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The chief executive of luxury carmaker Bentley said the company was stockpiling parts and described Brexit as a “killer” threatening his firm’s profitability.
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The boss of Pets at Home, the nation’s biggest pet supplier, said his company had started stockpiling essentials – including cat food – as “we don’t want families to run out of food for their pets” after Brexit day on 29 March.
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P&O, which began life as the Peninsular and Oriental Steam Navigation company in 1837, said all six of its cross-Channel ferries will be re-registered from the UK registry in Cyprus to keep EU tax benefits. The ferries include, the Spirit of Britain, the Pride of Kent and the Pride of Canterbury.
aphronesis said:https://www.vice.com/en_uk/article/yw8zj7/london-rental-opportunity-of-the-week-a-living-roomkitchenbedroom-combo-in-edmonton
MPs are trying to change the course of Brexit in a number of ways, after rejecting the deal the prime minister struck with the European Union.
Theresa May will return to the Commons on 29 January to set out the next steps in the process.
However, the opposition and backbench MPs have been tabling amendments to her motion in a bid to force the government to change direction.
Several different courses have been proposed and, in normal circumstances, one would be selected by the Speaker for 90 minutes of debate.
However, it is expected that the government will allow time for MPs to discuss more options.
US lobby groups for agriculture and pharmaceutical firms want UK standards to be changed to match those of the US in post-Brexit trade deals.
They want the sale of growth hormone-fed beef, currently banned in the UK and EU, to be allowed in the UK.
The groups are also seeking changes to the NHS drugs approval process to allow it to buy a wider range of US drugs.
They are also asking US officials - who will hold a hearing later - to seek lower tariffs on agricultural goods.
The lobby groups say any deal should move away from EU standards, including rules governing genetically modified crops, antibiotics in meats, and pesticides, such as glyphosate.
If this does not happen, they say they will not back a US-UK trade deal.
macbindle said::lol: :lol:
I hadn't heard that one!
To quote Stewart Lee, Gove even had to out-do David Cameron (when it emerged that Cameron had inserted his penis into a dead pig's head) by doing something even more disgusting and sticking his penis into a Daily Mail** journalist*
*Gove is married to DM journalist Sarah Vine.
**For the unacquainted, the Daily Mail serves as an adjectival synonym for 'excrable'
Its interesting to me that the Guardian attack JRM on this - his identity. From people who seem to in other cases cherish "being different". I guess it matters the type of different.macbindle said:Rees-Mogg plays his queen as Brexit enters a state of emergency
<span class="skimlinks-unlinked">https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2019/jan/25/rees-mogg-brexit-emergency?CMP=Share_AndroidApp_Copy_to_clipboard</span>
" If you had to distil into one personage the British people’s gibbering historical deference to terrible ideas advanced by low-to-middlebrow post-feudal shitlords who openly detest them, this plastic aristocrat would be it. Rees-Mogg is the logical end of whole centuries of barking up the wrong tree."
Ah ha ha ha ha :lol:
It’s not just aircraft parts and printing ink accumulating in U.K. warehouses ahead of the country’s possible split from the European Union in two months’ time. The growing stockpiles also include booze.
Luxury giant LVMH Moet Hennessy Louis Vuitton, the French maker of high-end beverage brands including Moet & Chandon champagne and Hennessy cognac, said Tuesday that it has added four months of wine and spirits inventory to the U.K. to prepare for the country’s expected exit from the European bloc.
Theresa May will not be flying to Brussels in Spitfire, BBC clarifies
“Yesterday, we found out what the UK doesn’t want. But we still don’t know what the UK does want,” Donald Tusk, the president of the European Council, tweeted. President Emmanuel Macron, of France, said that there would be no renegotiation, a position that other European leaders took, as well. A European diplomat told the BBC that the only reason there wasn’t panic in Brussels about the U.K. careening to a no-deal Brexit was that officials there “still have the popcorn out”—meaning that they are fascinated by the self-destructive pyrotechnics on display in Parliament.
Government officials are preparing to deal with “putrefying stockpiles” of rubbish in the event of a no-deal Brexit, according to documents leaked to the Guardian.
If the UK leaves the EU without a deal on 29 March, export licences for millions of tonnes of waste will become invalid overnight. Environment Agency (EA) officials said leaking stockpiles could cause pollution.
The EA is also concerned that if farmers cannot export beef and lamb, a backlog of livestock on farms could cause liquid manure stores to overflow. A senior MP said the problems could cause a public health and environmental pollution emergency. An EA source said: “It could all get very ugly, very quickly.”
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As well as recycling waste, the UK ships about 3m tonnes of rubbish a year to the EU to be burned in incinerators that generate electricity. Most of this is household rubbish, which is sometimes shredded and has metal removed before being sent abroad.
If waste has to be stockpiled after a no-deal Brexit, industry experts say the populous south-east of England would be worst affected. The UK’s lack of incinerator capacity and shrinking number of landfill sites drives the exports.
John McDonnell has criticised Theresa May’s rumoured approach to persuading Labour MPs to vote for her Brexit deal as “pork-barrel” politics, saying: “If there is money there to spend on our constituencies, it should be done anyway.”
The shadow chancellor’s accusation follows reports that the government is preparing to plough extra funding into deprived areas that supported leave, with Nottinghamshire MP John Mann claiming that a set of job-creation measures targeted at former industrial towns would make it “very difficult for Labour MPs in leave areas to vote against the deal unless they want a second referendum”.
macbindle said:Well, they conjured up a billion quid for the DUP to be able to form a government.
Research published by the Social Market Foundation suggests the best indicator of a person’s referendum vote was not age or education, but happiness or sadness about their personal finances – with unhappy people tending to vote Leave and contented ones preferring Remain.
The report, which analysed the level of cuts in each area of the UK alongside each area’s growth in support for Ukip, argues that had it not been for austerity, the referendum would not have turned out the way it did.
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The report also challenged the idea that age was the dominant factor in referendum voting behaviour, with analysis showing that only the 18- to 24-year-old demographic showed a strong majority for Remain.
“Brexit was not delivered only by old people; leaving was the majority choice for most age groups and only the very young were substantially pro-Remain,” the report stated.
What Britons actually wanted wasn't Brexit. What we wanted was dignity, self respect, f**k the other guy, and f**k the government. Brexit, like The Wall, is not a real thing at all. It's a mood. A symbol. A story. A promise about power and pride and sovereignty told by swindlers and thugs to frightened children. What people voted for isn't the messy reality but the idea of "taking back control." In fact, it's our leaders who have lost control—of their senses, of their resources, of the plot. And it's the rest of us who are going to pay.