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EU Referendum - are...
 

[Closed] EU Referendum - are you in or out?

 dazh
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<span style="font-size: 0.8rem;">Look I know leave won but by no stretch can 52:48, more than two years ago and under the circumstances that it took place, be considered emphatic and unarguable.</span>

What I meant was that 'the will of the people' in this case has been expressed, via the referendum, in an unarguable manner. Not polls, not by knocking on doors and extrapolating, not by analysing social media or going on instinct, but by an actual vote, which happened to have the biggest turnout of any vote conducted in this country for decades. Any politician who ignores that won't be a politician for very long.

If labour’s policy really is to enable a shit Tory Brexit in the hope that they will then get to win an election or two off the back of it then they are actually worse than the Tories in my book.

They want to completely deconstruct the neoliberal consensus and bring in transformative policies which will last for a generation. They're not going to be able to do that if they're in opposition. And yet they are accused of not being 'serious', whatever that means.


 
Posted : 22/09/2018 10:32 pm
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I think their policy is to wait in the wings til it becomes obvious to everyone that there’s going to be a shit Tory Brexit and then stop it.

Please god, please...


 
Posted : 22/09/2018 10:40 pm
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What would you have labour do?

If they say - " we are against brexit and will scrap it" then that easy pickings for the tory press and the tories " denying the will of the people"

Second referendum is also fraught with political danger - from not getting a remain result to creating more divide in the country to again being an easy target " denying the will of the people"

some come on - all of yu that are so critical of labour over brexit what would you have them do?

I think picking apart the Tories efforts while not allowing the easy targets for political point scoring has served them well.  I want conference to come up with a stronger policy as the time is right.  But to allow the tories enough room to hang themselves has been about the best they can do


 
Posted : 22/09/2018 10:40 pm
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What I meant was that ‘the will of the people’ in this case has been expressed, via the referendum, in an unarguable manner.

It's blatantly arguable.  On face value as presented it's the will of half of the people.  Looking at actual numbers it's the expressed will of a quarter of the people.

17 million votes for Leave = "the will of the people," the other 16 million votes for Remain = "we won you lost shut up stop moaning why do you hate democracy?"  **** that right off.


 
Posted : 22/09/2018 10:42 pm
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This must be a step in the right direction..

https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2018/sep/22/tom-watson-corbyn-members-brexit-vote-second-referendum-labour-party-poll


 
Posted : 22/09/2018 10:48 pm
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 **** that right off.

That and what does the vote out mean. If the will of the people was so clear then why the **** are our glorious leaders still confused about what it is?


 
Posted : 22/09/2018 10:49 pm
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What would you have labour do?

Be honest.

Doing nothing is the best course of action for them politically, I get that.  Wait for the inevitable implosion of the Tory party and then capitalise on picking up the pieces.

But the referendum was as close to 50:50 as makes no statistical difference and a lot of Leave voters didn't really vote for Leave reasons.  Corbyn is uniquely placed as a Eurosceptic which gives him credibility amongst fence-sitters;  if he were to go "yeah, the EU isn't perfect but let's stay in and try and fix the problems we perceive" I expect there would be massive support for him / them.

Hell, Labour could even get in bed with the LibDems, a superparty to take down the brexiters.  He could go down in history as the politician who brought us back from disaster.

Unicorns, I know.


 
Posted : 22/09/2018 10:52 pm
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+1 cougar. I expect politicians to be reasonably honest and to argue for what they believe in, not dishonestly duck the issue and hope to pick up the pieces later on.


 
Posted : 22/09/2018 11:08 pm
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 I expect politicians to be reasonably honest

I hope and demand that politicians be reasonably honest.  I expect that with a few exceptions (such as the aforementioned Tom Watson) they're actually all lying, self-serving shitehawks.


 
Posted : 22/09/2018 11:13 pm
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https://twitter.com/MirrorPolitics/status/1043598858373226496

also Times reporting that mays aides planning for General election in November


 
Posted : 22/09/2018 11:13 pm
 dazh
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Hell, Labour could even get in bed with the LibDems, a superparty to take down the brexiters.

Why would they? Their declared intention is to combat poverty, reduce the wealth gap, re-empower the public sector, rebalance the economy, give more power to workers through greater trade union membership and a whole host of other stuff. Stopping brexit isn't even on the agenda.

And really, coalition with the libdems? The party still stained by their collaboration with the tories, and which has recently declared labour to be 'appalling'.


