Social Sciences, asked by Sangsktra, 1 year ago

Happy friendship day guys

Explain in detail about BREXIT and EU .Ans in detail

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Answered by ayano71
0
HAPPY FRIENDSHIP DAY (^^)

here is you answer

Although some UK political actors, like Prime Minister Theresa May and Brexit Minister David Davis, still insist that most UK citizens want a hard Brexit — meaning pulling out of the single market to regain control over Britain’s borders and reduce immigration — the results of the general election earlier this month indicate that a much softer form of Brexit is now more likely. This hard version of Brexit as outlined in a white paper by the UK government could be summarized in the catch phrase by the former government that, “No deal would be better than a bad deal.” Of course the fear of not agreeing on a deal with the rest of the EU, and potentially trading on the terms of the World Trade Organization (WTO), were reasons why no overwhelming Brexit mandate was given to May.

Recently, leading Conservatives and Labour Party politicians had compromise talks on how to best structure a softer form of Brexit with the intent to convince May to pursue this direction. These compromise talks are positive indicators and hopefully cooler heads can prevail moving forward. However, despite these talks within the UK government, an important thing to note is that any soft version of Brexit requires an agreement from all remaining 27 European Union (EU) member states, and possibly the European Economic Area member states as well. As you can imagine, such approval can be difficult. Canada discovered this last year when the Region of Wallonia rejected the Canadian Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement (CETA) with the EU. In other words, small member states and regions could reject the UK’s soft Brexit.

Instead of a strong and stable majority, May is now governing in a proposed coalition with the Democratic Unionist Party, a hard-line protestant party from Northern Ireland. She has a very slim majority and it might only take a couple of dissenters among the Tory MPs for her to lose important votes. As a result, commentators see May ready to compromise and some see her recent cabinet appointments, such as the new Justice Minister David Lidington, as a sign of new policy moderation.

hope it helps!

Sangsktra: Thanks
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