By continuing to use the site, you agree to our use of cookies and to abide by our Terms and Conditions. We in turn value your personal details in accordance with our Privacy Policy.
Please log in or register. Registered visitors get fewer ads.
OUT WITH A DEAL EATING OUR CAKE AND LOVING IT suck it up remoaners
And like a typical anti democracy remoaner he decided the will of the people should be ignored the minute the democratic result was in total fecking hypocrite 😂😂😂😂😂😂
Despite it being voted in to law by the commons the spineless two faced remoaner MPs have totally abandoned any morals and decided to ignore the will of the British people.
It will be remembered and no election or referendum will ever be the same again in this country.
The one thing that will come is a massive surge in the popularity of UKIP or a similar party in the future who stand for the 52%.
Happy Days.
[Post edited 1 Jan 2021 14:13]
OUT AFLI SUCK IT UP REMOANER LOSERS
🇬🇧 🇬🇧 🇬🇧 🇬🇧 🇬🇧 🇬🇧 🇬🇧 🇬🇧 🇬🇧 🇬🇧 🇬🇧 🇬🇧 🇬🇧 🇬🇧 🇬🇧
Mexico and Britain have begun informal talks on an agreement to maintain Britain's preferential trade deal with Mexico after Brexit, British international trade secretary Liam Fox said on Thursday.
Fox also told reporters on a visit to Mexico City that he hoped Mexico and the European Union (EU) would press ahead with concluding their updated free trade agreement.
Fox said he and Mexican economy minister Ildefonso Guajardo have began a dialogue aimed at ensuring "that the preferential agreements that the U.K. currently enjoys with Mexico remain in place."
The British government supports the "ambitious and speedy outcome" to the free trade talks between Mexico and the European Union, Fox said, and will later undertake a process to adopt the deal so it also applies to Mexico-British trade post-Brexit.
"In other words, we will replicate (the Mexico-EU) agreement into U.K. law so that as we leave the European Union there is no disruption to the trading environment," Fox said.
He said that he would like to see topics such as e-commerce added to an updated Mexico-United Kingdom trade deal, which would go beyond what EU and Mexican negotiators have discussed.
Nothing like a bit of PR management. You can imagine the conversation with a young Tory Party researcher.
" The EU are planning yet another free trade agreement" Fox: "No problem we'll just say we pushed the EU into it and we're planning a bigger and better one anyway! " " Wow - bigger than the Customs Union?" Fox: "Silly boy. Run along Pike"
The Countdown begins. on 19:11 - Apr 23 by longlostjack
Nothing like a bit of PR management. You can imagine the conversation with a young Tory Party researcher.
" The EU are planning yet another free trade agreement" Fox: "No problem we'll just say we pushed the EU into it and we're planning a bigger and better one anyway! " " Wow - bigger than the Customs Union?" Fox: "Silly boy. Run along Pike"
[Post edited 23 Apr 2018 19:13]
Nothing like a remainer refusing to believe that anything positive will come from brexit.
-1
The Countdown begins. on 07:20 - Apr 24 with 6432 views
Mexico and Britain have begun informal talks on an agreement to maintain Britain's preferential trade deal with Mexico after Brexit, British international trade secretary Liam Fox said on Thursday.
Fox also told reporters on a visit to Mexico City that he hoped Mexico and the European Union (EU) would press ahead with concluding their updated free trade agreement.
Fox said he and Mexican economy minister Ildefonso Guajardo have began a dialogue aimed at ensuring "that the preferential agreements that the U.K. currently enjoys with Mexico remain in place."
The British government supports the "ambitious and speedy outcome" to the free trade talks between Mexico and the European Union, Fox said, and will later undertake a process to adopt the deal so it also applies to Mexico-British trade post-Brexit.
"In other words, we will replicate (the Mexico-EU) agreement into U.K. law so that as we leave the European Union there is no disruption to the trading environment," Fox said.
He said that he would like to see topics such as e-commerce added to an updated Mexico-United Kingdom trade deal, which would go beyond what EU and Mexican negotiators have discussed.
"In other words, we will replicate (the Mexico-EU) agreement into U.K. law so that as we leave the European Union there is no disruption to the trading environment," Fox said.
Is the disgraced former defence secretary making the case for or against Brexit here?
Fishing is a sh!ty job that's on the decline that no one wants to do. Fish processing is a growing industry that massively outsizes the fishing industry and relies on single market access and openly admits this. Native fish to our shores are mainly exported, whilst Cod and Haddock that sell well here are fished of Norway and Iceland's coasts. And increasing fishing quota's outside of the EU is pure fantasy.
