Showing posts with label Theresa May. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Theresa May. Show all posts

2019-03-12

Brexit Breakthrough? UK Nears 'No Deal' Brexit Deadline, March 29, 2019

'Make OR Break' Time for the UK Leaving the EU by March 29--

--Countdown to Brexit: 11:00 pm UK time on Friday, 29 March 2019

  • March 14, 2019: the House of Commons approves 412 to 202 (majority: 210) the Government's main motion: the UK will seek an (unspecified) extension of the Article 50 period--this will result in the UK asking the EU to delay the Brexit date of March 29th, which must be agreed to by the EU's other 27 members. Read more in the BrexitCentral feed embedded below.
  • March 13, 2019: Motion rejecting 'no deal' Brexit approved 321-278, however the vote has no legal force since March 29, 2019, is the default date pursuant to statute (Article 50), for leaving the European Union with or without a 'deal'.
  • March 12, 2019: UK Prime Minister Theresa May's 'deal' with the EU rejected 242 to 391 in the UK House of Commons. 
House of Commons LIVE video, Thursday, 14 March 2019, starts 9:30 am London:

UK economy defying expectations amid Brexit and global slowdown

CNBC International TV video above published March 13, 2019: UK Finance Minister Philip Hammond gives an update on the UK economy the day after politicians rejected Prime Minister Theresa May's Brexit deal for the second time.

House of Commons LIVE video below, Wednesday, 13 March 2019:
Starts at 11.30am London.

Tuesday 12 March 2019 YouTube.com video and UK House of Commons video:
Starts at 11.30 am London: [Oral questions: Justice (including Topical Questions); Ten Minute Rule Motion: Election Expenses (Authorisation of Free or Discounted Support), Craig Mackinlay MP (South Thanet, Conservative)]; Motion: Debate on a Motion relating to Section 13(1)(b) of the European Union (Withdrawal) Act 2018Adjournment [Future of community hospitals, Fiona Bruce MP (Congleton, Conservative)]. See also Brexit Debate LIVE replay video March 12, 2019.

FTSE 100 Index -- INDEXFTSE: UKX  March 12, 2019
March  12, 2018: British Pound Sterling LIVE: GBP Sterling starts BOUNCE BACK after MPs reject withdrawal agreement.

Background and more info:  UK Brexit Agreement Vote: Now A 'No Deal Brexit' or Renegotiate.
The United Kingdom (UK) voted in a June 23, 2016, referendum to leave the European Union (EU). The process, for better or worse, has now reached its finale. Options include a last-minute deal, a no-deal Brexit, a delay (extension), or even another referendum. 
FTSE 100 Index -- INDEXFTSE: UKX
The FTSE 100 Index (Financial Times Stock Exchange 100 Index), a/k/a  FTSE 100, FTSE, or, informally, the "Footsie," is a widely followed benchmark index of the 100 companies listed on the London Stock Exchange with highest market capitalization. The index is often used as a gauge of prosperity for businesses regulated by UK company law.

See also:
Twitter @BrexitCentral (embed below) and @StandUp4Brexit


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2019-01-15

'Brexit Deal' Vote January 15, Varoufakis on the Euro at Oxford Union

Yanis Varoufakis at the Oxford Union: The Euro Has Never Been More Problematic

Oxford Union video above published Dec 23, 2018: Yanis Varoufakis, Professor of Economics and former Finance Minister of Greece, talks about the Euro, Brexit and more. See also: The Euro Ends When Germany is Ready to Print Deutsche Marks Again--poundsterlinglive.com.

UPDATE 15 Jan 2019: UK's Parliament (House of Commons) voted 432-202 against Theresa May's 'Brexit deal' with the EU, the worst parliamentary defeat for a government in recent British history. Both Brexiteers and supporters of EU membership joined forces to vote down the deal.

The UK House of Commons votes Tuesday, January 15, 2019, on the 'Brexit Deal' negotiated by UK Prime Minister Theresa May with the European Union, follow the proceedings LIVE here,
Theresa May’s fatal error was to accept a two-phase negotiation: a divorce agreement followed by a new trade deal. “This was a declaration of war because Barnier said: ‘You will give us everything we want: money, people, Ireland. And only then will we discuss what you want.’ Well, that isn’t a negotiation, that’s a travesty. And Theresa May agreed to play along.”--Yanis Varoufakis in “The EU declared war and Theresa May played along”--newstatesman.com.


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2018-12-11

UK Brexit Agreement Vote: Now A 'No Deal Brexit' or Renegotiate


Countdown to Brexit: 11:00 pm UK time on Friday, 29 March 2019

For latest UPDATES go to: Brexit Breakthrough? UK Nears 'No Deal' Brexit Deadline, March 29, 2019.

