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Re: Britain outside the EU
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Re: Britain outside the EU
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In terms of his faults, I wouldn't put that at the top of the list. |
Re: Britain outside the EU
To be honest I think the issue is settled now and almost everybody - bar some fanatics - have moved on. The argument that we shouldn't have left but now that we have we might as well make the best of it is not hypocrisy nor contradictory. I think there are a few people in the press and the Government that want to keep pushing Brexit as a divisive issue because it sells papers and is politically useful but there isn't much juice in that issue.
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As the fog of Covid dissipates, the real world effects of Brexit will start to become more visible to the people who never really cared about the politics and just believed the lies. ---------- Post added at 11:54 ---------- Previous post was at 11:52 ---------- Oh the irony https://pbs.twimg.com/media/FL0speYW...jpg&name=small |
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So if that was what changed his mind, so what? You should welcome politicians standing back and re-evaluating rather than sticking to their guns simply to avoid losing face. I know you have a downer on Boris, but come on, play fair. |
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Forget that poll. It is not a true representation of what the people of this country think. Not only that, but some are having understandable doubts owing to the uncertainty about so many things at the moment, most of which are nothing to do with Brexit. When the dust settles, people will regain their confidence. |
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Now, 6 years later, with all that I know now, I'd vote leave, without hesitation. |
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The Leave press decided to take those scenarios, spin them as predictions and cherrypicked the worse. This left people like you believing that Remain had predicted 8% GDP as soon as we left the EU. No such claim was made. Given that we have only been out of the EU 2 years, we haven't had time for the effects to embed yet. Until we left at the end of January 2020 our economy benefited all round from business with the EU as usual. The decline of an economy is by a thousand cuts, not overnight. The signs aren't good though. The effect of the massive increase in red tape, something the leave campaign hid from you, has led to a 2% decline in trade with the EU, factoring out Covid-19. At the moment, no deals come close to replacing that. A deal with India may happen if we accept their demand for increased immigration from India. A deal may happen with the USA if we accept their demand to sell us poor quality meats and GM crops and to get their commercial hands on our valued institutions like the NHS. They tried that with the EU, when we were still members. The EU had the clout to say 'No'. Meanwhile, Rees-Mogg is trying to find out what the sunny uplands of Brexit might look like by asking Sun readers. Bear in mind that he did say that it might take 50 years for the full benefits of Brexit to be realised. He hasn't made it clear what happens to the economy, and people's livelihoods and businesses in the meantime. https://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/ent...b0de86f48e3566 |
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Boris is a buffoon and a proven liar; a breaker of manifesto promises; an eco-loon, possibly driven by his wife. He got this extravagant wallpaper at the behest of his wife with serious questions around the funding and the influence that the funder now has. He is a disaster. |
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We all know about the red tape and the costs that come with it. But Brexiteers pointed to the benefits of being released from the rest of the bureaucracy associated with the freedom of being outside the EU. So far, we have only seen the rollover trade deals that we were busily putting into place to ensure that we would continue to benefit from the EU-negotiated deals in the first year. However, we are forging ahead with the trade deal for India right now, and negotiations commence for the trade deal with Canada in April. It has been explained previously that the EU refused to include services in the trade deals they negotiated because other EU countries would benefit little from this. However, for us, services are the biggest income earner, and inclusion of services in our future trade deals will open up a very nice income stream indeed. You are wrong on the US situation. We had a draft trade deal with America all ready to go under the Trump administration, but when Biden got in he was not interested in these big deals, preferring to negotiate in packets. So far we have succeeded in getting deals on beef and lamb, which is a good start. As far as meat imports are concerned, trade deals can specify the standards required for sale in the UK, a little point that many remainers appear not to understand. We have yet to benefit from Brexit freedoms firstly because these new trade deals will take a few years to negotiate, and secondly, we have yet to witness the ‘bonfire of regulations’ that Boris has said he intends to bring forward now. Those economic forecasts you refer to are not worth the paper they are written on because they concentrate on what we already know about the downsides. Very few upsides are in that calculation because it is impossible to make a sensible and reasoned prediction as to how businesses will take advantage of their new freedoms, which will be gradually introduced over the coming years. We have been outside of the EU for less than three months, and yet remainers claim that we should already be seeing massive benefits from Brexit by now if it was to succeed. This is naive and stupid. The new freedoms are nowhere near completed yet. Any real benefits that push us into credit should be seen as medium, not short-term benefits. |
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