Brexit: All you need to know about Britain's departure from the EU (III)

Brexit: All you need to know about Britain's departure from the EU (III)

Great Britain and the European Union have launched official evacuation talks, here you can find an easy road map to understand the Brex issue starting with the most basic elements then looking at negotiations, followed by a selection of answers to the questions we sent about [...]

 

Can a second referendum occur?

It seems hard to happen. Both the conservators and Labusists have ruled out the possibility of another referendum, saying the trust of British citizens who voted for evacuation could be broken.

 

Will MPs vote for the Brex deal?

Yeah. Theresa May has appeared eager to avoid voting for her negotiating stand, to avert her departure from her priorities, but has promised that there will be a House of Representatives and Lords vote that will approve any agreement Britain and the EU would agree to, at the end of the two-year process.

 

Do British citizens need visas to travel to the EU?

Although there will be restrictions for British citizens to live and work in EU countries, it seems impossible for them to try to stop tourists. There are many countries outside the SAA, which include 28 EU member states plus Iceland, Liechtenstein and Norway, that British citizens can visit up to 90 days without the need for visas, and it is possible for such arrangements to be discussed with the countries of Europe.

 

Will British citizens continue using the same passport?

Yeah. The passport is a British document and there is no EU passport. The British government can, if it wishes, decide to change color, which is currently standardised for all EU states, explains BBC correspondent for Europe Chris Morris.

 

Some say the British will continue to stay in a single market. What is this market?

The only market is seen by its supporters as the EU's biggest achievement and one of the main reasons why it was established in the first place. Britain was a member of the European Free Market Zone before joining what was later known as the common market. In the free market area, states can trade each other without paying fees, but it is not about a single market because member states should not merge their economies together.

The EU's only market, which was reached in 1992, allows for free movement of goods, services, money and people within the European Union, as if it were a single state. It's allowed to create business or hire anywhere inside it. The idea was promoting trade, creating new jobs and lowering prices. But this requires making common laws to ensure that products are produced in the same technical standards.

 

Have any member states ever left the EU?

No state has left the EU. But Greenland, one of Denmark's foreign territories, held a referendum in 1982 after reaching a higher degree of self-government, and voted 52% in favour of leaving and 48% were to remain in the EU. Its departure from the EU was achieved after a period of negotiations.

 

What does that mean for Scotland?

Prime Minister Scocze Nicola Stormo after the results said this was the “not accepted in the democratic ascetic” for Scotland to face departure from the EU when it actually voted to stay. She also said that Theresa May's decision barring Britain's stance on a single market implies that Scotland must choose between a strong “Brexitw/Brexit) and becoming an independent state, with the possibility of being in the EU. It has officially requested permission to hold a second referendum, saying the vote could be held in mid-row of 2018 and spring of 201950. For that, Theresa May has said that “is not the time” for another referendum.

 

What has been the cost of Brexit?

There's a lot of debate about long-term costs and benefits for the post-Brex British economy, but what we do know is that the EU wants Britain to put some unpaid bills on hold before its departure.

There is no official measurement of these bills, which cover things such as pension fees for EU officials, the cost of shifting London-based EU agencies and unpaid financial obligations of the EU budget.

 

How will Brex affect pensions, savings, investments and mortgages?

During the referendum campaign, David Cameron had said the so-called “triple closure for state pensions would be threatened by Britain's departure. This is an agreement under which pensions rise to at least the level of income, inflation, or 2.5% each year, whatever is highest.

Theresa May dismissed the commitment to the tripartite closure in the party's election manifest, replacing it with 2020; with a subx0 double deadlock”, which envisions pension increases for at least in income or inflation level, but not with a minimum guaranteed of 2.5%.

 

Will tax-free sales return to Europe?

Journalists and writers in the social media have welcomed the return of tax-free sales as a golden side of Brexie. As a result of Brexit '%s', when will happen depends on how negotiations with the EU go about whether the agreement for <x0 use customs” between Britain and the EU will end or continue.

 

Is it possible for MPs to block EU departure?

Can the legislation pass the House of Representatives, given that many MPs in the current parliament were all in favour of the SNP and the Liberals, nearly as well as Labus and the Conservators? The result of the referendum is not legally binding, Parliament has yet to pass laws that Britain will take from the 28-nation bloc, beginning with the abolition of the 1972 European Community Act. The withdrawal agreement also needs to be ratified in parliament in the High Chamber and/or the House of Representatives can vote against ratification, according to the Parliament's Chosen Chamber report.

 

Does it mean that once I leave the EU, Britain will not have the reconciliation of the European Court of Human Rights?

The European Court for Human Rights (ECHR) in Strasbourg is not an EU institution. It is founded by the European Council, which has 47 members, including Russia and Ukraine. Thus, EU departure will not exclude Britain from its decisions.

Conservators are committed to abolishing the Human Rights Act, which requires that British courts treat E The CHR) as the establishment of legal precedents for Britain, in favour of the British Bill of Rights. As part of this, a government led by the Conservators would be expected to announce measures that would boost the strengthening of courts in England and Wales to pass judgments imposed by the ECHR.

The Labusist Party, the Liberal Democrats and the Green Party have campaigned against container proposals to abolish Court for Human Rights Acts.

 

Will the United Kingdom ever join the EU in the future?

BBC newspaper columnist Katia Adler says Britain should start from zero and enter talks with the EU. Every member state must be hired for Britain's re-entry into the EU. But, she says other leaders in Europe may not be generous with Britain's demands. New members are required to adjust the euro as their currency, as they meet the relevant criteria, although Britain may try to negotiate the option of non-taking part.

 

Who wanted Britain to leave the EU?

The United Kingdom Independence Party, which received about four million votes -- or 13% out of total -- in the 2015 general elections, but which suffered a decline in votes for 1,04 in this year's elections, has been campaigning for many years for Britain to exit the EU. They joined in their call during the referendum campaign by about half the MPs from the Conservatory Party, including Boris Johnson and five former members of the cabinet. A minority of lab MPs and the Northern Ireland Party were also in favour of evacuation.

 

What were their reasons for removing Britain from the EU?

According to them, Britain was being kept within the EU, which according to them imposed many business regulations and charged billions of pounds a year on return membership fees. They also wanted Britain to formulate all new animal laws, instead of being created through joint decision-making with other EU countries.

Imigration was also a major issue for Brex supporters. They wanted Britain to regain full control of its borders and reduce the number of people coming to live and work.

One of the main principles of the EU is “free movement”, meaning that someone who wants to live in some EU state does not need to be equipped with visas. The campaign for Displacement also rejected the idea of the increasingly narrow “ion” between EU member states and what they see as moving towards creating the “United States of Europe”

 

What was it about Britain's EU position?

For Britain's failure to move within the EU was former Prime Minister David Cameron, once the main voice of the campaign for residence, after having reached an agreement with other European Union leaders who would have changed the terms of Britain's membership if the country voted to stay.

He said the agreement would give Britain “special” and help regulate certain things that the British were not of reconciliation with the EU, as the high level of immigration, but critics said the agreement in question would make little difference.

Sixteen members of the D cabinet. Cameron, including the woman who would replace him as prime minister, Theresa May, were also for an EU stay. The Conservatory Party was divided into the issue and officially remained neutral during the campaign. The Labusist Party, the National Scotze Party, the Green Party and the Liberal Democrats all favour their stay in the EU.

Former President Obama also was Britain to stay in the EU, as well as leaders of EU member states like France and Germany./Periscopi/

 

Alex Hunt and Brian Wheeler, who translated it and adapted Periscope.

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