The June 2016 UK Referendum on EU Membership: [UPDATE] What kind of BREXIT do YOU want?

1414244464762

Comments

  • Posts: 11,425

    That's one benefit. Better trade links.

    And the key sentence (which is highlighted in bold in that article to show that it is the crux) is this:

    'Access to a $16.6 trillion a year Single Market of 500m people is the key benefit'

    Yep I agree with this. But those 500m people haven't just disappeared into a vacuum overnight (well apart from George Osborne). We still need to sell our stuff to them but - get this - they still need us to buy their stuff!!!

    Remainers would have you believe that Brexit is basically the same as the Goldeneye going off and the U.K. is back in the Stone Age. You clearly believe this. Some of us believe that market forces will prevail and we will continue to trade.

    The truth is no one knows who is right but to paint the picture as pessimistically as you are that we'll all be living hovels by the end of the week and pebbles will be the new currency is as over the top as people claiming we'll soon be another Switzerland.

    The likelihood is we'll continue to muddle along much the same as before, not as wealthy or productive as the Germans but better off than Italy and Spain.

    Sort of France but with less cheese and more rain.

    I stand by my point about none of our actual genuine structural challenges - low levels of productivity, investment, and exports - having much to do with the EU and everything to do with a failure of domestic political leadership.

    The issue with Brexit is that blame has been heaped on the EU and focus has been taken away from addressing our actual real problems. We are now going to spend years trying to renegotiate membership of the single market so that things essentially stay the same with some inconsequential tinkering around the edges (at least this is what Boris hopes for). Meanwhile we will continue to fail to address our real problems. Disenfranchised and deprived communities will carry on being disenfranchised and deprived becuase no one is talking about the real issues.

    Who will we blame once we're outside the EU? Darkies? The World Trade Organisation?

    Brexit has fed off the false promise that there are simple answers to complex problems. Brexit solves nothing. At best it's a massive distraction from the real issues. At worst it's a catastrophic blow to the future economic prospects of the UK. Either way it offers zero to address the genuine concerns of those at the edges of British society.

  • Posts: 352
    I'm a Government and Politics student at the University of Maryland, though, my focus is in American Politics.

    I absolutely love PM David Cameron - watching his speeches in Parliament is quite exciting, and I will miss him, despite his policies.

    With this second referendum potentially happening, as a result of the 2M+ signatures on the petition, is it actually possible for A) the initial referendum to be reversed, and allow the UK to remain with the EU, and B) Prime Minister Cameron or Her Majesty to rescind his resignation, due to the UK remaining (if the second referendum were to happen in this result?)

    Thanks!!
  • edited June 2016 Posts: 11,425
    It's actually unlikely there will be a second referendum any time soon. May be there will be one when the details of the leave deal are clear and it is felt necessary to get the electorate's approval. The vote to leave is very unlikely to be overturned.

    In terms of Cameron reversing his decision - zero chance.
  • Posts: 356
    So, Osbourne is staying.

    There is no need for an immediate emergency budget.

    The economy is fundamentally strong and, along with strong support from the Bank, can withstand the impact of Brexit

    And politicians wonder why people dont believe their prophesies of doom, and take the view that maybe Brexit may be a good thing
  • TheWizardOfIceTheWizardOfIce 'One of the Internet's more toxic individuals'
    Posts: 9,117
    https://www.google.co.uk/amp/www.bbc.co.uk/news/amp/36637732?client=safari#

    They've found Madeline err I mean George Osborne.

    Looks like he's been kipping on a park bench.

    Not resigning? Ok son it'll have to be a sacking then won't it because you were worse than Cameron and layering on the doom so if he goes you go. No way the new guy can keep someone so tarnished on.
    Getafix wrote: »
    I may be being too generous but there has to be an element of people working stuff out behind the scenes.

    As Brexit freely admit, they have no plan and no idea what leaving the EU actually means.

    My prediction is that Boris (a true member of the establishment if there ever was one) is going to attempt the most almighty fudge.

    As Boris is well known as being very pro EU in private, and almost certainly didn't want this result, he will be pondering how best to essentially keep us in while making a token gesture of leaving.

    It's hard to think of any arrangement that can please all sides and he's going to be doing major rowing back on pretty much every pledge the Leave campaign made - from immigration, to the UK's contribution to the EU.

