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Trump wanting us to ditch Europe.

(181 Posts)
Lovetopaint037 Sat 16-Nov-24 15:17:41

Saw in the Times that is what he wants. If our government gets taken in by (America First) Trump then we will never vote Labour again and we have been life long Labour supporters. Trump has selected a ridiculous cabinet and we need to be REALLY careful about trusting them. As the Bank of England said we had to make headway with Europe and trade to reduce the untold harm that Brexit has done to us. So thank you Farage and Boris Johnson. Thank you so much for dishing out the lies.

Fleurpepper Sun 17-Nov-24 09:48:53

Freya5

Fleurpepper

And what would you do with your Reform friends Freya?

We have always known that 'cake and eat it' will never work. Actually, to some extent, the UK did have it - kept own currency and other exceptions- which no-one had. But chose to throw it all away for what?

How arrogant of you to assume anything about me.

No assuming anything here, or arrogance. You have made your support for Reform very clear on so many occasions right on here.

David49 Sun 17-Nov-24 09:54:38

nanna8

Hey, why don’t they look at Australia? Trade more with us. We’re reliable and would never have any weirdos as our leaders because we are super conventional. Our wine is beautiful, so is our olive oil and so is our meat. After all the UK already runs most of our private health system ( BUPA ) and then there’s Specsavers.

I thought most of Australia was owned by the Chinese these days, when they say jump you say how high!.

Fleurpepper Sun 17-Nov-24 09:55:40

mum2three

One of the main reasons we (or some of us) voted to leave the EU was because we do not want someone dictating to us. We must remain an independant country, in charge of our own affairs.
While I welcome the election of Trump, he is the American president, not ours.
Starmer is proving to be exactly what so many people feared....weak and indecisive. He is too easily influenced by others.

What it has achieved, is for the UK to be totally isolated. Lost our main economic partners due to Brexit- and other Trade Deals have made us the losers, not the winners.

The economy is in a dire position- and this is NOT Starmer's fault, for sure. So, what do you think he should do?

What sort of Independence is this? Where the only choice he has, against all his conscience and beliefs, but to suck up to Trump to try and help the economy- and therefore all of us and all the services we require, and keep prices as low as possible.

Disgusting to say he will lick boots, be weak and indecisive.

He has been thrown into an impossible situation - yes on our behalf.

This idea, somehow, that the UK can stand totally isolated in glorious independence, in the modern world, is just absolute nonsense. Economically and for security in a terribly troubled and dangerous world.

Allira Sun 17-Nov-24 10:03:12

David49

nanna8

Hey, why don’t they look at Australia? Trade more with us. We’re reliable and would never have any weirdos as our leaders because we are super conventional. Our wine is beautiful, so is our olive oil and so is our meat. After all the UK already runs most of our private health system ( BUPA ) and then there’s Specsavers.

I thought most of Australia was owned by the Chinese these days, when they say jump you say how high!.

🤔

David49
Before criticising Australia, have you investigated just how much of UK business is Chinese owned or partly-owned?

Oreo Sun 17-Nov-24 10:12:12

Am assuming you made a jokey comment about the Chinese owning Australia David49 but if not then you must know that Chinese fingers are in the pie with every country with a good economy in the world.

Oreo Sun 17-Nov-24 10:20:17

Wyllow3

erm...ask our farmers?

They’re too busy planning what they will do to get Starmer to change his mind on the new jaw dropping idea to stick it to them on inheritance tax.
All cos Reeves decided pre election to assure voters that IT and NI wouldn’t go up! Scrabbling around now to claw money back by other means including the measly amount they save by not paying pensioners the WFA.
If we want good things we had to pay more in IT and/or NI.

David49 Sun 17-Nov-24 10:26:12

Allira

David49

nanna8

Hey, why don’t they look at Australia? Trade more with us. We’re reliable and would never have any weirdos as our leaders because we are super conventional. Our wine is beautiful, so is our olive oil and so is our meat. After all the UK already runs most of our private health system ( BUPA ) and then there’s Specsavers.

