RogerS":3go4zulr said:Are we suddenly going to stop trading? Importing? Running financial services ? I don't think so.
You know as well as I do that Frankfurt and Paris are licking their lips.
RogerS":3go4zulr said:Are we suddenly going to stop trading? Importing? Running financial services ? I don't think so.
Jake":2u3hh4ey said:RogerS":2u3hh4ey said:Are we suddenly going to stop trading? Importing? Running financial services ? I don't think so.
You know as well as I do that Frankfurt and Paris are licking their lips.
Cheshirechappie":2cafe8r2 said:Jake":2cafe8r2 said:RogerS":2cafe8r2 said:Are we suddenly going to stop trading? Importing? Running financial services ? I don't think so.
You know as well as I do that Frankfurt and Paris are licking their lips.
They can lick their lips as much as they like - they don't control world trade. If there's an international currency, it's the US dollar, not the Euro. There's a reason why London (and Edinburgh) are world-respected centres of finance and trade, and that's the back-up of UK Law - fair dealing in the event of dispute.
That doesn't make London (or Edinburgh) nailed-on certainties to control world trade, but it does give them very considerable trading advantages.
Eric The Viking":2h5mfa0m said:Jake":2h5mfa0m said:phil.p":2h5mfa0m said:Jake et al - yes, we have a veto. How long do you think this will last? It's nigh impossible for them to run 28 Countries without vetos let alone with them. Everything of any importance (to them) will be passed on QMV.
So who has a veto as to whether there is more QMV? We do. Circular argument, the rabidly paranoid guns one was better.
Sorry. I bet you wish that was true. Heck, if it was I'd be more in favour of the EU.
But you evidently havn't read any of the treaties, and, I note, chosen not to reply to me providing chapter + verse on why we're committed right now to propping up the Euro and open borders (and the commitment in AMSTERDAM, 20 years ago, to what will become an European army
CATEGORIES AND AREAS OF UNION COMPETENCE
Article 2
...
4. The Union shall have competence, in accordance with the provisions of the Treaty on European Union, to define and implement a common foreign and security policy, including the progressive framing of a common defence policy.
Eric The Viking":1o6jiuss said:This causes us to skip daintily over to Title VII ("Economic and Monetary Policy"). First off there are two authorities involved in European financial matters, the ECB (European Central Bank), and the less-well-known ESCB (European System of Central Banks). You'd think the latter simply refers to a co-ordinating council of central banks in Europe, until we read Article 107: "(2) the ECB shall have legal personality" and "(3) The ESCB shall be governed by the decision-making bodies of the ECB..."
Now the nub of the matter - Article 119. I'll skip quoting the whole thing, but basically it's about currency union (the Euro), and what happens when countries get into difficulties with their "balance of payments" (in this case an euphemism for "can't pay their creditors"):
119/2: "The Council, acting by a qualified majority, shall grant such mutual assistance..."
Article 139 TEU":1o6jiuss said:1. Member States in respect of which the Council has not decided that they fulfil the necessary conditions for the adoption of the euro shall hereinafter be referred to as ‘Member States with a derogation’.
2. The following provisions of the Treaties shall not apply to Member States with a derogation:
(a) adoption of the parts of the broad economic policy guidelines which concern the euro area generally (Article 121(2));
(b) coercive means of remedying excessive deficits (Article 126(9) and (11));
(c) the objectives and tasks of the ESCB (Article 127(1) to (3) and (5));
(d) issue of the euro (Article 128);
(e) acts of the European Central Bank (Article 132);
(f) measures governing the use of the euro (Article 133);
(g) monetary agreements and other measures relating to exchange-rate policy (Article 219);
(h) appointment of members of the Executive Board of the European Central Bank (Article 283(2));
(i) decisions establishing common positions on issues of particular relevance for economic and monetary union within the competent international financial institutions and conferences (Article 138(1));
(j) measures to ensure unified representation within the international financial institutions and conferences (Article 138(2)).
In the Articles referred to in points (a) to (j), ‘Member States’ shall therefore mean Member States whose currency is the euro.
3. Under Chapter IX of the Statute of the ESCB and of the ECB, Member States with a derogation and their national central banks are excluded from rights and obligations within the ESCB.
4. The voting rights of members of the Council representing Member States with a derogation shall be suspended for the adoption by the Council of the measures referred to in the Articles listed in paragraph 2, and in the following instances:
(a) recommendations made to those Member States whose currency is the euro in the framework of multilateral surveillance, including on stability programmes and warnings (Article 121(4));
(b) measures relating to excessive deficits concerning those Member States whose currency is the euro (Article 126(6), (7), (8), (12) and (13)).
A qualified majority of the other members of the Council shall be defined in accordance with Article 238(3)(a).
Article 143 TEU (ex Article 119 TEC)":1o6jiuss said:1. Where a Member State with a derogation is in difficulties or is seriously threatened with difficulties as regards its balance of payments either as a result of an overall disequilibrium in its balance of payments, or as a result of the type of currency at its disposal, and where such difficulties are liable in particular to jeopardise the functioning of the internal market or the implementation of the common commercial policy, the Commission shall immediately investigate the position of the State in question and the action which, making use of all the means at its disposal, that State has taken or may take in accordance with the provisions of the Treaties. The Commission shall state what measures it recommends the State concerned to take.
If the action taken by a Member State with a derogation and the measures suggested by the Commission do not prove sufficient to overcome the difficulties which have arisen or which threaten, the Commission shall, after consulting the Economic and Financial Committee, recommend to the Council the granting of mutual assistance and appropriate methods therefor.
