back to article No open door for India's tech workers in any UK trade deal

The notion that a trade deal between the UK and India might see a flood of cheap tech workers heading to Britain appears to have been scuppered. The British government is prepared to consider temporary visas for skilled workers, but that's as far as it goes. Last year, Home Secretary Suella Braverman caused controversy by …

  1. Howard Sway Silver badge

    An economic slowdown and the spiralling cost of living helps to redress all of these issues

    Well that's good news then. Make lots of companies go bust, and there'll be no shortage of workers to fill tech jobs any more, because there'll be no jobs to fill.

    Problem solved!

    1. Ah well

      Re: An economic slowdown and the spiralling cost of living helps to redress all of these issues

      Dont worry they can depend on their corporate welfare payments..

    2. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      21x population

      It will not take long to transform UK to India, since population of India is 21x of UK. Besides what's wrong with working online/WFH from India for UK instead of immigration? Covid has proved it works. Just tax it well with some incentives.

      It is disappointing that with all the talented workforce India is not modernizing itself instead of sending the talent abroad. Is life in India that bad? Same applies to Pakistan with its young population.

      Now that on-device AI chatbots will become a commodity in a couple of years, every young person will have access to a personal tutor in any scientific field, lets hope this will finally drag the countries out of poverty and desperation. Hopefully the political systems will change too.

      1. Anonymous Coward
        Anonymous Coward

        Re: 21x population

        There is no incentive to bring people out of poverty as there is no incentive not to put people into poverty.

      2. Ahab Returns

        Re: 21x population

        Most of my clients insist on UK based contractors, and won't even accept working from a holiday home outside the country. My current role could be done form anywhere, but security is a genuine concern to the organisation.

        1. ShortLegs

          Re: 21x population

          Ditto

          I wanted to do my job in Australia... but a client requirement is company employee, SC cleared and *UK based*.

          Shame, as we have to provide 24/7 support.... I would happily do the graveyard shift, out-of-hours changes, etc, during my working day

          Alas it cannot be

  2. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Skilled Workers?

    "one of the major sticking points believed to be India's expectation of easier access to the UK for many more of its skilled workers"

    Speaking as a former UK-based employee of an Indian-based outsourcer, what, pray, are these so-called "skilled workers" that India has? Or does it mean the "let's throw ten people at the job in the hope that one of them kind of knows what to kind of do" attitude that was so prevalent?

    1. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Re: Skilled Workers?

      Wages in India aren't what they're used to be, they're rising. Meaning that employees actually have to be pretty good at their job to keep it now.

      1. Yet Another Anonymous coward Silver badge

        Re: Skilled Workers?

        It's OK they've worked out a deal with a newly 3rd world country to sub-contract the work to.

        1. CrazyOldCatMan Silver badge

          Re: Skilled Workers?

          they've worked out a deal with a newly 3rd world country to sub-contract the work to

          So more work coming to the UK then?

          1. Anonymous Coward
            Anonymous Coward

            Re: Skilled Workers?

            1st world: USA & EU

            2nd world: China & India

            3rd world: the others

            1. Vincent Ballard

              They're political designators, not GDP designators

              First world: NATO and closely aligned nations. Second world: Warsaw Pact and other communist nations. Third world: non-aligned.

  3. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

    We were promised easier/more visa for Indians. This is a slap in the face to British Indians.

    1. Paul Crawford Silver badge

      Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

      I'm guessing that is sarcasm.

      But indeed the whole problem is Brexit, or more precisely the "free movement" that was used to rile gammons about EU workers taking their jobs so it had to end.

      And now we are short of care staff, NHS workers, fruit pickers, HGV drivers, etc, as many EU folks decided to head home than live in the home office 'hostile environment' and my oh my we found many who voted for that are unable or unwilling to fill those posts at market rates, while moaning about costs and not wanting to pay farmers, etc, more.

      Of course we have an imploding Tory party that can't see beyond Brexit goals, and a feeble Labour party that is afraid of the 'red wall' losses if they speak up.

      1. Yet Another Anonymous coward Silver badge

        Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

        Not sarcasm. British Indian communities voted for Brexit because they were told by conmen conservatives that the Eu made it hard for Indians to come to Britain while letting in all those Poles but once we controlled our own immigration that would change.

        1. Anonymous Coward
          Anonymous Coward

          Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

          Priti promised. Braverman reneged. Untrustworthy scoundrals.

          1. Michael Strorm Silver badge

            Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

            It's almost as if an unregulated spew of frequently contradictory lies from Brexiteers telling different people whatever they wanted to hear made for "promises" that were never, ever going to be delivered upon.

            It's almost as if that was fucking obvious at the time.

          2. Anonymous Coward
            Anonymous Coward

            Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

            Perhaps they thought there was enough Indians in the government?

        2. Ah well

          Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

          Thats a barefaced lie..

          1. Anonymous Coward
            1. wigger

              Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

              Trade partner yes but not open borders with India... btw you're welcome.

              1. Anonymous Coward
                Anonymous Coward

                Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

                There are a lot of freshly-minted handles espousing pro-Brexit nonsense mixed with a tinge of xenophobia every time there's an article like this. In case you need reminding - you won, get over it.

                1. Anonymous Coward
                  Anonymous Coward

                  Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

                  Oddly, that's also the case with the person they were replying to.

              2. Anonymous Coward
                Anonymous Coward

                Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

                Who mentioned open borders? (Apart from the usual raging gammonnati.)

            2. Anonymous Coward
              Anonymous Coward

              Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

              Why did South Asians vote for Brexit?

            3. ShortLegs

              Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

              You seem astounded that politicians forget their promises the second the election ends...

          2. stylistics

            Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

            The Vote Leave campaign group put out leaflets that very clearly claimed just this:

            https://www.ft.com/content/94adcefa-1dd5-11e6-a7bc-ee846770ec15

            "The official Out campaign is drawing up leaflets aimed at Punjabi, Hindi and Urdu speakers arguing that a British exit from the EU would help to stem the flow of Eastern Europeans into the UK — allowing more incomers from Commonwealth countries to take their place. "

          3. Doctor Syntax Silver badge

            Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

            "Thats a barefaced lie.."

            There were a lot of those about at the time,

        3. TheMeerkat Silver badge

          Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

          They are not very “British” Indian if they still care that immigrants come specifically from India.

          Should not British feel British rather then care that new immigrants came from a specific country?

          1. Anonymous Coward
            Anonymous Coward

            Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

            I'm an immigrant's son. I still have family in Indian. And work with team members in India. It's a ball ache to get them into the UK.

            And I'd pit my Britishness against yours any day of the week, pal.

            1. Anonymous Coward
              Anonymous Coward

              Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

              If you're arguing for ethnic/national favouritism towards certain people just because they come from the same family background as yourself- as it seems you are- then OP has an entirely legitimate point.

              You seem to take it as written that these Indian co-workers or family members have a right to have it made easier to enter the UK. I'll excuse the latter bias to some extent- everyone wants life to be easier for those close to them- but otherwise, who says so?

              The fact that you aren't making similar arguments in favour of those from other countries or trying to explain *why* Britain should let more Indians in from its point of view makes it perfectly legitimate to question your biases and loyalties.

              1. Anonymous Coward
                Anonymous Coward

                Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

                make it perfectly legitimate to question your biases and loyalties

                Oh. Suggesting easy visas for travel allows you to question my loyalty as a Brit? **** off.

                Conflating easy visa travel with "hordes of [insert group of your choice] at the gate". A classic gammon enraging narrative. And to be fair: It works very well indeed.

                1. Anonymous Coward
                  Anonymous Coward

                  Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

                  > Suggesting easy visas for travel for the one, particular favoured ethnic group that I happen to belong to

                  FTFY. Funny how easy it is to miss the fundamental criticism when your only defence depends upon entirely missing it.

                  > Conflating easy visa travel with "hordes of [insert group of your choice] at the gate".

                  Very cheap and dirty attempt to smear by associating me with phrases and words that are nothing like what I said.

                  And remember, you were the one who argued that a [group of your choice] should be allowed easily into the UK while apparently not extending that argument to everyone else.

                  Why was that?

                  > gammon

                  I didn't vote Leave. How about you?

                  1. Anonymous Coward
                    Anonymous Coward

                    Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

                    I didn't vote Leave. How about you?

                    Well done old chap. So your loyalty lies where, exactly? Voluteered for military service? That would be the gold standard for loyalty, would it not?

                    1. Anonymous Coward
                      Anonymous Coward

                      Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

                      Nice distraction from the fact you haven't tried to deny the accusations of favouritism towards your own particular ethnic group.

                      1. Anonymous Coward
                        Anonymous Coward

                        Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

                        You need to spend some time contemplating why you are making such an accusation, my friend.

                        Yes, all us ethnics eh? Devious indeed. One big homogeneous entity. But seriously, please do tell me which "ethnic group" you think I belong to?

