BorneTobyWilde wrote: » And still the leftist media roll out with lines like , '' a Brexit party tonight that the majority of the UK won't be going too'' WTF They voted to leave, and then voted HUGELY for Boris. Still going with the line that the majority didn't want this is a joke at this stage.
54and56 wrote: » What percentage of the recent general election votes were for the Conservatives? Less than 44% (https://researchbriefings.parliament.uk/ResearchBriefing/Summary/CBP-8749). Hugely? Bit like the Bigly, Fantastic, GOAT vote Trump won the Presidency with ie 2m votes less than Clinton. Democracy eh?
BorneTobyWilde wrote: » A They voted to leave, and then voted HUGELY for Boris. Still going with the line that the majority didn't want this is a joke at this stage.
BorneTobyWilde wrote: » Conservatives won the election hugely. There was never a chance for anyone to created a coalition against them. So those non voters must not have cared to remain, if they could not bother to vote.
SantaCruz wrote: » Yes, a look at the blasted economic wastelands of Western Europe totally bears out your point.
briany wrote: » Who'll be negotiating the FTA with the UK? Barnier or Big Phil?
correct horse battery staple wrote: » Stagnant eh?https://www.thelondoneconomic.com/news/the-uk-has-9-out-of-the-10-poorest-regions-in-northern-europe/06/06/
sid waddell wrote: » A nice family night out, eh? They better get those gulags prepared.https://twitter.com/peterjukes/status/1223381207045505024
Gintonious wrote: » https://twitter.com/pmdfoster/status/1223376150174601216 And it begins...
correct horse battery staple wrote: » Hmmhttps://www.theguardian.com/business/2020/jan/02/uk-economy-stagnation-end-2019-survey-shows
devnull wrote: » Have been in London today for work and would normally go out on a Friday after work and come home the next day, when I am there but tonight didn't bother with any of that as knew there would be smug triumphant Brexiteers so was out of there as quickly as possible. Hearing someone scream death to all foreigners near Kings Cross and hearing a group of people discuss burning EU flags on the tube didn't make me really make me think I should change my mind. What I've found in the last few days here is that some of the same people who are being over the top triumphant are the same ones begging for unity. Hypocrites.The only good thing is that things are not going to change too much in the short term, but I have friends who work on EU funded projects which are only guaranteed jobs until the end of the year and after that most likely they will be out of work.
Christy42 wrote: » Are the traitors people with different political opinions than themselves? That seems pretty terrifying that they want to lock people up for having a different political opinion How far they have sunk
boggerman1 wrote: » So they are gone and watching sky news it’s a really classy event that’s going on in parliament square.the smugness of the leavers is on full show.
MrMusician18 wrote: » I suspect it won't change much, not for the better anyway. Shithole towns like Boston will still be shithole towns, empty of young people and good jobs in 5, 10 and 15 years time.
WomanSkirtFan8 wrote: » well I suppose thats it then. UK's now officially out of the EU. It's going to be absolutely fascinating to see what happens over the next 6 months or so. Farewell UK. You're all on your own now.
CelticRambler wrote: » That article has nothing to do with the other one, which only reported that some parts of rich EU member states are not as rich as others (based on creative accounting) and has since been used over and over and over to claim that underperforming areas of the UK are actually poor, and not much better than recently joined Eastern European members. Every time someone cites it, it gives Brexiters and their ilk just cause to say "you're talking utter tosh!"
MrMusician18 wrote: » While what happens to the UK will be interesting, I'm more interested in how the EU reacts. There really ought to be a period of reflection in the EU at what were the causes of this loss of a large member state. Yes some of the pressures were down to domestic peculiarities within the UK such as a uniquely hostile media but the EU needs to examine it's own failures in the process too.