Merkel to address British parliament and have tea with the Queen

Blackleaf

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German Chancellor Angela Merkel is making a visit to Britain today to speak to both the Head of Government and the Head of State.

The leader of Europe's richest country is to address both Houses of Parliament and have tea with the Queen during a one-day visit to the UK.

Mrs Merkel will follow in the footsteps of other leaders, such as Nelson Mandela, Mikhail Gorbachev and Ronald Reagan, in addressing British MPs and peers.

The last time a German chancellor addressed both Houses of Parliament in Westminster was in March, 1970. Willy Brandt came and met Harold Wilson and expounded at length in English.

As well as holding talks with Prime Minister David Cameron she will also talk with the leaders of the other two main parties - Labour's Ed Miliband and Liberal Democrats' Nick Clegg, the Deputy PM.

Germany is one of Britain's biggest allies in the EU but Merkel, like other EU leaders, is worried that the British people may vote to leave the EU in a 2017 referendum.

Cameron is hoping to persuade Mrs Merkel to accept the need for EU treaty changes that would allow him to return powers from Brussels before a promised referendum on Britain's EU membership in 2017.

The Guardian reported on Wednesday that Berlin was prepared to offer "limited opt-outs" to the UK over its future compliance with existing EU directives and to make sure some other regulations were more flexibly enforced.


Angela Merkel to give symbolic address to UK Parliament

27 February 2014
BBC News


Angela Merkel is widely regarded as Europe's most powerful political leader

German Chancellor Angela Merkel is to address both Houses of Parliament and have tea with the Queen during a one-day visit to the UK.

Mrs Merkel will follow in the footsteps of other leaders, such as Nelson Mandela, Mikhail Gorbachev and Ronald Reagan, in addressing MPs and peers.

She will later hold talks with the three main party leaders.

David Cameron is pulling out all the stops as he sees the German leader as crucial to his aims in Europe.

He is hoping to persuade Mrs Merkel to accept the need for EU treaty changes that would allow him to return powers from Brussels before a promised referendum on Britain's EU membership in 2017.

The Guardian reported on Wednesday that Berlin was prepared to offer "limited opt-outs" to the UK over its future compliance with existing EU directives and to make sure some other regulations were more flexibly enforced.


David Cameron has spoken of his enormous admiration for Angela Merkel

'Disappointed'

The newspaper said it was a sign of the lengths that Germany was willing to go to to ensure the UK remained a member of the EU amid fears in Europe that a referendum could lead to British withdrawal.

But the BBC's Berlin Correspondent Stephen Evans said sources close to Mrs Merkel were playing down expectations of new proposals for the kind of changes British Conservatives wanted to see.

One Merkel adviser said: "Those expecting a thunderbolt in the speech will be disappointed."

Instead, Mrs Merkel will offer warm words about Britain and her desire to keep the country in the EU. But, says Evans, people close to the German leader are also expressing dismay that, as they see it, the British government has not come to them to spell out what changes it wants.

Although not an official state visit - Mrs Merkel is not head of state - the trip has been planned for months, with both governments aware of its political significance at a time of looming change in Europe.

Mrs Merkel is expected to speak for half an hour, in German, in front of an invited audience of dignitaries in the Palace of Westminster, including MPs, peers, diplomats, business and cultural leaders.





Leaders previously accorded the honour of addressing both House of Parliament include French Presidents Charles de Gaulle, pictured above, Valery Giscard d'Estaing and Francois Mitterrand, US presidents Bill Clinton and Barack Obama, the Tibetan opposition leader the Dalai Lama, Burmese politician Aung San Suu Kyi and former Russian president Boris Yeltsin - click here for a full list.

Mrs Merkel's predecessor, Willy Brandt, addressed both chambers in 1970.

'Not a priority'

After Thursday's address, Chancellor Merkel will meet a delegation of MPs and peers before having a working lunch with the prime minister at Downing Street.

The two centre-right leaders, both of whom govern in a coalition with other parties, will hold a press conference in which Mrs Merkel is likely to be pressed on whether she will support the UK's call for future treaty change in the EU.

David Cameron has said that if the Conservatives win the 2015 election, he will seek to renegotiate the terms of the UK's membership of the European Union and put the outcome to an in-out referendum of the British people in 2017.

But he faces a battle to convince leaders of other EU member states to agree to the treaty changes he will need, with French President Francois Hollande recently telling the prime minister, on a one-day visit to the UK, that it was "not a priority".

Mr Cameron is seen as having a warmer relationship with Mrs Merkel than Mr Hollande, although Berlin was angered by his decision to veto a fiscal compact in December 2011 in response to the eurozone debt crisis.

The prime minister and his wife Samantha visited the German chancellor's country residence last April, following a visit made by Mrs Merkel and her husband to Chequers in 2010.


Mrs Merkel and the Queen, Europe's two most powerful women, are to have tea together later at Buckingham Palace

The leader of Mr Cameron's junior coalition partners, the Lib Dem Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg, and opposition leader Ed Miliband, who both oppose calls for a referendum and who have warned that Conservative calls for a root-and-branch renegotiation will alienate EU leaders, will hold separate meetings with Mrs Merkel.

The German chancellor will round off the day by having tea at Buckingham Palace.


http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-26362034











 
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Walter

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Gotta love how she is leading the strongest economy in the EU. Good on you, Angela.
 

Blackleaf

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Gotta love how she is leading the strongest economy in the EU. Good on you, Angela.