House of Commons video, Tuesday 12 March 2019--May's 'Deal' Rejected 242-391--Motion: Debate on a Motion relating to Section 13(1)(b) of the European Union (Withdrawal) Act 2018; 

Parliament naive to rule out no-deal Brexit, UK lawmaker says

Lord Digby Jones, formerly the U.K.’s trade minister and director general of the CBI, discusses the January 29th votes of Parliament on a number of Brexit amendments. CNBC International TV video above published Jan 30, 2019.

1 March 2019: EU ready to give Britain more guarantees 'backstop' is temporary: Barnier--reuters.com: “We know that there are misgivings in Britain that the backstop could keep Britain forever connected to the EU,” Michel Barnier said in an interview with Germany’s Die Welt newspaper. “This is not the case. And we are ready to give further guarantees, assurances and clarifications that the backstop should only be temporary.”
"The question the Brexiteers should have posed Remainers is complex: do you want to remain within and support closer European Political Union; accept closer integration and political union, adoption of the Euro, and take on board the presently undefined liabilities the Union will eventually have to accept across the Union? In other words, are you prepared to write unlimited cheques to facilitate regional policies and politics, pay Danegeld for crisis such as immigration, and effectively assume the costs of dis-functional populist politics in places like Italy, Eastern Europe, Greece, and dare I say it.. France."--Bill Blain, morningporridge.com 28 Nov 2018.
See also:
  • Don't Expect The EU To Cave On May's Brexit Deal Until The Very Last Minute--"EU diplomats have pointed to a last-minute summit set for March 21 and March 22 - just a week before Brexit Day - as the likely time when a deal may finally be struck."--zerohedge.com.
  • Delaying or canceling Brexit ‘unconstitutional,’ lawmaker says--U.K. Member of Parliament John Baron discusses the possibility of delaying Brexit or holding a second EU referendum--CNBC International TV video published Jan 29, 2019.
  • "No Deal" Remains In Play--zerohedge.com.
  • The Brexit legal challenges that could force Britain to leave without a deal--spectator.co.uk
House of Commos LIVE video Tuesday 29 Jan 2019 Debate on Motion - Section 13 of the European Union (Withdrawal) Act 2018.

UPDATE Jan 29: UK Prime Minister Theresa May has support for a renegotiated "deal":

House of Commons LIVE video Monday 21 Jan 2019: European Union (Withdrawal) Act 2018 --Rt Hon Theresa May MP, The Prime Minister (Maidenhead, Conservative)--statement and motion on the UK Government's next steps for Brexit.

Run Down the Brexit Clock: "... prospect of a no-deal Brexit on March 29 remains in play after the British Parliament emphatically rejected Prime Minister Theresa May’s withdrawal agreement with the EU. Although it is tempting to reset the clock and give negotiations more time, that instinct must be resisted ..."--Yanis Varoufakis, Jan 16, 2019, project-syndicate.org and @yanisvaroufakis.
"... the Eurozone, and maybe the wider European Union (EU) is far from being a happy place ... one cannot rule out another economic crisis. I say this as the UK exports goods and services worth €209 Billion ($237 Billion) to the EU and imports from the EU trade worth €342 Billion ($388 Billion). The UK accounts for 16.8% of all EU exports. That is a too big a hit for a bloc the size of the EU to take without a problem rippling through the economy ..."--Forbes.com.
UK House of Commons video Tuesday, 15 January 2019: vote 432-202 against Theresa May's 'Brexit deal' with the EU, the worst parliamentary defeat for a government in recent British history. Brexiteers and supporters of EU membership joined forces to vote down the deal. See also Brexit: parliament rejects Theresa May's deal | YouTube.com / FT.com video.

'Brexit Deal Vote' analysis:  432 MPs voted against the deal (434 including two tellers), including 118 Conservative rebels, 250 Labour MPs, all 35 SNP MPs, all 11 Lib Dem MPs, along with the 4 MPs from Plaid Cymru, the 1 Green Party MP and 5 Independents, and lastly 10 members of DUP who otherwise support the Conservative government. Add back the 118 Conservatives and 10 DUP members, and May's government will withstand the "confidence vote" 330 to 304--UPDATE Jan 16: Theresa May wins the U.K. confidence vote, 325-306. 

See also 'Brexit Deal' Vote January 15, Varoufakis on the Euro at Oxford Union:
Theresa May’s fatal error was to accept a two-phase negotiation: a divorce agreement followed by a new trade deal. “This was a declaration of war because Barnier said: ‘You will give us everything we want: money, people, Ireland. And only then will we discuss what you want.’ Well, that isn’t a negotiation, that’s a travesty. And Theresa May agreed to play along.”--Yanis Varoufakis in The EU declared war and Theresa May played along--newstatesman.com.
Best path forward now:  re-negotiate withdrawal agreement or leave with "no deal" March 29, 2019, under WTO trade rules.

