Admit it. You wanted Boris Island. Could you get a bridge from there to France?Digby wrote:I'm sure they will care, but they're free to investment in a manner less harming to the environment. I just don't like the cheap option of expanding at HeathrowMellsblue wrote:I’m not particularly bothered where it is built either. I just wish it had been built. You and Stones may not care where your hub is, but the Treasury and the local economy of wherever it could’ve/would’ve been built probably do care. Those flying in on long haul for business will also care, as why catch a connection to the UK when you can just stay in Paris or Amsterdam.Digby wrote:
I've no issue with adding an extra hub airport in East Anglia, I'm just against a third runway at Heathrow, it's too polluting in a number of ways. If the extra hub airport in East Anglia isn't wanted or can't be delivered on then as noted above Amsterdam is a fine choice of hub airport
Brexit delayed
- Mellsblue
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Re: Brexit delayed
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Re: Brexit delayed
I don't know if that's the exact option I'd go for, but it'd be up for considerationMellsblue wrote:Admit it. You wanted Boris Island. Could you get a bridge from there to France?Digby wrote:I'm sure they will care, but they're free to investment in a manner less harming to the environment. I just don't like the cheap option of expanding at HeathrowMellsblue wrote: I’m not particularly bothered where it is built either. I just wish it had been built. You and Stones may not care where your hub is, but the Treasury and the local economy of wherever it could’ve/would’ve been built probably do care. Those flying in on long haul for business will also care, as why catch a connection to the UK when you can just stay in Paris or Amsterdam.
- Stones of granite
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Re: Brexit delayed
It's just another nail in British Airway's coffin, though not as fatal as their bizarre strategy of joining the race to the bottom and becoming a budget airline.Mellsblue wrote:I’m not particularly bothered where it is built either. I just wish it had been built. You and Stones may not care where your hub is, but the Treasury and the local economy of wherever it could’ve/would’ve been built probably do care. Those flying in on long haul for business will also care, as why catch a connection to the UK when you can just stay in Paris or Amsterdam.Digby wrote:I've no issue with adding an extra hub airport in East Anglia, I'm just against a third runway at Heathrow, it's too polluting in a number of ways. If the extra hub airport in East Anglia isn't wanted or can't be delivered on then as noted above Amsterdam is a fine choice of hub airportMellsblue wrote: That’s the point, though. If we’d built a bloody runway a decade ago, you and millions of other could go through Heathrow/Gatwick/Stanstead.
Yes it is more money for the south-east but that’s not the problem. The problem is the lack of investment in the North. It looks like this is being recognised and hopefully projects such as HS3 will start to rectify the imbalance.
Actually, maybe it makes sense. Budget airlines don't do connecting flights, only direct flights, and therefore don't have hubs. If BA don't have a hub with enough capacity perhaps in their conversion to budget airline status they are going to go the same route.
- Mellsblue
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Re: Brexit delayed
“Oi, Macron. Shall we build a bridge?”
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- canta_brian
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Re: RE: Re: Brexit delayed
If people are flying in for business of a financial nature their final destination is quite likely to be Paris or Amsterdam. Or Frankfurt or Dublin.....Mellsblue wrote:I’m not particularly bothered where it is built either. I just wish it had been built. You and Stones may not care where your hub is, but the Treasury and the local economy of wherever it could’ve/would’ve been built probably do care. Those flying in on long haul for business will also care, as why catch a connection to the UK when you can just stay in Paris or Amsterdam.Digby wrote:I've no issue with adding an extra hub airport in East Anglia, I'm just against a third runway at Heathrow, it's too polluting in a number of ways. If the extra hub airport in East Anglia isn't wanted or can't be delivered on then as noted above Amsterdam is a fine choice of hub airportMellsblue wrote: That’s the point, though. If we’d built a bloody runway a decade ago, you and millions of other could go through Heathrow/Gatwick/Stanstead.
