Donate SIGN UP

Yet Another "project Fear" Item Coming True.

Avatar Image
Canary42 | 18:44 Fri 19th Oct 2018 | News
32 Answers
Brexit Wrecks it (once more)

https://uk.yahoo.com/news/now-even-the-government-admits-it-no-deal-would-074037981.html

Never mind Quitters, just continue the ostrich impressions.
Gravatar

Answers

1 to 20 of 32rss feed

1 2 Next Last

Best Answer

No best answer has yet been selected by Canary42. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.

For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.
-- answer removed --
Hardly written by an impartial source - he's a mouthpiece for this bunch of EU dependent chancers

http://influencegroup.org.uk/

and will (hopefully) resume a career cleaning dunnies after Brexit.
It's outdated news -- this was in the government's Impact Studies a month or so back.

So hitting the source doesn't work, I'm afraid -- the source is the government.
So, it would also affect any aircraft coming from the E.U.

From the CAA.
\\“It is misleading for Sky News to say that pilots would need to renew their pilot's licence in a 'no-deal' Brexit scenario. Both commercial and private UK pilot licences would remain valid for use on UK-registered aircraft as the United Kingdom is a signatory to the International Civil Aviation Organisation (ICAO) Chicago Convention. Our licences are internationally recognised - including by the European Aviation Safety Agency (EASA) - both now and after 29 March 2019. //


From the CAA
//All licences issued by the CAA under EU legislation, and all type approval certificates and third country approvals issued by EASA under EU legislation, will continue to have validity under UK law, if they were effective immediately before exit day.//
Only a weapon's grade idiot would believe this bunkum.
"Weapons grade" was superfluous Spice. ))
For how long do you think the remaining 27 EU nations would tolerate being unable to accept flights from or send flights to the UK?
When flights are grounded because of Brexit come back and say I told you so.

Even your link says the government is confident of agreements being in place. But even if there is a glitch it will be short lived because no one wants to lose the lucrative holiday market.

As it is, it’s just a wet dream of yours Canary.
In the event UK and EU licensed airlines lose the automatic right to operate air services between the UK and the EU who really believes the right wouldn't be immediately granted by both sides ? Who pushes this drivel ?

(And if by some billion to one chance a period of disruption did occur, our freedom would still be cheap at 100 times the price.)
There won’t be many Euopean holidays booked at the end of March, eh!
Big Anti Brexit Demo expected today in London, Oh Dear.
gulliver.

\\Big Anti Brexit Demo expected today in London, Oh Dear.//

Thousands..

Where are the 16M that voted remain.
" where are the 16m that voted remain" ? Gone on holiday abroad before the end of March.
Michael Caine voted for Brexit.
Not a lot of people knew that.
oh why didn't you say canary, let's end this madness now, eeek!
WE DON'T CARE, WE WANT OUT, GEDDIT???
when will you VB mob get it through your heeds, anything that effects us will also effect the EU. Even if it's true, how long do you think it will be before the EU states demand to be able to fly here and we there? When the need is their, no amount of BS regs will be allowed to get in the way, they'll change the regs pronto.
spicerack; "Only a weapon's grade idiot would believe this bunkum. " - PMSL, BA material that!
//Big Anti Brexit Demo expected today in London, Oh Dear. //

there is a march in London today, yes. it's by an organisation called "people's vote". not an anti-Brexit demo, per-se, but for a demand that the people are given the final say. not the same thing really.

in any case, what they're demanding is pretty much impossible - a referendum requires an act of parliament, there's no way this would receive royal assent in time, even if a bill were put before parliament today.
As I’ve pointed out before, it would have time if the changeover period is extended, which has been mentioned only this week. Article 50 provides for this. With all the twists and turns we’ve seen throughout the process, nothing would surprise me.
BTW, I’m on record as saying I think that a referendum on the terms of leaving would be a disaaaaaster.

1 to 20 of 32rss feed

1 2 Next Last

Do you know the answer?

Yet Another "project Fear" Item Coming True.

Answer Question >>

Related Questions

Sorry, we can't find any related questions. Try using the search bar at the top of the page to search for some keywords, or choose a topic and submit your own question.