They will never ever get a trade deal that would be politically acceptable to their voters. The agri stuff the US would insist on will unite the Mail with the Guardian, a full scale deal never happen.
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Originally posted by Lang Spoon View PostThey will never ever get a trade deal that would be politically acceptable to their voters. The agri stuff the US would insist on will unite the Mail with the Guardian, a full scale deal never happen.
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This is a list of lost opportunties. Can't help but think they don't matter to the majority of people who voted Leave, though
https://twitter.com/JMPSimor/status/1572547414380400646?t=-LIM13uE14pf43FabtfvxA&s=19
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Interesting that Truss has agreed to participate in the newly-established European Political Community - admittedly, it does encompass practically every European country other than Russia and Belarus (bar the micro-states), and can hardly be expected to agree on foreign policy when the EU itself finds that impossible, but perhaps in time the UK will tiptoe back towards closer relations with Brussels.
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Enough to make you vote for Brexit
https://twitter.com/CliveSG/status/1581369252161822720?s=20&t=cLL_TwMqeOpgSVTORpZMnw
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Interesting England and Wales census statistics on migration - the number of Irish-born residents has fallen by 20%, from 407,000 to 325,000, yet along with the increases from India, Pakistan and Bangladesh, there have also been notable rises from Italy, Poland and Romania, so Brexit appears to have exerted zero influence on statistics.
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Seems that Truss's trade negotiations as Trade Secretary were a match for her fiscal policy as Prime Minister.
https://twitter.com/lewis_goodall/status/1592208294684557312?t=2-lIXWcVGusgkcYL4Rgfcg&s=19
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Originally posted by ursus arctos View Post
Our twenty-sixth Economic and fiscal outlook (EFO) has been unusual in both the time it took to
produce and the process leading to its publication. With the agreement of the Treasury, we started
work on this forecast earlier than usual on 29 July, three weeks after Boris Johnson resigned as
Prime Minister. We did this to ensure that his successor and their Chancellor would have an up-to-
date picture of economic and fiscal prospects upon appointment in early September and to be in a
position to publish a forecast alongside any potential fiscal event later that month. In the 16 weeks
since then, we have produced seven forecast rounds under three Prime Ministers and three
Chancellors, working towards three official forecast dates. And this final published forecast reflects
policies announced in five major fiscal statements since March.
Sorry for the formatting - that's what you get when you copy and paste from a PDF on a phone
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