What's next after the January 15th vote against May's 'Brexit Deal'? "A statement and motion on the Government's next steps for Brexit will be tabled on Monday 21 January. It will be debated Tuesday 29 January."

Jacob Rees-Mogg:
Continuing news via brexitcentral.com  |  @BrexitCentral -- A Better Deal and A Better Future (pdf) supported by Tory Brexiteers.

Recap:
'Brexit Deal' Debate & Vote LIVE: the UK House of Commons resumed debate on UK Prime Minister Theresa May's EU Withdrawal Agreement on 9 Jan 2019, for 5 days of debate, ending with a 'meaningful vote' on Tuesday 15 January 2019.


2018:
UK ramps up no deal Brexit preparations – troops on standby: Channel 4 News video published Dec 18, 2018: Three and a half thousand troops are on standby, while letters to 140,000 businesses are warning them to prepare for the worst. The government says that although pursuing Theresa May's Brexit deal is still its top priority, it's now begun ramping up its preparations for no deal. Details of where £2bn in funding will be spent have been revealed, while advice for the public will be rolled out over the coming days on everything from potential traffic chaos to credit card fees.

May and Juncker clash over Brexit deal (Dec 14, 2018 video): European leaders told Theresa May that a renegotiation was not possible. Frustrations boiled over during a "robust" exchange between Theresa May and the European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker of Luxembourg, after he had complained that her demands were "nebulous and imprecise."
"We will meet on Thursday and Friday [Dec 13-14] for the last European Council this year. Given the seriousness of the situation in the UK, let me start with Brexit. The intention is that we will listen to the UK Prime Minister's assessment, and later, we will meet at 27 to discuss the matter and adopt relevant conclusions. As time is running out, we will also discuss the state of preparations for a no-deal scenario."--Invitation letter by European Council President Donald Tusk to European Council members ahead of their meetings on 13 and 14 December 2018.
Reminder: Nobel Laureate Economist Paul Krugman (hardly a 'Brexiteer') on the Bank of England's 'scare tactics'--
".... What’s puzzling about the scenarios shown in [the Bank of England's {BoE)] Figure 1 is that they show these disruptions going on for multiple years, with barely any abatement. Really? Britain is an advanced country with high administrative capacity — the kind of country that history shows can cope well with huge natural disasters, and even wars. Would it really have that much trouble hiring customs inspectors and installing computers to recover from an 8 or 10 percent drop in GDP?
"And even in the short run, I wonder why Britain couldn’t follow the old prescription, “When all else fails, lower your standards.” If laxer enforcement, special treatment for trusted shippers, whatever, could clear the bottlenecks at the ports, wouldn’t that be worth it, despite the potential for fraud, as a temporary measure?
"That said, it’s truly amazing that Britain finds itself in this position. If the downsides are anywhere close to what the BoE asserts, given the risk — which we’ve known for a long time was substantial — of a hard Brexit, it was an act of utter folly not to have put in backup capacity at the borders. We can’t possibly be talking about all that much money, and the Brexit vote was more than two years ago. What has the UK government been doing?
"All in all, it’s quite a spectacle. Whether you’re pro-Brexit or anti, you should be horrified and outraged at how the issue has been handled."--Paul Krugman in the NewYorkTimes.com 30 Nov 2018.
Wednesday, December 12, 2018 #ComeWhatMay --vote outcome:
UK PM Theresa May survives "confidence vote" (video) by members of her Conservative Party--For 200, Against 117.
UK Prime Minister Theresa May's 'Brexit Deal' was to have been voted upon by the House of Commons in December (2018), is worded in one very long sentence for the House of Commons debate and vote:
"That this House approves for the purposes of section 13(1)(b) of the European Union (Withdrawal) Act 2018, the negotiated withdrawal agreement laid before the House on Monday 26 November 2018 with the title 'Agreement on the withdrawal of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland from the European Union and the European Atomic Energy Community' and the framework for the future relationship laid before the House on Monday 26 November 2018 with the title 'Political Declaration setting out the framework for the future relationship between the European Union and the United Kingdom'." More info here. See also Legal Note (pdf) and UK Parliament videos and What people in the UK think are the biggest issues facing the EU | statista.com.
Editor's note: original post title "UK Brexit Agreement Dead? Now A Hard Brexit or Capitulation to EU? "

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2018-03-02

MacroView: Hard Brexit or Else? When Will The EU and UK Face Reality?

