I will be extremely interested in how Fox is going to square the 220% tarfiff banged onto Bombardier.
So much for our sunny uplands and free trade.
Good Morning Monday 11th May 2026
In view of developments in Parliament over the past few days, such as the 'Henry VII' clause in the Repeal Bill and moves to give the government a majority in House of Commons Select committees , I am wondering just what people who voted Leave understand by the concept of 'Sovereignty' and if they are at all worried by the Government's attempts to bypass Parliamentary scrutiny of legislation and amendments to legislation?
I will be extremely interested in how Fox is going to square the 220% tarfiff banged onto Bombardier.
So much for our sunny uplands and free trade.
Thousands of jobs at risk, many in Northern Ireland, because of that, whitewave.
www.theweek.co.uk/88637/macron-sets-out-radical-vision-for-europe
I wonder how many brexiteers would change their minds if this happens - and how they would spin it.
Maybot is apparently annoyed
Never has there been such an ineffectual PM
Wonder what the DUP is making of it, as I suspect a lot of protestants stand to lose their jobs as a NI friend said that most jobs are taken by protestants in Bombardier
Tweet from James Chapman.
Macron has invited the U.K. To join in a massive reform programme of the EU.
Now that is my sort of mood music
skwawkbox.org/2017/09/28/may-ostracised-by-european-leaders-in-tallinn/
There are times when even I feel sorry for May.
That sounds interesting whitewave.
I think May is very used to getting her own way.
Sorry, but this has to be read in tweets. It's about Bombardier, and written by someone who knows what is happening, not by the man who runs voxpolitical, someone Annie knows all about.
voxpoliticalonline.com/2017/09/29/bombardier-and-the-reason-brexit-will-further-cripple-uk-industry/
For the benefit of people who won't follow links I've copied & pasted the tweets from dj's link
Start
Chris Kendall
People saying #Bombardier is a warning about life after #Brexit: you are right. Let me explain. /1
What’s my qualification? In 1993-4 I was in the UK’s DTI covering the long-running GATT dispute between the EU & US over Airbus v Boeing. /2
The US eliminated the UK’s large passenger aircraft industry in the 50s. In the 70s a new EU consortium challenged US dominance: Airbus. /3
Selling airliners isn’t like selling widgets. Investments are so huge, timelines so long, normal market rules don’t apply. /4
It takes literally decades for a multi-billion investment in a new airliner to return a profit. No bank will lend on those terms. /5
So the aircraft industry would not exist without state support. Every aircraft maker relies on some form of subsidy. /6
As aircraft makers fight for dominance, state aids have become the key battleground. Slapping on a punitive tariff can ruin a competitor
In the EU, we hit upon a solution called Launch Aid. Govt invests huge sums in developing new models, is repaid from royalties on sales. /8
The level of subsidy in Launch Aid can’t be determined because royalties continue to be paid throughout a product’s life.
So far, all EU Launch Aid for Airbus has ultimately returned a profit to state investors. ie zero subsidy. trade.ec.europa.eu/doclib/docs/2010/september/tradoc_146485.pdf … /10
US calls foul & says it’s unfair, but it also uses state aids eg indirect subsidies. US aero manufacturers get billions in defence work. /11
US aero makers cross-subsidise development of civil airliners & engines by using tech developed under defence contracts. /12
This is how the Boeing 747 was developed, for example. www.economist.com/node/14214813 /13
Only huge economies like EU & US can afford large civil aircraft industries. But smaller countries can compete: eg Canada, Brazil. /14
But they can’t compete on a level playing field if they’re punished for legal state aids. They have to be able to defend themselves. /15
And this is where being an EU member is so important. The EU has the weight to defend itself. We can retaliate. /16
The UK acting alone can’t take on the US. This is why it lost its post-war lead in civil aviation. academic.oup.com/ahr/article/113/1/151/41355/Jeffrey-A-Engel-Cold-War-at-30-000-Feet-The-Anglo … /17
International trade is dirty, that’s why we need rules. Free trade Brextremists like Minford don’t get it, or deliberately hide from it. /18
By advocating unilateral free trade, “liberal” Leavers are bringing chocolate spoons to a knife fight. UK industry will be decimated. /19
Acting collectively, fronted by the exceptional trade specialists in the European Commission’s DG Trade, the EU defends its corner. /20
It’s a big bad world out there. If your livelihood depends on exports, do you want May, Fox, and Johnson defending your interests? /21
End
Wow, thanks, Maizie. I am pleased you thought it important enough to do that.
I do, dj. It really is time that people started waking up and smelling the coffee.
www.indy100.com/article/jk-rowling-just-ruined-this-awful-brexit-metaphor-daniel-hannan-eu-harry-potter-twitter-7975226
Hannan thinks Brexit is just like moving home.
"A hard Brexit could be a lot more painful for the U.K. than for the European Union.
Britain’s automotive, technology, health-care and consumer goods sectors may lose 17 billion pounds ($22.8 billion) a year in export revenues when the U.K. leaves the single market and customs union, according to a report released Monday by Chicago-based law firm Baker & McKenzie LLP and consultancy Oxford Economics Ltd. The sectors account for 42 percent of the U.K.’s manufacturing GDP.
The report highlights that the British-EU trading relationship is sometimes heavily tilted in Europe’s favor. EU countries buy about half of the U.K.’s exports, while the U.K. accounts for just 9 percent of EU goods. That means if British goods become relatively more expensive, because of tariffs or other regulatory costs proposed as part of a hard Brexit, Europeans could switch to cheaper alternatives and deliver an intense blow to U.K. exporters.
“You can understand why there is now mounting pressure for the U.K. to negotiate new customs arrangements for post-Brexit trade with the EU,” Jenny Revis, a Baker & McKenzie lawyer, said in an emailed statement. “And for companies to work with their industry groups to help shape future trading relations with the EU.” "
Bloomberg.
Hidden in the depths of this thread this might not be noticed, but a question for Brexiters, from twitter this morning:
Paul Astell @paul_astell
Surely ardent but ordinary Brexiters must be shocked at the staggering complexities that have come to light since the ref.
Are you?
I would assume that Brexiters would say that this is a fundamental reason why they want to leave now. The 'complexities' are indicative of the federalism inherent in our relationship with the EU.
A Brexiteer could say - if we can't leave, then they can tell us we have to 'xxxxxx'. Insert your own idea - join the Euro would be my top guess.
Would they be wrong?
I'm not in the business of second guessing what Brexiteers might say, Primrose. I was hoping that I might get some reaction from them.
A long read here, but worth it.
skwalker1964.files.wordpress.com/2017/10/wolchover-cd-no-contact-info1.pdf
I think a Brexiteer may have just told you Maizie.
Not admitting it. then, GG? Written in the 3rd person...
www.theguardian.com/politics/video/2017/oct/02/protester-tells-jacob-rees-mogg-hes-despicable-video
Rees-Mogg says he's despicable.
David Davis is going to leave parliament in 2019.
Having watched the whole of spreadsheet Phil's (someone should tell him their not working) speech I felt I deserved a medal. That John Crace could not only sit through it but raise some laughs from it means he should get a peerage.
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