Every deal the EU has ever done has been by brinkmanship and leaving it till the very, very last moment. It's how this chaotic organisation runs.
Why would this be any different? End of a very long day countries will realise they are dealing with us directly. The EU has offered and May has weakly accepted an impossible deal. It's literally worse than you could make up.
We have nothing to lose now. It's a shame but here we are.
WTO rules. Although I doubt it will come to that. Too much at stake. We have a massive trade surplus with them in their favour. Why would they risk their own economies nose diving so Juncker and his ilk can prove a point?
Doesn't make sense.
This is going to be a compendium answer ...
If and it is very much if, the Commons passes this agreement, it will certainly be a second or maybe third best option for the UK and EU. But it could and still might be a lot, lot worse.
As before I hold the opinion that staying in fully would be the best option both for the UK and EU. There are probably a few items which might have been more palatable to the UK.
The response of the financial markets with every convulsion in the UK Parliament,says a lot for how sober people see it.
Tommie, I do agree that the comment about us being a drunken nation, should be challenged... . I was listening to BBC Ulster this morning while in Belfast, and around 10 :15 this morning there was a gentleman on who might have made more sense had he been drunk!. If this is what you are subjected to routinely, no wonder you are addled. He was claiming that this proposal would give Dublin control of the North, and this is not why he had been fighting the Shinners for twenty years. Even the interviewer was finding that hard to take, but his remonstrations were falling on deaf ears.
More sober minds in the North including the Farmers Union and the Business sector have been cautiously welcoming.
Fingers, can you not see that this is the brinkmanship deal. ?. The clock has already wound down ,the clock has gone red, we are in injury time. Whether the UK negotiating team used their 2 years wisely is no longer relevent. The time to have had this proposal on the table for discussion and serious modification was a year ago. .. Or more sensibly would have been to have had these as discussions, PRIOR to handing in the Article 50 letter.