UPDATE: Theresa May's Brexit speech March 2, 2018

UPDATE March 2, 2017: UK Prime Minister Theresa May delivers her Brexit speech on Friday, March 2, 2018. “We all need to face up to some hard facts ... Neither of us can have exactly what we want, so we need to strike a new balance. But we will not accept the rights of Canada and the obligations of Norway”--UK Prime Minister Theresa May. See May pitches mixture of concession and detail in Brexit vision | Reuters.com.

So Far, Brexit Negotiations Have Been Going Nowhere Fast:
Unclear Brexit vision from a divided cabinet

Financial Times (ft.com) video above published Feb 15, 2018: Political columnist Janan Ganesh and FT editor Lionel Barber discuss how Boris Johnson's call for national unity comes at a time when the Conservative cabinet remains divided on Brexit.

Boris Johnson’s Brexit Speech at Policy Exchange (video)

Jacob Rees-Mogg on Boris's speech and the transition period (video)

At best, the UK may not be able to strike anything other than an ordinary trade deal with the EU in its Brexit negotiations. Late last year, the EU produced a graphic which warned that the UK is heading for a hard Brexit. The  infographic below is based on that, and shows how Theresa May's demands may be incompatible with the current relationship Norway (a non-EU nation) enjoys with the EU, or  Iceland and Liechtenstein. Included in UK's previous demands were to be free of European courts, trade rules, migration, regulation and financial contributions, which would mean it could not use Switzerland as a future template, or the Ukraine and Turkey deals with the EU. So the UK-EU deal may reflect the same type of relationship as that agreed upon by the EU with Canada and South Korea, or if there is no deal, the UK and EU would be left with the WTO rules to govern trade with each other. Why the UK hasn't already opened up trade negotiations with the U.S., Canada, and others, is shortsighted, if it is serious about Brexit. Unfortunately, the EU is also being shortsighted as a "hard Brexit" will actually hurt the EU countries, particularly Germany, harder--the UK imports more than it exports to the EU.

The current trajectory of Brexit negotiations, in the short term, with the delay and uncertainty, is hurting the UK economy, and in the long term, the EU is "cutting off the nose to spite the face."

Infographic: Why Hard Brexit Could Be Inevitable  | Statista Statista.com

Related links:


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2018-01-08

2018 Forecasts: From US-China Trade War to Chaos in the Mideast (video)

FT Forecasts 2018: From US-China trade war to chaos in the Mideast

The FT.com's senior commentators give their big predictions for the year ahead, from a US-China trade war, to Silicon Valley (Facebook, Amazon & Google) and regulation, to Theresa May surviving as UK prime minister and chaos in the Middle East. Financial Times video above published Dec 28, 2017.

FT Forecasts 2018: A US-China trade war?

FT.com chief foreign affairs commentator Gideon Rachman predicts that next year could see the US aim tariffs at China. If China retaliates with its own tariffs we could see the beginnings of a trade war with implications for the world's trading system. Financial Times video above published Dec 26, 2017.

Are Stocks Still A Good Bet In 2018?

Here's why BlackRock.com’s Kate Moore says yes. Fortune.com video above published Dec 12, 2017.

S&P 500:
 S&P 500
 S&P 500 index up almost 32% since 4 Nov 2016

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2017-06-08

UK Election June 8: Results, Markets, Macroeconomics, & Brexit (video)

Sky News LIVE

UPDATE June 9: Conservatives lost 12 seats but remain the largest party, with Labour gaining 29 seats, and both parties winning seats from the Scottish National Party (SNP) which lost 21 seats. PM Theresa May to form a new government with the DUP, according to Sky News | sky.com:

The London Stock Exchange benchmark index FTSE100 closed UP Friday, June 9:
 FTSE100

The UK election explained

Video above published May 24, 2017: Prime Minister Theresa May has brought forward the UK's next general election. The FT.com's Henry Mance explains why and how the country votes for its government.

Brexit Deadline:


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2017-03-29

Brexit Reality: What To Expect After Article 50 Letter on March 29 (video)

Brexit graphic ©2017 DomainMondo.com
Brexit graphic ©2017 DomainMondo.com
UPDATE March 29, 2017:

Leaving the EU negotiating objectives | PlanforBritain.gov.uk: "The Government has set out 12 negotiating objectives ahead of the UK leaving the EU."
1. Providing certainty and clarity
2. Taking control of our own laws
3. Strengthening the Union
4. Protecting our strong and historic ties with Ireland and maintaining the Common Travel Area
5. Controlling immigration: We will have control over the number of EU nationals coming to the UK.
6. Securing rights for EU nationals in the UK, and UK nationals in the EU
7. Protecting workers’ rights
8. Ensuring free trade with European markets
9. Securing new trade agreements with other countries
10. Ensuring the UK remains the best place for science and innovation
11. Cooperating in the fight against crime and terrorism
12. Delivering a smooth, orderly exit from the EU

