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Where does Ireland's Europe minister think Brexit talks stand now?

The Meath-East TD, who worked in European law and twice ran as an MEP candidate, talks to TheJournal.ie about an extraordinary Brexit week.
I’ve always felt that the expression of Irish sovereignty is greatly enhanced by being part of that table at Europe.
It’s not a question of giving up sovereignty, it’s a question of the bigger country sharing sovereignty with us. And that’s the way I’ve always looked at it – it gives us more power.

THOMAS BYRNE IS the seventh person to hold the role of Minister of State for European Affairs – a junior ministry that has become more important in recent years.

Since the Brexit vote in June 2016, the Europe portfolio has involved a lot of batting for the benefits of the EU and the importance of upholding the Good Friday Agreement – the latter of which was greatly helped by having the same customs and regulatory rules North and south.

Never has there been a greater need for it than this week, when the UK threatened to renege on commitments to Northern Ireland contained in the concluded and ratified Withdrawal Agreement (upon which Boris Johnson glided into a successful general election campaign).

The non-Cabinet European Affairs minister role was first created in 1997; since then its alumna have assumed more senior Cabinet roles.

Current Eurogroup President and Finance Minister Paschal Donohoe assumed the role in 2013, and his Fine Gael colleague Helen McEntee – who is now a Justice Minister at the age of 34 – preceded Byrne.

Being a junior minister for Europe looks good on a CV.

For Byrne, moving from a role as Fianna Fáil’s education spokesperson to a junior minister for Europe may seem left-of-field, but he started his professional career as a solicitor in the EU law department of Irish firm McCann FitzGerald, He also twice ran as an MEP candidate, adding that he’s “always had an interest” in European matters.

And, like many domestic politicians who become MEPs, Commissioners, or take up another European role, he’s already using the safe, steady language of an EU politician.

pjimage (4)

Already out to bat for Ireland and the EU in a game of Brexit this week, he told BBC Radio 4 that the UK’s actions to renege on commitments made in the Withdrawal Agreement in relation to Northern Ireland were “uniquely unprecedented”.

He said that the UK’s claim that they were taking this action to protect the Good Friday Agreement was “completely false”, and that the opposite was true.

[It was put to me that] a sovereign country can make its own laws. But one of the essences of sovereignty is making agreements with other sovereign countries. And I think the UK has missed that point.

In an interview with TheJournal.ie - held during the throes of a diplomatic crisis with the UK government over the Withdrawal Agreement – he responded to a question about whether Ireland has done enough to protect Northern Ireland with a familiar answer:

Even in the best Brexit outcome imaginable, there’s still going to be huge, negative consequences on the island of Ireland, north and south.

He adds that no one could have foreseen the UK rowing back on an international treaty it ratified just months earlier.

“The [Irish] Protocol is there, fundamentally, to protect trading goods to the island of Ireland, and thereby protect the peace process,” Byrne says – another recognisable phrase. 

“Anything at all that is said or done about the Protocol can have immediate effects in Northern Ireland.”

Byrne repeats another familiar phrase: that in his phone calls with all his European counterparts, he is “struck” by the solidarity there is with Ireland.

When asked whether other EU countries care anymore about Brexit, he says they do, and insists that Brexit hasn’t slipped off their agenda.

“Well it’s my job to keep it on the agenda,” he adds.

An exemption on travel

Though having relaxed into the role, Byrne admits that his start as Ireland’s Europe minister has been somewhat clipped by not being permitted, under public health guidelines, to travel to Europe.

When asked has he travelled abroad, he gives an emphatic ‘no’.

But, anticipating a change to Ireland’s travel rules next week, he plans in-person meetings in two weeks’ time: “The General Affairs Council is happening physically in two weeks. So we expect to be there at that point, and we’re making preparations to be there.”

Currently, foreign diplomats and workers involved in the supply chain are the only workers exempt from travel restrictions – MEPs have written to the Taoiseach Micheál Martin to ask for an exemption to allow them to travel to the European Parliament without having to restrict their movements for 14 days upon their return.

“I don’t want to start comparing us to nurses or doctors,” Byrne says, but adds that the current travel regulations are “pretty restrictive”, and that diplomacy will be needed as the trade talks come to an end this winter. If not sooner.

‘Unacceptable’ events this week

When Byrne read Peter Foster’s exclusive in the Financial Times last Sunday night, which said the UK was planning to override key parts of the Brexit Withdrawal Agreement with a piece of domestic legislation, he thought it was incredible.

Despite it setting off alarm bells in Dublin, he said that the Irish government took an initial reaction “of caution and care”. 