I thought most of Australia was owned by the Chinese these days, when they say jump you say how high!.

🤔

David49
Before criticising Australia, have you investigated just how much of UK business is Chinese owned or partly-owned?

It’s not hard to find Chinese run businesses in surprising places, not on the scale of Australia or NZ, foreign ownership is routine in the UK.

Wyllow3 Sun 17-Nov-24 10:32:35

I was merely pointing out a very long term problem expressed by farmers for a long time as regards competition from cheaper sources. Australian food products meet some of our food standards but not others

mae13 Sun 17-Nov-24 10:33:49

mum2three

One of the main reasons we (or some of us) voted to leave the EU was because we do not want someone dictating to us. We must remain an independant country, in charge of our own affairs.
While I welcome the election of Trump, he is the American president, not ours.
Starmer is proving to be exactly what so many people feared....weak and indecisive. He is too easily influenced by others.

Starmer makes me think of the Spitting Image tiny David Steel puppet living in the top pocket of a bigger and more flamboyant politician, whose name I cannot remember for the life of me.

The now Lord Steel is supposed to have claimed it ruined his career. Starmer will go the same way.

Fleurpepper Sun 17-Nov-24 10:38:46

Careful what you wish for. Tories will definitely suck up to Trump, BIG, massive times. What sort of 'independence' is that.

And even more totally isolated in Europe.

Oreo Sun 17-Nov-24 10:41:25

The Tories aren’t in power here.

ronib Sun 17-Nov-24 10:49:28

Having spent a few minutes looking at the import/export table link provided by Casdon, I don’t understand the argument that we are isolated and not trading with Europe. Germany is very involved with the UK. The USA is our biggest market both import/export so how can we throw a flounce because Trump is in?
And I guess everyone else knows that the USA has an absolutely huge 31.46 trillion deficit which makes ours look tiny? Happy days….

Casdon Sun 17-Nov-24 11:02:17

mae13

mum2three

One of the main reasons we (or some of us) voted to leave the EU was because we do not want someone dictating to us. We must remain an independant country, in charge of our own affairs.
While I welcome the election of Trump, he is the American president, not ours.
Starmer is proving to be exactly what so many people feared....weak and indecisive. He is too easily influenced by others.

Starmer makes me think of the Spitting Image tiny David Steel puppet living in the top pocket of a bigger and more flamboyant politician, whose name I cannot remember for the life of me.

The now Lord Steel is supposed to have claimed it ruined his career. Starmer will go the same way.

You’re funny mae13. Like this, you mean?
m.youtube.com/watch?v=AC0IgwmsRSE

David49 Sun 17-Nov-24 11:17:52

It was a jokey comment about Australia l do love Aussie wine but realistically most of their produce goes to China and other places closer

MaizieD Sun 17-Nov-24 11:21:31

ronib

Having spent a few minutes looking at the import/export table link provided by Casdon, I don’t understand the argument that we are isolated and not trading with Europe. Germany is very involved with the UK. The USA is our biggest market both import/export so how can we throw a flounce because Trump is in?
And I guess everyone else knows that the USA has an absolutely huge 31.46 trillion deficit which makes ours look tiny? Happy days….

Look at the figures again, ronib

The EU and non EU European countries are far greater import and export markets for the UK than the US (with about equivalent populations)

Wyllow3 Sun 17-Nov-24 11:33:38

We need to stick to the policy of increasing trade and security arrangements with our nearest neighbours, which as pointed out, are not all EU. (Like Norway, it's quite possible). Sovereignty not lost.

If The new US administration tries to do some sort of ideologically motivated deal which lets us off" huge tariffs in exchange for breaking relationships with Europe, we shouldn't give in to blackmail.

silverlining48 Sun 17-Nov-24 11:34:49

I hope we work with Europe which is on our doorstep and is our biggest trade area.
If we end up with a health system like America, and that will be their plan, we are doomed.