Yes it is more money for the south-east but that’s not the problem. The problem is the lack of investment in the North. It looks like this is being recognised and hopefully projects such as HS3 will start to rectify the imbalance.
- Stones of granite
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Re: RE: Re: Brexit delayed
Or Zürichcanta_brian wrote:If people are flying in for business of a financial nature their final destination is quite likely to be Paris or Amsterdam. Or Frankfurt or Dublin.....Mellsblue wrote:I’m not particularly bothered where it is built either. I just wish it had been built. You and Stones may not care where your hub is, but the Treasury and the local economy of wherever it could’ve/would’ve been built probably do care. Those flying in on long haul for business will also care, as why catch a connection to the UK when you can just stay in Paris or Amsterdam.Digby wrote:
I've no issue with adding an extra hub airport in East Anglia, I'm just against a third runway at Heathrow, it's too polluting in a number of ways. If the extra hub airport in East Anglia isn't wanted or can't be delivered on then as noted above Amsterdam is a fine choice of hub airport
Or, believe it or not, Leeds or Edinburgh
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Re: Brexit delayed
Bernard Jenkin (Tory MP) castigates the cabinet for being vague and divided on Brexit, and then sets out a divisive vision whereby we leave the customs union and single market. He is at least not being vague, though why he only thinks it divisive to want a softer Brexit (or indeed no Brexit) fails even the vaguest logic test
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Re: Brexit delayed
Liam Fox once so keen on the idea we'd be able to do free trade deals once free of the EU has spent much of the last few days begging the USA not to announce a huge imposition o tariffs on steel and aluminium. But no dice, and Trump makes clear what he means by a beautiful trade deal.
It may yet prove the USA doesn't care to impose tariffs on the UK as we're just not big enough to care about and/or they want a deal on something else
It may yet prove the USA doesn't care to impose tariffs on the UK as we're just not big enough to care about and/or they want a deal on something else
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Re: Brexit delayed
There are many things you can blame Dr Fox for, but Trump being a fuck head isn't one of them. They are about a £360m export market for us.Digby wrote:Liam Fox once so keen on the idea we'd be able to do free trade deals once free of the EU has spent much of the last few days begging the USA not to announce a huge imposition o tariffs on steel and aluminium. But no dice, and Trump makes clear what he means by a beautiful trade deal.
It may yet prove the USA doesn't care to impose tariffs on the UK as we're just not big enough to care about and/or they want a deal on something else
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Re: Brexit delayed
I'd have more sympathy for Fox had he not been so sold there was a swift and lucrative deal to be done with the USA, and here we are months and even years down the line with not even with an outline of what that deal might be, and despite Fox's begging not to make the announcement Trump going ahead with his highly ill-advised and poorly considered announcement of tariffs in the name of protectionism an security. And seeing as Trump is seemingly obsessed with deficits one would have to assume given current UK-US trade that Donald sees any future deal as moving away from our and toward US advantage, though expecting logic and consistency from Trump is something of a waste of time.Banquo wrote:There are many things you can blame Dr Fox for, but Trump being a fuck head isn't one of them. They are about a £360m export market for us.Digby wrote:Liam Fox once so keen on the idea we'd be able to do free trade deals once free of the EU has spent much of the last few days begging the USA not to announce a huge imposition o tariffs on steel and aluminium. But no dice, and Trump makes clear what he means by a beautiful trade deal.