“What we don’t want to do on this side, is just immediately ratchet up things,” he said.

But it came into to sharp relief [in the House of Commons], that’s the truth. And it’s not acceptable. It just can’t be accepted.

The Bill was published on Wednesday afternoon, and was as extreme in reneging on the Withdrawal Agreement as had been promised – contradicting requirements for custom declarations for goods travelling from Northern Ireland to Great Britain, and giving British ministers the power to decide on State aid rules for companies in the North.

Byrne compares the British government’s actions to former British Prime Minister Winston Churchill’s “absolute commitment to treaties”, when he invoked a Portuguese Treaty from 1373 in the House of Commons during the Second World War.

When it’s suggested that Boris Johnson was not far off when he is reported to have said that the Brexit deal agreed “never made sense”, particularly in relation to what customs rules the North was to abide by, Byrne refutes this.

“I think it makes perfect sense. What the protocol aims to achieve is to ensure that goods can trade freely on the island of Ireland, and that requires a protection for the [EU's] Single Market as well. 

Northern Ireland is such a complicated place that there are complicated solutions to its problems. The Good Friday Agreement is a complicated system of government.

He said that the protocol was the end result of compromise on both sides in negotiations, though there is still “a lot of work to do”.

When asked whether there is any chance for a trade deal to be struck, Byrne says that the government launched its Brexit Readiness plan this week encouraging businesses to be ready on the basis of “a limited deal or no deal”. 

He says that Ireland and Europe will watch how the Internal Market Bill progresses through the UK Parliament. 

Sovereignty, Europe, and Anglo-Irish relations

The UK has argued that though it was one of the most influential countries in the EU, it paid more into the EU ‘pot’ than it got out – an argument that had always been the reverse for Ireland (mostly because of the EU’s CAP payments to farmers).

Following on from Ireland’s resurrection from the depths of the recession to high offices of influence (see Paschal Donohoe as head of the Eurogroup, and Mairéad McGuinness’ new role), it will be paying more into the EU than before. 

We tend to play our hand strongly for a country of our weight,” Byrne says, “but that’s not to say that we don’t have challenges ahead. One is that we’ve become a net contributor… That will require a bit of work and a bit of effort [to communicate].”
We want to make Europe as relevant as possible to citizens without getting caught up in huge big constitutional changes.

“You’d love to have a stronger health competence or whatever might be useful now, but that’s not going to happen without big ratification… we’ve got to work with what we have.”

On the more macro issue of Ireland’s place in Europe, Byrne says Ireland has a close relationship with European nations, but adds that it could be closer. 

“Countries like Croatia and Austria, those countries that you mightn’t think of, there are business links that can be developed to mutual benefit,” he says.

Byrne also stresses, however, that relations with the UK must be maintained.

On the fisheries issue in trade negotiations, a sensitive one for Ireland, Byrne says that “you can see where Britain is coming from as well, there’s a lot of deprivation on the coasts in England, that’s where they’re coming from”.

“I think we’ve it’s absolutely necessary to maintain a close relationship with Great Britain. There’s no two ways about that. It’s a really important relationship.”

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19 Comments
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    Mute Seth Cheffetz
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    Feb 2nd 2016, 1:05 PM

    I think I’d honestly rather have Trump as president than this nutjob.

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    Mute Papasmurf
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    Feb 2nd 2016, 1:18 PM

    He’s a well respected lawyer and has brought some useful bills to fruition in his time and got them over the line. He passed through Princeton and Harvard Law too. Seems the evangelicals came out in big numbers and got him over the line.From what I’ve seen of him his religious credentials seem to be all about votes. You’ll recall John McCain becoming a baptist in his republican race, Trump too went off to Church last week.

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    Mute Nathan Wheeler
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    Feb 2nd 2016, 1:29 PM

    McCain believed in evolution, this wack job does not. Ergo Moron.

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    Mute Fozz
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    Feb 2nd 2016, 1:33 PM

    The fact that anyone who doesn’t believe in hard scientific facts can still be taking seriously as a leader by millions of people is testament to the wide-scale ignorance under which many people still live.
    In 2016…terrifying.

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    Mute ScewMadd
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    Feb 2nd 2016, 2:48 PM

    You’re quite right Fozz. It is indeed the current year.

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    Mute TheBull
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    Feb 2nd 2016, 2:54 PM

    He absolutely believes in evolution. He just says he doesn’t to appeal to the people who don’t. Every word that comes out of any of theses guys mouths is a lie to get elected. That’s much worse than ignorance.