                        1. Anonymous Coward
                          Anonymous Coward

                          Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

                          How odd that it's only now- *after* you've lost the argument and need a distraction- that you've suddenly decided to nitpick use of the word "ethnic" in a manner that suggests you're going to use it as an excuse to trip me up.

                          Hmm.

                          > Yes, all us ethnics eh? Devious indeed. One big homogeneous entity.

                          Still trying to shove words into my mouth to distract from your shameless favouritism?

                          1. J.G.Harston Silver badge

                            Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

                            Always nice to see to anonymous posters rage-fighting each other. ;)

                            1. Strahd Ivarius Silver badge

                              Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

                              I just proves that they are both bloody foreigners!

                              A proper Brit will always stand by his word.

                              1. Korev Silver badge
                                Pirate

                                Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

                                I just proves that they are both bloody foreigners!

                                A proper Brit will always stand by his word.

                                I know dualling has been banned, I think the anonymous cowards need to meet at dawn to satisfy their honour!

                                1. Peter2 Silver badge

                                  Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

                                  I know dualling has been banned, I think the anonymous cowards need to meet at dawn to satisfy their honour!

                                  Dualling hasn't been banned; you can still play dual play split screen games so people could meet to satisfy their honour in Goldeneye, Perfect Dark or whatever people are playing split screen versus games these days.

                                  Duelling has been banned though, so you couldn't go out for breakfast for two, pistols and then coffee for one.

                                  1. Korev Silver badge
                                    Pint

                                    Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

                                    Thank you Sir!

                                    That didn't look right as I typed it and that's why :-)

            2. Anonymous Coward
              Anonymous Coward

              Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

              >And I'd pit my Britishness against yours any day of the week, pal.

              I take it that you have allowed your daughter to be brought up "British" and thus wear the clothes she wishes to wear, go to university and to marry whomsoever she wishes...

              PS. I am the grandson of immigrants. I have no interest in the country/society my grandparents left, but then they left that society in circa 1900.

              1. Anonymous Coward
                Anonymous Coward

                Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

                exactly! I'm a son of an Indian Immigrant and I have ZERO interest in more immigration from the "motherland". I voted Remain because it would make life easier for me to get a job in teh EU, something I Can't do now.

        4. wigger

          Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

          It should be hard for all of them..

        5. Roland6 Silver badge

          Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

          And some other communities voted for BREXIT because they were told it would reduce immigration as the UK could take back control of its borders...

          Targeted campaigning/advertising works until the differing target audiences compare notes...

      2. Ah well

        Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

        Like you really care about NHS workers, fruit pickers, HGV drivers etc, in fact all have had ther wages artifically supressed by the jobs market being flooded with cheap EU labour.

        Even your salary is being supressed.

        I suppose its okay since your child is not a fruit picker..

        1. Anonymous Coward
          Anonymous Coward

          Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

          Hello day-old single-issue handle. This must be the high-wage non-EU labour you're referring to:

          Revealed: Indonesian workers on UK farm ‘at risk of debt bondage’

          ‘I’m ashamed’: working in UK leaves fruit pickers from Indonesia in debt

          1. Doctor Syntax Silver badge

            Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

            "Hello day-old single-issue handle."

            It's amazing they don't realise we can spot them a mile off.

            1. Anonymous Coward
              Anonymous Coward

              Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

              I can only assume they're not from the lot that were sent off to become sunflower fertiliser in Ukraine, then.

            2. RegGuy1 Silver badge
              FAIL

              Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

              I'm sure someone once said brexiters were not the sharpest tools in the box.

              For example, my father voted for brexit because 'we won the war.' He knew absolutely nowt about the EU, other than it was, of course, shit. Shortly after he died. Thanks dad.

              1. Anonymous Coward
                Anonymous Coward

                Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

                I love my father-in-law, he at the time was a big fan of Farage and pro "taking back control" Brexit; now he will flatly deny ever being for and voting for Brexit...

          2. wigger

            Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

            And the spanish argricultural industry is run off the backs of illegal migrant labour living in plastic townships.

            Those fruit pickers that your are so fond of weren't even paid the Uk minimum wage, the food producers used a romanian agency that pays the workers at the local Romanian rate and shipped them into the uk. But you knew that.

            1. Anonymous Coward
              Anonymous Coward

              Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

              You're going to have to come up with a source for that, new guy.

              1. Roland6 Silver badge

                Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

                Suggest you look at the history of the UK's Gangmasters (Licensing) Act 2004 ...

                Don't know about Spain etc.

        2. Anonymous Coward
          Anonymous Coward

          Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

          The cheap EU labour has gone for a few years now. The supposedly artificially suppressed wages in the sectors you mention have not gone up. Explain. Perhaps you've noticed NHS workers (and others) have been forced to strike to get pay rises that try to match the cost of living.

          1. Jellied Eel Silver badge

            Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

            Perhaps you've noticed NHS workers (and others) have been forced to strike to get pay rises that try to match the cost of living.

            Perhaps we have issues with NHS, schools and pretty much everything because our population has increased faster than the services? Perhaps cost of living has increased due to the demand for housing, due to the population increasing faster than the housing stock. And every illegal immigrant is entitled to free housing, healthcare, education. And of course our cost of living increase is largely down to our insane energy policy, which means the NHS hires sustainability consultants rather than medical ones.

            Pay rises just means inflation goes up, reducing inflation means we need a government that actively tries to reduce the cost of living, not increase it. I still think the best way is to introduce performance related pay for government. So they're paid on an -RPI basis. Then when RPI is negative and costs fall, they get a pay rise. Otherwise inflation is the inevitable result of indexing the price of essentials, like energy. Keeping prices high just guarantees higher margins and profits.

            1. Anonymous Coward
              Anonymous Coward

              Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

              our population has increased faster than the services?

              Easy solution if it has... spend the increased taxes collected from the larger working population on increased services.

              And every illegal immigrant is entitled to free housing, healthcare, education.

              Really? I thought they were entitled to the hostile environment which denies those services and deportation.

              1. Jellied Eel Silver badge

                Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

                Easy solution if it has... spend the increased taxes collected from the larger working population on increased services.

                That assumes the population is working, and paying taxes. Plus there's an added challenge with migrant workers sending money offshore to families rather than spending it here, and paying VAT on stuff. Which is fair enough for the migrants. But then if the families accompany the migrant to the UK, it places more strain on services.

                Really? I thought they were entitled to the hostile environment which denies those services and deportation.

                Nope, we have lawyers preventing that. We have many people trying desperately to escape the hostile environment of the EU, and especially France after all.

                But that's a different kind of migration. It gets a bit more complicated with India thanks to misguided map drawing and moral obligations. But the general idea is skilled migrants can support themselves, contribute to the economy and support any dependents, providing there's reciprocity. But this is also a challenge for India because of the good'ol brain drain, and the NHS (and private medicine like GPs) poaching Indian medical professionals to come work in the UK. Especially when thanks to India's booming economy, living in London can be cheaper than living in Mumbai. Then on the business side, India is extremely protective of it's market and discourages foreign companies who want to play the usual cheap labour/lax regulation and siphon the profits out game. Which again is reasonable given the way India's resources have been exploited in the past.

                1. Anonymous Coward
                  Anonymous Coward

                  Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

                  But the general idea is skilled migrants can support themselves, contribute to the economy and support any dependents, providing there's reciprocity.

                  So... just like the EU then.

                2. RegGuy1 Silver badge

                  Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

                  That assumes the population is working, and paying taxes. Plus there's an added challenge with migrant workers sending money offshore to families rather than spending it here.

                  * First, nearly one in five are over 65, with the proportion growing every year. And it is well know that NHS care for the elderly is far more expensive than for younger people. With fewer and fewer workers how is this sustainable?

                  * Second, public services should be paid for through taxation, not borrowing. The problem we have is everyone wants everyone else to pay more tax. We all should, but the richer can pay more. Of course they don't, because taxes on dividends and capital gains, for instance, are lower than other income. Funny that.

                  * Third, imagine you have gone out to the Middle East, and found a wonderful job that paid shed loads. How would you feel if you couldn't send any of that money back to the UK? This argument about sending money 'offshore' is just racism.

                  * ...

                  1. Anonymous Coward
                    Anonymous Coward

                    Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

                    >* Second, public services should be paid for through taxation, not borrowing. The problem we have is everyone wants everyone else to pay more tax. We all should, but the richer can pay more. Of course they don't, because taxes on dividends and capital gains, for instance, are lower than other income. Funny that.

                    All government expenditure is paid through borrowing. Taxation is the process used to influence spending decisions (sugar tax, higher tax on polluting vehicles, etc) and control inflation through "destroying" the money that the government creates through borrowing. But you are right, the government don't want to increase the tax that they - and their donors - pay.

              2. SundogUK Silver badge

                Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

                The population is rising but the working population isn't. That is the core problem.

