2/ But one thing caught my eye. "Theresa May to use her Brexit speech to say 'we can't have everything', Grayling says" is the title of The Guardian's live blog by @AndrewSparrow.
3/ The relevant entry is this one: theguardian.com/politics/blog/… Apparently the BBC's Laura Kuennsberg thinks the PM will be honest with the public and deliver hard truths.
4/ I assume the Government still aims to leave the Single Market and Customs Union. So if May *were* to be honest, to deliver hard truths, here's a list of what she would have to say.
5/ First, Brexit will make all Britons poorer, at least in the short and medium term. Indeed, to some extent, it already has.
6/ Second, some major industries will move their production from the UK, and jobs will be lost. Passporting will be lost, so some City jobs will move (and tax revenues to the Treasury will fall).
7/ Third, doing business will the rest of the EU will become harder once the transition phase ends, as standards diverge and taxation (VAT) rules change.
8/ Fourth, freedom of movement for Brits will end. It will be harder to retire to the Costa del Sol.
9/ Fifth, the cost of products on supermarket shelves will rise, as the pound will fall, driving up cost of imports, and local production will not compensate - not least due to lack of farm labourers.
10/ Sixth, there is no Brexit dividend whatsoever, and indeed for at least a decade leaving the EU will cost the UK more than being in it - because replicating all the EU's agencies and functions will take a lot of time and money.
11/ Seventh, trying to strike trade deals with the rest of the world will not offset the trade lost with the EU.
12/ Eighth, all of this will necessitate some border infrastructure in Ireland - a completely open border will be abandoned.
13/ Those then would be some hard truths. Can you imagine May delivering any of those? No, me neither. #Brexit
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Prerequisites for this:
- someone ousts May in a Tory leadership election in Sept/Oct
- Govt majority lost, meaning a new GE in Oct/Nov 2018
(both of these are of course open to question - but bear with me!)
2/8
How do the Tories and Labour approach #Brexit in such a General Election campaign?
One presumes that the Tories (with 75% of their membership pro-Brexit) aim for a hard Brexit, something akin to the Chequers deal (or harder). They'd NOT want a #peoplesvote
3/8
This thread examines some of the aspects of extending Article 50 (or not)
1/12
First some background - I have an older blog post here about why extending the Article 50 period would be a good idea: jonworth.eu/transition-per…
And the relevant part of Article 50 is shown here - unanimous agreement of EU-27 needed to extend
2/12
Extending the Article 50 period is not something either side really wants.
BUT No Deal #Brexit is the thing both sides should absolutely fear, especially 🇬🇧 but even the 🇪🇺, whose Member States (especially 🇮🇪) would take a major GDP hit.
But let's just say for a minute that, spurred on by national sandwich sentiment post a No Deal Brexit, the UK did want to make itself more self-sustaining in its food production, what could it do?
2/15
First some stats: Defra has useful stats on UK food import dependency here: gov.uk/government/sta…
The first Excel table shows how import dependency for food has been growing (the UK now imports 40% of its food), and the second Excel download lists value by food type.
Most charming & amusing Russian 🇷🇺 experience to date here in Ulan-Ude...
When planning this trip people asked me: do you speak Russian? Answer: no. But I am armed with Yandex Translate. It has a RU-EN offline dictionary, and can speak it all too: itunes.apple.com/us/app/yandex-…
1/7
You can do pretty complex things with Yandex.
But trying to book a bus 🚌 ticket 🎟 online from Irkutsk to Bratsk was a step too far.
Irkutsk = Иркутск
Bratsk = Братск
is easy enough.
Entering names, gender etc., sure.
But nationality?
2/7
What is my nationality?
England = Англия
Great Britain = Великобритания
UK? = Объединенное королевство великой Британии и северной Ирландии
None in the list...
Enter a confused but helpful hotel receptionist.
3/7
Something about this #Seehofer "resignation" does not add up.
A thread.
1/9
Merkel went to Brussels and got a framework for a deal on refugees, the sort of thing that Seehofer was pushing for. A bit thin on the details, but Merkel did not return empty handed.
2/9
The normal CSU reaction to this would have been to have claimed a minor victory, to show how Bavaria's interests were being taken seriously, and move on somewhat.
3/9