    The big challenge for Boris is probably going to be getting anything through Westminster. The majority of MPs know leaving is national suicide so they will be looking for a Norway type option, which will be near impossible to get, and which large swathes of Leave voters will find totally unpalatable.

    The prospect of the most almighty establishment stitch up is one that I am sure @Wizard relishes!

    Agree with that that will be Boris's strategy from here. And if he can pull it off I would be all for it. Staying in whilst giving the EU an enormous scare would be the best result for the continent as a whole.
    Getafix wrote: »

    I stand by my point about none of our actual genuine structural challenges - low levels of productivity, investment, and exports - having much to do with the EU and everything to do with a failure of domestic political leadership.

    The issue with Brexit is that blame has been heaped on the EU and focus has been taken away from addressing our actual real problems. We are now going to spend years trying to renegotiate membership of the single market so that things essentially stay the same with some inconsequential tinkering around the edges (at least this is what Boris hopes for). Meanwhile we will continue to fail to address our real problems. Disenfranchised and deprived communities will carry on being disenfranchised and deprived becuase no one is talking about the real issues.

    Who will we blame once we're outside the EU? Darkies? The World Trade Organisation?

    Brexit has fed off the false promise that there are simple answers to complex problems. Brexit solves nothing. At best it's a massive distraction from the real issues. At worst it's a catastrophic blow to the future economic prospects of the UK. Either way it offers zero to address the genuine concerns of those at the edges of British society.

    You keep telling us what Brecit isn't.

    Tell us what the EU is.

    Anyway got to head off to Nice now to watch English supremacy continue its inexorable march across the continent. Well at least Iceland (probably).

    Have fun on here chaps. Try to keep it friendly.


  • ThunderpussyThunderpussy My Secret Lair
    Posts: 13,385
    George is a political ' Dead man walking" no one will believe his figures after his
    referendum lies, and he has neither the class or dignity to resign. :(
  • George may survive if & it's a big if he swallows his pride & takes what ever office is offered to him, be it minister for keeping out of the way & saying f**k all except to kiss the new PM's butt (New post I hear). ;)
  • ThunderpussyThunderpussy My Secret Lair
    Posts: 13,385
    If we could get a new PM quickly, and get rid of the wimp Cameron. A strong team could go
    to the EU discussions, saying that they could have a second referendum, if we got some
    concessions ?
    With this referendum vote, they'd have a strong hand to get what they wanted. Then hold
    a second vote. Which might keep the majority happy. The remain camp would have their
    second chance and Britain would have some proper consessions, to help the Country ?
  • Posts: 11,119
    This article really sums up all the populist resentment that is present now in western societies. I found it a very uncomfortable article to read. But I think it needs some attention, especially since Friday's Brexit.

    Many people obviously will find it difficult to read, because it is 'too long' or too 'dystopian'. But there are some lessons in it that can be learned. Especially when it comes to the 'final stages' of a democracy. It was posted/translated in the Dutch opiniated magazine 'De Groene Amsterdammer' of last week, but it was published first in the 'New York Magazine' of May 1st.

    I....read this article more as a critique on the current state of democracies in western societies, and less as a full-frontal attack on demagogues and populists. But it does tell you something about the state of our democracies, and how they become susceptible to anger and populism. This goes for both the 'ultra-democratic' instruments of referendums, like the Brexit referendum, but alsoduring general elections.

    Here is the article. It would be nice if everyone reads this silently and digests the matter in a calm way. The article was written and published on May 1st, so before the Brexit:

    I think the discussion about Brexit in here is symptomatic of today's easiness and bloggo-style approach of a complex subject that actually needs extensive scrutiny. People are not..reading extensive articles anymore. We think that we are our own journalists, whereas elite experts are sometimes telling the truth.

    It worries me that we are not self-critical anymore, by not reflecting and adjusting our own opinions with help of good articles like the one I have posted above. I am in favor of democracy. But I am also in favor of a positive, nuanced, representative democracy, in which we give our politicians a mandate to govern. What I don't like is a full-blown direct democracy as a throw-away instrument by populists that use it to facilitate anger and fear.

