What will people who work in Northern Ireland but live in Ireland (or vice versa) do after the no-deal Brexit?
What will people who work in Northern Ireland but live in Ireland (or vice versa) do after the no-deal Brexit?
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I'm pretty sure, they will have the right to live and work here, and vice versa, thanks to a pre-existing agreement, that both parties are intent on keeping if possible.
Why did you stop fighting for your land
are they really going to build a fence plaestine style?
There will be a wall. France is going to pay for it.
Yes. There are already pre-existing agreements for this.
There will be no border.
How do we stop Brits from entering Europe through Ireland? I do not feel comfortable with this.
>who work in Northern Ireland but live in Ireland
why would anyone do it? Northern Ireland is poor af, while the Republic has got extremely expensive to live recently
it seems like a more reasonable choice to live in NI and work in Dublin
>we
It doesn't concern you, Pekka.
Literally nobody gives a shit about potato people.
Based
the main problem is that if the UK leaves the EU with no deal then there will be a border between a EU and non EU country, which will lead to custom duties and border checks between the two countries. Some here said that this is already regulated by the UK but Ireland but they actually aren't, in fact the problem was only solved when the two countries joined the EU. So what either they will have to find an agreement themselves, or the status quo will go back to the IRA era.
They will be castrated and thrown into the Irish Sea, as was accustomed by British Sailors in the Eighteenth century
wtf no its england gonna pay
>Brits from entering Europe through Ireland
just by simply imagine br*t on the europe soil makes me feels sick
But the French are Cuckolds who lost to England look at Quebec
No. You are entirely incorrect.
The common travel area existed before the EU and will continue to exist.
There will be a border from a No Deal Brexit though, so he's not entirely incorrect.
Interesting, then I guess that the only problem will be the custom duties
bbc.co.uk
The EU probably won't allow a soft border unless Ireland also leaves the EU
There will not.
The UK has said it will not enforce it.
The EU has said it will not enforce it.
Nobody will enforce it.
It will allow a hard border, otherwise, Ireland wouldn't have signed a new bilateral arrangement.
>It will allow a hard border
****it will allow not having a border.
You can keep throwing articles at me, but it won't make a difference. The British government and the Irish government have (re)signed an agreement allowing for a common travel area.
Neither the UK, RE or EU have said they will enforce a border.
If there's no deal then there has to be customs checks, ergo a border.
The EU will definitely enforce it. And the UK will to since it wont have any other option under WTO rules.
I have sources. You just state things. I win.
Same as before. There will be no hard border, and the common travel agreement secures the right to live and work in Ireland and the UK for each others citizens. It won't be an issue for people, but the details of European trade coming from outwit Ireland into the UK will need a technological solution to handle taxation of goods.
Ireland does however need to tighten its entry procedures for non-EU nationals so that Ireland does not remain or increase being a backdoor into the UK, and be a further draw for illegal migration and lax security.
Neither side will enforce it, all three are very aware of the possible consequences of doing so - if that requires violating WTO rules than so be it.
Posting articles without context is not "sourcing".
>Ireland does however need to tighten its entry procedures for non-EU nationals
Ireland doesn't have to do and such thing. Illegal migration into the UK is their problem to resolve, not ours.
What are the possible consequences so?
Being part of a CTA, it is more than reasonable to assume that external border enforcement is on both parties.
The return to pre-Good Friday Agreement days.
>it seems like a more reasonable choice to live in NI and work in Dublin
It's a terrible commute
>it is more than reasonable
No, it's not. If you don't want people entering your country then that's your responsibility. We won't be paying for it.
Then there'll be a deal, as that's the only alternative.
Hopefully, Ireland will once more belong to the Irish.
Proddies in the north will drag this out for at least another 50 years. They simply refuse to accept the reality of the situation, despite the UK and the Republic wanting them to cut ties to Great Britain. They can go back to England whenever they want but they choose to stall the inevitable because muh British pride.
>No, it's not. If you don't want people entering your country then that's your responsibility. We won't be paying for it.
Yes, this applies both ways.
Exactly. A deal will happen, all parties will do their best to avoid a no-deal basically for this reason.
This. But anyway, even if there is a hard border, all it does is add an hour to your commute for passport control. And you are a fucking eejit if you live in NI and haven't already applied for an Irish passport for easier travel.
this
NI isn't yours and never will be you bogtrotting catholic subhuman, leave us alone
what's the point? thye can't even speak their fucking language
Who cares what the Irish want? They're just a tax haven meme nation anyway.
explode