Workingman wrote:EFTA's FTA with the EU has nothing whatsoever to do with any agreement the UK makes, or is likely to make... we are not in EFTA. It is a straw man.
Actually I was using the EFTA information site to highlight the EU trade deals with the rest of the world. But, yes, you are correct. Let's go straight to the horses mouth then.
Here. Notably when you look for EU trade agreements the actual source site is not the most obvious.
I count three free trade agreements. South Korea (in force), Vietnam and Singapore. Now every time I say LIE below, please remember, this is the EU site which lists their Trade Agreements. At least ONE of these countries, has restricted movement of people between itself and the EU. It only takes ONE for the statements below to be a lie.
To highlight that.
From the
Free Trade Agreement with Korea. I note that in the
actual text of the document. It says
Nothing in this Chapter shall prevent a Party from
applying measures to regulate the entry of natural persons
into, or their temporary stay in, its territory, including those
measures necessary to protect the integrity of, and to ensure the
orderly movement of natural persons across, its borders,
provided that such measures are not applied in such a
manner as to nullify or impair the benefits accruing to the
other Party under the terms of a specific commitment in this
Chapter and its Annexes
In a note at the bottom of the chapter it says.
The sole fact of requiring a visa for natural persons of certain
countries and not for those of others shall not be regarded as
nullifying or impairing benefits under the terms of a specific
commitment in this Chapter and its Annexes.
Workingman wrote:I most certainly have been saying for months that the EU are saying that the only way we can have a free trade deal is to accept EU levels of movement.
The EU has said nothing of the sort. It has said we cannot have a post Brexit free trade deal under the same terms and conditions we currently enjoy as a member of the EU.
OK let me see. Note I have tried to avoid UK right wing papers or EU right wing press.
Verhofstat:
Any future relationship between Britain and the EU “cannot infringe on the four freedoms,” Verhofstadt said, which include the freedom of movement for people who want to work in another EU country, as well as the free movement of capital, goods and services.
That, as we can see from the treaties , is a subtle LIE. What he means is: The EU does not want to negotiate a less open agreement with the UK than it currently has today. No matter what the UK wants. Because it is too damaging to the EU to do so.
But Verhofstadt, the leader of the liberal ALDE group in the European Parliament, said that tariff-free single market access would only be possible if the freedom of movement of people was accepted.
Again a reiteration of the same lie. The EU has these agreements with other countries without free movement of people. The UK does not need and does not use the full rights of access it has today. The EU _does_ use those full rights in the UK. The two situations are not equal and they need to start telling the truth.
Barnier:
“I have heard some people in the UK argue that one can leave the single market and keep all of its benefits – that is not possible.
Yes, _some_ people. But the UK government has said it does NOT want to leave the single market and keep all its benefits. It is the EU that wants to keep all the benefits to the UK
I have heard some people in the UK argue that one can leave the single market and build a customs union to achieve ‘frictionless trade’ – that is not possible
Which is a backhanded way of turning the truth into a lie. It is not so much the UK who want some kind of customs union. The UK wants free trade, it is the EU that needs customs union because the EU exports more to the UK than the UK exports to the EU.
He then set out the EU’s three “red lines” – that free movement of persons, goods, services and capital are indivisible, that there can be no “sector by sector” participation in the single market, as desired by the UK, and that the EU must have autonomy to set its own rules, a reference to the ECJ.
Yet another Lie. As proven by the Free Trade treaties the EU has already entered into. There can be but they Do Not Want To because it would impact their own access to the UK market.
Juncker:
Britain will have to accept European Union rules “without exception or nuance” if it wants to keep full access to the single market after Brexit, European Commission president Jean Claude Juncker has said.
Again with the "full access". Which part of "free trade" not "full access" is not being understood? Well, actually, it is understood. The EU understand that Free Trade is not Full Access for the EU to the UK. So they say it's not possible.
Again, as per their own agreed and documented treaties. It is possible. So this is a Lie.
In a blunt statement Wednesday, European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker said the U.K. couldn't pick and choose what it liked about the EU once it has left.
Actually isn't that what a Free Trade deal is? That appears to be the content of those trade deals I read. Essentially the picking and choosing of what each party liked in terms of trade with each other.
"There can be no 'a la carte' access to the single market," Juncker said in his annual state of the union speech
All evidence to the contrary; documented in pedantic detail, by the EU itself.
‘There will be no access to the internal market for those who do not accept the rules – without exception or nuance – that make up the very nature of the internal market system.’
Again a twisting of words. We don't want access to the "internal" market, we want External access to the EU market. Couching the requirements of the EU as requirements of the UK, again, is not working for me and the terminology needs to be changed.
Britain will have to accept EU rules including free movement “without exception or nuance” if it wants to retain full access to the single market, Jean-Claude Juncker has said.
Yet again. We don't want or need _full_ access to the single market. We have that today and we find it is not worth the cost. So we export our goods to other countries outside of the EU.
This very long series of statement posted above is to highlight what I have been saying for months. The leaders of the EU, the negotiators of the EU and, to an extent, the leaders of the states within the EU, are all telling differing levels of mistruths and putting their wants and needs forward as our own to varying degrees.
The person who has stuck to the strictest truth and only talked, peripherally, about the EU needs as also being the UK needs is Tusk. For which I give him a large measure of credit. Notably Tusk is rarely in the news over Brexit because his statements are conciliatory and sensible.
To go back to the crux of what I'm saying here. The EU is saying that we can't have _any_ access to the single market, outside of WTO rules, unless we accept full free movement of people.
That is clearly articulated above and is something I keep reiterating because they keep on doing it.
The second part is where they keep on pushing their needs as ours and then using their needs to justify their claims. That we, the UK, need to stop and realign it to UK needs and EU needs and where we are going to meet in the middle.
Why do I recognise the second part so readily? Because the EU, formerly the EEC, has been doing this for over 40 years and it was the strongest reason I wanted to leave the EU in the first place.