    Now again, to all of you: Read the above article.
  • The problem with any deal is that if you want to get what you want you have to be willing to walk away. 'You put tariffs on our goods we'll but them on yours & everything will collapse, no one wins, over to you', it's kind of throwing baby out with the bathwater, but the EU seems to respond to that kind of attitude.
  • ThunderpussyThunderpussy My Secret Lair
    Posts: 13,385
    Like any split, you either leave on good or bad terms. I think it's better for
    all sides to split on good terms. No reason for the EU to see Tbe UK as
    anything but a friend, but if a tariff war is how they want to go, so be it.
    It will hurt everyone. :(
  • Posts: 15,535
    I think the next PM should be chosen after a general election not a nomination by the Conservative party.
  • edited June 2016 Posts: 4,724
    For DC not to have a credible and planned exit strategy will go down as one of the most irresponsible acts of any post War PM. We all knew that the reaction would be quick, we can log in and and watch the pound falling in real time etc etc.
    To resign and then say we will have a new PM by Oct is remarkable. He used the metaphor of the captain steering the ship which is fair enough. The tradition is that it is the captain who leaves a stricken ship last. Not first!!
    Time after time, he refused to discuss what would happen if the vote was out. Perhaps he thought that even discussing that scenario would be a sign of weakness. This has been a fatal misjudgement. The voters have every right to vote out and they have every right to expect a PM who acts in the best interests of the nation and that includes planning for this option. He is a disgrace.
  • ThunderpussyThunderpussy My Secret Lair
    Posts: 13,385
    AGREE 100%, He should go now, get a new team in. Hopefully a competent one,
    but my hopes aren't high. Cameron is a Disgrace !
  • Posts: 4,724
    Much of the issue re the pound and shares etc is connected not only with the outcome of the vote but with uncertainty and it is DC that has caused the later, not the voters.
  • Campbell2Campbell2 Epsilon Rho Rho house, Bending State University
    Posts: 299
    No emergency budget? So the presses in Threadneedle Street run without proper backing? Problem is, the traders can hear them even in Asia. And they talk about the old lady having to open her purse twice already. This gets scarier by the minute.
  • Posts: 11,119
    Can I ask some questions?

    - Do we really believe we can solve the immigrant crisis from one country to another country, without any good cooperation?
    - Do we really believe we can solve Islamic terrorism without intense intelligence cooperation between countries?
    - Do we really believe the already belittled middle class gains more prosperity and welfare by reverting back to nationalism?
    - Do we really believe we can halt back financial and economic dominance of countries like China, by arranging everything without the EU?
  • Posts: 4,724
    Gustav, that debate is over. and the inners lost the debate, sorry
  • Posts: 11,119
    patb wrote: »
    Gustav, that debate is over. and the inners lost the debate, sorry

    Really.....WTF is that comment supposed to mean. I ask valid questions, regardless of Brexit or Bremain! And all you do is...

    article-2245916-1670696C000005DC-226_634x581.jpg

  • edited June 2016 Posts: 389
    Anyone agree that the shambles that is westminster at this time explains why 67% of MP's backed remain, because they didn't have the skills to negotiate an exit, mind you, not confident the brexit group have either. What a bloody mess.

    Maybe this will bring about a quantum change in politics thats needed, out of necessity grows structure. [-O<

    And before you jump down my throat @Gustav_Graves no I don't regret voting leave as I would do the same again.
  • Posts: 4,724
    The thread is about the referendum and that is over and we are coming out. The debate know needs to shift to the topic of how best we come out. To keep going over the same old in/out questions is not forward looking at we need to focus on the future at the moment, that was my point GG
  • Campbell2Campbell2 Epsilon Rho Rho house, Bending State University
    Posts: 299
    Anyone agree that the shambles that is westminster at this time explains why 67% of MP's backed remain, because they didn't have the skills to negotiate an exit, mind you, not confident the brexit group have either. What a bloody mess.

    Maybe this will bring about a quantum change in politics thats needed, out of necessity grows structure. [-O<
    .


