Potemkin Villager wrote:I will reiterate, indeed as folk on this forum are keen on doing, I will make a prediction. The blessed Teresa is expecting a green light on Monday to press on regardless. Without divine intervention there are two hopes of this, Bob Hope and no hope.
https://youtu.be/cjRE9YlMmnM
She knows there will be no green light:
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles ... t-progress
Looks to me like the whole process is now doomed:
https://www.theguardian.com/politics/20 ... ks-says-eu
Ireland will have final say on progress of Brexit talks, says EU
Donald Tusk says that if Ireland cannot accept UK offer for its border, EU will not allow negotiations to move on to trade
Ireland will have the final say on whether the UK has made sufficient progress in Brexit negotiations to move on to the next stage, the president of the European council, Donald Tusk, has said.
After an hour-long meeting with Leo Varadkar in Dublin, Tusk said he had agreed that the taoiseach would be consulted fully before the guidelines for negotiations on Brexit transition arrangements would be circulated among the 27 member states.
Ireland, which is looking for written commitment that there will be no return to a hard border with Northern Ireland, has threatened to veto progress if Britain does not come up with a satisfactory and concrete offer this weekend.
“Let me say very clearly: if the UK offer is unacceptable for Ireland, it will also be unacceptable for the EU. I realise that for some British politicians this may be hard to understand,� said Tusk. “But such is the logic behind the fact that Ireland is the EU member while the UK is leaving
British and European Brexit task force officials are having “intense discussions� on how to reconcile the desire by all parties not to have a hard border with the legal requirement to have customs border checks once the UK departs the bloc.
There is no indication yet of a text that would be agreeable to the Irish, and Varadkar warned again on Friday that Ireland was prepared to prevent talks moving forward.
“We have to ensure we avoid the risk by any regulatory divergence,� he said.
The EU/Ireland is demanding the impossible. They are demanding that either the UK doesn't leave the customs union and single market (in which case there's no point in leaving the EU at all) or that Northern Ireland remains in the customs union, resulting in an internal hard border within the UK, which is (understandably) completely impossible politically within the UK. It is also demanding that the UK commits to this before the EU enters into trade negotiations. There is nothing Theresa May can do to fix this - she is facing demands that the EU knows perfectly well are impossible to fulfil, even if there was the political will to do so.
It isn't a matter of time, either. She could have all the time in the world, and she still wouldn't be able to square this circle. She now
has to walk away. She has to take the money back off the table and say the UK is walking away, and prepare to trade under WTO rules.