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Brexit

The EU has no negotiating strategy - according to the Telegraph

442 replies

BeaStoic · 09/02/2020 09:00

The EU is scoffing with panic. This week, its leaders neurotically laughed off the threat of a Parliament shutdown, as bureaucrats slammed their fists over post-Brexit budget cuts. Press officers tuttingly buried an economic report warning that Brexit will rock bloc economies.But they struggled to firefight raging speculation as to who might follow Britain out the door. As rumours rumbled of anItalexitdebt crisis, Marine Le Pen thundered that a global Eurosceptic movement has infiltrated Brussels.

Perhaps the most intriguing development this week, however, isMichel Barnier’s shift in persona. Mere months ago, Mr Barnier was gloomily instructing Britain to sign up to vassalage. Lecture highlights included “why Britain must take responsibility” (by becoming an EU satellite state) and why “choices” (for example liberty) must have “consequences”. But suddenly, the school master has a snake oil salesman. His arid presentations on Britain’s self-inflicted fate have morphed into butterypitches for “a best in class free trade agreement”.

Such a “best in class” deal could be otherwise described as Theresa Mayite vassalage. It entails sucking Britain into megalomaniac defence projects, allowing Brussels toplunder Britain’s fishing waters, and blessing Britain with freedom for the small price of sacrificing its competitiveness. This “exceptional offer” is beinggift-wrappedfree of charge in the tangled red ribbons of state aid paperwork and taxation regulations. Available fora limited time only (expires Dec 2020).

In reality, though Brussels knows that its chance to flog Britain the worst trade deal in history is slipping away. It can no longer fall back on the backstop to keep us locked in Hotel California. Boris Johnson’s thumping majority also means Britain’s "no deal" bargaining chip is back in play:aWTO Brexitwould pass through Parliament reasonably comfortably. Revelations this week that, in the event of no deal,Japanese car giant Nissan would considerdoublingdown on the UK to boost its domestic market share, and protect its Sunderland plant,underline the inconvenient truth:Project Fear premonitions are overblown, andBritain could cope perfectly well without a trade deal.

It is also becoming embarrassingly clear that the EU has no actual strategy. Only the clapped out choreography of a collapsing robo-bureaucracy. The most tedious of its “secret moves” is sequencing. Granted, this was how Brussels tripped up that lurching political equivalent to two left feet, Theresa May. She sealed her fate when she foolishly agreed to settle Northern Ireland before penning a divorce settlement.

But the idea that Boris Johnson’s government would fall for this again is laughable. Still the EU tries its luck: this week Mr Barnier said that before signing up to a trade deal, Britain would have to agree to the EU’s conditions - effectively trying to turn fishing and Gibraltar into the new Irish Border.

Another of the EU’s recycled moves is heel dragging. It intends to bog Britain down with absurd and nonsensically disparate demands until the deadline is near. The idea being that Boris Johnson will feel political pressure to avoid breaking his promise to settle Brexit by the end of the year - and thus sign up to a dud deal.

Britain’s counter-move is already evident - to negotiate trade deals with the United States and other countries, as talks with Brussels flounder; Cummings and co are determined to send out the message that if the EU does not want to engage in talks then that it can go jogging.

Indeed, Trade Secretary Liz Truss announced on Thursday that Britain is seeking huge reductions in tariffs from a trade deal with the United States. The Government also intends to begin negotiations with Japan, Australia and New Zealand in the coming months.

And so the EU gets more and more desperate. In a stumbling tribute to Orwellian doublespeak, its most ridiculous new wheeze is semantic. It is genuinely trying to get Britain to accidentally enslave itself by changing the meaning of basic words.

This includes the preposition “In”. Britain has rejected staying “in” the single market, with all the accompanying constrictions and conditions. Brussels’ solution? Offer “access” to the single market, with all the accompanying constrictions and conditions.

Then there is the oldest trick of the bureaucratic sociopath: the unflinching lie. My favourite peddled by the EU this week is that free movement must continue as the condition for any trade deal. Even though the EU has, in the Political Declaration, conceded the precise contrary.

It is increasingly clear that Brussels is the new Theresa May of these negotiations. And it is finally heading for a rude awakening.

OP posts:
HenHarrier · 14/02/2020 21:13

Auld and ... breathe.

The bridge is just another squirrel.

Clavinova · 14/02/2020 21:30

Not sure why our C&P artist decided to use that?

Because Jason118 linked to a press release in the Law Society Gazette dated 11th Feb - I linked to a press release in the Law Society Gazette dated 13th Feb.

Companies not coming here and citing Brexit (even as one factor) are to be dismissed as using Brexit as an excuse

Your link (Japanese law firm chooses Frankfurt/Brexit) quotes the German law partner of course - not the Japanese director - he doesn't mention Brexit.

And a Japanese telecoms giant choosing London as a global base is good news - and certainly no less significant than a Japanese law firm choosing Frankfurt as a base.

HannibalHayes · 14/02/2020 21:50

Non sequiturs are us tonight...

HannibalHayes · 14/02/2020 21:52

I guess the Moscow night shift is taking over now...

Clavinova · 14/02/2020 22:06

Non sequiturs are us tonight

I went out - I did say.

I guess the Moscow night shift is taking over now

Oh yes, I'm a Russian spy.Top tip from the Kremlin - you need to stock up on those rice and beans. Don't forget the uht milk. Wink

AuldAlliance · 14/02/2020 22:15

Think I'll go and breathe other air for a while.
Good luck to all.

ListeningQuietly · 14/02/2020 22:38

Suella = universal suffrage reaches the low point

HannibalHayes · 14/02/2020 22:42

No Clav, you're definitely nowhere near being a top spy!

ListeningQuietly · 14/02/2020 22:49

Its odd
years ago -long before Brexit became an issue
Clav was a useful commentator on various issues
back then they analysed rather than cnp
I wonder what changed them
$$$$$$$

Jason118 · 14/02/2020 23:00

Captured by the delusion

Jason118 · 14/02/2020 23:01

Although that does sound like an album and a band

Peregrina · 15/02/2020 10:37

What sort of band? One which makes horrible tuneless noise? Led by scruffy blokes with their shirts hanging out?

Clavinova · 15/02/2020 11:03

Led by scruffy blokes with their shirts hanging out?

And the Lib Dems are led by? Oh wait - your leader lost her seat in the last general election.

Peregrina · 15/02/2020 11:20

I was thinking of people like Keith Richards when I posted, and great grandpas singing about Lurve as though they were besotted 20 year olds, but never mind, you decided it was Cummings and Johnson!

Jason118 · 15/02/2020 12:06

None are so blind as those that always see the same thing

malylis · 15/02/2020 13:42

The sort of band who are only playing because mummy and daddy facilitate their dreams of being a musician.

They lack any flair or ability, but get gigs because they know the right people.

Peregrina · 15/02/2020 14:46

Unless of course Clav was thinking about Corbyn, but he smartened up a bit. I don't think she's a Corbyn admirer, but I could be wrong.

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