Skip to playerSkip to main content
  • 7 weeks ago
Transcript
00:00Does the U.S. not want a strong E.U.? Will – sorry, Jonathan was sort of saying that, you know, it's a strong collective can stand up to the U.S., weaker individual countries not so much.
00:15So I think that we don't – to be fair, I think it's pretty clear we don't like the E.U. as an institution in the way, again, it's sort of this economic bloc trying to negotiate against our interests.
00:23And I think it's jarring when we – again, we're dealing with that tension between how the European Union countries interact with us when they're talking about NATO and military cooperation versus when they're talking about economics.
00:35So I think we want – but at the same time, we do want the European countries to be stronger internally, I think.
00:41And I also think, you know, one of the things I would say to the remainder U.K. types is that what's happening is that your population is screaming at you over immigration.
00:51And I think that there – just somehow there needs to be a reorientation of things in a lot of these Western European countries that, like, you're going to have these right-wing rebellions effectively against the E.U. and the global governance if the E.U. is a super incredible force for migration into your countries.
01:11And I think you'd have a lot more buy-in to the European Union generally and wouldn't have to worry about people like Farage if you were solving your immigration problems.
Comments

Recommended