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    Mute P.J. Nolan
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    Feb 2nd 2016, 3:12 PM

    @the bull
    Agreed but so does every politician, which ever colour, in the world

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    Mute P-anti matter
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    Feb 2nd 2016, 3:13 PM

    Of the 44 American presidents since the civil war, none have claimed to be president. Strange really when the Pew Religious Landscape survey reported that as of 2014, 22.8% of the U.S. population is religiously unaffiliated, atheists made up 3.1% and agnostics made up 4% of the U.S. population. So 30% of the general population are non – religious. So that’s generally means that almost 1 in 3 American presidents have lied about their beliefs.

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    Mute P-anti matter
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    Feb 2nd 2016, 3:14 PM

    That should read “None have claimed to be atheist”. Apologies.

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    Mute C O'Neill
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    Feb 2nd 2016, 6:12 PM

    I would never trust a politician who was being backed and financed by a large Corporate interest or lobby. This only makes that politician beholden to them at the expense of the people they are meant to represent. If I was an American citizen I’d investigate which candidate(s) has been bought by a Corporate interest or lobby and not vote them. All you are getting is more of the same – a puppet president not serving the peoples interests. Trump is far from perfect but he has entirely financed his own campaign and I believe that he genuinely puts the considerations of the American people before any corporation or lobby.

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    Mute captain ireland
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    Feb 2nd 2016, 6:51 PM

    Ha ha , now that trump is gone , media are branding cruz as the new nutjob .. you would swear Clinton was the virgin Mary herself

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    Mute Seth Cheffetz
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    Feb 2nd 2016, 7:05 PM

    Trump is not gone yet. Please understand the subject before commenting.

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    Mute C O'Neill
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    Feb 2nd 2016, 7:08 PM

    I think Reagan lost Iowa too – there is a long way to go yet.

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    Mute Francis Mc Carthy
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    Feb 3rd 2016, 5:38 AM

    Cruz was ALWAYS branded a nutjob, and a very dangerous one at that ..

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    Mute Harry
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    Feb 2nd 2016, 1:14 PM

    Great just what America needs an evangelical nut

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    Mute ScewMadd
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    Feb 2nd 2016, 2:58 PM

    I wouldn’t worry about it. The GOP establishment have decided Rubio is their man in the same way Dem establishment have ‘Hill dog’ as their preferred candidate, and given Microsoft are doing the tallying of votes at these caucuses and the company has donated tens of thousands to both of those candidates, I reckon they’ll be running by hook or by crook.

    Rubio and Clinton are the same on just about all major issues, particularly foreign intervention, the TPP and immigration. The issues on which they do disagree are cosmetic and of no concern to establishment elites (the likes of the Koch brothers, Goldman Sachs or Hillary’s foreign donors) and amount to shuffling of the deck chairs on the Titanic in the grand scheme of things. Expect media like Buzzfeed, the Guardian, and NRO to put an undue amount of focus on ridiculous and frankly inconsequential topics such as transgender bathrooms, playing up the minor differences to draw attention from their glaring similarities.

    In the mean time, expect more idiotic articles about things such as the “BernieBros” as the media attacks any candidate their corporate paymasters may not be able to 100% control.

    Enjoy your “choice” America.

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    Mute P.J. Nolan
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    Feb 2nd 2016, 3:06 PM

    It’s really really annoying when people don’t do what you tell them

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    Mute C O'Neill
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    Feb 2nd 2016, 5:45 PM

    I didn’t know that -surely thats a conflict of interest? Microsoft is one of Cruz’biggest donors yet got to do the counting!

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    Mute ScewMadd
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    Feb 2nd 2016, 8:25 PM

    The Hillary stories are worse. The counts for her vs. Bernie went to coin flips in six different places, and Hillary just happened to win all six. This is beyond a joke.

    With what happened to the left wing government in Greece last year, where there was an attempt to stop them holding a referendum as it would be ‘undemocratic’, and what’s happening to the right wing Law and Justice government in Poland, with the EU taking steps to suspend their right to vote in laws and take direct control, I hope people will start to realise it doesn’t matter if you’re “right” or “left”. If you dare to vote outside the narrow postage stamp of ‘Officially Approved Ideologies’(tm), you’re going to get screwed, or your campaign will be snuffed out before it gets off the ground.

    It’s not such a new thing to suggest democracy is dead, but I think the real power-brokers have just decided to stop playing ‘Weekend At Bernie’s’ with the corpse.

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    Mute John Quill
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    Feb 2nd 2016, 1:09 PM

    I’m confused if he was born in Calgary how is he eligible exactly? I thought you had to be born in the US or is an american mother enough?