 
Posted : 22/09/2018 11:18 pm
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What I meant was that ‘the will of the people’ in this case has been expressed, via the referendum, in an unarguable manner.

This has been argued ad nauseam. 52/48 does not demonstrate the will of the people, it is the will of half the people. Half said they didn't want to be in the EU, half said they did. I'm not going to argue the toss over a few percentage points. Whatever we do, half the people will be unhappy with the outcome because we are not all suddenly accepting the result. So, what is a government to do? Well for a start, not piss off the half of the population that was quite happy to placate the other half, because you'll still have half the population pissed off. Something more intelligent and grown up is required. Which is unlikely given the track record of the halfwits and ego-maniacs we have at the helm.


 
Posted : 22/09/2018 11:27 pm
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Corbs will go with whatever his party decides on 2nd ref, as we said earlier. Quite astute I reckon, cos he can't be blamed politically whichever way it goes.

But also, it's his principles a d has been since before Brexit. And we could be much closer to a second ref by the end of next week.


 
Posted : 23/09/2018 12:22 am
 igm
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an actual vote, which happened to have the biggest turnout of any vote conducted in this country for decades

Agreed.  Ish.

EU referendum turnout - 72.2%

1992 election turnout - 77.7%

1997 election turnout - 71.3%

Average GE turnout 1922-2017 - 72.9%

So yes, a bigger turnout than we’ve had since Blair got in, but a little below what we used to expect until recently.


 
Posted : 23/09/2018 12:28 am
 Leku
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Labour ceased to be a genuine opposition party with the death of the “great” John Smith in 94, there has been no leader since who has had even a sliver of John’s integrity and honesty.

I always describe myself as a "John Smith Labour' voter. Still truly missed.


 
Posted : 23/09/2018 1:56 am
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Corbyn is playing it right.  You can't win on the Brexit issue as it is not party political, all parties have the same problem.  You cannot suggest overriding the vote as however close it was it was still the result and people who didn't understand the complexities before the vote won't understand any other complexities either and it will just be used against him.


 
Posted : 23/09/2018 8:25 am
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How do you think the electorate will react when they realise they've been deliberately lied to by both major parties for years on end? If anything the Tories are being more honest, May ducks the question when asked if brexit is good for Britain and if she'd vote for it next time.


 
Posted : 23/09/2018 8:40 am
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How do you think the electorate will react when they realise they’ve been deliberately lied to by both major parties for years on end?

When are we swapping the electorate for one that can think independently and is actually interested enough to notice?


 
Posted : 23/09/2018 8:50 am
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How do you think the electorate will react when they realise they’ve been deliberately lied to by both major parties for years on end?

We we don’t seem to have cottoned on after the last 370 odd years of lies what make you think recent events will change anything?


 
Posted : 23/09/2018 9:31 am
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Who knew swashbuckling free traders were such big girl's blouses?

https://twitter.com/DanielJHannan/status/1043225725703204864


 
Posted : 23/09/2018 9:35 am
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It’s the lack of shame shown by the likes of Hannan that makes me want to puke. Put him in front of a bunch of blue rinsed Home Counties Himmlers and he’ll be talking about self reliance, Britain being ‘great’, rule Britannia, don’t fire til you see the whites of their eyes etc.

But he will also play the wounded snowflake just to get something, anything out on Twitter that his vile supporters can latch onto.

A horrible, weak, vain bully.


 
Posted : 23/09/2018 10:38 am
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Someone explain to Hannan that diabetics are allowed to eat cake. He might want to take us back to the 60s but we're not there yet.


 
Posted : 23/09/2018 2:29 pm
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Well the next battle for remain is the Labour Party conference, getting them to agree to a vote or an ability to stop it all will put some clear difference between the 2 parties and give people some choice.

Nobody can give a decent outcome with a straight face at the moment.


 
Posted : 23/09/2018 2:39 pm
 DrJ
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Someone explain to Hannan that diabetics are allowed to eat cake. He might want to take us back to the 60s but we’re not there yet.

Well, yeah, but if the stockpile of insuliun runs out she will be in trouble if she eats too much cake.


 
Posted : 23/09/2018 3:19 pm
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Not Dan the

Daniel Hannan, a Tory MEP and one of the faces of Vote Leave, declared: "Absolutely nobody is talking about threatening our place in the single market."

not sure where we stand now.

But probably best to ramble on about some cake bollocks.