              3. The register distorts comments

                Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

                You're assuming all of them are paying taxes and/or nett contributors to the system, so an immigrant on minimum wage with a spouse and more than 1 kid will make no nett contribution to the system and will in fact take out more than they contribute.

                They will also tie up housing, healthcare, education etc.

                1. Anonymous Coward
                  Anonymous Coward

                  Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

                  How many new handles? That's one bitter xenophobe working overtime.

                  Even a most cursory Google search shows this:

                  2021 - Impact of Immigration on UK Economy

                  2018 - The Fiscal Impact of Immigration on the UK

                  2014 - The Fiscal Effects of Immigration to the UK

                  2013 - Recent waves of immigrants to the UK have contributed far more in taxes than they received in benefits

                  What are the downsides that are mentioned? A government reluctant to plan ahead and match infrastructure provision to population. You can insert the "careful mate, that foreigner wants your cookie" cartoon here.

                  1. WorkShyEU

                    Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

                    Quoting far left think tanks.....

                    Whats that quote about statistics and lies

                    1. Anonymous Coward
                      Anonymous Coward

                      Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

                      Whats that quote about statistics and lies

                      You find them on the side of a big red bus with party clowns in front of it ... ?

                      And is it any better than parroting Tufton St., Hmm..?

                  2. Roland6 Silver badge

                    Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

                    All of those reports are deeply flawed.

                    For example add in the housing and infrastructure provision and you negate the fiscal benefit. ie. the economic case for largescale immigration as we have witnessed over the last 25 years is at best marginal.

                    1. Peter2 Silver badge

                      Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

                      the economic case for largescale immigration as we have witnessed over the last 25 years is at best marginal.

                      You appear to be assuming that everybody in the economy is impacted equally, and everybody is interested in the overall benefit to the economy and the overall detriment rather than the effect of the policy on them.

                      The practical reality is that any policy (including high levels of immigration) have benefits and detriments to different people. For instance, if you started buying a house 25 years ago then the average house that you bought for £65,475 is now worth £305,731 as a result of housing supply not increasing as fast as demand, and by economic fundamentals the price rose.

                      The generation since then have had to deal with the property prices exploding as a result of the immigration, while their wages have also fell as a result of additional labour supply rigging the market in favour of the older generations who quite liked the idea of cheap staff in hospitality, building etc as that's a benefit to them, while they didn't face any of the detriments from competition like lower wages, having passed the early point in their careers, and ladders like "training" and "career progression" were pulled up behind them as they are required to retain staff, and who cares about that if there is a permenant surplus of desperate labour willing to work for tuppence? On top of that, that same generation who bought their house in the late 90's had to pay basically no interest for the last decade of their mortgage.

                      The fundamental problem which we've now well and truly got with the economy is that almost everybody over 50 is relatively very well off, and those under 50 are reduced to grinding poverty by being expected to pay house prices that are 4.6x higher than 20 years ago on basically the same wages, while paying higher prices for electricity and gas, higher costs to travel to work and higher costs for food, while also paying for their own personal development to be suitable for anything beyond basic labour. Which of course suits the older generations as they can help their kids out, because they are well off. Assuming they only had a couple of kids so the money is reasonably concentrated.

                      The stark reality is that the only people with any significant disposable income in the economy are the over 50's, and that's going to mean very bad things for the economy since a lack of customers is likely to mean impending unemployment.

                      1. Roland6 Silver badge

                        Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

                        >You appear to be assuming that everybody in the economy is impacted equally

                        Err? no.

                        >"For instance, if you started buying a house 25 years ago then the average house that you bought for £65,475 is now worth £305,731"

                        An example of assuming everybody is impacted equally... It is still possible to buy a house for under £30k, however, whether you would want to live in those areas...

                        Similar applies to all those "immigration is (economically) good" reports, dig into the data and you will find the data that skews the figures. For many this is the period 2006~2010 where there were many French and German nationals working in London's financial services sector, their incomes (and thus economic contribution) were so large (yes the financial crisis might have been happening, but the banks were paying out huge bonuses - mostly earnt pre-crash).

                        Similarly, we can dismiss all those reports who specifically note that workers from EU countries paid more in taxes than they got in benefits. The EU granted freedom of movement of workers (not benefit claimants), as noted above the main destination for highly paid EU nationals was the City of London's financial sector - not a sector known for paying wages that need to be topped up by benefits...

                        Hence why I said the economic case was at best marginal.

                2. FirstTangoInParis Bronze badge

                  Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

                  So, from personal experience, people coming to UK as refugees seeking asylum are legally not allowed to work while their claims are considered. During this time they are housed by the Home Office and given small weekly allowance for food and clothes. Only after they have Leave to Remain are they allowed to work.

                  1. CrazyOldCatMan Silver badge

                    Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

                    Only after they have Leave to Remain are they allowed to work

                    Not entirely true - they are allowed to work after two years - irrespective of whether they have LTR or not (it can take 3-4 years for the review process). Also, the allowance they get varies according to their accomodation - in a hotel it's really small (all meals are provided) whereas those in a shared or individual house have a larger allowance so that they can buy food and the like.

            2. Anonymous Coward
              Anonymous Coward

              Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

              Yup. Immigrants are to blame for everything. You are Nigel Farage* and I claim my £5.

              * Or anyone from the batshit crazy wings of the Conservative Party.

              1. Doctor Syntax Silver badge

                Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

                Poor old Nige might not be able to pay you - he doesn't meet Coutts' wealth standards to keep a bank account there. Maybe someone will have to organise a whip-round for him.

                1. gandalfcn Silver badge

                  Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

                  Poor old Nige mtold lots of porkies about Coutts' wealth standards and other things, but Brexiteers somehow still refuse to accept he is nothing more than a lying con artist.

              2. gandalfcn Silver badge

                Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

                'Or anyone from the batshit crazy wings of the Conservative Party.' They're pretty mainstream nowadays, which could explain their low ratings.

            3. Doctor Syntax Silver badge

              Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

              "Perhaps we have issues with NHS, schools and pretty much everything because our population has increased faster than the services? Perhaps cost of living has increased due to the demand for housing, due to the population increasing faster than the housing stock."

              You're looking at an issue which has a lot of dimensions to it. Population is increasing partly because we're living longer, something which I personally can only approve of. It's the ageing end of the population which has increased demand for NHS services.

              Increased demand for housing stock is partly due to more people living singly, either not forming relationships or those relationships breaking up so there are more but smaller households.

              The increased number of singletons, and the smaller family sizes for those having children means that the birth rate has been low for some time and is now actually below replacement rate so that there are fewer locally-born recruits to provide services - including staffing the NHS and it certainly hasn't helped that we haven't been training enough staff for the NHS for years.

              1. Anonymous Coward
                Anonymous Coward

                Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

                For the issue with housing, there is a perfect solution: the communal flats!

                It did wonder after the Glorious Revolution of 1917.

            4. R Soul Silver badge

              Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

              You're just about wrong on everything here.

              The cost of living has almost nothing to do with the size of the population or its growth rate. The rises in interest rates (and therefore mortgages) is a direct consequence of government policy. The madness of Trussonomics (that mercifully short-lived government's policy) made the cost of living crisis worse. We're still dealing with the legacy of that macroeconomic lunacy. Energy prices have rocketed, partly because of Putin's invasion of Ukraine, but also because government policy pegs the price of electricity to wholesale gas price on international markets. Housing costs are going through the roof (excuse the pun) because it's government policy to build fewer houses than meets demand. Food prices have gone up because of increased energy costs, worse exchange rates, higher transport/import duties as well as Brexit. These factors are largely a result of government policy failures too.

              Inflation is not the same as the cost of living. Inflation is caused by having too much money in the economy chasing after too few goods or services. In the UK, that was turbo-charged by the government printing and borrowing staggering amounts of money during the pandemic. And Trusstime. Inflation's got fuck all to do with "indexing to the price of energy". Whatever that means.

              Reducing the cost of living has nothing to do with inflation either. The cost of living doesn't necessarily go down when inflation is under control. If you don't have enough money to pay your bills (food. energy, housing, etc) it simply doesn't matter what the inflation rate is. The cost of living is simply too high.

              No matter. Just blame all of this shit-show on immigrants. It's much easier than facing up to reality. Or accepting the consequences of self-inflicted wounds of 20+ years of stunningly incompetent government and economic mismanagement.

              1. Jellied Eel Silver badge

                Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

                The cost of living has almost nothing to do with the size of the population or its growth rate. The rises in interest rates (and therefore mortgages) is a direct consequence of government policy.

                Uhuh.. So it costs the same to service a population of 60m as it does for 70m? There are no additional costs or demands on schools, hospitals, transportation, housing costs, water or energy suppy etc etc..

                Energy prices have rocketed, partly because of Putin's invasion of Ukraine, but also because government policy pegs the price of electricity to wholesale gas price on international markets.