It may yet prove the USA doesn't care to impose tariffs on the UK as we're just not big enough to care about and/or they want a deal on something else
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Re: Brexit delayed
I would like to apologise to the board for discussing Fox and not using the label disgraced former defence secretary, Liam Fox
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Re: Brexit delayed
so you actually believe he was sincere in that? To me that's just expected sophistry, without the cleverness.Digby wrote:I'd have more sympathy for Fox had he not been so sold there was a swift and lucrative deal to be done with the USA, and here we are months and even years down the line with not even with an outline of what that deal might be, and despite Fox's begging not to make the announcement Trump going ahead with his highly ill-advised and poorly considered announcement of tariffs in the name of protectionism an security. And seeing as Trump is seemingly obsessed with deficits one would have to assume given current UK-US trade that Donald sees any future deal as moving away from our and toward US advantage, though expecting logic and consistency from Trump is something of a waste of time.Banquo wrote:There are many things you can blame Dr Fox for, but Trump being a fuck head isn't one of them. They are about a £360m export market for us.Digby wrote:Liam Fox once so keen on the idea we'd be able to do free trade deals once free of the EU has spent much of the last few days begging the USA not to announce a huge imposition o tariffs on steel and aluminium. But no dice, and Trump makes clear what he means by a beautiful trade deal.
It may yet prove the USA doesn't care to impose tariffs on the UK as we're just not big enough to care about and/or they want a deal on something else
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Re: Brexit delayed
The idea free trade deals with the EU and others would be easily arranged was put forward as part of the campaign, though I'm not surprised the disgraced former defence secretary is being caught out in instances such as this. And people should be called out for sophistry, Fox and his cohorts in this instance, just as Osborne and Cameron can be called out for some of the worst of what's daftly labeled Project FearBanquo wrote:so you actually believe he was sincere in that? To me that's just expected sophistry, without the cleverness.Digby wrote:I'd have more sympathy for Fox had he not been so sold there was a swift and lucrative deal to be done with the USA, and here we are months and even years down the line with not even with an outline of what that deal might be, and despite Fox's begging not to make the announcement Trump going ahead with his highly ill-advised and poorly considered announcement of tariffs in the name of protectionism an security. And seeing as Trump is seemingly obsessed with deficits one would have to assume given current UK-US trade that Donald sees any future deal as moving away from our and toward US advantage, though expecting logic and consistency from Trump is something of a waste of time.Banquo wrote: There are many things you can blame Dr Fox for, but Trump being a fuck head isn't one of them. They are about a £360m export market for us.
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Re: Brexit delayed
Oh I agree, I was just surprised at what sounded like naivety from your goodselfDigby wrote:The idea free trade deals with the EU and others would be easily arranged was put forward as part of the campaign, though I'm not surprised the disgraced former defence secretary is being caught out in instances such as this. And people should be called out for sophistry, Fox and his cohorts in this instance, just as Osborne and Cameron can be called out for some of the worst of what's daftly labeled Project FearBanquo wrote:so you actually believe he was sincere in that? To me that's just expected sophistry, without the cleverness.Digby wrote:
I'd have more sympathy for Fox had he not been so sold there was a swift and lucrative deal to be done with the USA, and here we are months and even years down the line with not even with an outline of what that deal might be, and despite Fox's begging not to make the announcement Trump going ahead with his highly ill-advised and poorly considered announcement of tariffs in the name of protectionism an security. And seeing as Trump is seemingly obsessed with deficits one would have to assume given current UK-US trade that Donald sees any future deal as moving away from our and toward US advantage, though expecting logic and consistency from Trump is something of a waste of time.
