tried
And what did the British courts decide?
You have never seen me applauding murderers.
BTW, you know who wrote the ECHR?
tried
That doesn't bode well for all those 50 odd agreements we have to negotiate with other countries.I am of the opinion that some negotiations are intentionally drawn out, yes.Are you really of the opinion that the negotiations on a trade agreement are intentionally drawn out?Only up to a certain point: after that point, agreements take as long as either, some, or all of the parties want them to take.It's why agreements take so long to negotiate.
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And what did the British courts decide?
So you are suggesting that as the EU didn't want Brexit, it will intentionally stall trade negotiations?That doesn't really follow; by entering into discussions at all, both parties implicitly want an agreement. In the case of Brexit (as it is current, and precipitated this thread), it was Brexit (i.e. the situation) that the EU didn't want.Doesn't that belief suggest that the agreement is only desirable by one of the parties and the other party does not particularly want an agreement.
You consider that the Remainers will intentionally stall any trade agreement negotiations with EU.In which case, do you think the negotiation for a trade agreement between UK and EU will be desirable by UK or EU?
See above, and (as the UK voted "Leave", the negotiation is implicitly desirable by the UK (or, at least, as tolerable "means to an end"), and the converse is therefore true for the "Please Remain!"-leaning EU.
I think John's comment has addressed this sufficiently.It's in the EU's interest to stall negotiations - after two years of Article 50 being triggered, UK would revert to WTO rules (unless agreement had already been reached, or the EU members allowed an extension). Stalling the negotiations would act as a warning to other potential "leavers".Which one will intentionally slow down the negotiation?
As John said, the two year time frame refers to the divorce proceedings, not the negotiations on any new arrangement.You've answered for me - thank you - with your use of "perpetual". Demonstrates the mentality behind these protracted "negotiations".Do you not think that the complexity and perpetual 'need to consult and re-consider' causes the time frame to be long and drawn out?
That, and the time frame consists of a. time required, plus b. additional time added by the parties themselves. But I said that at the start.
What did you expect?Leadsom is in the ballot. Happy days, I hope she wins it. As a true believer in Brexit she's the only one who will try to deliver it. I might even consider voting tory if she gets it.
I expected her to get stitched up like they were trying to do. I'm glad she didn't and I think she might have a strong chance now because a lot of the grass roots tories want out I've heard.What did you expect?
It is being decided according to the rules set out beforehand, just like the referendum was. And having one man one vote for the whole party, majority wins is more democratic than just giving the power to a bunch of MPs. Again, just like the referendum.