                So government policy, which being goverment policy, government could correct. But the problem started long before the UK and EU decided to sanction itself. I mean Russia. Insist on 'investing' in 'renewables' which are intermittent, unreliable and expensive. So the UK's wasted something like £200bn doing this so far. Because they're weather dependent, when we get weather systems like we've had for the last couple of weeks, there's no wind. So we had to invest in gas as well to provide backup. So the rush to go 'Green' increased the dependency on gas. Electricity bills have been rising long before we decided to ban ourselves from buying Russian gas (which we didn't anyway) and not exploit our own natural resources for energy security. Energy is an input cost to pretty much everything, so as that's increased in price (not necessarily cost), inflation and the cost of living have increased. An increased population just increases demand, and makes the supply problem worse. There's no incentive to increase supply or reduce prices because that hits profits.

                India, you may notice has not wasted much money on 'renewables' because it's smart enough to know that relying on pre-industrial forms of generation is an insane policy that our ancestors dumped at the first opportunity.

                Housing costs are going through the roof (excuse the pun) because it's government policy to build fewer houses than meets demand.

                The government doesn't build houses.

                Food prices have gone up because of increased energy costs, worse exchange rates, higher transport/import duties as well as Brexit

                Yes, energy costs have played a big part in making UK produce more expensive. Exchange rates, less so GBP's at $1.27 vs (from memory) $1.18 at Brexit when the world was supposed to end. In theory, the UK no longer has to follow EU agricultural policy, and farmers are still waiting for the bonfire of red tape. Transport costs are in part fuel related as a result of duty and taxs. But we're also now free from EU quotas and can import produce from say, Australia, New Zealand or the Commonwealth in general.. who's economies suffered a lot when we decided to join the 'Common Market'. The government is also in control of it's own import duties and taxes.

                Inflation is not the same as the cost of living. Inflation is caused by having too much money in the economy chasing after too few goods or services.

                M1 and M2 are aspects, which were not helped by QE and free money. But there are other elements, like wage and price inflation. Or insane policies that price 'renewables' based on the price of gas, because wind and solar use soo much gas as an input cost.. Handy for generating windfall profits though.

                Inflation's got fuck all to do with "indexing to the price of energy". Whatever that means.

                It means you know nothing about the energy market, or the CfD regime. On the one handy, the 'renewables' lobby tells us their product is getting ever cheaper, on the other, their CfDs are indexed linked. So if they're right, and their costs are really falling, indexed contracts are just easy profits. If they're right, they should accept an RPI or CPI- adjustment to reflect the falling cost and encourage efficiency savings.

                No matter. Just blame all of this shit-show on immigrants. It's much easier than facing up to reality.

                Nope, I pointed out that they're part of the problem. Skilled workers add value to the economy by doing useful work. Non-workers just cost the economy. Trade was an exclusive (in)competence of the EU, which means trade policy and agreements had to be negotiated between 28 member states with vastly different economies and economic interests. Now, they're bilateral deals between the UK and <whoever>. The UK can negotiate (or try to negotiate) a deal that's best for the UK, not best for Germany, France, Poland etc etc. Any incompetence in those deals will be exclusively the UK's problem.

                1. gandalfcn Silver badge

                  Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

                  JE spouting more bollox. As usual.

                  1. Jellied Eel Silver badge

                    Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

                    JE spouting more bollox. As usual.

                    Ah, an ad hom attack that adds nothing to the conversation. I guess from your name, you believe in magic, whereas I have the bollox to face reality and state a point of view.

                    So back to magic. If the UK had remained in the EU, how would the government the UK people elected to represent them negotiate a trade deal with India, that benefitted the UK? Same with general foreign policy, or making decisions that are in the UK's interest when they're areas the EU's asserted exclusive (in)competency? Remember the fuss and whining from the EU when we negotiated and got the cough vaccine before the EU managed to do so? Or the deal Ursula von der Crazy negotiated on the entire EU's behalf?

                    1. Anonymous Coward
                      Anonymous Coward

                      Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

                      Your delusion is off the scale. Since leaving the EU the UK has not negotiated any trade deals that benefit the UK.

                      And there's no trade deal with India: https://publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm5803/cmselect/cmintrade/77/report.html

                      1. Jellied Eel Silver badge

                        Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

                        Your delusion is off the scale. Since leaving the EU the UK has not negotiated any trade deals that benefit the UK.

                        Not me guv. I refer m'learned friend to say, this-

                        https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AUKUS

                        The pact also includes cooperation on advanced cyber mechanisms, artificial intelligence and autonomy, quantum technologies, undersea capabilities, hypersonic and counter-hypersonic, electronic warfare, innovation and information sharing. The pact will focus on military capability, separating it from the Five Eyes intelligence-sharing alliance that also includes New Zealand and Canada.

                        So a pretty good tech-based trade deal that had the advantage of annoying the French, who'd been annoying Australia for bolloxing up their submarine program. Also has many potential side benefits for Australia via stuff like SMRs or general civil nuclear power. Australia after all produces a fair amount of uranium. Plus it has the potential to reduce the cost of our Astute replacement. But not a deal that could have been done with our Commonwealth partners, because France-

                        President of the European Commission, Ursula von der Leyen, who told CNN that "one of our member states has been treated in a way that is not acceptable. ... We want to know what happened and why."

                        Ursula rarely knows what's happening, or why..

                        And there's no trade deal with India:

                        .. Yet. I'm also guessing you've never tried doing business in India, because if you had, you'd know the negotiating process tends to take time.

                        1. Anonymous Coward
                          Anonymous Coward

                          Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

                          To perform in a tech deal, you need to have industries in that domain.

                          Unfortunately, all of them are now US...

                          1. Jellied Eel Silver badge

                            Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

                            To perform in a tech deal, you need to have industries in that domain.

                            Unfortunately, all of them are now US..

                            Nope. The UK does still have tech industries, like Rolls Royce, makers of the finest submersible kettles. Or BAE, which ok, is in the US but mainly for procurement reasons. Or there's a bunch of automotive and space industries..

                            Or for deals in general-

                            https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Free_trade_agreements_of_the_United_Kingdom

                            Some of those are kinda novated across from the EU days, some are new.

                        2. R Soul Silver badge

                          AUKUS

                          1. This is an agreement about weaponry. It isn't a trade deal. These are when nation states reduce or eliminate tariffs between them, simplify customs arrangements, agree common standards for goods and services, etc. Which is a world away from "cooperation on advanced cyber mechanisms" and a long list of vague or meaningless buzzwords.

                          2. Snatching a sub contract from the French is all very well. However it'll have a minimal impact on our economy or the balance of payments. We're not going to reboot our economy or fix our horrific and structural balance of payments deficit by flogging a handful of subs to the Aussies.

                          3. Your references to "the potential to reduce the cost of our Astute replacement" is a desperate, flailing attempt to clutch at straws. Every MoD procurement turns out to be vastly over budget and years/decades late. The Astute replacement - now there's an oxymoron! - will be no different. BTW I'm a middle aged, unfit fat bastard who has the potential to win Olympic gold in the 100 metres. That doesn't mean it's going to happen.

                2. WorkShyEU

                  Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

                  So when do you stop building houses??

                  Always attcking the symptoms of the problem rather than the cause..

                3. heyrick Silver badge

                  Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

                  "So government policy, which being goverment policy, government could correct."

                  A competent government could take a crack at correcting the problems, but this particular government is perfectly happy with nurses going to food banks while lowering the tax burden of the wealthy.

                  So, no, the current government has no plans to make any changes other than fucking the little guy just that tiny bit harder. Bastards, the lot of them.

                  1. Roland6 Silver badge

                    Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

                    >A competent government could take a crack at correcting the problems

                    Not been one of these at Westminster in far too many decades...

              2. Vincent Ballard

                Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

                > Food prices have gone up because of increased energy costs, worse exchange rates, higher transport/import duties as well as Brexit. These factors are largely a result of government policy failures too.

                From the general tone of your post I think it's unintentional, but this seems to imply that the first three factors are independent of Brexit. Brexit was a major factor in the value of the pound dropping, and is surely relevant to the duties as well.

            5. gandalfcn Silver badge

              Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

              What a load of untrue fascist propaganda.

            6. Anonymous Coward
              Anonymous Coward

              Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

              >And every illegal immigrant is entitled to free housing, healthcare, education.

              Illegal immigrants, by bloody definition, are illegal and are not entitled to anything. There are an estimated 800,000 - 1.2million illegal immigrants who arrived with a valid visa and we don't know if they actually left. The largest group of these comes from the Indian subcontinent and many live with their families (who are here legally). When these are identified, they are processed for deportation.

              What you are doing is conflating illegal immigrants with asylum seekers - who get 1/2 of bugger all until their claim is processed (housing - usually a single room - and £45/week on an Aspen card). Anyone, from any country, has the right to claim asylum at any country that is signed up to the UN Refugee Convention (UK is). So, you could go and claim asylum anywhere if you wanted to. The receiving government has the right to process that claim and accept or reject it. Our government has spent the last 13 years breaking the processing system to manufacture outrage so they can convince people to vote for them to fix something they have deliberately broken.