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Re: Brexit delayed
I could manage misplaced credulity, though not for such as disgraced former defence secretary Liam Fox who maybe doesn't rank as low as Farage or Galloway but is nonetheless approximate to scum.Banquo wrote: Oh I agree, I was just surprised at what sounded like naivety from your goodself
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Re: Brexit delayed
agreed, the Tower for the lot of emDigby wrote:I could manage misplaced credulity, though not for such as disgraced former defence secretary Liam Fox who maybe doesn't rank as low as Farage or Galloway but is nonetheless approximate to scum.Banquo wrote: Oh I agree, I was just surprised at what sounded like naivety from your goodself
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Re: Brexit delayed
God knows what to do. Listening to May on Marr earlier and the scale of ineptitude and lack of planning continue to vie for dominance with her putting the Tory government before the country (though given the alternative might be Corbyn I'm not entirely without sympathy)Banquo wrote:agreed, the Tower for the lot of emDigby wrote:I could manage misplaced credulity, though not for such as disgraced former defence secretary Liam Fox who maybe doesn't rank as low as Farage or Galloway but is nonetheless approximate to scum.Banquo wrote: Oh I agree, I was just surprised at what sounded like naivety from your goodself
Still at least Trump isn't saying he wants more tariffs now
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Re: Brexit delayed
she's up sh*t creek, and the paddle was taken away when she called the election and ran the worst campaign since....well the worst campaign.Digby wrote:God knows what to do. Listening to May on Marr earlier and the scale of ineptitude and lack of planning continue to vie for dominance with her putting the Tory government before the country (though given the alternative might be Corbyn I'm not entirely without sympathy)Banquo wrote:agreed, the Tower for the lot of emDigby wrote:
I could manage misplaced credulity, though not for such as disgraced former defence secretary Liam Fox who maybe doesn't rank as low as Farage or Galloway but is nonetheless approximate to scum.
Still at least Trump isn't saying he wants more tariffs now
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Re: Brexit delayed
That's the problem with her view, it's about her being in trouble, when really it's about the county being in trouble, her individual success/failure is in the bigger picture meaningless and it's not like there aren't many others who couldn't prove similarly impotentBanquo wrote:she's up sh*t creek, and the paddle was taken away when she called the election and ran the worst campaign since....well the worst campaign.Digby wrote:God knows what to do. Listening to May on Marr earlier and the scale of ineptitude and lack of planning continue to vie for dominance with her putting the Tory government before the country (though given the alternative might be Corbyn I'm not entirely without sympathy)Banquo wrote: agreed, the Tower for the lot of em
Still at least Trump isn't saying he wants more tariffs now
I don't as it happens think the election has changed that much for her on Brexit. It's not as if the Tory parliamentary party before the election was united in what should happen, the election was an aim to increase a majority to make it easier to ignore both extremes, that she returned no majority doesn't in many ways change the divisions when it comes to Brexit, it makes other areas harder where the Tory MPs would be easier to corral, but the remain and leave camps seem much as they were
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Re: Brexit delayed
I think she is miles weaker post election, the DUP being just one example.Digby wrote:That's the problem with her view, it's about her being in trouble, when really it's about the county being in trouble, her individual success/failure is in the bigger picture meaningless and it's not like there aren't many others who couldn't prove similarly impotentBanquo wrote:she's up sh*t creek, and the paddle was taken away when she called the election and ran the worst campaign since....well the worst campaign.Digby wrote:
God knows what to do. Listening to May on Marr earlier and the scale of ineptitude and lack of planning continue to vie for dominance with her putting the Tory government before the country (though given the alternative might be Corbyn I'm not entirely without sympathy)
Still at least Trump isn't saying he wants more tariffs now
I don't as it happens think the election has changed that much for her on Brexit. It's not as if the Tory parliamentary party before the election was united in what should happen, the election was an aim to increase a majority to make it easier to ignore both extremes, that she returned no majority doesn't in many ways change the divisions when it comes to Brexit, it makes other areas harder where the Tory MPs would be easier to corral, but the remain and leave camps seem much as they were
Mind, pretending this would be easy to do in any circumstances is exactly that, a pretence. And i was using she as a substitute for we; WE are up shyte creek. This govt will fall at some point during this mess, and likely Corbyn will walk into power.
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Re: Brexit delayed
She's weaker generally for sure, and that perhaps does make Brexit worse for her. But give her back the MPs she lost during the election and I don't see how they're not having the same fight over Europe.Banquo wrote: I think she is miles weaker post election, the DUP being just one example.
Mind, pretending this would be easy to do in any circumstances is exactly that, a pretence. And i was using she as a substitute for we; WE are up shyte creek. This govt will fall at some point during this mess, and likely Corbyn will walk into power.
