Welcome to Over50sForum! The site for people over 50 to chat, make friends, discuss, share, and generally be part of something that's fun and friendly :)
The European Parliament still has until the end of April to ratify the trade and cooperation agreement.
If it does not do so and provisional application of the agreement is not extended, then the trade deal would cease to apply, leaving Britain and the European Union to trade on WTO terms with tariffs and quotas.
The European Parliament still has until the end of April to ratify the trade and cooperation agreement.
If it does not do so and provisional application of the agreement is not extended, then the trade deal would cease to apply, leaving Britain and the European Union to trade on WTO terms with tariffs and quotas.
They will sign.
I hope not,this should be another test of who's chicken !!
I bet Boris caves again !!
But what can he give away now. ??
Maybe vaccine?
The European Parliament still has until the end of April to ratify the trade and cooperation agreement.
If it does not do so and provisional application of the agreement is not extended, then the trade deal would cease to apply, leaving Britain and the European Union to trade on WTO terms with tariffs and quotas.
They will sign.
In all probability they will.
"All mouth and no trousers" as they say.
The European Parliament still has until the end of April to ratify the trade and cooperation agreement.
If it does not do so and provisional application of the agreement is not extended, then the trade deal would cease to apply, leaving Britain and the European Union to trade on WTO terms with tariffs and quotas.
They will sign.
We will just agree to another extension, we always do
The European Parliament still has until the end of April to ratify the trade and cooperation agreement.
If it does not do so and provisional application of the agreement is not extended, then the trade deal would cease to apply, leaving Britain and the European Union to trade on WTO terms with tariffs and quotas.
They will sign.
Of course they'll sign! The deal benefits the EU more than the UK. There is however increasing doubt about the trustworthyness of britain as a signatory of deals. Even the american president relies more on EU and ireland than on UK.
Of course they'll sign! The deal benefits the EU more than the UK. There is however increasing doubt about the trustworthyness of britain as a signatory of deals. Even the american president relies more on EU and ireland than on UK.
Back to front as usual! I'm surprised you've come back.
As for the American president, well, I think we all know about him by now.
The pressure is now starting to ramp up on Mr Macron amid campaigners calls for the country to hold its own referendum on membership with the EU.
In addition, a poll carried out by the Odoxa institut, conducted online from February 3-4 and quizzing 1,005 French adults, showed 81 percent of people believe Mr Macron's centre-right government "does not know where it is going" in terms of Covid planning.
Charles-Henri Gallois, president of the Generation Frexit political campaign group, lashed out at the EU and branded its policies "a disaster for France", demanding the country take back control of its sovereignty.
He told Express.co.uk: "The COVID-19 crisis had really shown that we need our sovereignty back. EU policies are a disaster for France.