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

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I'm with those that say the likes of Boris needs to take over from May.

I can't stand him but we need a Brexiteer PM to fail badly and bring down Brexit with him. The Tories too, fingers crossed.

The country will be damaged along the way but that's no longer avoidable.

The country needs to suffer in the short term to truly put Brexit to bed for generations.

Yes, I'm totally p*ssed off by Brexit and it's proponents!


 
Posted : 24/05/2019 11:30 pm
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We’ve all seen those beautifully surfaced roads they have on the mainland that are only like that as the uk paid for them.

How long after we leave will our roads be the same?


 
Posted : 24/05/2019 11:53 pm
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seems to be a large internal cock-up by the Electoral Commission

It's yet another UK government cock up. Add it to the list.

Why does England want to leave the EU but remain part of the UK. That’s not independence, is it?

I shall be reusing this. Thanks.


 
Posted : 25/05/2019 12:36 am
 Del
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Why does England want to leave the EU but remain part of the UK. That’s not independence, is it?

No, wait, I know the answer to this one...


 
Posted : 25/05/2019 12:43 am
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http://www.staffordforum.com/xf/index.php?attachments/20190522_223021-jpg.6844/


 
Posted : 25/05/2019 2:44 am
 DrJ
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Apparently the British Steel thing is the EU's fault - they insisted that BS be responsible for its environmental impact (in fact the Govt lent them the money for carbon credits), and prevented public money being spunked up to make good their losses. Such is brexiteer logic...


 
Posted : 25/05/2019 8:27 am
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Boris has made his 'No Deal' pitch.

Radio 4 this morning were reporting that the 'contest' will be decided by under 100,000, possibly as low as 50,000 Tory party members (they refuse to give actual figures) with an average age of 71

God help us!


 
Posted : 25/05/2019 10:35 am
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Boris will need to make it through to the final two selected by Tory MPs. By all accounts he is not very popular amongst his peers and beyond that is thought of as a bit of an election liability. So he will need to work hard to get the Brexiteer ticket.


 
Posted : 25/05/2019 4:26 pm
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Rory Stewart committing the ultimate sin: endangering the party solidarity by saying he couldn't or wouldn't serve under BoJo, I see...


 
Posted : 25/05/2019 7:32 pm
 ctk
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DrJ

Member

Apparently the British Steel thing is the EU’s fault – they insisted that BS be responsible for its environmental impact (in fact the Govt lent them the money for carbon credits), and prevented public money being spunked up to make good their losses. Such is brexiteer logic…

Simon Jordan on QT was interesting about this. From memory he said the venture capitalists that bought it for £1 have taken £60 mil out of the company since owning it.


 
Posted : 25/05/2019 8:06 pm
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Boris will need to make it through to the final two selected by Tory MPs. By all accounts he is not very popular amongst his peers and beyond that is thought of as a bit of an election liability. So he will need to work hard to get the Brexiteer ticket.

This. Though I suspect Boris would rather be the next + 1 PM, rather than the shooting his bolt being the next, as well- like JRM, he's better on the sidelines fine tuning his opinion each time the winds shift.


 
Posted : 25/05/2019 8:41 pm
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Yeah that`s because Rory Stewart is by some margin the only sane candidate as far as I can see.
His experience in difficult situations outside politics is remarkable , compared with the other candidates who are a bunch of liars or something , none of this helps when the country has no palatable party to support that has the numbers to make a difference , Labour need to split first
with a sensible middle ground team - they would cleanup .


 
Posted : 25/05/2019 8:51 pm
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Yeah that`s because Rory Stewart is by some margin the only sane candidate as far as I can see.
His experience in difficult situations outside politics is remarkable

I agree, and the fact that he’s achieved all this after being killed in Vietnam is all the more remarkable.

Rory Stewart


 
Posted : 25/05/2019 9:41 pm
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giggle , lots here https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rory_Stewart
I would never vote for the Tories but I think there is something I could respect there.


 
Posted : 25/05/2019 9:59 pm
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Oh Tommy Watson.

https://www.tom-watson.com/the_most_crucial_issue_of_our_generation


 
Posted : 25/05/2019 11:06 pm
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Rory Stewart sounds a very decent sort and with much more real world experience than your average career politician. Makes you wonder why he's in the game and why he's a Tory.


 
Posted : 25/05/2019 11:17 pm
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re British Steel- Greybull Capital who as mentioned above bought them for a pound, promised at the time of aquisition to invest £400m into the company. Instead they loaned them £154m, upon which they charged £17m in interest in 2017 and 2018. The company's owner loaned them money at a higher interest rate than the company's banks. They also charged £3m management fees annually for the privilege.


 
Posted : 25/05/2019 11:49 pm
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Greybull Capital have got form for this sort of thing.

They conducted a similar ‘rescue’ of Monarch’ airlines and made a profit on its collapse while costing the taxpayer 60 million quid.

And these sorts of disaster capitalists are going to be licking their lips at the prospect of the no deal Brexit that is looking increasingly inevitable. They’ll make an absolute killing out of the ensuing carnage


 
Posted : 26/05/2019 10:09 am
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How can I become a disaster capitalist? Seems lucrative


 
Posted : 26/05/2019 10:15 am
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How can I become a disaster capitalist? Seems lucrative

There’s the rub. You need a shitload of ready cash you can initially ‘invest’ and a list of ‘contacts’ that include some senior Tory politicians.