I don't know either if Corbyn would walk in, I think we'd probably need another coalition. And any Corbyn government could easily see some Labour MPs ignore their party whip so even a slim majority mayn't mean much. Still, if people are stupid enough to vote Brexit and Trump I should likely give up any predictions on how people will vote, christ even Berlusconi is back as a truly bizarre voice of reason
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Re: Brexit delayed
I don't think you should discount the emboldening effect, or that others are after her job, and how debilitating that is.Digby wrote:She's weaker generally for sure, and that perhaps does make Brexit worse for her. But give her back the MPs she lost during the election and I don't see how they're not having the same fight over Europe.Banquo wrote: I think she is miles weaker post election, the DUP being just one example.
Mind, pretending this would be easy to do in any circumstances is exactly that, a pretence. And i was using she as a substitute for we; WE are up shyte creek. This govt will fall at some point during this mess, and likely Corbyn will walk into power.
I don't know either if Corbyn would walk in, I think we'd probably need another coalition. And any Corbyn government could easily see some Labour MPs ignore their party whip so even a slim majority mayn't mean much. Still, if people are stupid enough to vote Brexit and Trump I should likely give up any predictions on how people will vote, christ even Berlusconi is back as a truly bizarre voice of reason
There's some new polling methodology, which seems credible, which has Labour at 48%; apparently you have 'shy' Labour these days. Mind, as you say, bizarre is the new normal!
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Re: Brexit delayed
I do sort of agree, in part, but they've been divided on Europe since I can remember (which would be the early 90s as far as politics goes). So unless she'd won with a majority of 70+ Brexit was always going to be a problem, and even then she'd have needed MPs she could form a power base amongst, had the new MPs all been akin to Anna Soubry or Peter Bone there'd have been issues with a majority of 100 when it came to BrexitBanquo wrote:I don't think you should discount the emboldening effect, or that others are after her job, and how debilitating that is.
There's some new polling methodology, which seems credible, which has Labour at 48%; apparently you have 'shy' Labour these days. Mind, as you say, bizarre is the new normal!
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Re: Brexit delayed
as have Labour. Reflecting the country, as it turns out, so Brexit a pretty intractable vote to deal with, whatever the hue. But having no authority makes it harder, which is the point.Digby wrote:I do sort of agree, in part, but they've been divided on Europe since I can remember (which would be the early 90s as far as politics goes). So unless she'd won with a majority of 70+ Brexit was always going to be a problem, and even then she'd have needed MPs she could form a power base amongst, had the new MPs all been akin to Anna Soubry or Peter Bone there'd have been issues with a majority of 100 when it came to BrexitBanquo wrote:I don't think you should discount the emboldening effect, or that others are after her job, and how debilitating that is.
There's some new polling methodology, which seems credible, which has Labour at 48%; apparently you have 'shy' Labour these days. Mind, as you say, bizarre is the new normal!
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Re: Brexit delayed
If she wanted authority she should have run her leadership campaign on such basis, instead she ran trying not to offend anyone in her party from either camp. She's not been dealt a bum hand, these are the cards she negotiated for, presumably on the basis she saw her being leader as enoughBanquo wrote:as have Labour. Reflecting the country, as it turns out, so Brexit a pretty intractable vote to deal with, whatever the hue. But having no authority makes it harder, which is the point.Digby wrote:I do sort of agree, in part, but they've been divided on Europe since I can remember (which would be the early 90s as far as politics goes). So unless she'd won with a majority of 70+ Brexit was always going to be a problem, and even then she'd have needed MPs she could form a power base amongst, had the new MPs all been akin to Anna Soubry or Peter Bone there'd have been issues with a majority of 100 when it came to BrexitBanquo wrote:I don't think you should discount the emboldening effect, or that others are after her job, and how debilitating that is.
There's some new polling methodology, which seems credible, which has Labour at 48%; apparently you have 'shy' Labour these days. Mind, as you say, bizarre is the new normal!