leedswolf
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Always mind my Ps & Qs...Haha, stay classy!
Always mind my Ps & Qs...Haha, stay classy!
Brexit is what allowed us to handle our vaccine programme differently to the eu.As to the EU purchasing & rollout of vaccines this has sod all to do with Brexit.
As others have said that even if still in we could have gone our own way, though it is enlightening that none of the other larger countries (Germany, France, Italy) have done so yet.
Some others have started to or are at least in discussions (spoke to my sister in Denmark & they are apparantly negotiating with Israel for any surplus as they have vaccinated the majority now).
Not sure that this should be on the referendum thread anyway as it isn't relevant to that.
This bit. We had the veto, we weren't in the single currency, we weren't in Schengen why wouldn't we have gone alone on this, when it's clear it was feasible? Even without Brexit we've always been the least compliant member.Brexit is what allowed us to handle our vaccine programme differently to the eu.
What makes you think that we wouldn't? The UK was fairly bullish about stuff that didn't suit when we were members.Which bit do you disagree with?
if itās āBrexit is what allowed us to handle our vaccine programme differently to the eu.ā, what makes you think that if we were still in the EU, we would have been the only country to decline to be part of the pan-eu vaccine programme?
Brexit has nothing to do with the vaccinations - all 28 (before we left) could have gone the way we have if they wanted to , as could we if we had voted to stay in.Brexit is what allowed us to handle our vaccine programme differently to the eu.
as you say, the theory is that any eu country could have gone their own way, the practicality of it is that none of them could.
I was reading about Denmark (and Austria) negotiating for Israeli vaccines (eu members are allowed to use any vaccines not licensed as part of the eu vaccination program). As I understand it, the danish government is a coalition and two of the major parties wonāt allow that deal until Israel has vaccinated the Palestinians.
in my view, the positive impacts of brexit (the ability to do things outside of a large and cumbersome bloc) are as valid a point of discussion as the other side of things (difficulties in trading with that bloc once weād left).
Snidey comments?In April, Germany, France, Italy and the Netherlands started negotiating with suppliers for vaccines. The likelihood is that we would have been part of that group if we were still in the EU, theoretically getting a good start, but still part of a block that could get a decent deal.
in June, the eu used the eu emergency support instrument to start buying vaccines across the eu
at that point, the European Commission persuaded the four countries that a pan European vaccine programme would enable cheaper deals due to the blocs buying power, and that the eu solidarity was at stake, because if the big eu economies arranged their own deals, the smaller economies would be left behind, and the likelihood is that some of those would be courted by Russia and China with vaccines, further endangering the european project.
that then convinced the four to join in to the eu vaccine programme.
now, itās theretically possible that at that point we could have said ābollocks, despite being in the eu, and being one of the bigger economies, and probably agreeing with all the arguments made by the eu, having gone through brexit and needing to keep relations in a good place, weāre going our own wayā
Theoretically possible - but I donāt really see that being practically possible, in the same way Germany, France, the Netherlands and Italy didnāt see it being practically possible.
other views are of course available - but i would appreciate if those arguments can be as logically put as mine above, rather than just snidey asides.
peace, all.
And what is yours? im sure youāre capable of more than just criticism, glib remarks and random swearing.Snidey comments?
Let me make it simple; Hypothesis.
Same reason why donāt have the Euro and arenāt in Schengen. We had a veto and we used it a lot.And what is yours? im sure youāre capable of more than just criticism, glib remarks and random swearing.
the remain voters on here like to position themselves as superior to the thicky brexiteers, so letās see some of that intellectual and analytical superiority in action.
If we had stayed in the eu, Why would the UK realistically have stayed out of the EU vaccine programme, given all the things we know about why the other big EU countries went into it, despite lining up their own vaccine supply?
Thank you, I appreciate the rational consideration.It clearly was because of Brexit that we could go it alone with our vaccine plans. If we were still in the EU we would have gone along with the other 27 (even though we didnāt on a number of issues), it would not have been practically possible because, yāknow, France and Germany. No other nation in the world has been able to go it alone on vaccine delivery except all those countries that did.
Itās hard to disagree with PQ on this because his argument isnāt full of holes and half truths.
Iāve had discussions with TSB before, whilst we tend to be on opposite sides of the argument, he makes his points very well, and doesnāt tend to need to resort to sarcasm.I'm not sure sarcasm is picked up that well on the internet.
Kudos for trying TSB.