So you've rolled back from "important distinction" to "very subtle distinction" eh?Rinkals wrote: ↑Fri Dec 11, 2020 8:42 pmI'm drawing a distinction between what each side wants.Paddington Bear wrote: ↑Fri Dec 11, 2020 3:58 pmNo, it doesn't and has been explicit on this - indeed the rationale for rejecting LPF ratchets and EU court oversight is that we are not asking for full access. You know this
If you edit my post to remove the context, it may help you win on the internet, but it doesn't really advance the discussion.
The original point was this:
" this is a negotiation where both parties want the best for their own members".
I said that there was a fine distinction to be drawn; namely that the UK might want to get the best deal possible for their voters, but that the EU had to find the solution which was the least damaging for the 27 remaining members.
By way of example, I said that the EU could, if they wanted to, grant the UK the full access to the European Market without restriction.
This is clearly what David Davies, RM and others thought would happen because they saw no reason why the EU wouldn't as "we hold all the cards".
My point was that the EU cannot afford to grant this access because doing so would be very damaging to the EU.
So, on the one hand the point about getting "the best for their own members" may be true for the UK, but it doesn't really hold for the EU because the EU isn't looking for the "best deal" but it's looking for the least damaging deal.
It's a very subtle distinction, but I think it's worth bearing in mind.
So very subtle that no one else has seen it.