goldfinger
- 09 Jun 2005 12:25
Thought Id start this one going because its rather dead on this board at the moment and I suppose all my usual muckers are either at the Stella tennis event watching Dim Tim (lose again) or at Henly Regatta eating cucumber sandwiches (they wish,...NOT).
Anyway please feel free to just talk to yourself blast away and let it go on any company or subject you wish. Just wish Id thought of this one before.
cheers GF.
cynic
- 27 May 2014 14:36
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haulage costs within uk are horrific too as are x-channel rates
please define "no free movement"
visas required?
jimmy b
- 27 May 2014 14:45
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cynic i must admit i don't have the answers , i can just see (as Blair couldn't) that when you have countries such as the ones we are talking about and the door is open to the land of milk and honey they are going to flood in , its not going to work i suppose i dont believe in the united states of Europe .
Shortie
- 27 May 2014 14:50
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Are you implying that there will be some kind of quota or extra charge if we leave the EU to Export goods into the EU?
Fred1new
- 27 May 2014 15:22
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cynic 27 May 2014 13:50 - 41486 of 41493
as a dedicated non-voter fred, why should you care and indeed do you even have a right to care?
an oft repeated statement i know
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Whether I use "my" rights to vote or not to vote does not diminish my rights and I find it interesting to "try" to "judge" what is going to happen "politically".
But, unlike you I don't have any need to attach myself to the ragtag and bobtail you seem happy to be attached too.
To vote for a grubby crew like the present tory party of motley crew of UKIP has no appeal.
Feel a bit sorry for Clegg. He made a difficult decision and may have got it wrong, but unlike the old etonians does seem to have some principles.
Not sure about labour, but liked the sense of what Milliband is suggesting.
Have feeling his middle game is good and maybe his endgame will be even better.
I will wait and see.
Haystack
- 27 May 2014 15:31
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If we left the EU completely, there would be a tarrif barrier for us as there is for goods from outside the EU now.
MaxK
- 27 May 2014 15:46
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You imply the tarrif (if any) would be a one way street.
Haystack
- 27 May 2014 15:49
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No. But it would be our choice the other way. We might be able to have a free trade agreement with the EU.
Fred1new
- 27 May 2014 15:49
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Exporting is the problem, importing is easy!
hilary
- 27 May 2014 16:02
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Haystack,
Given that the UK imports more from Germany than it exports to them, I suspect it may well be the EU who are knocking on the UK's door to enter a free trade agreement rather than the other way around, in the event that were to leave the EU.
ExecLine
- 27 May 2014 16:03
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I'm glad I voted for UKIP in the MEP elections. It has helped to kick off the "earthquake of change".
I do like this Comment from today's Telegraph and agree with what it says in the bit I've bolded below and I would dearly like Cameron to prove he means what he says and set out his agenda for change now:
Britain’s relationship with Europe needs to change. That fact has long been obvious to most people, but the European elections have rammed home its importance. It is not just that Ukip performed so well. It is that the Liberal Democrats did so badly. Faced with a collapse in support since entering the Coalition, Nick Clegg and his team abandoned their traditional local-first campaign strategy and presented themselves as unabashed Europhiles, the defenders and saviours of Britain’s place in the European Union. For their trouble, they were spectacularly thumped.
The Conservative argument, in the wake of their first third-place finish in more than a century, is that they understand this completely: they are, after all, the only party that is both offering a referendum on Europe, and has a chance of bringing it about. That is true – but it is no longer sufficient. Voters need proof not just that David Cameron will offer them a choice, but that he is actively striving to pave the way for it.
What does this mean? Perhaps the greatest problem facing the Tories in winning back voters who have defected to Ukip is an absence of trust. When the Prime Minister says: “Have faith that I will negotiate in Britain’s interests”, many will be sceptical, or even scornful. In particular, the longer he refuses to set out his shopping list, or at least his broad aims, the more the suspicion will grow that what he has in mind is not so much renegotiation as tinkering at the edges.
There is no need, as some have suggested, for Mr Cameron to bring forward his proposed referendum from 2017. It would be actively foolish to put Britain’s membership to a vote before there had been time to negotiate a better deal. But it would be equally misguided to wait until after the general election to begin grappling with the issue in earnest.