Information about leaving the EU | planforbritain.gov.uk"We have ruled out being a member of the single market, as the PM said in the Lancaster House speech. EU leaders have made clear their view that members of the single market must sign up to the ‘four freedoms’ that underpin it — including the free movement of people – and be subject to the jurisdiction of the European Court of Justice ... Instead, we want a bold and ambitious Free Trade Agreement with the EU. This will enable free-flowing trade in both goods and services, and ensure the freedom for UK companies to trade with and operate within European markets. We also intend to leave the Common Commercial Policy and for the UK not to be bound by the EU’s Common External Tariff so that we can pursue our own independent trade policy, securing trade deals with new partners. The Prime Minister created the Department for International Trade for this purpose."

"Will there be a second referendum or an alternative to leaving the EU? No. The country voted to leave the EU and it is the duty of the Government and Parliament to make sure we do just that."

A fairer society | PlanforBritain.gov.uk: "We will build a fairer society where success is based on merit, not privilege. We have started to rebalance our society in favour of ordinary working people, but now need to do more to turn Britain into a union where success is defined by work and talent, not birth or circumstance. The Government’s Plan for Britain seeks to
  • provide access to a good school place for every child – one that gives them the skills and knowledge they need to succeed in the future
  • ensure there is control of immigration so that it serves the national interest and is fair to everyone who lives and works in this country
  • deliver one million new homes, so that more people have the chance to own or rent an affordable home of their own
  • continue to invest in the NHS to help people at every stage of their life and support a vital national institution
  • help people who can work get back into work so that our welfare system is fair to those who need it and fair to those who pay for it
  • tackle historic injustices, like racial and gender discrimination, that hold too many people back.
Prime Minister's Commons statement on triggering Article 50 | GOV.UK



EU Taskforce on Article 50 negotiations with the United Kingdom | European Commission | ec.europa.eu See also: https://ec.europa.eu/info/news/notification-article-50-teu-united-kingdom_en

--original post--
Brexit: ahead of UK Prime Minister Theresa May triggering Article 50 by delivery of a letter to the EU's European Council President Donald Tusk, on March 29, 2017, which will start negotiations between UK and the EU, both benchmark indexes of the London Stock Exchange (LSE), the FTSE 100 and FTSE 250, closed up on Tuesday, March 28:
FTSE 100 up 22.75% since June 27, 2016
FTSE 250 up 26.63% since June 27, 2016
What to expect after Article 50 | FT.com Opinion

Video above published Mar 21, 2017, by FT.com.

Theresa May may need to read Trump's "Art of the Deal"--
UK Should Prepare To Walk Away--“Paying Any Exit Fee is absurd”--"... The primary problem in these negotiations is the EU nannycrat fools believe they can force the UK to pay ridiculous exit charges on top of other demands. The ideal approach for the UK is to simply walk away. What can the EU possibly do that does not hurt the EU even more than it does the UK? The sooner Theresa May sets the appropriate tone for negotiations the better off everyone will be. I wrote about this long ago in Brexit Stacked Deck? Which Way? Don’t Negotiate, Just Leave! Serious negotiations can only begin once Theresa May sets the proper tone. The proper tone is the UK is prepared to walk away and pay the EU nothing."--MishTalk.com

EU Needs To Fill Gap In Budget Once Brexit Becomes Official:

Mar 27, 2017: UK says it will not pay a 60 billion euro bill to leave the EU.

See also:
Courtesy of: Visual Capitalist


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2016-10-07

UK Prime Minister Theresa May: Brexit & Change Are Coming (videos)

Theresa May: Speech to Conservative Party Conference 2016:

Navigating change in a turbulent world--UK Prime Minister Theresa May: Brexit & Change Are Coming--video published Oct 5, 2016.  The UK PM's closing speech at the Conservative party conference which included a strategic move to lure the working classes and make Britain a "fairer Britain." Speech Transcript (pdf).

Building a country that works for everyone:

Video above published Oct 5, 2016, by the Conservative Party (UK)--Domain: conservatives.com; Twitter handle: @Conservatives.

Tory civil war off the agenda:

A few months ago some were predicting the Conservative party would be thrown into civil war by the Brexit vote. Perhaps it would even have to split. The FT.com's Henry Mance reports from the Tory party conference about why that has not happened. Video published Oct 5, 2016.

