that does confirm how the treaty that was announced friday really can not be extrapolated to the ftt in any way.
sweden (see above), czech republic, cyprus, malta, ireland, luxembourg, ireland -> all countries that, unlike the uk, are in or undecided on friday, but are dead set against an ftt. a eu-commissioner travelled to malta last week in an attempt to persuade the malta government, but got nothing. i'm still completely clueless as to how merkouzy would be able to press through on this ftt, even in the eurozone. it's unclear they even have a majority behind them in the eurozone. let's not overestimate the germanfranco power here, these are still all sovereign countries which i'm convinced will not back down. one country can perhaps be bought off with all kinds of additional concessions, but i really don't see this happening with all countries that are against.
best thing that could happen to kill this thing fast is the +/- 8-10 countries that really want this, go at this alone. the less countries are in, the faster this thing will be dead.
sweden (see above), czech republic, cyprus, malta, ireland, luxembourg, ireland -> all countries that, unlike the uk, are in or undecided on friday, but are dead set against an ftt. a eu-commissioner travelled to malta last week in an attempt to persuade the malta government, but got nothing. i'm still completely clueless as to how merkouzy would be able to press through on this ftt, even in the eurozone. it's unclear they even have a majority behind them in the eurozone. let's not overestimate the germanfranco power here, these are still all sovereign countries which i'm convinced will not back down. one country can perhaps be bought off with all kinds of additional concessions, but i really don't see this happening with all countries that are against.
best thing that could happen to kill this thing fast is the +/- 8-10 countries that really want this, go at this alone. the less countries are in, the faster this thing will be dead.