More strain on the NHS as official figures show that nearly 4000 EU nurses left the UK last year. Not being reported in the right wing rags for some reason.
The Countdown begins. on 10:55 - Apr 25 by Batterseajack
More strain on the NHS as official figures show that nearly 4000 EU nurses left the UK last year. Not being reported in the right wing rags for some reason.
The Countdown begins. on 10:55 - Apr 25 by Batterseajack
More strain on the NHS as official figures show that nearly 4000 EU nurses left the UK last year. Not being reported in the right wing rags for some reason.
In that second article that Jackie Smith says (paraphrasing because I’m phone illiterate and don’t know how to copy and paste) “retirement and staffing levels are the main reason for nurses quitting the NHS and only a small number cite fears about brexit.”
The creatures outside looked from pig to man, and from man to pig, and from pig to man again; but already it was impossible to say which was which.
The Countdown begins. on 11:12 - Apr 25 by Highjack
Fake news.
In that second article that Jackie Smith says (paraphrasing because I’m phone illiterate and don’t know how to copy and paste) “retirement and staffing levels are the main reason for nurses quitting the NHS and only a small number cite fears about brexit.”
It's not fake, just being spun in different ways. The numbers of EU nurses registering has fallen through the floor since the referendum (from over 1,300 the year before the referendum, to only 46 this year). The vast majority of overseas nurses since 2008 have come from the EU. The numbers coming in are falling drastically and the numbers leaving are increasing.
I learnt this while perving at the Nursing in Practice magazine
There's a very real cause and effect here. Brexit is cited as a major reason why people are leaving (working conditions is also another biggy). It's a bit of a perfect storm brewing.
People obviously leave through retirement or resignations, etc., too, but government policy is (a) hitting EU recruitment, and (b) their withdrawal of grants for student nurses is having a big impact on local recruitment (or at least it was; there was a load of guff in the press about this in the last couple of years). Applications are down again this year apparently by about 10%. Maybe the pay rise will help that.
What I didn't realise with these foreign nurses is we train them up just to send them home again, under 'earn, learn and return' schemes. That must be mightily inefficient. No sooner have you trained them than you lose them. A quick fix rather than making it a more attractive career choice and training up Brits who'll then spend their careers giving back.
The Countdown begins. on 21:24 - Apr 26 by LeonWasGod
It's not fake, just being spun in different ways. The numbers of EU nurses registering has fallen through the floor since the referendum (from over 1,300 the year before the referendum, to only 46 this year). The vast majority of overseas nurses since 2008 have come from the EU. The numbers coming in are falling drastically and the numbers leaving are increasing.
I learnt this while perving at the Nursing in Practice magazine
There's a very real cause and effect here. Brexit is cited as a major reason why people are leaving (working conditions is also another biggy). It's a bit of a perfect storm brewing.
People obviously leave through retirement or resignations, etc., too, but government policy is (a) hitting EU recruitment, and (b) their withdrawal of grants for student nurses is having a big impact on local recruitment (or at least it was; there was a load of guff in the press about this in the last couple of years). Applications are down again this year apparently by about 10%. Maybe the pay rise will help that.
What I didn't realise with these foreign nurses is we train them up just to send them home again, under 'earn, learn and return' schemes. That must be mightily inefficient. No sooner have you trained them than you lose them. A quick fix rather than making it a more attractive career choice and training up Brits who'll then spend their careers giving back.
"The Whitehall department in charge of Brexit has failed to approach a single external company to obtain ideas of how technology will help solve the NI border issue."
But in response to a freedom of information request submitted by i, officials at the Department for Exiting the European Union admitted the number of companies it had spoken to about such technology was “nil”.
Not much going on down at Dover either. This Government is a calamity.
BBC South East has found that not a single @DExEUgov Minister has yet been to see operations at the Port of #Dover. That’s despite concerns over traffic and a steady stream of other politicians coming here for briefings. pic.twitter.com/ixeFM6B7jI
The Countdown begins. on 09:16 - Apr 27 by Lord_Bony
I agree,doctors and nurses are trained from the EU only to put their skills to work in their native countries....also known as the "brain drain".
Wouldn't it make sense therefore, to have a recruitment drive aimed at British nurses and give them an attractive incentive while they are training?
Just a thought.
That seems too sensible. It's great that the NHS is still seen in such high regard that w're sharing knowledge round the world, etc., etc. But yep, I'd have thought we need to sort out the pipeline of UK staff first as these form the foundation of the NHS for years to come and then do all the overseas training stuff.
Presumably the main driver behind what we do now is cost, as this just seems to be temporary outsourcing as it's cheaper.