Brexit thread - what happens next

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We are talking about free access.

I know, so people should say free or tariff-free access and stop making this deliberately disingenuous claim that you "cannot access the single market with accepting free movement"



Of course lots of countries trade with the EU with tariffs and customs and controls on quantities allowed to be imported each year etc,

Yet with the exceptions of Norway & Switzerland, none of the other hundred plus countries that sell into and buy from the single market think trading their ability to control immigration numbers for a bit of a discount on trade is worth it.

They can't all be wrong surely.
 
So all those highly skilled workers we want will decide to head somewhere else that's easier to get into? Great idea!

It doesn't take long to get a visa in the UK. High skilled people go through tier 1 and this can be done the same day if you book application and turn up in person.

Tier 2 is a skilled visa and that you usually apply for with a job offer. That is 10 days with a priority service.
 
Would they be offered it even if they did think it was beneficial? There must be a high proportion of those 'hundred plus' countries that the EU would never approve freedom of movement with.
 
It doesn't take long to get a visa in the UK. High skilled people go through tier 1 and this can be done the same day if you book application and turn up in person.

gov.uk said:
You can no longer apply or extend Tier 1 (General) visas.

With effect from 6 April 2015, Tier 1 (General) will close and applications to extend leave will no
longer be accepted. A

We've had enough misinformation in this whole Brexit saga without you adding more.
 
[TW]Fox;29808164 said:
We've had enough misinformation in this whole Brexit saga without you adding more.

Is that a joke?

Use the visa premium service. You can get them same day. My wife used this before we were married (I went with her to the centre in Croydon). Also people at my work have used this. Book it and get all your paperwork together. You get your visa confirmed (or denied) within an hour or 2 after. If you can't get to the centr then you can also pay for the super premium service where they cost you. It is still 24 hours turn around.
 
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Yet with the exceptions of Norway & Switzerland, none of the other hundred plus countries that sell into and buy from the single market think trading their ability to control immigration numbers for a bit of a discount on trade is worth it.

They can't all be wrong surely.

No one else is a member of the single market or has been offered single market access.
 
I was listening to a piece on the radio yesterday that said if you are white, low income, with poor education attainment the likelihood is you voted for Brexit. That is exactly the same demographic in the U.S. that are backing Trump for President.

Not only that but it's a similar demographic that are agitating for drastic change across Europe. Surely that should be ringing alarm bells with politicians everywhere.

Rightly or wrongly this demographic feels left behind by society and does not have a share in the wealth of the country they were born in. They feel their whole way of life is under threat from immigration and it's a toxic mix.

I don't pretend to have an answer to this conundrum and I suspect neither do the politicians.
 
We are talking about free access. Of course lots of countries trade with the EU with tariffs and customs and controls on quantities allowed to be imported each year etc,

Probably be worth running with tariffs to be able to take a more worldwide approach to trade.
 
Canada's trade minister said in a recent interview that Canada wanted free movement with their trade deal with the eu but couldnt get it.

I'm sure 90% of the countries in the world would happily accept free movement for a trade deal with the EU, and most would throw in their daughter for full single market access. The only country I can see turning it down are the US, and possible some authoritarian states who don't want visitors.
 
[TW]Fox;29808262 said:
No.

The Tier 1 visa you discuss does not exist any more. My quote is direct from gov.uk.

Ah yes. It still exists but for dependent only now. Tier 2 is the one most applicable then. We do not have long waiting times for those wanting to use the premium (or super premium) services.
 
Where did I say that?

Yet with the exceptions of Norway & Switzerland, none of the other hundred plus countries that sell into and buy from the single market think trading their ability to control immigration numbers for a bit of a discount on trade is worth it.

They can't all be wrong surely.

No one else is a member of the single market or has been offered single market access.

So how do Korean and US products get into the hands of people who live in the single market? Saying no one outside the EU/EFTA has "access to the single market" means the only people who can sell anything within the EU are other EU/EFTA members, otherwise other people have access as well.
 
So how do Korean and US products get into the hands of people who live in the sine market? Saying no one outside the EU/EFTA has "access to the single market" means the only people who can sell anything within the EU are other EU/EFTA members, otherwise other people have access as well.

Having access to the single market means you have unrestricted access to the European single market in goods and services. The single market removes all obstacles to trade. All countries can sell to Europe, but there are restrictions on what you can buy/sell, and the EU are able to impose tariff and non-tariff barriers, as is the case with goods from the US and Korea.
 
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