City (London's financial centre) calls for clarity on Brexit:

Barclays’ John McFarlane, David Sproul of Deloitte and Ratesetter’s Rhydian Lewis express concern over future access to the EU's single market and skilled labor. Video published Oct 3, 2016. 


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2016-07-25

Brexit a Month Later: Chicken Little Forecasts, Reality Check (videos)

Brits abroad | Brexit Breakdown:

Published on Jul 22, 2016: Now that the UK has a new government, Theresa May and her ministers have been looking further afield as the country prepares to negotiate its way out of the EU. James Blitz rounds up the week’s Brexit news.

U.K. PM Theresa May: Britain Won’t Leave EU Before End of 2016:

U.K. Prime Minister Theresa May speaks at a press conference following her first meeting with German Chancellor Angela Merkel. Published July 20, 2016
The only thing we have to fear is fear itself.--Franklin D. Roosevelt, U.S. President, FDR's First Inaugural Address (1933)
"... the arguments for big short-run damage from Brexit look quite weak ... Indeed, the rebound in British stocks, which are now above pre-Brexit levels, is already causing some backlash against conventional economists and their Chicken Little warnings. Sorry, people, sloppy thinking is always a vice, no matter what cause it’s used for." -- Paul Krugman, Nobel Prize-winning economist, June 30, 2016, NYTimes.com

Markets in Europe since the June 23rd Brexit vote: UK's FTSE100 UP +6.19%; Germany's DAX DOWN -1.07%, France's CAC40 DOWN -1.90%, Friday, July 22:
Top to Bottom: FTSE100, DAX, CAC40 (source: google.com)
CNN.com[UK Prime Minister] May reiterated her commitment to Britain leaving the EU, following the vote to do so in a referendum last month. But although the country is leaving the EU, she said, "The United Kingdom is not leaving Europe. "I'm very clear, Brexit does mean Brexit," she said. "We will make a success of it. What we need to do in negotiating the deal is ensure that we listen to what people have said about the need for controls on free movement. But we also negotiate the right deal, and the best deal for the trade of goods and services for the British people." She also stressed that Britain should not be limited by focusing exclusively on its relationship with its European neighbors but should instead look to build beneficial ties throughout the world.

UK explores multi-billion pound free trade deal with China | BBC.com"[UK] officials are looking at New Zealand's free trade agreement with China which took four years to negotiate and came into effect in 2008. Care would have to be taken over security concerns and the possibility of China "dumping" cheap imports in the UK - for example steel.... At the G20 many countries are now moving into practical mode ... [Brexit vote is] now a matter for the history books. The British public have spoken. The present challenge is seeing how the fifth largest economy in the world can take advantage of that decision, rebuilding a "close" trading relationship with the EU and new economic relationships with countries, like China, which, it should be remembered, has never had a free trade agreement with any EU country."

See also: News Review [24Jul] | DomainMondo.com:  As noted before on Domain Mondo, the EU actually needs the UK more than the UK needs the EU (which is why the UK, instead of EU-dependent Greece, will be the first member state to leave the EU)... UK Property Market Proves Resilient post-Brexit and One month after Brexit: ... "little Brexit effect on [UK] retail sales growth" and ecommerce transactions "showing similar growth rates to those before the referendum."

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2016-07-14

Theresa May's First Speech As UK Prime Minister, Brexit, The Way Forward

Theresa May's  First Speech As UK Prime Minister:

Video above: Theresa May speaking at No. 10 Downing Street, London, July 13, 2016. May emphasized unity and social justice in her first speech as Prime Minister of the United Kingdom.

David Cameron's last day as UK Prime Minister:

David Cameron was given a rousing send off by MPs in the House of Commons. It was his last ever Prime Minister's Questions (PMQ), and in among the serious stuff - there were plenty of jibes and jokes and a few gentle words of thanks. He said he would miss it. Most importantly, at 3:27 in the video above, David Cameron answers the question from a Scottish MP about David Cameron's advice to his successor, Theresa May, concerning the way forward
"My advice to my successor [Theresa May] who is a brilliant negotiator, is that we should try to be as close to the European Union as we can be for the [mutual] benefits of trade, cooperation and security. The [English] Channel will not get any wider once we we leave the European Union, and that is the relationship we should seek."
While the British Pound Sterling (UK currency) has fallen since the Brexit vote on June 23, in relation to the U.S. dollar and Euro, thereby providing incentives for the British tourism industry, foreign investment into the UK, and UK exports, many will be watching what the Bank of England (BoE) does Thursday:

Euro | Pound Sterling Forecast | poundsterlingforecast.com July 13, 2016: "With a rate cut to 0.25% likely either tomorrow or next month and the chance of further Quantitative Easing (QE) being introduced, I expect the recent Sterling recovery to come under further pressure should the scenario unfold as I expect."

