Scottish Daily Mail

Boycott French food if we have a no-deal Brexit

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THE result of the Salzburg Eu leaders summit, and the recent comment by the French Minister for European Affairs that a nodeal Brexit will be better than a bad deal for the French, provide a wonderful opportunit­y to show the member states exactly what they will miss if we leave the Eu without a deal.

As a preliminar­y test of how things might change, we simply stop purchasing produce and goods from one of the member states. As President Macron is perhaps the most vocal opponent of the UK, then we should immediatel­y cease purchasing anything French.

It may upset a few of the snobs in Whitehall who would miss their cognac, but who cares.

If the French took umbrage and blockaded the Channel ports, then we would have to switch everything to the Dutch and Belgian ports.

If the Dutch and Belgian government­s then joined the French, it would not be long before the business leaders of the Eu started knocking a few political heads together, because such a situation will not benefit anyone — least of all the Eu.

If the bureaucrat­s in Brussels had been more receptive to the minimal and reasonable changes that David Cameron had been looking for, then we would not be in this position today.

ROBERT BISHOP, Billingshu­rst, w. Sussex. SO, unelected Eu president Donald Tusk calls out Britain’s elected Home Secretary over his comments on the Eu. Never a word about President Macron, the modern-day little Napoleon who called Brexiteers liars. Typical of the un-elected bureaucrat­s!

IAN WETHERILL, greenock,

Renfrewshi­re.

Chequers betrayal

IT MAY be all right to wax lyrical about the Prime Minister’s performanc­e at the Tory Conference (Comment), but the country didn’t vote for a comedienne.

Behind Theresa May’s upbeat speech, there continues to lie the spectre of the Chequers plan.

One suspects very few people have read the proposals in detail — these make alarming reading. The ‘common rulebook’, for example, means that the UK would have to obey Eu rules, without being able to vote on them.

It is unlikely the Eu would accept even an amended deal, accusing the UK of ‘cherry-picking’.

We should recognise that the Chequers plan is exactly as Boris Johnson portrayed it. The sugges- tion that he is doing it to further his own leadership ambitions is to ignore the fact that leaving the Eu will be a million miles from the expectatio­ns of the majority who voted in the referendum.

HUGH SAWYER, Basingstok­e, Hants.

I HAVE my doubts as to Boris’s suitabilit­y for Prime Minister. But the contention that he resigned, having endorsed the Chequers agreement, just to improve his leadership chances is unfair.

Boris, the then Brexit Secretary David Davis and the majority of the Cabinet were kept in the dark about these proposals until the last minute, giving no chance for any serious thinking about their suitabilit­y. After a few days’ contemplat­ion, Boris was quite entitled to resign honourably.

ADRIAN JACKAMAN,

Stonehouse, glos.

Real money-laundering

FURTHER to the bugs and germs that lurk on loose change (Mail), I recently returned from a trip to the u.S.

In San Francisco, staff at the Westin St Francis Hotel in union Square have been washing in strong detergent every dollar, dime, nickel and cent that their customers spend at the hotel since 1938, when they first employed a full-time coin washer. Coin washing using a burnishing machine was introduced at the hotel to prevent ladies from soiling their white gloves when handling money. These were in vogue in the Thirties and Forties.

‘Money laundering’ continues at the hotel to this day. They believe they are the only hotel in the world to employ a coin washer. IAIN CAMERON WILLIAMS,

Edinburgh.

March of the minority

THE SNP-led City of Edinburgh Council estimates that 20,000 people marched in the capital on Saturday in support of breaking up the UK.

So 5,430,000 of Scotland’s population didn’t – including Nicola Sturgeon.

How about this travelling circus instead accepts the result of the 2014 referendum? Time to respect democracy and move on, guys.

MARTIN REDFERN, Edinburgh.

That’s rich from RBS

THE boss of royal Bank of Scotland, ross McEwan, says the UK could be tipped into recession if there is a no-deal Brexit (Mail).

Didn’t RBS, with other reckless banks, plunge the world into recession and need to be bailed out by British taxpayers in 2008, who still hold almost two-thirds of its shares? This would be a good time for Mr McEwan to concentrat­e on his day job instead of making up Project Fear scare stories.

MIKE DURAND, Penzance, Cornwall.

Corbynista purges

IT would seem that Labour’s Corbynista elements have now succeeded in dragging down another couple of Scottish moderates, this time including former health spokesman Anas Sarwar, in a most cruel and humiliatin­g way.

Scottish Labour leader richard Leonard’s lack of support for another moderate in the party, Kezia Dugdale, would suggest their Stalinist-like purges on what is termed ‘Blairites’ in England have been enthusiast­ically embraced by fellow Corbynista­s in Scotland – and their grip on the party is tightening.

This is not the broad church party that I once admired and supported. ALEXANDER MCKAY, New Cut Rigg, Edinburgh.

Taxing credibilit­y

I READ with interest that a tourist tax on visitors to Scotland would cost the country’s hospitalit­y industry £175million per year if they apply £2 per night to a hotel bill (Mail).

These people obviously have not visited Italy or other places in Europe that apply between three and five euros per person per night to a hotel bill.

In my case, my wife and I had to pay 42 euros after staying a week in Italy. I don’t see them talking about millions of pounds – or euros – being lost.

JAMES SMITH, Rutherglen,

Lanarkshir­e.

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