          2. The register distorts comments

            Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

            Thay havent left, theyre still here silly...

            1. Anonymous Coward
              Anonymous Coward

              Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

              Needless to say, wrong.

              The impact of Brexit on the UK labour market: an early assessment:

              By September 2022, there was a significant shortfall of around 460,000 EU-origin workers, partly but not wholly compensated for by an increase of about 130,000 non-EU workers.

              1. J.G.Harston Silver badge

                Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

                By September 2022, there was a significant shortfall of around 460,000 EU-origin workers, partly but not wholly compensated for by an increase of about 130,000 non-EU workers.

                And there's 1.3million unemployed: link.

                1. heyrick Silver badge

                  Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

                  It's similar here in France. Lots of unemployed, but also lots of jobs. The thing is, low end wages are shit and one may be economically better off not working once you take into account things like childcare, petrol prices, car maintenance, etc.

          3. CrazyOldCatMan Silver badge

            Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

            The cheap EU labour has gone for a few years now

            My recent incarceration^W stay in hospital (courtesy of a pain-spasming old cat and a panic-bite where two canines (upper and lower) went into my let hand thumb joint - 2 stints in hospital, two operations to clean out the joint and enough intravenous antibiotics to float a small rowing boat..) showed me what a fairly mixed environment the nurses were - about 30% Indian subcontinent & Nepal, about 30% African and the other 40% various Europeans (mostly British but also Irish, Spanish and a couple of Germans).

            In general it seemed to work - the ward had them paired off so that ones with more limited English were partnered with someone fluent that also spoke their language.

            The ones with the best English skills? Undoubtedly those from Zimbabwe and South Africa.

            1. heyrick Silver badge
              Thumb Up

              Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

              "Undoubtedly those from Zimbabwe and South Africa."

              Used to work with both when I was a Care Assistant in England. Lovely people, and plenty of interesting stories from their different cultures.

          4. Roland6 Silver badge

            Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

            >"The cheap EU labour has gone for a few years now. The supposedly artificially suppressed wages in the sectors you mention have not gone up. Explain.The cheap EU labour has gone for a few years now. The supposedly artificially suppressed wages in the sectors you mention have not gone up. Explain."

            Too many years of institutionalised conservative thinking. Wage costs were kept down for many years by importing cheap labour, thus low wages in some sectors became the norm.

            Cheap labour as you note dries up, first reaction is to increase the workload on remaining staff and only begrudgingly make token payments under duress.

            Second reaction is to lobby government to facilitate the restoration of cheap labour imports and moan about how UK residents are lazy and wanting too much money.

            After a few years you get to where the UK is now, "ancient" technology and working practises, too few workers and wages way out of line with reality. As the current government are slowly beginning to realise there are no quick fixes, a change in mindset and investment in people over many years (15 years in the case of the recently announced £36 bn NHS investment) is the solution.

        3. gandalfcn Silver badge

          Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

          Nothing artificial about it at all, for example seasonal jobs have been common for decades, long predating the EU. Ever heard of strawberry dodgers?

          https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-wales-49019716

          NHS conditions were poor because of Tory policy / wilful underfunding.

          'Even your salary is being supressed' By powerful corporations and Tory policy.

      3. wigger

        Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

        Why didnt you engage in a career in Fruit picking,

        I heard it pays very well and you can afford a house in Chelsea with the generous salary the role attracts.

        1. Anonymous Coward
          Anonymous Coward

          Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

          Black currant harvest season is starting soon, if I am not mistaken.

          Want some information about picking?

          Contact Lucozade Ribena.

    2. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

      Brexit - every vote for it was from a useful idiot transferring power to a bunch of useless idiots.

      1. Ah well

        Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

        So you prefer the useless idiots in the EU then.. yet you're still here.

        1. Anonymous Coward
          Anonymous Coward

          Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

          "So you prefer the useless idiots in the EU then.. yet you're still here."

          I'm not, ditched the UK as soon as the Brexit farce became reality, worked in Germany and Netherlands so far, and at least their useless idiots get stuff done instead of trying to sell off anything public that's not nailed down, or tax cuts for the rich and dodgy deals for their mates down the pub.

          No potholes in the roads in the EU countries I've been to (last time in the UK thought I'd been accidentally flown to one of the more isolated Greek islands on a bad weather day), as well as public transport that works and charges reasonable fares, my last council tax bill FOR THE YEAR was around 300 Euros.

          If this is the consequence of having "useless EU idiots", I'll take them any day over the incompetent chinless inbred Eton rejects the UK is seemingly lumbered with!

          1. Hee Hee

            Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

            I suppose thats what happens when you stood idly by and allowed the millions in that availed themselves of everything on offer because it was working for you.

            No other Eu country provides a free at point of service healthcare system, how much is your Health insurance per year in your new home?

            Of course with so many subscribers any system is going to get overloaded and degraded and if they are taking more out of the system than they contribute then yeah its going to get worse.

            And if the EU was so great why are all the boats still coming why have so many from the EU stayed?

            Actually selling off of public assets cheaply to corporations is an EU policy called "Market Liberalization", they tried it in Ireland when they tried to privatize the State owned water company but the decent Irish fought back and won it via a referendum.

            After the EU is all about the Big Love isnt it. Enjoy your your new age cult.

            1. Anonymous Coward
              Anonymous Coward

              Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

              No other Eu country provides a free at point of service healthcare system, how much is your Health insurance per year in your new home?

              Couldn't be more wrong if you tried:

              Health Insurance & Healthcare System in Europe

              Hint. The text you are looking for in the table is "Mostly free with the exception of small service fees", like the NHS.

              they tried it in Ireland when they tried to privatize the State owned water company but the decent Irish fought back and won it via a referendum.

              So there you go, an EU country can have state-owned water companies. Also happens in Spain. There are others but I think I've hit my search quota today for trolls.

            2. heyrick Silver badge

              Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

              "how much is your Health insurance per year in your new home?"

              Here in France, 70% is free (*) and medical top up covers the rest. My policy was about €25/month but a recentish law change means that I have to take the policy my employer offers, and they cover about 2/3rds of it.

              * - major things like cancer are fully covered by the Sécu.

              "And if the EU was so great why are all the boats still coming"

              Probably because the UK is a bit of a soft touch, not to mention notoriously incompetent. I think the Home Office wants to dump all of them in Rwanda because it's not so important if they lose people when they're in a different country in a different continent.

              "why have so many from the EU stayed?"

              Probably the same reason I've stayed in France - it's where I've set up my life. This is where I call home now. For them, they probably think of the UK as home.

              "Actually selling off of public assets cheaply to corporations is an EU policy"

              Yeah. Whatever. Thatcher was doing it before the EU even existed.

              "Enjoy your your new age cult."

              The EU isn't perfect, far from it. But I'd rather them than the fucking Tories.

          2. CrazyOldCatMan Silver badge

            Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

            No potholes in the roads in the EU countries I've been to

            Not been to Italy then? Riding over the Alps from Austia to Italy is a shock in terms of road conditions:

            Austia - well tarmaced roads, proper armco to stop you going over the edge if you make a mistake. Good signage.

            Italy - poor, uneven, potholed roads, no armco or signage.

        2. Anonymous Coward
          Anonymous Coward

          Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

          I'm the original AC you replied to as opposed to the other AC who's in the EU. Yes, I do prefer the useless idiots in the EU. To answer your question you'll have to say where "here" is, but as I'm also in the EU the answer is probably going to be that I'm not "here".

        3. gandalfcn Silver badge

          Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

          "So you prefer the useless idiots in the EU then" Now your 'unelected bureaucrat' lire has been exposed you change to another patent lie. The only country doing worse than the UK is Putin's SSR.

    3. JimmyPage
      Mushroom

      Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

      If only there had been a concerted effort to warn you that any "promises" were a load of horseshit.

      Oh, hang on, there were.

      And you still voted for Brexit ?

      I hope you don't work in any role where critical thinking is needed.

      1. gandalfcn Silver badge

        Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

        Mr Gumby from Monty Python springs mind

        https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MrCPIrs90eg

    4. Red Or Zed

      Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

      A bunch of proven liars told obvious lies. The only thing missing were hats & badges labelled "LIAR".

      Not sure how it could have been clearer.

      1. Ah well

        Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

        Like Blair and Lib Dems...

        1. Anonymous Coward
          Anonymous Coward

          Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

          That's different. They didn't lie, they just made promises that couldn't be kept but they made those promises in good faith because the alternative was letting people unfit to govern win elections.

          1. J.G.Harston Silver badge

            Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

            Ah, so people shouldn't be allowed to vote for who they want to, only allowed to vote for those that the self-appointed Great And Good have deemed you should only be allowed to vote for. Just remind me what a North Korean ballot paper looks like....