Elegran Sun 17-Nov-24 12:08:27

ronib

Having spent a few minutes looking at the import/export table link provided by Casdon, I don’t understand the argument that we are isolated and not trading with Europe. Germany is very involved with the UK. The USA is our biggest market both import/export so how can we throw a flounce because Trump is in?
And I guess everyone else knows that the USA has an absolutely huge 31.46 trillion deficit which makes ours look tiny? Happy days….

Did you notice that the amount of trade we do with the EU as a whole is far more than the amount we do with the USA, Ronib ? witheach EU contry it is less than with the US, but when all the EU countries are added together the total is much greater.

Perhaps if each US state were listed separately, as are the EU countries, the comparison would be more obvious.

Together we stand, divided we fall.

Elegran Sun 17-Nov-24 12:09:51

See my post at Sun 17-Nov-24 09:47:19 for the figures.

Dickens Sun 17-Nov-24 12:38:48

Sarnia

LizzieDrip

Sarnia if the outcome of a democratic vote means ‘nothing to discuss’, why is there thread after thread on GN moaning about discussing the outcome of our recent democratic election?

Exactly. No matter how we voted Brexit was born and we have to accept that otherwise why have a referendum?

Exactly. No matter how we voted Brexit was born and we have to accept that...

... in the same way the Eurosceptics accepted the 1975 result to continued EC membership? Which was, incidentally, decided by a majority of over 8 million voters.

They had concerns - some legitimate - so they hammered away for 40 or so years. Because that's how democracy works. And look - they won. By a much lower majority, though.

Accepting the result does not mean that we must never talk about it - it was the biggest constitutional change for us in decades and the ramifications are still being felt.

By 'acceptance' - do you mean that those who are involved in the movement to 're-join' should be banned from it, and the campaign / movement should not be allowed to exist?

I have no skin in the game, I am not a re-joiner, but I am arguing because I really don't understand what you, or anyone else, means when they talk about acceptance.

LizzieDrip Sun 17-Nov-24 12:49:10

Exactly Dickens - that was the point I tried to make (perhaps not very well).

‘Accepting’ the outcome of a democratic vote does not mean ‘never discussing it again’.

For 8 years those who have tried to discuss Brexit have been called ‘Remoaners’ (and worse); been told to ‘get over it’, ‘move on’, ‘just accept it’ etc.

I do accept the outcome of the referendum but I refuse to be told there’s ’nothing to discuss’.

petra Sun 17-Nov-24 13:05:20

Oreo

Am assuming you made a jokey comment about the Chinese owning Australia David49 but if not then you must know that Chinese fingers are in the pie with every country with a good economy in the world.

Not just those with a good economy. They own the biggest port in the Med (Piraeus) but the biggest concern is the fact that they practically own North Macedonia.
Eventually North Macedonia will join the EU, and then what 🤷‍♀️

Fleurpepper Sun 17-Nov-24 13:10:28

Oreo

The Tories aren’t in power here.

No, but they caused most of the issues we face NOW.

Grantanow Sun 17-Nov-24 13:14:25

Of course Brexit was a serious blunder fuelled by lies about sovereignty, money for the NHS, etc. But it's unlikely the EU would let us rejoin any time soon - they have other things to worry about and we would never get the advantageous terms renegotiated by Thatcher. So the best we can hope for is some agreements about equivalence to reduce red tape and inspections, etc., at the border. I hope Starmer has the backbone to push that through as a minimum. Military cooperation might be another area alongside NATO but our diminished strength undermines that.

Caleo Sun 17-Nov-24 13:27:27

Big Louis wrote:
"One of the few things I like about Trump is his rhetoric about putting his own country first. We should do the same. There are far too much money flowing out of this country into the hands of corrupt foreign warlords or being squandered on third world wars. We have out own to look after."

When all nations look out for themselves then all nations lose the benefit of the common good.

The US can support isolationism simply because it is so powerful. and to an extent economically self sufficient.

In 2024 isolationism does not work. Trump and Co are climate change deniers. But climate straddles national boundaries.