required field
- 03 Feb 2016 10:00
Thought I'd start a new thread as this is going to be a major talking point this year...have not made up my mind yet...(unlike bucksfizz)....but thinking of voting for an exit as Europe is not doing Britain any good at all it seems....
Fred1new
- 10 Feb 2019 09:37
- 12416 of 12628
Perhaps, you are right.
8-)
required field
- 10 Feb 2019 12:14
- 12417 of 12628
Talking about a hard border : how about the chimps that escaped from Belfast zoo ? using storm debris....aren't they clever monkeys ?....(that was part one....)……(part two : the irish ones went back in as they would miss tea-time)…….
Stan
- 10 Feb 2019 12:56
- 12418 of 12628
Very good RF, except that it should have been posted on the joke thread as well...just where all the other Brexit jokes and Brexit joke posters should be )-:
required field
- 10 Feb 2019 13:24
- 12419 of 12628
Cheers Stan....perhaps I should have put : Brexitea-time.....(;))…..
hilary
- 11 Feb 2019 08:35
- 12420 of 12628
One of the ideas in this weekend's press was that, assuming no movement had been made on the current deal, a motion might be moved whereby Parliament would approve May's current deal on the condition that it was subject to a binary referendum with the question 'Should Parliament accept May's deal or stay in the EU?'. To hold the referendum a short extension of Article 50 would be required. Apparently there's cross-party support for it in Parliament as it appeases leavers and remainers and breaks the impasse.
Nobody knows whether a motion like that would have any mileage, but if it did and there was a new referendum, I'm curious how the likes of BoJo would vote given their public denouncement of the current deal, and how it was supposedly worse than staying in the EU. I'd also be interested to know of anybody here who previously voted to leave who would either not vote or now vote to remain given the choice above.
Fred1new
- 11 Feb 2019 09:02
- 12421 of 12628
Are you asking the lemmings, like Dil, It, Marti and Georgi, if they are changing direction?
iturama
- 11 Feb 2019 09:21
- 12422 of 12628
Hardly lemmings Fred. At the time, the odds were on stick-in-the-muds wanting to stay in their comfort zone. The people who voted leave made up their own minds in the face of the full propaganda machine from the government. We will not change direction. We had the vote, we voted, you didn't, end of.
hilary
- 11 Feb 2019 09:32
- 12423 of 12628
No Fred, I don't expect people to change their mind. It's possible, however, that some might abstain for any one of a number of reasons.
Stan
- 11 Feb 2019 09:33
- 12424 of 12628
Well Fred' that's one Muppet's view, now what about the others?
Fred1new
- 11 Feb 2019 10:04
- 12425 of 12628
Stan,
What do you expect from the "Up and at 'em brigade"?
But, they are so sure that the public who are now more aware of the consequences of Brexit that they are too fright to hold an informed referendum.
They are soooo democratic.
Stan
- 11 Feb 2019 10:11
- 12426 of 12628
Very true.
Stan
- 11 Feb 2019 10:20
- 12427 of 12628
LONDON (Reuters) - Britain’s economy slowed as expected in the final three months of last year, pushing growth in 2018 to its weakest in six years, as Brexit worries hammered investment, official figures showed on Monday.
cynic
- 11 Feb 2019 10:23
- 12428 of 12628
insofar as i have understood even some of the ramifications, i would certainly accept TM's deal in such a scenario
iturama
- 11 Feb 2019 10:31
- 12429 of 12628
There will not be another referendum. Period. Pipes dreams of the losers. Loosers to the thick one.
Stan
- 11 Feb 2019 10:31
- 12430 of 12628
That's not a lot coming from you Alf is it, and what about the "Brexit worries hammered investment"?
Stan
- 11 Feb 2019 10:36
- 12431 of 12628
"Period"? that's American English and you go on about spelling and Gramma...You Muppet.
Stan
- 11 Feb 2019 10:36
- 12432 of 12628
Come on Alf, answer the question -):
cynic
- 11 Feb 2019 10:48
- 12433 of 12628
i answered the original question asked
businesses are more worried by the thought of an "up the drawbridge" exit, than the soft exit proposed by TM
also, neither business nor the markets like uncertainty
meanwhile, economic activity is low not just because of brexit uncertainty, but also because the eurozone economies are in a parlous state, china's economy is comparatively weak, and the harm done by the trade war with america cannot be underestimated
Stan
- 11 Feb 2019 10:53
- 12434 of 12628
What for the last 6 years? you can do better then that.
Martini
- 11 Feb 2019 10:57
- 12435 of 12628
Hils
Hmm bit like being asked if I want to be electrocuted by AC or DC.
I don,t like either but Mays deal edges it as I can’t do a Fred and not vote for anything. If only to stop stay.