Quizzes & Puzzles1 min ago
Why Is Barmpot Bothered About The Irish Border?
45 Answers
http:// www.bbc .co.uk/ news/uk -politi cs-4300 1931
they don't seem to give a rats plaster about their other borders do they?
they don't seem to give a rats plaster about their other borders do they?
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No best answer has yet been selected by ToraToraTora. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.//There was a soft border long before we joined the EU so why should it be any different when we leave?//
Erm, because Ireland are now part of the EU and we won't be. At the time you're talking about, neither of us were - and we joined simultaneously.
This unwillingness to acknowledge that the modern world exists, or the bizarre conviction that it will just go away if we ignore it, is really concerning.
Erm, because Ireland are now part of the EU and we won't be. At the time you're talking about, neither of us were - and we joined simultaneously.
This unwillingness to acknowledge that the modern world exists, or the bizarre conviction that it will just go away if we ignore it, is really concerning.
Ummm
\\I'm not talking about illegals, for goodness sake.
No one knows what border controls the UK will put in place after brexit.//
If they are legal and have passports why would they go to the trouble of reaching the uk via Ireland, when I go on holiday to Tenerife after Brexit I wont go via Ireland.
\\I'm not talking about illegals, for goodness sake.
No one knows what border controls the UK will put in place after brexit.//
If they are legal and have passports why would they go to the trouble of reaching the uk via Ireland, when I go on holiday to Tenerife after Brexit I wont go via Ireland.
//What difference does it make if Eire are in the EU and we are not?//
Because the EU is a trading bloc, Jack. And that necessarily means that trade within it is given preferential treatment to trade from without. This is why bespoke deals like the recent ones with Japan and Canada were so elaborate to arrange.
That means if you have a border with the bloc, and you don't join its customs union or the single market, then you need to have a hard border.
Because the EU is a trading bloc, Jack. And that necessarily means that trade within it is given preferential treatment to trade from without. This is why bespoke deals like the recent ones with Japan and Canada were so elaborate to arrange.
That means if you have a border with the bloc, and you don't join its customs union or the single market, then you need to have a hard border.
There are effectively two aspects to the border issue, regarding a) people and b) goods. With reference to the EU's border with Norway, because Norway is a member of Schengen the question of monitoring the movement of people is in effect cancelled/solved/removed. On the other hand, there is full monitoring of the movement of goods and the system used has been featured fairly extensively in the various news-type media, particularly television. They do care about the movement of goods at that border and others.
Zacs- I should have said if the EU feels it necessary (having said they won't accept a hard border) to have one, then let them incur the opprobrium of the Dublin government.
Korom- we have no control over illegal immigration via the Irish border at the moment. We can operate checks at other places without setting our customs people up to be bombed/ shot. A hard border operated by us will not work.
Korom- we have no control over illegal immigration via the Irish border at the moment. We can operate checks at other places without setting our customs people up to be bombed/ shot. A hard border operated by us will not work.
There will be a border. There is at present. It can remain the same unless the EU are determined to cause trouble. In which case, having decided a closed border is to be insisted on they will instruct Eire to stop the open border arrangement despite the UK upholding their side of the agreement to leave it open. Those responsible will inevitably be Eire and their EU masters.
As for Barnier, he's just causing trouble whilst trying to look as if butter wouldn't melt in his mouth. Basic EU control tactics. In this case trying to force NI, and thus the UK, as one part can't be in whilst another's out, to stay in the EU in all but name. As a bonus for Eire, the daft negotiation suggestion to avoid the issue, might encourage further demands for a united Ireland. Not that any Westminster politician should give it even a moment's consideration. As I said, trouble making.
As for Barnier, he's just causing trouble whilst trying to look as if butter wouldn't melt in his mouth. Basic EU control tactics. In this case trying to force NI, and thus the UK, as one part can't be in whilst another's out, to stay in the EU in all but name. As a bonus for Eire, the daft negotiation suggestion to avoid the issue, might encourage further demands for a united Ireland. Not that any Westminster politician should give it even a moment's consideration. As I said, trouble making.
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