By the time it actually works your grandchildren will be pensioners.
That is why I prefer to have my wine now. It is no use waiting for this rabble to sort themselves out.
By the time it actually works your grandchildren will be pensioners.
pessimist, you sound like a Watford supporter!!![]()
The Republic doesn't necessarily support reunification. Can't afford it for starters and why should it pay to clean up our mess?In the event of a hard Brexit with no deal for the border polls have shown (polls from LucidTalk) that 48% of the Ulster electorate would support reunification with the Republic, and consequent EU. membership, and 45% would support staying in the UK. Small margins I know, with the usual margin for error found in such polls, but, under the terms of the Good Friday Agreement, the UK. government is legally obliged to hold a referendum on Irish reunification if the polls show support for one. Could this be a way out for Scotland, by joining such a unification ? An EU. state can grow within the EU. as the German reunification proved - so an Irish Reunification + Scotland is a possibility.
In the event of a hard Brexit with no deal for the border polls have shown (polls from LucidTalk) that 48% of the Ulster electorate would support reunification with the Republic, and consequent EU. membership, and 45% would support staying in the UK. Small margins I know, with the usual margin for error found in such polls, but, under the terms of the Good Friday Agreement, the UK. government is legally obliged to hold a referendum on Irish reunification if the polls show support for one. Could this be a way out for Scotland, by joining such a unification ? An EU. state can grow within the EU. as the German reunification proved - so an Irish Reunification + Scotland is a possibility.
Exactly - a ridiculous number of jobs in NI are public sector. I don't know the exact number but it's hugely disproportionate.As I understand the GFA, for a poll to be held it has to be called in both the south and the north at the same time. The government in the south has said they will not hold one at present. Why should they take on the subsidies that flow from London at present?

If the Irish Government does not want one then they may be at odds with their electorate Frenchie. The last poll on this - 29th December 2017 showed that support in the Republic has increased, with 6 out of 10 people saying they wanted a single Irish state, even if it costs taxpayers an extra € 9 Billion a year. This 60% was up from the 50% in a similar survey in March. This is taken from the Irish Times from today. If a majority on both sides of the border want it then it may well happen. What kind of influence would this have on Scotland ?As I understand the GFA, for a poll to be held it has to be called in both the south and the north at the same time. The government in the south has said they will not hold one at present. Why should they take on the subsidies that flow from London at present?
It would be comedy gold if it wasn't so damned tragic."super competitive country on its doorstep" Oh you do make me chuckle sometimes. Needed it today so thank you![]()
Rose tinted specs from my Irish brethren Cologne - I don't know many who want it when push comes to shove. The cost both economically and politically is too much for them to bear. That said of course there'll be plenty who do want it. I suspect we won't find out!If the Irish Government does not want one then they may be at odds with their electorate Frenchie. The last poll on this - 29th December 2017 showed that support in the Republic has increased, with 6 out of 10 people saying they wanted a single Irish state, even if it costs taxpayers an extra € 9 Billion a year. This 60% was up from the 50% in a similar survey in March. This is taken from the Irish Times from today. If a majority on both sides of the border want it then it may well happen. What kind of influence would this have on Scotland ?
If the Irish Government does not want one then they may be at odds with their electorate Frenchie. The last poll on this - 29th December 2017 showed that support in the Republic has increased, with 6 out of 10 people saying they wanted a single Irish state, even if it costs taxpayers an extra € 9 Billion a year. This 60% was up from the 50% in a similar survey in March. This is taken from the Irish Times from today. If a majority on both sides of the border want it then it may well happen. What kind of influence would this have on Scotland ?
Rose tinted specs can take you a long way Dan. The reunification of Germany did not make economic sense at the time either. These things happen by striking while the iron is hot not waiting until favourable economic conditions arise - the latter will follow.Rose tinted specs from my Irish brethren Cologne - I don't know many who want it when push comes to shove. The cost both economically and politically is too much for them to bear. That said of course there'll be plenty who do want it. I suspect we won't find out!
Rose tinted specs can take you a long way Dan. The reunification of Germany did not make economic sense at the time either. These things happen by striking while the iron is hot not waiting until favourable economic conditions arise - the latter will follow.
A laughable response-about as much substance as a Farage promiseYou will be thanking us in a few years time, mine is a large red wine, cheers.
I don't think the difference in size matters much Frenchie - the piggy bank in Berlin didn't actually do anything here. They simply introduced a 'solidarity tax' to cover it - I've been paying this for the last 28 yearsHuge difference in size between West Germany and Eire. Plenty of money in the piggy bank in Berlin, but not so much in Dublin. One day I hope it happens as I believe in countries coming together rather than falling apart.
Actually I don't think the reunification of Germany has been an unqualified success but that's a subject for elsewhere.I also like pulling things together rather than taking them apart (I think you knew that) but I think this may be a bridge too far. Too much dissent and resentment on both sides to ever make it truly work. But....Huge difference in size between West Germany and Eire. Plenty of money in the piggy bank in Berlin, but not so much in Dublin. One day I hope it happens as I believe in countries coming together rather than falling apart.
My point all along is that as long as the Uk promises to uphold the Good Friday agreement then we can only leave the EU with an NI border that is seamless I. E. Maintains the 4 freedoms. I didn’t invent this scenario-the politicians did. The fact that NI voted in the referendum to STAY in the EU simply confirms the impossibility of the UK leaving in a way the ‘hard’ Brexiteers wish. How the DUP square all this only they can explain, but as their politics is as opaque as Loch Ness then good luck to anyone trying to negotiate with them. Oh I forgot the UK govt. depends on them. You couldn’t make it up.I don't think the absence of a border in Ireland should be the driving force of anything. If there has to be a border then so be it and solutions have to be found.
The real issue is that we cannot get most of the cherry picked items we want because they are incompatible with the EU's 4 pillars. Remaining in the customs union makes trade deals elsewhere problematic whatever solution there is or is not in Ireland.
The rabid ‘leave at any cost’ Brexiteers, have continually tried to dismiss the issue of the Irish border as being somehow inconsequential, mere trivia, even painting it as a supposed ‘red herring’ being supposedly used as a tool to keep us in the EU.No one has come up with a solution apart from the EU, but having agreed to it there was then a change of heart by the UK government.
You can see that the hard Brexiteers always need someone else to blame. First it was the EU, now it is the PM.