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....
iturama
- 05 Jul 2016 06:17
- 4210 of 12628
4199
So it sounds like your neighbours will not be too happy with having rednecks like you. Lowers the tone of the place. You are an archetypal Tory snob Hays. As Dil says, closet racists. Love diversity as long as it is not next door.
poo bear
- 05 Jul 2016 07:25
- 4211 of 12628
This has become one of the nastiest threads I have ever seen on Moneyam.
Are you lot incapable of reasoned discussion without stooping to the gutter?
VICTIM
- 05 Jul 2016 07:30
- 4212 of 12628
What a load of balls , research suggests that 1.2 million Leaver voters now regret their vote , who does this research by the way the media stirrers poor losers . What if we complain that we voted for the Cons at the last election can we go back and re vote on that . It's beyond belief , maybe they ask all the remainers if they would like to leave now the World hasn't ended .
MaxK
- 05 Jul 2016 08:08
- 4213 of 12628
Depends on who is doing the research.
Haystack has now come out officially. Simply confirms what we already knew.
Haystack is a turkey, and he will vote for Christmas if the tory high command tells him to.
Fred1new
- 05 Jul 2016 08:57
- 4214 of 12628
Congratulations to the loss of a real leader:
of lemmings.
jimmy b
- 05 Jul 2016 09:34
- 4215 of 12628
Big shame Farage has gone ,without him we would never have got the vote on Europe ,i wish he had been involved in negotiating our exit .
VICTIM
- 05 Jul 2016 09:45
- 4216 of 12628
jimmy he had no chance , the Cons can't even get on with each other , like being in a snake pit .
jimmy b
- 05 Jul 2016 09:51
- 4217 of 12628
Well VIC we owe him that's for sure
===========================
DAILY MAIL COMMENT: MUCH MOCKED FARAGE CHANGED BRITAIN
For years he was relentlessly sneered at and abused by supporters of every other party, yet Nigel Farage can genuinely claim to have been one of the most influential political figures of recent times.
Gutsy and tenacious, his achievement in taking Ukip from a fringe protest party to top the poll in the 2014 Euro elections was truly astonishing.
More than anyone, he recognised the depth of anger and disenfranchisement felt by ordinary people in huge swathes of Britain from the Thames estuary to Labour’s northern heartlands.
In particular, he articulated their very real concerns over mass migration when others feared being branded racist.
And of course, without him there would have been no EU referendum because David Cameron would have avoided calling it and the public would have been denied the democratic opportunity to express their disdain for life under the Brussels yoke by voting leave.
For that alone, Britain owes Mr Farage a debt of gratitude
iturama
- 05 Jul 2016 09:52
- 4218 of 12628
He is staying on at the EU parliament to torment them. He does have a way with words doesn't he? Although at times he needs to think before speaking, like on referendum night with his early concession, based on the bookies odds, and there was no need to gloat at the EU parliamentary session. Sometimes less is more.
VICTIM
- 05 Jul 2016 10:00
- 4219 of 12628
Yes iturama there are times when I thought he should have just let be , as it can look like he's rubbing their noses in it .
MaxK
- 05 Jul 2016 10:03
- 4220 of 12628
They need their noses rubbing in it, over and over again.
jimmy b
- 05 Jul 2016 10:13
- 4221 of 12628
VICTIM
- 05 Jul 2016 10:16
- 4222 of 12628
Just goes to show who's running the democratic EU , I thought that was a dictator's job though .
MaxK
- 05 Jul 2016 10:18
- 4223 of 12628
The fatherland runs Brussels, everyone knows that.
Haystack
- 05 Jul 2016 12:32
- 4224 of 12628
From the Governor of the BoE's statement this morning, it looks like the predictions made by him, Cameron and Osborne are coming true. House prices may fall, the pound is at a 31 year low. We could soon be heading into a recession.
Just watch how many regret their decision when things get much worse in the UK economy. There will be a clamour for a second referendum. I hope the government resists the temptation to stay in the EU. Had the Leavers believed Cameron, Carney, the Treasury and Osborne they wouldn't have voted to leave.
I was expecting a recession, house prices to fall, the pound and stock market to fall but I think it is a price worth paying to leave the EU. This is just the beginning and it is going to get a lot worse. The benefits from being outside the EU may not appear this side of 10 years.
Fred1new
- 05 Jul 2016 13:06
- 4225 of 12628
By whom and how will the price be paid?
What and incompetent government.
Like the Somme, a country lead by donkeys.
cynic
- 05 Jul 2016 14:36
- 4226 of 12628
so how would corbyn be classed?
even the donkeys would disown him
Haystack
- 05 Jul 2016 14:39
- 4227 of 12628
Maybe something that donkeys leave behind.
Fred1new
- 05 Jul 2016 14:45
- 4228 of 12628
Answer the questions, don't deviate.
Your beginning to sound like an old tory woman.
(I will now duck and work on my apology to women for calling them old.)
ExecLine
- 05 Jul 2016 14:56
- 4229 of 12628
Andrea joined with 7 other MPs, adding her name to a letter of concern about HS2.
It's in PDF format and you can read it here:
http://www.andrealeadsom.com/downloads/mps-letter.pdf
Basically, these 8 MPs felt the decisions towards HS2 were against the democratic process and furthermore, that decisions taken on HS2 thus far have not adequately taken into account the strength of negative feeling at local level.
In other words, if Andrea gets elected to be leader, then HS2 stands a high chance of getting dumped. But something else would undoubtedly take its place, that would be less costly and more useful and much more favourably acceptable to the majority.