However, remember the current interest rate of the BoE is .50, while the European Central Bank (ECB) has resorted to negative interest rates, and currently has an interest rate of -0-% in an attempt to deal with the Eurozone's troubled finances and economy.

Opinion/Analysis: Theresa May would be wise to begin free trade negotiations with nations outside the EU, as soon as possible, with those agreements each having a self-executing "effective date" upon UK's departure from the EU. This would be beneficial for two reasons:
  1. to reset expectations (and fears) away from the EU, and focus on the future and opening of world markets to the UK, including London's role as a global financial center; 
  2. those agreements may become "templates" for the UK-EU agreement. Once the EU sees the "deals" the United Kingdom strikes with nations not in the EU such as Canada, U.S., Australia, New Zealand, China, Norway, and others, it is likely to want equal or even better terms for the EU since the United Kingdom is the world's fifth biggest economy and Germany's third largest export market. Germany's unions and businesses may likely drive the final negotiations, not Juncker et al.
Brexit Calendar--what's ahead: May has said there will be no UK general election “until 2020,” giving her plenty of time as Prime Minister to negotiate a transition and change in relationships between the UK and EU, and the UK and rest of world. Theresa May has also said she won’t trigger Article 50 to begin formal departure from the EU until 2017 at the earliest, and the process could take up to two years to complete. Here are some key dates within the near term:
  • July 18: Vote on the renewal of the UK Trident nuclear deterrent. May has said it would be “sheer madness” to give up the weapons system.
  • July 20: May's first Prime Minister’s Questions time in the House of Commons.
  • July 21: UK Parliament goes on summer recess until Sept. 5.
  • August: European officials go on vacation. May has promised a new government department, led by a pro-Brexit minister, to handle the UK's negotiations with the EU. This could be set up in August. UPDATE*: Theresa May has now announced her Brexit team (see below).
  • September 4-5: G-20 summit in Hangzhou, China. May will meet many global counterparts for the first time.
  • September 16: EU leaders meet without the UK for a summit and to chart the EU’s future direction.
  • October 5: An EU meeting on Afghanistan could be May’s first meeting in Brussels as Prime Minister.
  • November 8: U.S. Presidential election. May is well-positioned to continue the UK-US "special relationship" irrespective of whether Hillary Clinton or Donald Trump is elected.
*UPDATE Brexit means Brexit: Prime Minister Theresa May has handed responsibility for Brexit negotiations to those who campaigned to leave, appointing Boris Johnson as foreign secretary, David Davis as Brexit czar, and Liam Fox as chief of international trade negotiations.
  • Foreign Secretary: Boris Johnson – probably the biggest surprise among the appointments, Johnson, who was born in New York, was a leader of the Brexit Leave Campaign, and is not known for his "diplomatic skills"--he once compared Hillary Clinton, the Democratic Party’s presumptive nominee for President, to “a sadistic nurse in a mental hospital” and said she is “everything I came into politics to oppose.” When Johnson was in charge of the Spectator magazine, an editorial described President George W. Bush as a “cross-eyed Texan warmonger” who “epitomises the arrogance of American foreign policy.” He also compared Russian President Vladimir Putin to Dobby the House Elf (from the Harry Potter films), and called him “a ruthless and manipulative tyrant.” Long before he was elected Mayor of London, Johnson, now 52, became a Euroskeptic during the 1990s through his work as a reporter in Brussels for the Daily Telegraph newspaper. Look out Jean-Claude Juncker
  • Brexit Secretary: David Davis  – Davis, a Euroskeptic who has served as a minister of state for Europe and Conservative Party chairman, was appointed “Secretary of State for Exiting the European Union.” 
  • Secretary of State for International Trade: Liam Fox – Fox, a prominent Euroskeptic, will negotiate new trade deals for the United Kingdom, and work closely with Davis.
  • Chancellor of the Exchequer: Philip Hammond – Hammond’s  background is business, working in property, construction and oil and gas. Experienced in negotiating with EU counterparts from his time in the foreign office, he will work closely with Brexit czar Davis;
  • Home Secretary: Amber Rudd - As energy secretary she represented the UK in climate change talks, gaining negotiating experience that will aid her in immigration negotiations. She previously worked in investment banking for JPMorgan and then in venture capital. She was also an aide to former Chancellor George Osborne.
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2016-07-02

Brexit Postscript: FTSE100 Roars, Theresa May, Sword in Hand, Next PM?