By setting the process of negotiation in train now, Mr Cameron will show voters that he is a man who delivers on his promises. There are other advantages. Europe is reeling from elections that showed the established order under threat from all sides. The eurozone crisis, and the subsequent economic stagnation, have shaken many people’s faith in the project. As Boris Johnson wrote yesterday, even Nicolas Sarkozy now sees the virtue in devolving power to nation-states, and restricting the movement of economic migrants. No longer can Mr Cameron, or Britain, be dismissed as isolated and misguided: our calls for change have instead proved prophetic.
In domestic terms, the move would also be to the Tories’ advantage. Ukip can hardly oppose it, given that it pushes Britain towards a referendum. The Lib Dems have lost the moral authority to object, after this weekend’s humiliation. And if Labour refuse to back the Prime Minister, they will be handing him a priceless electoral gift. It will also help the Tories hone their own message on Europe, which at the moment seems to echo Richard Nixon’s on Vietnam. He promised to end the war, but told voters he could not reveal the details of his strategy for fear of tipping his hand. They trusted him then; but Britons will be less willing to endorse Mr Cameron’s blueprint for Brussels without insight as to its detail.
The idea would also address another weakness in the Tories’ European strategy. Voters know they want change – but they are unable to see how politicians can deliver it. Mr Cameron has spoken of curbing benefit tourism, and removing the treaty requirement for “ever closer union”. Both would be welcome – but it is hard to see them resonating in the same way as, for example, limiting immigration from the EU’s poorer members (which is currently impossible). Starting the process now buys Mr Cameron time to make the case in Brussels for more dramatic changes – and to make the link in Britain between EU reform and pound-in-your-pocket politics, such as the money on food bills saved by fixing farming policy, or the lower costs to business brought about by slashing red tape.
Mr Cameron and his fellow European leaders must now begin to chew over the election results, and begin the process of choosing the European Commission’s new bosses. He should make clear that the message sent by voters across the Continent needs to be heard – and acted on. There has never been a better time to shake up Brussels, or a longer list of reasons to try.
aldwickk
- 27 May 2014 16:59
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I want out of the EU , the deals I want is a free trade agreement and other deals like the control of labour between us and ageement's in tackerling international crime , things like that.
Haystack
- 27 May 2014 16:59
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Hilary
Yea, I agree. I was just spelling out the options. I don't see any srious problems doing business with the EU. There may be a few small problems in particular sectors, such as farming due to not being in the CAP. The EU does also tend to create tarrifs and quotas if the country in question has government subsidies. Overall I think trade would be similar. It would also give us the possibility of trade agreements with the wider Commonwealth. Although we would be outside the EU they may still require us to obey many EU rules to trade with them.
Haystack
- 27 May 2014 16:59
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.
goldfinger
- 27 May 2014 17:07
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To say you didnt vote on the EU vote Hays you seem to have a lot to say about it.
2 faced or what.
And MANUEL your post to Fred this morning should equally be aimed at Hays.
So no special treatment please for you close pals.
goldfinger
- 27 May 2014 17:09
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O/T whenever we come back from a bank holiday it always seems stockwatch is knackered.
What on earth do MAM do to it. !!!!!!!!!
Site as slow as a slug aswel.
cynic
- 27 May 2014 17:17
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i shall just wait and listen to the argument and counter, try to work out what has a reasonable % of truth and then make up my mind ..... i don't have a fixed idea of what key elements i am looking for
if labour are in power, there won't be a choice ..... you'll be "in" whether you like it or not and further, there's a good chance that labour will slowly allow more and more of our laws and lives to be governed by brussels
cynic
- 27 May 2014 17:18
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fully agree sticky ...... naughty manuel :-))
Haystack
- 27 May 2014 17:23
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Politics gets everywhere. I was visiting hospital today and there was a Labour ward! I certainly didn't find a UKIP ward.
cynic
- 27 May 2014 17:25
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UKIP ward would have been signed as Recovery Room
Fred1new
- 27 May 2014 17:32
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More like the Mortuary!
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