Better than a No Deal or not?

Poll : Better than a No Deal or not?

  • Yes

    Votes: 18 56.3%
  • No

    Votes: 6 18.8%
  • Don't know

    Votes: 8 25.0%

  • Total voters
    32
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I'm pleased for the workers at Nissan Sunderland, this protects their jobs, they must be relieved.

Also farmers etc.
How long before you mention Brino Notchy?Again.
Bit googling for you first?
 
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"The bank, JP Morgan, had this to say: "...in our view, the EU appears to have secured a deal which allows it to retain nearly all of the advantages it derives from trading relationships with the UK, while giving it the ability to use regulatory structures to cherry pick among the sectors where the UK had previously enjoyed advantages in the trading relationship. That applies to the service sector in particular, but to parts of the goods sector, too."
 
"The bank, JP Morgan, had this to say: "...in our view, the EU appears to have secured a deal which allows it to retain nearly all of the advantages it derives from trading relationships with the UK, while giving it the ability to use regulatory structures to cherry pick among the sectors where the UK had previously enjoyed advantages in the trading relationship. That applies to the service sector in particular, but to parts of the goods sector, too."
Good news then Notchy..if your country has been fuked over so you can sing "" I told you so"""
 
From what I've read so far the deal doesn't sound too bad. We've conceded a bit more on fishing than I expected, but gained more than I expected in other areas like LPF and involvement of European courts.
Notwithstanding the small print, I'm more than happy with it.
Well done Boris, you got it done.

Boris Johnson set to unveil Brexit triumph - leaked paper shows big WINS over EU | Politics | News | Express.co.uk

BORIS JOHNSON is set to announce a triumph over the EU in a number of key trade battlegrounds when the historic agreement is confirmed - but not on fishing, according to a leaked document.
Lengthy negotiations have been ongoing throughout the 11-month Brexit transition period and according to an internal government paper, the UK has scored a victory in almost half of the key problem areas.
A table of analysis of the talks seen by political website Guido Fawkes, shows the UK believes it has gained the upper-hand in twice as many areas than the EU.
The document assesses the deal in 65 key areas, ranging from trade barriers, the level playing field, tax, and fisheries.
According to the Government paper, the UK negotiating team won in 28 or 43 percent of areas.
The other 26 areas or 40 percent were deemed to be “mutual compromises”, and the remaining 11 topics or 17 percent were labelled “EU wins”.
Fishing and the so-called level playing field have been the main problem areas in the talks and according to the analysis, Britain has been freed from EU regulations but has caved in on access to UK waters.
On the level playing field (LPF) the text says the EU asked for an “unprecedented level of alignment with their own regulatory framework”.
But, the document claims the UK won the argument against the provisions, it says: “The LPF provisions are not based on EU law. There is no concept of EU law in the Treaty.”
In a short section of the paper, fishing has been categorised as a “mutual compromise” and says fixed quotas for EU vessels in UK waters will remain in place for more than five years.
It says: “Annual quota system returns after a 5 and a half year transition, during which access is fixed.”
The UK had pushed for annual negotiations on fishing quotas from as early as next year, but the EU wanted greater reassurances for its fishermen.
Britain had wanted to take back control of as much as 60 percent of fish in UK waters but according to reports, this could be reduced to less than third.


 
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