The Commission shall keep the Council regularly informed of the situation and of how it is developing.
2. The Council shall grant such mutual assistance; it shall adopt directives or decisions laying down the conditions and details of such assistance, which may take such forms as:
(a) a concerted approach to or within any other international organisations to which Member States with a derogation may have recourse;
(b) measures needed to avoid deflection of trade where the Member State with a derogation which is in difficulties maintains or reintroduces quantitative restrictions against third countries;
(c) the granting of limited credits by other Member States, subject to their agreement.
3. If the mutual assistance recommended by the Commission is not granted by the Council or if the mutual assistance granted and the measures taken are insufficient, the Commission shall authorise the Member State with a derogation which is in difficulties to take protective measures, the conditions and details of which the Commission shall determine.
Such authorisation may be revoked and such conditions and details may be changed by the Council.
Eric the Vikling":1o6jiuss said:Council of Ministers, and the "mutual assistance" means loans or grants. And the QMV (emphasis mine) means we can't get out of it. So on this one, Osborne is simply lying - it's there in the treaties and has been for two decades*.
Cheshirechappie":16ug981r said:One of the problems with examining the minutiae of EU treaties is that the EU top brass has demonstrated that it is prepared to ignore their provisions if it is politically expedient to do so. I gather from the broadsheet press that the bail-out of Greece (or more accurately the banks loaning money to Greece) was illegal under EU law, but it happened anyway.
I'm not sure whether the imposition of an unelected 'technocratic' government on a member state is legal either, but it happened to Italy.
The problem from the ordinary man-in-the-street's point of view is that all these treaties leave us in a position of 'heads they win, tails we lose'. The EU will bring down the full force of the law on any member state that contravenes a treaty provision, but itself cheerfully ignores treaties if it feels the political need to do so.
Jake":14ak9c8u said:Cheshirechappie":14ak9c8u said:One of the problems with examining the minutiae of EU treaties is that the EU top brass has demonstrated that it is prepared to ignore their provisions if it is politically expedient to do so. I gather from the broadsheet press that the bail-out of Greece (or more accurately the banks loaning money to Greece) was illegal under EU law, but it happened anyway.
This is a bit vague to deal with, but I assume you mean the challenges which have been made by German citizens against the OMT and ESM. The former has been ruled legal under EU law by the ECJ. The latter was dismissed by the German Constitutional Court. So neither of those support this thesis (the ECJ and German Constitutional Court being somewhat more authoritative on the subject of legality or not than some unnamed broadsheet article).
I'm not sure whether the imposition of an unelected 'technocratic' government on a member state is legal either, but it happened to Italy.
Monti is a EU bureaucrat through and through, but he was appointed by the Italian president, and his government was voted into power by the Italian parliaments.
The problem from the ordinary man-in-the-street's point of view is that all these treaties leave us in a position of 'heads they win, tails we lose'. The EU will bring down the full force of the law on any member state that contravenes a treaty provision, but itself cheerfully ignores treaties if it feels the political need to do so.
My problem with the EU is that they are vampires who eat children and old people, and have literal tentacles which suck the life force out of the EU population with the secret intention of turning the Matrix into reality. But in the real world, those are probably not very credible concerns so should not be given much weight in a vote of this importance. Sadly they might well be on the current state of discourse.
Eric The Viking":11fy2ozg said:[*]So, amongst other things, we cannot finance, let alone actually find, the teachers and healthcare professionals we need, and guess what? It takes at least seven years to train a doctor, and four or five years to train a teacher. They don't grow on trees, and right now (not in three years's time) there is a large shortfall. So this can only get worse.
E.
paulm":1rxju801 said:Regardless of what side of the argument holds sway with me currently, I hope you intended the above to be tongue in cheek and drily humorous, otherwise I fear that posts like this, and many recent ones by Rhossdy also, may cross a line and come across as being arrogant, supercilious and condescending.
Or maybe not, I may be an overly sensitive soul :lol: but just thought I would mention how some recent posts and posters are coming across to me, merits or otherwise of any arguments aside.
This thread is about the current debate on the referendum, not sweeping comments on all of history. You know that.RogerS":39nc6sj6 said:You weren't. This is what you wrote "That's just ridiculous. There's no way ex-prime ministers are in any way gullible."Rhossydd":39nc6sj6 said:Long dead. We're talking about NOW.RogerS":39nc6sj6 said:Now remind me, Rhossydd, what was the name of that chap, wandering off an aeroplane, and waving a piece of paper in the air and shouting 'Peace in our time' ?
Clearly your statement is wrong.
Asking people (who should know better) to post clearly isn't 'patronising'.RogerS":28zchysp said:Don't be so patronising.Rhossydd":28zchysp said:.....phil.p":28zchysp said:Who has a vested interest in getting out? I can't think of anyone - quite the opposite in many cases.
Phil.p
Please learn to use the quote system properly. At 8.5k+ posts you really should be able to use it effectively by now. It makes it far easier for everyone to follow a discussion here if it's clear where quotes start and finish.
Rhossydd":2fcr3azl said:Asking people (who should know better) to post clearly isn't 'patronising'.RogerS":2fcr3azl said:Don't be so patronising.Rhossydd":2fcr3azl said:Phil.p
Please learn to use the quote system properly. At 8.5k+ posts you really should be able to use it effectively by now. It makes it far easier for everyone to follow a discussion here if it's clear where quotes start and finish.
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