Moreover, don't you think that there ought to be suitable restrictions regarding the length of time between a referendum and a rerun? Otherwise there'd be nothing from stopping a government, if they so decide, from having one every couple of years until they get the result that they want. — S
I'd be grateful if you could briefly outline what revoking Article 50 involves, and its likely consequences. As I understand it, that's something that's in the control of the EU, not of the UK, since it's an EU rule. If that's correct, doesn't that disqualify it from being an option in a UK poll? — andrewk
The European Court of Justice has ruled the UK can cancel Brexit without the permission of the other 27 EU members.
The ECJ judges ruled this could be done without altering the terms of Britain's membership.
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