    They are utterly, totally clueless. The EU has more of an idea than the UK does at the moment. Only way to prevent this from getting worse is to come forward and haggle it out. It's not going to be the outcome anybody hoped for anyway, might as well get it over with.
  • CommanderRossCommanderRoss The bottom of a pitch lake in Eastern Trinidad, place called La Brea
    Posts: 8,670

    I think the discussion about Brexit in here is symptomatic of today's easiness and bloggo-style approach of a complex subject that actually needs extensive scrutiny. People are not..reading extensive articles anymore. We think that we are our own journalists, whereas elite experts are sometimes telling the truth.

    It worries me that we are not self-critical anymore, by not reflecting and adjusting our own opinions with help of good articles like the one I have posted above. I am in favor of democracy. But I am also in favor of a positive, nuanced, representative democracy, in which we give our politicians a mandate to govern. What I don't like is a full-blown direct democracy as a throw-away instrument by populists that use it to facilitate anger and fear.

    Now again, to all of you: Read the above article.

    Sir yes sir!

    If you ask me it's anarticle about a man who's having trouble understanding the workings of the internet and politics both. You can't just 'make a blog' and then 'reach millions'.

    At the same time, yes, there's far more room for emotion on the internet. But far more important, the political class have become more cynical and self-indulgent, or at least it has become more visible.

    Still this all has little to do with the Brexit, which you still seem to blame on 'right wing extremists', again misiterpreting what's actually going on. If you really think 53% of Britons are extremists, you've got another thing coming.
  • CommanderRossCommanderRoss The bottom of a pitch lake in Eastern Trinidad, place called La Brea
    Posts: 8,670
    Can I ask some questions?

    - Do we really believe we can solve the immigrant crisis from one country to another country, without any good cooperation?
    - Do we really believe we can solve Islamic terrorism without intense intelligence cooperation between countries?
    - Do we really believe the already belittled middle class gains more prosperity and welfare by reverting back to nationalism?
    - Do we really believe we can halt back financial and economic dominance of countries like China, by arranging everything without the EU?
    - no
    - no
    - who knows, they didn't seem to gain much in the EU.
    - nope, with 1.2 billion people, China will be dominant, and none will stop them. Good thing really, they're a peaceful lot.

    So... what relevance has this? Or haven't you considered the possibility the EU can't answer these questions differently?
  • ThunderpussyThunderpussy My Secret Lair
    Posts: 13,385
    " Don't bring me problems, bring me solutions ! " ;)

  • bondjamesbondjames You were expecting someone else?
    Posts: 23,883
    Washington may use this opportunity to conjure up some 'common threat' relatively soon. Assad's Syria is looking pretty impressive as a target. It blunts Trump's momentum, benefits Hillary, and gets all of Europe (including the UK) looking strong. With the Labour opposition in shambles, the drumbeat could be deafening.

    Wag the dog
    is part of the tried and tested playbook and could be just what the doctor ordered.
  • ThunderpussyThunderpussy My Secret Lair
    Posts: 13,385
    I think any of Dave's decisions are as solid as a bowl of jelly. ;)
  • edited June 2016 Posts: 11,119
    - no
    - no
    - who knows, they didn't seem to gain much in the EU.
    - nope, with 1.2 billion people, China will be dominant, and none will stop them. Good thing really, they're a peaceful lot.

    So... what relevance has this? Or haven't you considered the possibility the EU can't answer these questions differently?

    This has every relevance for the future of the remaining 27 EU-nations.....and to all people in here who are perhaps not from the UK. If we keep slamming down these questions as 'nonsense' or as 'unimportant', and if we silently tolerate nonsense quotes like "Let's build a wall" or "Throw them out" (Just read the tweets in this article: http://nos.nl/artikel/2113834-na-brexit-buitenlanders-in-groot-brittannie-krijgen-volle-laag.html & http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2016/06/26/spate-of-racist-attacks-blamed-on-brexit-vote/), then we keep fuelling the current anti-EU resentment.

    I want solutions, not problems. And now the UK is out -it has always been the most troubling EU-member- the remaining EU nations need to gather and A) really address the worries of the people who know turn to populist parties and explain in simple language that we are here for the ordinary butchers and builders as well and B) come with real solutions to the above questions in perhaps a 'EU of different Speeds and more Variety'.
  • ThunderpussyThunderpussy My Secret Lair
    Posts: 13,385
    I regard quotes like "Let's build a wall" or "Throw them out" as nonsensical as well ;)
This discussion has been closed.