            1. Strahd Ivarius Silver badge
              Facepalm

              Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

              No, what he said was that Blair made a bunch of lies to avoid the bloody incompetent Tories to come back in power.

              The Tories made better lies the next time, so went to power anyway.

        2. call-me-mark

          Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

          The difference is that Blair has been out of power since 2007 and the Lib Dems have never formed a government on their own (I'm half expecting a retort about the 1906 election here) but the Brexit liars are still in power now. So what is your point?

    5. R Soul Silver badge

      Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

      "We were promised easier/more visa for Indians"...

      The Brexiteers knowingly promised all sorts of things that were utter bollocks. Too many gullible/stupid people believed those lies.

      As for your complaint about visas for Indians, get in the queue. I'm still waiting for the extra billions the Brexiteers promised for the NHS. IIRC that one was even on the side of a bus. Then there was "the easiest trade deal in history" that hasn't happened yet. Or the promises of pain-free travel between the UK and EU/EEA. Or...

      1. Yet Another Anonymous coward Silver badge

        Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

        But you got nearly blue passports so it wasn't all lies

        1. gandalfcn Silver badge

          Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

          Which could have existed anyway. So still a lie.

        2. Anonymous Coward
          Anonymous Coward

          Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

          And UK industry is in such a shape after Thatcher that the contract went to the EU...

          1. Roland6 Silver badge

            Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

            > the contract went to the EU...

            With post-CoViD PPE scandal hindsight, it does seem strange that this contract actually went to a company actually capable of delivering...

            >And UK industry is in such a shape after Thatcher

            The existing UK-based supplier lost because of price. Which suggests the problem isn't Thatcher but that the Conservatives still favour supposedly cheaper overseas businesses to the detriment of UK industry and then complain the welfare budget is too big because the British are lazy and overpaid, whilst awarding themselves a bigger slice of the tax take pot...

      2. The register distorts comments

        Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

        They already spent that money on the NHS, stop being a parrot. But we have already saved £191 billion by not being in the EU, im sorry thats not the news youd like to hear

        1. Azium

          Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

          That's a lie, stop repeating the tory propaganda. £350m extra every week, according to the bus. This extra money has not been spent on the NHS.

          1. ArrZarr Silver badge
            Unhappy

            Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

            As much as I hate to side with the raving lunatics that still seem to think that Britain still rules the world and therefor the UK can do better without the EU, the wording on the bus was "We send the EU £350 million a week. Let's fund the NHS instead".

            It's evocative rhetoric but through luck or intention, does not mean that the NHS will get a single penny more.

            To me, this means that about the only thing that camp leave didn't lie about was that they never promised to put that £350M/week into the NHS, they just implied it. Very strongly.

            1. Yet Another Anonymous coward Silver badge

              Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

              As well as funding the NHS, that £350 million//week was going to replace the Eu farming subsidies and the Eu grants to poor regions and be invested in infrastructure and pay for tax cuts.

              It was going to really work hard that £350 million

            2. Anonymous Coward
              Anonymous Coward

              Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

              They knew exactly what they were doing and said that knowing damn well how it would be interpreted by the majority of people. You're cutting those weasels way too much slack they don't remotely deserve.

              1. ArrZarr Silver badge

                Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

                No. They're politicians. That lot especially are the utter scum of the earth, but to a cynical bitch like me it was immediately obvious from their wording that they were "merely presenting an option" as to what we could do with all that money.

        2. gandalfcn Silver badge

          Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

          "They already spent that money on the NHS" Lie.

          " But we have already saved £191 billion by not being in the EU" Lie

        3. Anonymous Coward
          Anonymous Coward

          Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

          And that money is now safely secured in a tropical paradise (*), outside the reach of those hungry Brits...

          (*) or perhaps in Jersey, that will be soon a tropical paradise with global warming on the rise.

    6. wigger

      Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

      No we weren't...

    7. J. R. Hartley

      Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

      Don't be silly. The great British unwashed are far, far too racist and servile for that type of thing.

      1. Anonymous Coward
        Anonymous Coward

        Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

        The difference between Brits and immigrants being that the later were washed ashore, I suppose?

    8. This post has been deleted by its author

      1. Strahd Ivarius Silver badge
        Devil

        Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

        Bring the Raj back!

        1. Korev Silver badge
          Coat

          Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

          Well, Rajesh is a lovely chap

        2. Yet Another Anonymous coward Silver badge

          Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

          So we're waiting for some foreigners to turn up, build railways, install a functional government administration, create a global tea planting industry and teach us to play cricket ?

    9. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Re: This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

      > We were promised easier/more visa for Indians. This is a slap in the face to British Indians.

      The hallmark of the Leave campaign was that people were "promised" lots of different, mutually contradictory things. In short, endless lies telling people what they'd be most likely to believe, aided by the wilful gullibility of people like yourself to selectively hear what you wanted to hear.

      Lots of *other* people heard and believed the part about cutting down immigration and voted for Brexit on *that* basis.

      (And a lot of your fellow Leave voters were stupid enough to believe it would cut down the number of brown-skinned people- i.e. from primarily non-European countries- coming in.)

      All this was clear- and pointed out- to people like you at the time. You didn't want to hear it. Don't expect any sympathy for any perceived betrayal by those conmen now.

      > This isn't the Brexit we voted for.

      That's not the Brexit you wanted to think you were voting for. But whether or not you want to believe it, that's exactly the Brexit you actually did vote for. One where nothing more was agreed upon beyond the bare question of "Should the United Kingdom remain a member of the European Union or leave the European Union?"

      Nothing planned, no agreed consensus on how it would work if Leave won, not even on whether they wanted a "hard" or "soft" Brexit, nothing. No chance of all those contradictory "promises" being met.

      Which was why voting for Brexit as it stood was a fucking stupid idea, whether or not you wanted to leave the EU.

      So, you got exactly the pig in a poke you voted for. If you don't like that, tough shit, you've been played, and you screwed it up for the rest of us in the process.

  4. tmTM

    "Negotiating a trade deal will be easy"

    Which Tory stooge said that again??

    1. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Re: "Negotiating a trade deal will be easy"

      Well, to be fair, it's an easy mistake to make when you turn on the oven and forget to set the timer. After all, who hasn't put an oven ready deal in and then forgot about it until it was burnt to a crisp a few hours later...

      1. Ah well

        Re: "Negotiating a trade deal will be easy"

        Only if you have incompetent corporate shills in charge of making the meal, wouldnt you say...

        1. Anonymous Coward
          Anonymous Coward

          Re: "Negotiating a trade deal will be easy"

          The corporate shill who said "f*ck business" and came up with a deal involving huge great non-tariff barriers then lied about it on Christmas Eve ("There will be no non-tariff barriers to trade"). That corporate shill?

          1. wigger

            Re: "Negotiating a trade deal will be easy"

            The corporate shills that fed information back to their cult leaders in the EU, those corporate shills.

            The same corporate shills that attempted to overturn an exercise in direct democracy.

            1. Strahd Ivarius Silver badge
              Facepalm

              Re: "Negotiating a trade deal will be easy"

              The non-binding referendum?

          2. The register distorts comments

            Re: "Negotiating a trade deal will be easy"

            Only in your mind....

            1. Doctor Syntax Silver badge

              Re: "Negotiating a trade deal will be easy"

              Oh, look, another. Or same one with different handle?

        2. Doctor Syntax Silver badge

          Re: "Negotiating a trade deal will be easy"

          From what I recall it was political shrills who were making the deal. And remember that we're pretty good here at spotting shills when we see them.

        3. gandalfcn Silver badge

          Re: "Negotiating a trade deal will be easy"

          'Only if you have incompetent corporate shills in charge of making the meal, wouldnt you say...' You mean the same liars who lied about how great Brexit would be?

          That isn't the burn you believe it is.

      2. Hee Hee

        Re: "Negotiating a trade deal will be easy"

        Any moron can burn an oven ready meal or deal.

    2. Ah well

      Re: "Negotiating a trade deal will be easy"

      They're not Torys they're "New Labour" self identifying as Torys

      1. Yet Another Anonymous coward Silver badge

        Re: "Negotiating a trade deal will be easy"

        So the last 12 years is really Corbyn's fault

        1. Fruit and Nutcase Silver badge
          Joke

          Re: "Negotiating a trade deal will be easy"

          Yes, for failing to win the election!

        2. wigger

          Re: "Negotiating a trade deal will be easy"

          Corbyn isnt new labour. silly

          1. Anonymous Coward
            Anonymous Coward

            Re: "Negotiating a trade deal will be easy"

            I think you're getting mixed up between your handles.

      2. gandalfcn Silver badge

        Re: "Negotiating a trade deal will be easy"

        'They're not Torys they're "New Labour" self identifying as Torys'. I see, so the right wing of the Tory party are now "New Labour"? Really? Time to lay off the hallucogens.

