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....
required field
- 24 Jan 2017 14:04
- 6271 of 12628
Diana Ross was great...but the Supremes were even better....inside..out...
Fred1new
- 24 Jan 2017 14:25
- 6272 of 12628
Vicky,
I would have expected that.
Your upgrade could have been to a reform school.
Pity, you seem to have missed out.
jimmy b
- 24 Jan 2017 14:39
- 6273 of 12628
Go back to sleep Fred .
VICTIM
- 24 Jan 2017 14:42
- 6274 of 12628
Pompous old git , trouble is I don't know what to expect from a one minute intellectual to a then childish name caller and perpetual moaner/depressed living in another age cartoon obsessed cellar/bunker living crony non voting all criticising numpty big headed numpty .
jimmy b
- 24 Jan 2017 15:00
- 6275 of 12628
Don't be too nice VIC ,get it all out ,you'll feel a lot better for it.
VICTIM
- 24 Jan 2017 15:18
- 6276 of 12628
Yes I think i'll just be saying " Go back to sleep Freda " from now on .
mentor
- 26 Jan 2017 12:03
- 6277 of 12628
Live goes on even better, despite of the negative's from the remainers .........
Consumers drive Britain's economy, repulsing expected Brexit vote hit
LONDON, Jan 26 (Reuters) - Britain's free-spending consumers again wrong-footed broad prognostications of a slowdown after June's Brexit vote, driving a robust pace of economic growth in the final three months of 2016, data showed on Thursday.
Gross domestic product rose at a quarterly rate of 0.6 percent between October and December, keeping the above-average pace seen in the first three months after June's referendum decision to leave the European Union.
Services, most susceptible to consumers, were the biggest gainers, while industry and construction lagged.
Economists polled by Reuters had forecast a slight slowdown to growth of 0.5 percent. Some predictions ranged as low as 0.3 percent.
Sterling hit a three-week high against the euro after the data and British 10-year government bond yields rose to their highest since mid-December.
Many economists had expected Britain to flirt with recession after it voted to leave the EU.
But the Office for National Statistics said that growth in 2016 as a whole slowed only slightly to 2.0 percent from 2.2 percent in 2015, and this was mostly due to weak growth in the first quarter, before the referendum.
The outlook for 2017 is murkier, however, in part because of the reliance on consumers.
Sterling's near 20 percent fall against the dollar is already pushing up costs for businesses, and consumers are likely to share the pain soon.
The Bank of England forecast in November that growth would slow to 1.4 percent in 2017, but it may well raise forecasts for growth and inflation in a quarterly update next week.
LEADING THE PACK, FOR NOW
Britain was probably one of 2016's fastest-growing major advanced economies, and there are some signs this will continue into early 2017. Year-on-year growth, for example, exceeded that of Germany, where the economy grew 1.9 percent last year.
The Confederation of British Industry on Wednesday also reported strong orders for manufacturers in January.
However, the central bank is uneasy about the composition of British growth, with Governor Mark Carney warning that it relies heavily on consumers who will be vulnerable to higher prices.
British carmakers cut investment by a third last year due to Brexit worries, their lobby group said on Thursday.
Services output - which is most sensitive to consumer spending - grew by 0.8 percent.
Her finance minister Philip Hammond has said the resilience of the economy means Britain will enter the Brexit negotiations from a position of strength.
mentor
- 26 Jan 2017 12:15
- 6278 of 12628
UK's Article 50 Brexit bill to be published at 1230 GMT - PM's spokesman
The British government's bill seeking authorisation from parliament to start the formal Brexit process by triggering Article 50 of the European Union's Lisbon Treaty will be published at 1230 GMT on Thursday, Prime Minister Theresa May's spokesman said.
Parliament is scheduled to start debating the bill on Tuesday next week.
Haystack
- 26 Jan 2017 13:10
- 6279 of 12628
Second reading of Bill tomorrow plus 3 days of debate.
2517GEORGE
- 26 Jan 2017 16:00
- 6280 of 12628
I see the number of people sleeping rough has increased, about 20% of them are vagrants from Poland, Romania and Lithuania, some luvvies and certain MP's are none too happy about it-------just where did they think these immigrants that they so desperately wanted to come here were going to sleep?
2517
VICTIM
- 26 Jan 2017 16:06
- 6281 of 12628
How did they get the money to get here . and why come to a cold country like ours when there's Spain and other warmer countries out there .
2517GEORGE
- 26 Jan 2017 16:12
- 6282 of 12628
Apparently 1 in 3 of those sleeping rough in London are East European vagrants.
2517
VICTIM
- 26 Jan 2017 16:18
- 6283 of 12628
That's the EU for you we can't send them back .
grannyboy
- 26 Jan 2017 16:54
- 6284 of 12628
What no mention of 'Syrian' refugees left to roam the streets, is that because
all these 'children' were given priority housing, or those luvvies like lily allen,
Sturgeon at al have taken in some of these destitute 'children' and put them
up in their mansions/penthouse apartments like they told us that they would?..
MaxK
- 26 Jan 2017 17:55
- 6285 of 12628
Fred1new
- 27 Jan 2017 08:18
- 6286 of 12628
Dil
- 27 Jan 2017 10:53
- 6287 of 12628
Cracking performance by Corbyn at PM question time this week.
He seriously needs some new advisors and a script writer.
mentor
- 27 Jan 2017 11:06
- 6288 of 12628
re - script writer.
any suggestion?
Shall we put forward ..... Freda
and make the "bitches" redundant ( unless she is one of them )
jimmy b
- 27 Jan 2017 11:09
- 6289 of 12628
They are as mad as Fred especially Diane Abbott , (on question time last night) now she really has now got mental needs .
Dil
- 27 Jan 2017 11:50
- 6290 of 12628
Loved it when the SNP remoaner was put in his place by a member of the QT audience. Basically said Scotland voted to be part of UK and the UK is leaving the EU so what part don't you get ? .... classic.