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Laugh at the remains all you like, I am still yet to see a single positive article, news story or statistic that says that leaving was a good idea. Feel free to provide any of the above if you can find one and want the people who voted remain to stop feeling concerned about the future of the country.
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Nothing Wrong with that view. But You lost the democratic vote there is far to many who refuse to accept it. |
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...there is no choice but to accept it, Arista..but accepting it doesn't mean there still won't be frustrations in it...and of all people, Brexit voters should be very understanding of that because the main premise for many Brexit voters was their own frustrations in decisions being made for them by EU that they didn't agree with so we're told..well 48% of UK people are feeling those frustrations atm that Brexiters are apparently all too familiar with... |
when the Conservatives win an election, it doesn't mean that all the labour supporters should then support the tories, and vice versa. The same applies with the brexit vote.
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People say that after Elections. People went out to vote more than a Election on this. It meant more to us that voted "leave the EU" I was shocked to see others in front of me at 7AM to Vote on Brexit that never happens on Elections Referendum it was a rare event for the UK |
Brexit causes an increase in price for common household producys and tesco refuses to stock them
https://www.ft.com/content/58560c1e-...8-d3778b55a923 Pretty big news |
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Funny how when there have been big price dips for these big companies they never thought to pass it on to the consumers. Boycott Unilever I say. |
Siobhan Fenton
@SiobhanFenton Court now discussing which rights currently available to British citizens will be lost after Brexit 3:48 PM - 17 Oct 2016 Siobhan Fenton @SiobhanFenton Lord Chief Justice asks government lawyer, what if we say the Crown cannot trigger Article 50? Where does that leave us? 4:35 PM - 17 Oct 2016 http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk...-a7365101.html |
A lawyer representing the UK Government has said it is "very likely" MPs will be able to vote on the final Brexit agreement between the UK and the European Union.
James Eadie QC was speaking in the High Court as part of the final day of the hearing to decide whether Prime Minister Theresa May can trigger Article 50 without parliamentary approval. Downing Street has since confirmed that he was representing the Government's position. The judges have said they will rule on the historic legal challenge "as quickly as possible". Lord Chief Justice Lord Thomas, Master of the Rolls Sir Terence Etherton and Lord Justice Sales reserved their decision on Tuesday at the end of a three-day hearing. After hearing closing submissions from lawyers at the High Court in London, Lord Thomas announced: "We shall take time to consider the matter and give our judgment as quickly as possible." http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk...-a7367126.html |
Maybe Kizzy
but after we Start the the 2 year countdown |
It may all be over?....
Parliament has the right to reject the final Brexit deal, No.10 has indicated for the first time – raising the possibility that Britain’s EU exit could yet be halted. Downing Street agreed it is “very likely” that MPs and peers will be given a vote once the withdrawal negotiations are finished, after the issue arose in the High Court. The statement – after the Prime Minister repeatedly refused to give ground on demands for Parliament to have a say on Brexit – immediately triggered furious debate about the possible consequences. One senior pro-EU Conservative MP called it a “victory for all those who believe in the right of Parliament to represents the interests of our constituents”. And the prospect of Parliament exerting some control over the final settlement caused the pound to surge immediately against the dollar in exchange markets. http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk...-a7368561.html |
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It would be hilarious if it happened. I'd live for the fumes.
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The upshot of it is .... i think ... because well .... i don't think anyone knows for sure, parliament will get a vote, but the result of that vote doesn't really matter as we will have already exited (or at least begun the irreversible process of exit)
It is an almighty mess, it has to be said, but its right that we clarify exactly what a referendum can and can't do legally within the constitution. If it has no standing, why would people bother voting ... its all a bit of a nonsense. |
I mean they can vote on what they like but it doesn't make a difference because we'll only get whatever we end up with from the negotiations.Seems pretty pointless tbh.
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Hmmmm....
Theresa May privately warned that companies would leave the UK if the country voted for Brexit during a secret audience with investment bankers a month before the EU referendum. A recording of her remarks to Goldman Sachs, leaked to the Guardian, reveals she had numerous concerns about Britain leaving the EU. It contrasts with her nuanced public speeches, which dismayed remain campaigners before the vote in June. Speaking at the bank in London on 26 May, the then home secretary appeared to go further than her public remarks to explain more clearly the economic benefits of staying in the EU. She told staff it was time the UK took a lead in Europe, and that she hoped voters would look to the future rather than the past. https://www.theguardian.com/politics...s-about-brexit |
And again nobody was surprised ...
The Chancellor will face an £84 billion black hole in the country’s finances at the Autumn Statement unless he announces a sweeping “fiscal reset” and ditches George Osborne’s old economic rules, economists have warned. An analysis by the Resolution Foundation think-tank found that changes in the economic outlook since the EU referendum mean a significant “deterioration in the public finances”. The advice from the researchers comes a day after leaked Treasury documents suggested Philip Hammond would have to fill a multi-billion pound black hole because of the “severe worsening of public finances” caused by Brexit. http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk...-a7380081.html |
eh?.....
Brussels will be able to dictate what the British government can and cannot tell the British Parliament about Brexit negotiations, the Government has claimed. EU minister David Jones told the House of Commons European Scrutiny Committee that he could not say how much information MPs would be given about the talks until the European Council had laid down its rules about secrecy. The claim comes after Theresa May and Brexit Secretary Davis Davis both said there would be a limit to how much they would tell the UK Parliament about negotiations. :joker: http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk...-a7381806.html |
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Um that proves nothing, we haven't left yet :/
#perspective http://cdn.tradingeconomics.com/char...=201610011542q http://www.tradingeconomics.com/unit...nt-debt-to-gdp |
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We are going to be out ... so thats the way our economy is, we don't have an alternative parallel economy. So ... the upshot is .... i wont believe a word good or bad associated with the economy and brexit. |
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