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    Mute Pete Slattery
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    Feb 2nd 2016, 1:12 PM

    There are still questions over his eligibility to run. His parents’ nationality and the fact that they voted in Canadian elections around the time of Cruz’s birth calls into question his eligibility. It’s all very confusing. And the least worrying thing about Cruz. He’s a nasty little man.

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    Mute Norman Hunter
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    Feb 2nd 2016, 1:15 PM

    His mother is a US citizen, he was therefore entitled to citizenship.But of course if he is on target to become President there will be a challenge.

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    Mute ktsiwot
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    Feb 2nd 2016, 1:22 PM

    Same here john, I am really confused that a Canadian born Cuban-American is running for the president of America and one of his main platforms is anti emigration. I thought you had to be born in the USA to run for president.

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    Mute Papasmurf
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    Feb 2nd 2016, 1:23 PM

    He had dual citizenship at one point. Canada and US, so he renounced his Canadian citizenship.

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    Mute No Mauvaise Foi
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    Feb 2nd 2016, 2:01 PM

    Good point John. That whole ‘you had to be born in one of the 50 states’ was a big thing in the so-called birther movement against Obama. Having an American mam wasn’t enough for those people objecting to Obama, even though it was proven that he was born in the 50 states. But now it’s ok for Cruz cause we KNOW he wasn’t born in the states, but because his mam is American?

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    Mute thejynxeffect
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    Feb 2nd 2016, 2:03 PM

    the rules state you must be born of the land to run for president. There’s legal challenges to his candidacy which he is keeping under wraps for the moment it seems.

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    Mute Kieron Connolly
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    Feb 2nd 2016, 2:06 PM

    You have to be a ‘natural born’ citizen to run for prez. Opinions differ, but majority of legal eagles agree that as he was a citizen at the time of his birth ( his mother is from U.S. ), he’s qualified, regardless of where he was born.

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    Mute Alien8
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    Feb 2nd 2016, 2:07 PM

    The criteria isn’t being what they call a natural born US citizen, rather than just a US citizen. The government cleared natural born citizens born in other territories when John McCain (born in the Panama Canal Zone) was questioned and the senate validated his run. Cruz qualifies under the same criteria. We’re not as fussy, as some Americans (i.e. Martin O’Malley) qualify for Irish Citizenship and can run for president here.

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    Mute Larry Smierciak
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    Feb 3rd 2016, 1:21 AM

    The gotcha could most likely be the “natural born citizen” requirement. Most legal scholars agree that means born in the United States. Cruz is arguing that simply being born anywhere with a legal entitlement to citizenship is enough. If it’s challenged, I don’t think he would win.

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    Mute Cal Cryton
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    Feb 2nd 2016, 1:14 PM

    Rick Santorum and Mike Huckabee were the last two winnners of the Republican nomination in Ohio, neither of whom went on to be the nominee for President. Ohio tends to pick the most religious nutter. Despite how the media is trying to spin it, this is not a setback for Trump. He’s going to do a lot better in New Hampshire.

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    Mute P.J. Nolan
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    Feb 2nd 2016, 1:54 PM

    Agree I think trump will win new Hampshire and north Carolina but I think the fact Rubio came a reasonably close third could be significant.
    Rubio is who the Democrats fear most and for that reason I believe he will be the candidate

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    Mute dowthebow
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    Feb 2nd 2016, 2:04 PM

    Iowa??

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    Mute Patrick Keating
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    Feb 2nd 2016, 2:06 PM

    What has Ohio got to do with this?

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    Mute Cal Cryton
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    Feb 2nd 2016, 2:13 PM

    whoops..Iowa of course…ye knew what i meant!

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    Mute Cal Cryton
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    Feb 2nd 2016, 2:21 PM

    @ P.J

    Agreed, Cruz will likely fall off the way Santorum did in the last campaign. It will likely be a Trump vs Rubio contest. The “establishment” will get behind Rubio now, so will be interesting to see if that’s enough to beat Trump.

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    Mute P.J. Nolan
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    Feb 2nd 2016, 3:10 PM

    If it does come down to trump and Rubio the Establishment’ as you put will be between a rock and a hard place. Do they support Rubio to beat trump but what if he runs as an independent?

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    Mute ScewMadd
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    Feb 2nd 2016, 3:58 PM

    The shock here isn’t the support that Cruz got. That was around the level expected. The real story is the amount of supporters that seemed to shift from Trump to Rubio. As you said, the Iowa support tends to go to ‘Mr. God and Jesus’ which isn’t really Rubio’s game.

