Tuesday, 28 March 2017

Remain Party Observes Whether Leave Government Could Live Up to Brexit Promisesb



Pro-remain MPs are listing 10 pledges that the current UK government should address as the Brexit talks push forward. The issues listed include trade, security and Britons' rights. The MPs said British citizens expect all the promises to be kept. 



The list is to be finished and published on Tuesday morning in London backed by MPs who opted for the United Kingdom to stay in the European Union. According to the MPs the government is opting for a "Hard Brexit" as the UK government was slowly failing to live up to its promise of a smooth transition in exiting the European Union.

According to the MPs, most of the promises made during the campaign period have been abandoned or even disputed by the Leave campaigners and ministers themselves. One of these were the £350m weekly savings for the NHS after the UK has quit the European Union.

Another pledge that are teetering on the edge of abandonment is the single market membership assurance, to which the chance is slowly fading away; new trade deals ready to sign upon leaving the EU; full protection of rights enjoyed and guaranteed by EU membership despite leaving the bloc and more.

According to the MPs observing the route of the UK government's Brexit plans closely, the final deal that could make all ten promises actually materialise in the next half-decade is impossible. They added that the outcome rests solely on "those conducting negotiations" and "those advocating a hard Brexit."

Sunday, 26 February 2017

British Nationals Are Applying For German Citizenship Before The Brexit Bites Down



British citizens are trying to escape the undesirable clout of the Brexit by applying for German citizenship. According to surveys, many UK citizens are descendants of Jews. Exploiting the German Article 116, which says any Jew stripped of citizenship during the Nazi-era including distant relatives could have their citizenship restored.



More than 550 British Jews have begun applying for German citizenship since the outcome of the EU referendum. 

Meanwhile, UK Prime Minister Theresa May is trying to guarantee the "free movement" of British citizens in Europe despite Britain's exit from the country while trying to keep out EU nationals from conveniently entering the United Kingdom. The deal intends to guarantee free movement including EU nationals residing in the United Kingdom.

Not every EU country is pleased with Britain's decision to leave the European Union. According to RT, Germany, France, Italy, the Czech Republic said Britain must pay a "multi-million compensation bill" before the Brexit talks could begin. This pertains to the UK's actual financial obligations, which might reach up to €60 billion (£51bn). The European Union is discussing the actual total of the "divorce bill" for Britain, which can potentially reach more than €80bn according to EU officials.

The bill includes all of the UK's fiscal responsibilities on projects, programs, pensions and relocation of EU institutions in London. Britain houses the European Medicines Agency and the European Banking Authority.

Thursday, 26 January 2017

Internet Pornography Blocked To Be Finalised In New Law



UK will bypass EU law after the Article 50 is triggered, bringing about the firm grounding of the new pornography block law in the country. EU laws state that no online content could be filtered by member states.



New UK laws are becoming anti-net neutrality laws by the European Union, which have become a threat in recent years. The new law that seeks to block pornography has become a supplement in the proposal for a new Digital Economy Bill to be debated and possibly passed through legislation. The new pornography bill would block explicit websites that would not employ strict age verification.

Internet service providers have been blocking pornography websites as per recommendation of the government to introduce pornography "blocks" at will by ISPs. During the leadership of former PM David Cameron, his new measures made it voluntary for ISPs to block or filter pornographic websites. According to Internet and telecoms lawyer for Decode: Legal Neil Brown, the new proposal explicitly states that ISPs must filter and to "ensure ISPs" continue filtering.

Brown, in contrast, believes the ISP-blocking law against irresponsible pornography websites is a form of tampering with online traffic -- a core principle in the EU laws the UK will bypass through Brexit. However, the Internet Service Providers Association are in favour of the amendment and added protection for children surfing the Internet.