Unemployment rate

Germany: 7.3%
UK: 7.2%


Economic growth rate 2013

Germany: 0.4%
UK: 1.9% (The British economy grew almost 5 times faster than the German economy in 2013)


Predicted economic growth for 2014

Germany: 1.8%
UK: 3.4%

As I've said before, Britain's economy is currently the best-performing of all major Western economies.


German Chancellor Angela Merkel has hailed Germany's "close partnership" with the UK in an historic address to both Houses of Parliament.

But she said those hoping for her to back EU treaty reform - or the opposite - would be "in for a disappointment".

Somebody should tell Merkel that no EU treaty reform = Britain voting to leave the EU in 2017.


Germany's Angela Merkel has addressed UK Parliament

BBC News
27 February 2014


Angela Merkel speech in the Palace of Westminster, home of the UK Parliament

German Chancellor Angela Merkel has hailed Germany's "close partnership" with the UK in an historic address to both Houses of Parliament.

But she said those hoping for her to back EU treaty reform - or the opposite - would be "in for a disappointment".

She began her remarks in English before delivering the main part of her speech in German.

David Cameron is pulling out all the stops as he sees the German leader as crucial to his aims in Europe.

Mrs Merkel hailed the peace and stability she said the European Union had brought, saying war between EU member states was now "inconceivable".

But she stressed that the EU's mission of maintaining peace in Europe was not over as some thought, telling the audience of Britain's political leaders: "We need to stand up resolutely against extremists and the inhumane."


The speech was anticipated by all sides of the UK EU debate

She hailed the "unparalleled success" of the EU free market - and the freedoms European integration had delivered - but stressed that "we need to change the political shape of the EU in keeping with the times".

She called for the EU to be made "stronger, more stable and more competitive than it is today".

David Cameron is hoping to persuade Mrs Merkel to accept the need for EU treaty changes that would allow him to bring back powers from Brussels before a promised referendum on Britain's EU membership in 2017.

The Guardian reported on Wednesday that Berlin was prepared to offer "limited opt-outs" to the UK over its future compliance with existing EU directives and to make sure some other regulations were more flexibly enforced.


PM David Cameron, right, awaits the speech with opposition leader Ed Miliband, left, and deputy PM Nick Clegg, centre. Left of centre at the top is Shadow Chancellor Ed Balls

The newspaper said it was a sign of the lengths that Germany was willing to go to to ensure the UK remained a member of the EU amid fears in Europe that a referendum could lead to British withdrawal.

But the BBC's Berlin Correspondent Stephen Evans said sources close to Mrs Merkel were playing down expectations of new proposals for the kind of changes British Conservatives wanted to see.

BBC News - Germany's Angela Merkel addressing UK Parliament







 
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captain morgan

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A Mouse Once Bit My Sister
Unemployment rate

Germany: 7.3%
UK: 7.2%


Economic growth rate 2013

Germany: 0.4%
UK: 1.9% (The British economy grew almost 5 times faster than the German economy in 2013)


Predicted economic growth for 2014

Germany: 1.8%
UK: 3.4%

As I've said before, Britain's economy is currently the best-performing of all major Western economies.



Germany GDP - 3.4 trillion USD (2012) whereas the United Kingdom has a measley GDP of 2.435 trillion USD (2012).
 

Blackleaf

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Germany GDP - 3.4 trillion USD (2012) whereas the United Kingdom has a measley GDP of 2.435 trillion USD (2012).



Come back and say that after we overtake Germany economically and in terms of population within the next 15 years.
 

Blackleaf

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15 years?

Think more in terms of 15 generations and you might have a chance... Assuming, of course that the Germans spend that amount of time not producing in any way

Britain's economy is expected to overtake France's this year to become the fifth largest in the world and will overtake Germany's by 2030. France won't even be in the top ten by 2030.

Germany's population is shrinking whereas Britain's is growing rapidly and Britain's population is also expected to overtake that of Germany within the next couple of decades so that Britain becomes the largest country in Europe. Britain will be Europe's top dog once again.

Crow all you like, but Britain's "poxy" economy (nothing poxy about it, is is the sixth largest in the world, bigger than Canada's poxy economy) is set to sweep Germany aside. Germany is on the wane, and so is France.

Between now and 2030, the US is to fall down the rankings like Germany and France and Canada is to stay in 10th place. Britain will be the only one of those countries to climb the economic rankings.


 
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Blackleaf

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UK population 'largest in Western Europe by 2050'


By Wesley Johnson , Press Association
Friday 30 July 2010
The Independent

The UK will be the biggest country in Western Europe by 2050, overtaking both France and Germany, figures showed.

The UK's population will increase to 77 million in just 40 years' time from 62.2 million today, a rise of almost 24%, the US-based Population Reference Bureau projected.

The surge would make it bigger than both France and Germany. France's population is forecast to be 70 million in 2050, whereas Germany's population is to fall to 71.5 million.

The population of Western Europe as a whole will remain fairly constant - 190 million in 2050 compared with 189 million today - while figures for the whole of Europe suggest the population will drop from 739 million to 720 million.

UK population 'largest in Western Europe by 2050' - Home News - UK - The Independent

In 2009, Britain accounted for a THIRD of the total EU population growth of that year.
 

Tecumsehsbones

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Just accept that the days are coming in which Britain willd ward Germany.
NOOOOO! You can't willd ward Germany!

That'd be inhuman.

Don't you ever get tired of waving your pecker around, shouting "my naughty bits is bigger than yours!!!"?
Well, empirically, clearly not.

Get it? "Empirically?" As in "Empire?" Ha ha.

I'm here all week.