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    Mute Cal Cryton
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    Feb 2nd 2016, 4:38 PM

    I think Trump has already publicly stated that he won’t run as an independent if he doesn’t get the nomination…would be hard for him to roll back on that.

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    Mute P.J. Nolan
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    Feb 2nd 2016, 4:53 PM

    Trump has probably gone to far in this primary race to turn around and go independent now

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    Mute ScewMadd
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    Feb 2nd 2016, 5:17 PM

    Trump will roll back on anything. He flip flops on plenty of issues almost weekly. At one stage he was non interventionist, then he wanted to ‘bomb the sh*t out of’ people and ‘kill their families’.

    If he was to declare open war on the GOP establishment and run independent his supporters would be ecstatic. They’d rather kill the ‘RINO’ or more distastefully ‘cuckservative’ campaign and have another shot at the primaries in 2020 than see Rubio or Cruz win. Remember if the GOP gets the White House, that man will be running again in four years. That wouldn’t suit Trump at all.

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    Mute P.J. Nolan
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    Feb 2nd 2016, 6:43 PM

    @scewmadd
    Now I thought I was cynical!

    But I’m not saying that you are completely wrong

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    Mute Rosie Gluten
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    Feb 2nd 2016, 2:44 PM

    “Mark my word, if and when these preachers get control of the [Republican] party, and they’re sure trying to do so, it’s going to be a terrible damn problem. Frankly, these people frighten me. Politics and governing demand compromise. But these Christians believe they are acting in the name of God, so they can’t and won’t compromise. I know, I’ve tried to deal with them.” -Barry M.Goldweather ,1994.

    Be afraid,be very afraid.

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    Mute No Mauvaise Foi
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    Feb 2nd 2016, 1:59 PM

    #FeelTheBern

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    Mute ScewMadd
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    Feb 2nd 2016, 3:59 PM

    #HashtagsAreForTwitter

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    Mute Rumpelstiltskin
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    Feb 2nd 2016, 3:16 PM

    “I will carpet bomb Isis until the sand glows”
    Gospel according to Ted

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    Mute Guybrush Threepwood
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    Feb 2nd 2016, 3:23 PM

    Trump is not a nutjob. He is very dangerous and while I disagree with almost everything he has to say there is some sense to his extremist views. Cruz, on the other hand, is a complete nutcase.

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    Mute Johnnathan Biskalero
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    Feb 2nd 2016, 2:07 PM

    Hillary v Sanders ……six coin tosses to decide in six areas and Killary won all six……lol…..democracy ? You got to be kidding me….

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    Mute Patrick J O'CONNOR
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    Feb 2nd 2016, 7:16 PM

    I live in Alberta 5 months a year and although a Trump fan myself I can assert with all honesty that I haven’t heard a god word about Cruz or a bad word about Trump. Everybody is mystified by yesterday’s Iowa vote.We fully ecpected Trump to win. Cruz wouldn’t have a hope in hell here in Alberta if……..

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    Mute Mr. Hoffman
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    Feb 2nd 2016, 8:22 PM

    What does Alberta, Canada have to do with a United States election?

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    Mute Patrick J O'CONNOR
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    Feb 2nd 2016, 9:29 PM

    @Mr Hoffman……………..100,000 US citizens live in Calgary.

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    Mute Guybrush Threepwood
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    Feb 2nd 2016, 9:32 PM

    You must’ve misunderstood his question.

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    Mute Patrick J O'CONNOR
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    Feb 2nd 2016, 11:08 PM

    @Guybrush Threepwood……..I ought to have given some background to my original comment. Albertans in general, and Calgarians in particular, are quite like Americans and have in the past considered joining the US. So Cruz having connections to Calgary,Alberta one would imagine strong or some support for him in Alberta. I have not heard any favourable comments for Cruz but Trump definitely turns Albertans on. Too bad about Iowa.
    BTW Americans,unlike Irish, can vote in US elections.

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    Mute Martello Mulligan
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    Feb 2nd 2016, 3:46 PM

    A right wing nut job won’t get elected so if the Republicians pick one they’re phucked. Having said that, it’s great to see that the Donald got some feathers pulled in Iowa. He’s gonna be totally plucked in a few weeks. Quack, quack, quackery quackers!

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    Mute P.J. Nolan
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    Feb 2nd 2016, 6:47 PM

    But what if the Democrats pick a socialist?

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    Mute Irish Cottage Rental
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    Feb 2nd 2016, 5:52 PM

    Rubio the most likely – obvious if you look hard enough.

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