        1. gandalfcn Silver badge

          Re: "Negotiating a trade deal will be easy"

          Rees-Mogg and Dorries likely to be named in ‘contempts of parliament’ report.

          Boris Johnson’s allies are expected to be named in a report published on Thursday about potential “contempts of parliament”

          1. Yet Another Anonymous coward Silver badge

            Re: "Negotiating a trade deal will be easy"

            "contempts of parliament" makes them sound much cooler than "shites of parliament"

        2. Yet Another Anonymous coward Silver badge

          Re: "Negotiating a trade deal will be easy"

          Well New Labour are just Tories in disguise so therefore Tories are just New Labour in disguise - so it's all Michael Foot Corbyn's fault when the Tories I voted for do anything I don't like

    3. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Re: "Negotiating a trade deal will be easy"

      Liam Fox

      https://www.theneweuropean.co.uk/brexit-news-liam-fox-department-claims-40-trade-deals-are-ready-but-40942/

      1. Strahd Ivarius Silver badge
        Trollface

        Re: "Negotiating a trade deal will be easy"

        just looking at the name of the web site you know it is biased against Brexit and the wonderful BJ...

        1. Roland6 Silver badge
          Joke

          Re: "Negotiating a trade deal will be easy"

          Is there a website other than BorisJohnson.com that is isn't biased against BoJo ?

  5. s. pam
    Facepalm

    I want COMPETENT, not cheap workers

    Damnit, as a company leader, the last thing we need is more cheap workers

    We need workers who are competent, confident and quality oriented.

    Sadly that's not been my personal experience with > 90% of their workers.

    1. Yet Another Anonymous coward Silver badge

      Re: I want COMPETENT, not cheap workers

      Well obviously the competent workers will still be chaps one knows from school, the rest are just cleaners and IT and since they aren't important we just need the cheapest ones possible

      1. wigger

        Re: I want COMPETENT, not cheap workers

        Bring back Slave labour then.. Its juts the same.

        1. Phones Sheridan Silver badge

          Re: I want COMPETENT, not cheap workers

          Shhhh, slaves need feeding and a roof over their heads!

    2. Jason Bloomberg Silver badge

      Re: I want COMPETENT, not cheap workers

      It seems to me most successful countries will bring in immigrants as a 'not quite slave labour' force to do all the shit and low paid jobs the natives don't want to do, freeing natives up to get educated, advance themselves, and make their countries world beating.

      But brexiteers want to to give our high-paid and skilled jobs to foreign workers while forcing natives to do the shit jobs no one wants to do.

      I was never convinced they were batting on our side.

      1. Ah well

        Re: I want COMPETENT, not cheap workers

        Define successful countries....

        1. gandalfcn Silver badge

          Re: I want COMPETENT, not cheap workers

          'Define successful countries....' In the context it's blatantly obvious, other than to a Brexiteer.

      2. Doctor Syntax Silver badge

        Re: I want COMPETENT, not cheap workers

        ISTM that the Brexiteers were relying a lot of voters not being well-enough educated to indulge in a bit of critical thinking when it came to marking their referendum papers.

      3. Hee Hee

        Re: I want COMPETENT, not cheap workers

        I see you havent been paying attention..

  6. PBuon

    It’s far cheaper if the workers remain in India and work remotely. I suspect this is at the forefront of any decision making.

    1. Yet Another Anonymous coward Silver badge

      But you need somebody here to take the orders from the customers and give them to the remote engineers- someone with people skills, and a red stapler

      1. Anonymous Coward
        Anonymous Coward

        any good old boy from oxbridge will be perfect for that role

  7. Tron Silver badge

    Nothing economically beneficial will happen until the Tories get kicked out.

    Germany, Canada, New Zealand, Australia and South Korea are working hard to entice and increase migrant labour to boost their economies, aware that quality labour at all levels and pay grades, is key to economic survival as Cold War II and deglobalisation progressively destroy growth.

    Meanwhile, in late Victorian Britain, keeping Johnny Foreigner out at all costs leaves our imperial masters with three options:

    - Workfare - forced labour in return for benefits. Very poor quality labour, inevitably.

    - Days out for prisoners (as happened in some slaughterhouses during the pandemic). Like Russia drafting convicts but with more chance of survival.

    - Decriminalising slave labour. Ethically tricky nowadays, but maybe with a bit of PR and some cute furry creatures in the ads. Cut your outgoings by selling your least promising child into slavery.

    Or they could default to the inevitable and embrace our undeveloped third world future. They have taken us so far down hill, it seems a shame to leave the last mile to Max Headroom and Team Labour.

    1. Yet Another Anonymous coward Silver badge

      Re: Nothing economically beneficial will happen until the Tories get kicked out.

      A return to serfdom obviously.

      Of course that would mean all the land, money and political power being in the hands of a few rich people.

      1. R Soul Silver badge

        Re: Nothing economically beneficial will happen until the Tories get kicked out.

        "Of course that would mean all the land, money and political power being in the hands of a few rich people."

        So, just like how it's been for centuries then?

        1. Yet Another Anonymous coward Silver badge

          Re: Nothing economically beneficial will happen until the Tories get kicked out.

          Well I was hoping for a return to Norman rule, if only for the ham, cheese and cider. But I'll settle for a bloody civil war where we get to slaughter Lancasterians

          1. Doctor Syntax Silver badge

            Re: Nothing economically beneficial will happen until the Tories get kicked out.

            I think I'd prefer a return to the Danelaw. Slaughtering Lancastrians would be a possibility but the priority would be keeping Wessex and Mercia out.

            1. Yet Another Anonymous coward Silver badge

              Re: Nothing economically beneficial will happen until the Tories get kicked out.

              Well Orkney is throwing off centuries of foreign rule from Edinburgh and wants to take their oil and join Norway so I don't see any problem with Northern-exit to dump the Saxons and rejoin the Scandinavian empire

              1. CrazyOldCatMan Silver badge

                Re: Nothing economically beneficial will happen until the Tories get kicked out.

                Northern-exit to dump the Saxons and rejoin the Scandinavian empire

                Hmm.. who to support? Viking genetics, Welsh genetics and a Celtic blood type..

                1. Anonymous Coward
                  Anonymous Coward

                  Re: Nothing economically beneficial will happen until the Tories get kicked out.

                  +1 to remake Gainsborough the capital. We've had to put up with London for 1010 years...

            2. CrazyOldCatMan Silver badge

              Re: Nothing economically beneficial will happen until the Tories get kicked out.

              keeping Wessex and Mercia out

              Which gives me a perfect opportunity to post (some of0 my favourite Saxon poem:

              Efstað ye fyrdsmenne to þære ea

              wyrmscipu wadaþ on infleowende flod

              ure leaffule linde ond æscwude spere

              eft scoldon we lædon to þæm hrimceald stæð

              gedihtað þa scyldburh eaxlgesteallan

              ær oþþe æfter ure lar beo cyðen

              hie scoldon singan þe we forðferdon

              for landum þe þa suna þære seaxe healden

              https://www.reddit.com/r/anglosaxon/comments/1raj1i/saxon_war_song_shield_wall_translated_in_modern/

              (sadly, yes, Reddit. Copy it before the site dies..)

              1. Yet Another Anonymous coward Silver badge

                Re: Nothing economically beneficial will happen until the Tories get kicked out.

                I wandered lonely as a cloud

                When all at once I saw a crowd, A host of golden haired Celts

                So I cut their heads off

                1. heyrick Silver badge
                  Pint

                  Re: Nothing economically beneficial will happen until the Tories get kicked out.

                  Whoa. This has all gone Game of Thrones.

                  I approve. Now somebody fetch my longsword!

            3. Korev Silver badge
              Pirate

              Re: Nothing economically beneficial will happen until the Tories get kicked out.

              I think I'd prefer a return to the Danelaw. Slaughtering Lancastrians would be a possibility but the priority would be keeping Wessex and Mercia out.

              Come to think of it, it's been a few years since the Cornish marched on London

              Kernow Bys Viken!

    2. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Re: Nothing economically beneficial will happen until the Tories get kicked out.

      This country has not been able to feed its own population for almost a century. We are straining our water resources, our housing resources, our land resources, our transportation network, our health service, and everything else you can think of, because the population is already too high. Bringing in even more, when we are not capable of properly serving the people already here, is insanity.

      1. Yet Another Anonymous coward Silver badge

        Re: Nothing economically beneficial will happen until the Tories get kicked out.

        Bloody Saxons coming over here killing our lake monsters and talking funny

      2. Doctor Syntax Silver badge

        Re: Nothing economically beneficial will happen until the Tories get kicked out.

        As I said above, even ignoring immigration our population has increased because we're living longer but birth rates are falling. That means that the demand for services increases whilst the population supplying those services is shrinking (extending retirement age is unpopular). Household numbers are also increasing because there are more adults living singly.

        Whatever your political inclinations those are the demographic trends you have to work with.