 
Posted : 23/09/2018 5:29 pm
 igm
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Useless information.

Did you know that more people voted for the 2010 ConDem coalition (17.5m) that for Brexit (17.4m)?

Of course they didn’t know what they were voting for at the time, but...


 
Posted : 23/09/2018 5:51 pm
 mrmo
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Who would have guessed that the government hasn't done any prep.

http://www.itpro.co.uk/policy-legislation/31939/government-systems-unprepared-for-no-deal-brexit


 
Posted : 23/09/2018 6:43 pm
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I, boringly, kept asking "clued up Brexit Cheerleaders" about the changeover between IT systems for Customs about a year ago, on here and elsewhere… and the lack of acceptance that contingency was needed (old system not being patched up to cope with implications of being outside the CU, and new requirements added to the scope of the new system without any acceptance that it would impact/delay the implementation of that)… I'm sure that's all been sorted, and we're not relying on a transition period that isn't in the hands of the UK government to guarantee… that would be crazy, right?


 
Posted : 23/09/2018 7:48 pm
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NO transition without a deal on NI and a deal on NI is not possible for May.


 
Posted : 23/09/2018 8:22 pm
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There’s a part of me that really wants an NI fudge that’s unacxeptable to ROI, and for ROI to veto the deal, sending the U.K. crashing out with nothing.

its not the greater part of me! Given that ROI (or “Southern ireland”/“Eire” if you’re a brexshiteer) will be a bit ****ed by a no-deal Brexit, the best solution for them would be no Brexit at all

But it would be a hell of a kick in the nuts by the little guy. 😀


 
Posted : 23/09/2018 8:30 pm
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Another 3 blokes video

I'm kind of reminded of 'Touching the Void', where Joe Simpson has had is accident and his partner Simon Yates climbs down to where he as landed. It went something like "Simon's face said it all, you’re dead mate, you are so ****ed.'


 
Posted : 23/09/2018 8:43 pm
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This should be interesting

https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-politics-45622161

Gives Corbyn a nice out to change tack on his Brexit stance if it’s “the will of the people” (in his party)


 
Posted : 24/09/2018 9:02 am
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Little by little they are coming round. Still not sure I could actually vote for them though.


 
Posted : 24/09/2018 9:29 am
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This current Labour leadership will NEVER allow there to be any path back to EU membership. They will NOT support any vote that could prevent us leaving the EU.


 
Posted : 24/09/2018 9:57 am
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Kelvin - why do you say that - its completely at odds with their public announcements


 
Posted : 24/09/2018 10:01 am
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On that subject: why would Len McCluskey be saying that a second referendum is a bad idea? The vast majority of the job losses following Brexit will be in the sectors that are directly represented by Unite, or no union at all.

What does he get out of Brexit?


 
Posted : 24/09/2018 10:04 am
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This current Labour leadership will NEVER allow there to be any path back to EU membership. They will NOT support any vote that could prevent us leaving the EU.

Are you writing for the mail there??
They know their position is at odds with the membership, in the same way as allowing Members to deselect them is democratic then accepting that you represent the members not yourself is democratic.


 
Posted : 24/09/2018 10:05 am
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tjagain

Kelvin – why do you say that – its completely at odds with their public announcements

I think it's fair to distrust Labour. Look at what they have done rather than what they say, and the Great Abstainers don't look so good.


 
Posted : 24/09/2018 10:09 am
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The current Labour Leader, and Shadow Chancellor, want Brexit. They willl not stop it. They will not allow the country to vote to stop it. They will not allow party members to vote to stop it. They will not allow party members to vote to allow the country to vote to stop it.


 
Posted : 24/09/2018 10:11 am
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tj, I guess you didn't hear John McDonnell just now on the radio insisting that there would be no remain option in a new referendum. Of course it may not be up to him, but that's Labour's current position. What a shambles.


 
Posted : 24/09/2018 10:15 am
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Trying to maintain that constructive ambiguity is getting ever harder

Corbyn has agreed to abide by what membership votes for, likely that'll be an 'all options' ref


 
Posted : 24/09/2018 10:23 am
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I've not seen the wording yet but I'd be surprised if a resolution for Conference which took a reported 6 hours to draft was clear and unequivocal.


 
Posted : 24/09/2018 10:24 am
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Watch this space, I reckon.


 
Posted : 24/09/2018 10:31 am
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At least there is a chance of a possibility of a glimmer of hope.


 
Posted : 24/09/2018 10:38 am
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