Smileless2012, Quote [snip>>> The EU countries are not going to agree to any deal that gives the UK the ability to cherry pick what it likes, because then every other member will want to do the same.<<<snip]
Smileless2012, in regard to your above post, the European Union has what is known as the four freedoms which make up the core of its being. In that, it is the free movement of goods, services, capital and people that all twenty-eight nations making up the European Union have freely signed up to, by way of the Maastricht and Lisbon treaties which included the United Kingdom.
In the above, Britain wishes to retain the free movement of capital, services and goods on leaving the European Union but not the free movement of people. The EU cannot offer such an agreement to Britain as that would transgress both the above treaties. Therefore, it not the European Union that is being "difficult" in the leave negotiations, but it is Britain requesting terms that the EU simply cannot grant.
Perhaps the leave campaign should have made the above clear to the British electorate during the Brexit referendum campaign, or had they not realised that fact themselves probably due to lack of simple research and knowledge.
The above would seem to be the case as David Davis the then UK chief leave negotiator stated on the day that article fifty was signed, "these will be the easiest negotiations ever concluded.".
What a joke when the leave leaders have proved to be totally incompetent by way of two years of bungled negotiations demanding terms which cannot be given. That situation has left many sectors of Britains industry and commerce desperate in not knowing what post-Brexit will hold. In that, many are now finding great difficulty in signing new customer and supplier contracts for future fulfilment.
It is not the European Union that is making things difficult for Britain; it is Britain making things difficult for itself. Did our negotiators really believe that the other twenty-seven EU nations would rip up the Maastricht and Lisbon treaties to which they all signed just to accommodate Britain leaving?