        What's your solution to balancing those supply and demand factors?

        1. Yet Another Anonymous coward Silver badge

          Re: Nothing economically beneficial will happen until the Tories get kicked out.

          The extension of slavery to anyone who hasn't got a knighthood. Sensible policies for a happier Britain

        2. Doctor Syntax Silver badge

          Re: Nothing economically beneficial will happen until the Tories get kicked out.

          Yes, I'd like to downvote reality too. But it just doesn't work like that.

        3. Anonymous Coward
          Anonymous Coward

          Re: Nothing economically beneficial will happen until the Tories get kicked out.

          I don't have one. All I can say for certain is that he current policy of trying to paper over the cracks, by constantly increasing the population through immigration, is not sustainable by any rational measure. There are simply not enough resources to support the current population.

      3. gandalfcn Silver badge

        Re: Nothing economically beneficial will happen until the Tories get kicked out.

        The problems you cit are a direct and inevitable result of Tory policy so stop blaming immigrants.

    3. The register distorts comments

      Re: Nothing economically beneficial will happen until the Tories get kicked out.

      Maybe when germany becomes like the UK it will leave the EU too..

      1. gandalfcn Silver badge

        Re: Nothing economically beneficial will happen until the Tories get kicked out.

        "when germany becomes like the UK" When they keep electing governments of entitled, incompetent Tory types? I think not.

  8. Hee Hee

    Great news.

    1. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Another "new" account in the type of discussion that oddly attracts them...

      Welcome to The Register, newcomer- and thank you for that, the fifth of eleven comments you've posted so far under an account that was only created this morning.

      (More specifically, the fifth of eleven comments *all* posted within an hour of the account being set up.)

  9. jmch Silver badge

    Good for India to reject ISDS

    "At the same time, India is not in favor of the strong investment protection provisions the UK wants as a part of any potential deal. This is to provide UK businesses with assurances of fair and non-discriminatory treatment when operating in India, including access to adequate remedies such as an Investor State Dispute Settlement (ISDS) mechanism."

    ISDS can be a poison for any state that accepts it if it isn't very carefully worded. I understand the reluctance of a company to invest in a foreign country where the government and courts might screw over the foreign company. But the answer is for the 'host' country to get it's rule-of-law shit together, and any foreign company can simply decide not to invest if it thinks it's too risky. But setting up a system of secret "independent"* courts to adjudicate disputes between local governments and foreign companies is a perversion of sovereignty and rule of law.

    *Each treaty is different in the details but many ISDS tribunal arbitrators are from the 'western' legal tradition and take a very broad scope on what a company can legitimately claim. eg there have been cases where a company has successfully sued the host country for tightening envorinmental regulations which damaged the company profits.

  10. StrangerHereMyself Silver badge

    Visa-free travel

    The Indian government is pushing many trading partners to allow Indians to freely travel and live in their countries because hundreds of millions of Indians are desperate to get out of that Hell-hole and are pushing their government to make this possible.

    Countries like the U.S. can't be pushed around, but a smaller nation like the U.K. might be. Although the Government is currently resisting the push a deteriorating economic situation could alter their stance if India promises better market access.

    1. gandalfcn Silver badge

      Re: Visa-free travel

      One major factor being totally ignored is India's cozy relationship with the Putin SSR.

      1. StrangerHereMyself Silver badge

        Re: Visa-free travel

        That's a common misunderstanding in the West. India doesn't consider itself to be in the American camp nor in the Russian (formerly Soviet) camp. They consider themselves to be a camp of their own.

        The big mistake the West made was to demand servitude during the Cold War, thereby creating a rift which has lasted three-quarters of a century. Even today the West is demanding servitude from India by demanding trade sanctions against Russia and condemnation of the invasion of Ukraine.

        1. Yet Another Anonymous coward Silver badge

          Re: Visa-free travel

          >The big mistake the West made was to demand servitude during the Cold War

          Basically said, hello little brown guys, having thrown off your tea drinking foreign masters, welcome your new coffee drinking foreign masters.

          When they said no, we magnanimously decided to arm Pakistan and support any of Pakistan 'unofficial freedom fighting' until it became obvious that Pakistan is a basket case and India is our only alternative to China for cheap labour on a massive scale to build iPhones and a large middle class market to buy iPhones

          1. StrangerHereMyself Silver badge

            Re: Visa-free travel

            The U.S. Government had the motto: "If you're not for us, then you're against us!" So they thought: "If India doesn't want to play ball, maybe Pakistan (its arch-enemy) will." And they did.

            Obviously the West didn't willingly support the Pakistani terrorist organizations, but did so indirectly by giving Pakistan economic and military aid. This was wrong in hindsight, but understandable as the Cold War was raging and because of the misinterpretation of India's stance.

            1. Anonymous Coward
              Anonymous Coward

              Re: Visa-free travel

              If it was related to the Cold War only, why did the USA continue to fund these Pakistani terrorist up to now?

              1. Yet Another Anonymous coward Silver badge

                Re: Visa-free travel

                In case the Tsar tries to send his cosacks through the Kyber pass and threaten her majesty's imperial domain.

                Now that the Russ have got over that brief silliness with workers being equal we obviously go back to the great game

  11. J.G.Harston Silver badge

    We've got thousands of unemployed tech workers already here, we don't need to import any.

    1. Roland6 Silver badge

      I'm sure with Sir Humphrey Appleby's help the government can redefine Indian tech workers as being wholly different to the unemployed tech workers and thus identify a shortage of "tech workers" which can only be satisfied by importing (cheaper) Indian tech workers.

  12. J.G.Harston Silver badge

    And WTF are "trainee computing teachers entering schools"? Is this another "cars are the future, everybody must be taught automotive engineering" bullshit?

    Pupils in schools need to be taught how to ******USE***** computers in the same way that 100 years ago they needed to be taught how to drag a pen across a sheet of paper and make meaningful marks. But should pupils be taught how to reset passwords and change toner cartridges *in* *school* because *some of them* may end up working doing that? Or be taught programming *in* *school* because even fewer may end up employed doing that? As part of the general curriculum? Because we use electricity to light our homes, schools need to teach pupils electrical engineering? Those that are intested in it, and have the aptitude for it, will be learning themseleces outside school, *despite* the school curriculum, not because of anything in it.

    1. Yet Another Anonymous coward Silver badge

      Yes they need to be taught programming so that they understand that computers just follow precise instructions, and errors, given by programmers - so when a government proposes some computer system to do XYZ they know to laugh.

      And they should be taught where electricity comes from so when idiots say we can replace all powerstations running on XYZ with magic unicorns they also know to laugh.

      But you can leave out all that stuff about ox-bow lakes, nobody needs to know that.

      1. Roland6 Silver badge

        >But you can leave out all that stuff about ox-bow lakes, nobody needs to know that.

        However, everyone does need to know about the Battle of Agincourt and how the plucky English won against the French. Although, for obvious reasons, there is no need to for the siege of Orléans to be taught.

        1. Yet Another Anonymous coward Silver badge

          School children need to be taught that sieges rarely work out for the attackers - if we are going to retake Normandy.

          The French should also learn from Crecy and Agincourt to have a plan beyond a disorganized charge at an enemy well equipped with effective projectile weapons (also known as: don't get into an arse kicking contest with a porcupine)

  13. TM™

    There is no way the UK government doesn't want lots of cheap IT labour flooding the market and driving down wages. Especially a Tory government. This is an announcement designed to mollify the electorate, nothing more.

  14. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    No more imported tech people

    We have loads of older people with massive tech skills that cannot find roles due to ageism

    Stop letting In the Indians and invest in OUR people before it is to late

    1. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Re: No more imported tech people

      For once this Indian is very happy to see the tides turning - colonial chickens are coming home to roost. Time to start an East Anglia Company (as opposed to East India Company).

  15. Bebu Silver badge
    Windows

    Land of the long white shroud?

    I didn't quite realize that Brexit wasn't the just product of a few faredge nutters but now appears to me, from the preceding posts, that it was likely the product of a number chronic cancers in English society and the ripping apart of poorly formed scars which, if not resolved this time, will disolve the UK and relegate England to NZ status in the national league tables.

    1. Roland6 Silver badge

      Re: Land of the long white shroud?

      Trouble is once you take out financial services - the pre-eminent "export" of the UK, there probably isn't much to differentiate the UK economy from NZ, other than the UK probably has fewer sheep...

  16. codejunky Silver badge

    Observation

    It is very interesting to watch the battle of comments between new handles seemingly supporting brexit and cowards defending the EU. Definitely entertainment value

    1. Roland6 Silver badge

      Re: Observation

      And both defending the indefensible...

      Trouble is, as events in Ukraine have shown, it doesn't really matter whether the UK is in or out of the EU, European security requires the UK and the EU to constructively engage; for which we need the adults to sit at the table...

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