British Major Jack Churchill (far right) leads Commandos, sword in hand (World War II photo - public domain)
Enjoy your weekend! Here's a review, with links, to follow-up Domain Mondo's posts on Brexit:

•  After ‘Brexecution,’ the man who betrayed Boris Johnson speaks out | WashingtonPost.com"A day after staging a political ambush that reshaped the race to be Britain’s next prime minister, Michael Gove said Friday he acted out of “conviction, not ambition”... [Theresa] May [now favored to win] would be the second female prime minister in British history, after Margaret Thatcher. May’s unsmiling public persona and hard-line conservative politics have drawn occasional comparisons to the Iron Lady ..."  

Theresa May may be exactly the right person to lead the UK, with nerves, and persona, made of steel. She has already said the UK will leave the EU, but on terms, and timing, the UK chooses, not the EU.

UPDATE July 7, 2016: Theresa May and Andrea Leadsom to vie for Iron Lady’s Mantle as ‘Hard as Nails’ U.K. Prime Minister--read more at Bloomberg.com and London Property Market: Massive Undersupply, Cheap Pound, Uncertainty | DomainMondo.com.

•  There Will Be No Early General Election | washingtonsblog.com"The new PM [UK Prime Minister] will have 3.5 years in Downing Street with a working Commons majority. As I predicted, the temperature of debate in the Tory party has cooled almost completely. Their leadership contest is genteel. People who were accusing each other of outright lies and appalling behaviour just one week ago, are now all chummy together again. The Tories care about power above all else. They have it and won’t risk it."

• Eric Schmidt on Brexit: 'Unlikely' to Hurt Google's British Operations | Fortune.com"Though he said he doesn’t understand the reason for the vote ..." Really? Maybe Eric Schmidt should read: Brexit Is Only the Latest Proof of the Insularity and Failure of Western Establishment Institutions | TheIntercept.com by Glen Greenwald: "The decision by U.K. voters to leave the EU is such a glaring repudiation of the wisdom and relevance of elite political and media institutions that — for once — their failures have become a prominent part of the storyline. Media reaction to the Brexit vote falls into two general categories: (1) earnest, candid attempts to understand what motivated voters to make this choice ... and (2) petulant, self-serving, simple-minded attacks on disobedient pro-Leave voters for being primitive, xenophobic bigots (and stupid to boot), all to evade any reckoning with their own responsibility ... these  institutions have spawned pervasive misery and inequality, only to spew condescending scorn at their victims when they object ..."


British lion and Union flag - Attribution via Wikimedia Commons (CC BY 2.0)
[Jonund, tracy, Stefano Brivio (buggolo), sculptor of lion: W. F. Woodlington]
London Stock Exchange benchmark FTSE100 comes 'roaring' back, hits 2016 high, and has its biggest weekly rise since 2011; up 3.78% since Brexit vote on June 23. Germany's DAX and France's CAC40 are still "in the red" post-Brexit vote:
Top to bottom: FTSE100 (UK); DAX (Germany); CAC40 (France) - source: google.com
•  Brexit Bargains Beckon: Hunting Ground For Brexit Bargains | SeekingAlpha.com"... In the history of value investing, the greats have consistently followed one rule: Never let a good crisis go to waste ... it is the opportune time to identify cheap businesses in certain industries that are unjustifiably beaten down or sold off together with peers. In order to screen for high-quality companies and seeking to capitalize on the panic surrounding Brexit ..."

•  Is Brexit the End of the EU? | MauldinEconomics.com: "The EU, Not Britain, Is the Weaker Player. The UK is Germany’s third-largest export market. It is the fifth-largest for France and Italy ... Europe cannot afford a trade war even if it feels insulted ... Britain’s banks channel global capital and are a huge source of investment for the Continent ... it is the clients who will determine the world’s banking hubs. London has been a traditional banking center preferred by foreign clients. New York—not Frankfurt—is the alternative to London. If clients had wanted to bank in Frankfurt, they would have already done so ..."

•  UPDATE: Backwards Brexit doomsayers: usatoday.com"... The alarmists have everything exactly backward. It is the EU that is under threat of dissolution, and it is the EU’s strongest member, Germany, that would be most vulnerable were trade relations to deteriorate ..."

•  Beware the Man With the World's Reserve Currency--It was the U.S. Federal Reserve, not the ECB, that issued trillions of dollars in credit and swap lines to the major European banks in 2008--Brexit, the E.U. and the "Special Relationship" | charleshughsmith.blogspot.com: "... The U.S. has a core interest in preserving British autonomy, but it also has a core interest in helping the European Union solve its many problems. The U.S. is not choosing between the U.K. and the E.U., except if it is forced to on specific issues by extremists in the E.U. Any clique in the E.U. that thinks the U.S. will sit idly by while they "punish" the U.K. had better recalibrate their core interests and the potential for blowback ..."


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