A bit like those grand tax avoidance schemes. If they were open to everyone it wouldn’t be so bad, but of course they only work if the gain you make on avoiding tax is more than the fees of the advisor. For this to work, the bill must be big.

If things get too bad, you also need more cash to add two metres to the height of the fence around your estate so you can feel secure against potential criminals who might have it in for you.


 
Posted : 26/05/2019 10:26 am
 dazh
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If I'm not mistaken, John McD has pretty much just announced that labour will be swinging behind a 2nd ref on sky news. Said it was 'right thing to do to try to bring the two sides together, but now we have to move on'. Also said labour and other parties and moderates had to do everything possible to prevent an extremist new tory leader from taking us out with no deal. If that's not a clear signal that labour are now moving towards a full-blown remain position I don't know what is.


 
Posted : 26/05/2019 10:34 am
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 dazh
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Get over it man! Whether you like it or not, Corbyn isn't going anywhere.


 
Posted : 26/05/2019 10:55 am
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Then sadly. I fear, niether is the Labour party


 
Posted : 26/05/2019 11:17 am
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Looks like Len McClusky didn’t get the memo on the second referendum then. He’s on Five Live now

Head still buried in the 1973 sand as they carry on reversing down their Corbynite Brexit ‘delivering the will of the people’ cul-de-sac.

He’s ripping into Tom Watson for having the temerity to engage with reality, as opposed to red unicorns

It’s pretty depressing listening. He seems to inhabit some kind of alternative universe


 
Posted : 26/05/2019 11:44 am
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The shadow chancellor and deputy leader have been talking sense about Brexit for months now… but… they don't set Labour policy on this, and nor do the members. Hell, even Paul Mason is stridently calling for the Leader to clearly come down in favour of a referendum at least. The pressure will be mounting over the next few weeks… I doubt it'll have any effect though… but I would like love to be wrong and for Corbyn to come good on his "party run by its members" promise.


 
Posted : 26/05/2019 12:36 pm
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There’s the rub. You need a shitload of ready cash you can initially ‘invest’ and a list of ‘contacts’ that include some senior Tory politicians.

Also helps to be an utter ****.


 
Posted : 26/05/2019 1:10 pm
 dazh
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Looks like Len McClusky didn’t get the memo on the second referendum then.

Which explains Corbyn's position. Irrespective of his own views his primary job is to hold the party together, which so far he's managing (just!). Somehow he has to keep working class dinosaurs like McCluskey and modernist middle class socialists like Paul Mason on the same side. Same for working class white voters in northern towns and middle class cosmopolitan liberals in the cities. It's all a balancing act. And yet you think they should rip all that apart just at the time when voters are sending a clear and unambiguous signal that they're fed up with politicians obsessing about themselves and their parties?


 
Posted : 26/05/2019 1:27 pm
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Did you read the deputy leader's email/column? Labour need to turn their back on the Lexit dinosaurs if they want the support of the public that are normally inclined to vote for them. They'd already have done this if it wasn't for the intrangency of the leader and head of strategy.

And, time to dump this bullocks about the "working class" being the supporters and facilitators of Brexit. It is the public school educated, those one step removed from the reality of life in Britain for most people, who have pushed it on the nation. And I include Corbyn in that.


 
Posted : 26/05/2019 1:29 pm
 dazh
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And, time to dump this bullocks about the “working class” being the supporters and facilitators of Brexit.

Do you deny that there is a significant proportion of white working class labour voters who voted for brexit? I could take you to places in the north east where the vast majority are habitual tribal labour voters, and almost 100% pro-brexit. And I can assure you they haven't changed their mind. If you think labour can afford to lose them either to Farage or simply them not turning out then you are as much in denial as those who think a no deal is a good idea.

It is the public school educated, those one step removed from the reality of life in Britain for most people, who have pushed it on the nation. And I include Corbyn in that.

Once again the cult-like obsession with Corbyn warps people's minds. So not only is he a far-right sympathising hard brexiteer immigrant hater, now he's also a member of the aloof public school governing elite!


 
Posted : 26/05/2019 1:55 pm
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Well Corbyn went to a £2500 to £3500 per term (depending on age) school, Castle House, so he is very much a part of "the aloof public school governing elite!"


 
Posted : 26/05/2019 2:05 pm
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he’s also a member of the aloof public school governing elite!

Sorry, he went to a state school and has a long history of doing jobs that any reasonable person would identify as "working class". Silly me. He is in no way a career politician (not that I think that's a bad thing) and is working class to the core. Not public school educated. Not part of the political "elite". Man of the people. Salt of the earth. Also he was never a Brexitier, because he has no history of anti EU campaigning and positioning and voting. None at all.


 
Posted : 26/05/2019 2:06 pm
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Several prominent tory MPs today saying they would vote against thier own party in a VONC, if a no deal brexiter replaces may. The numbers are there across the house to take down the government, I'm fairly confident.

Corbyn needs to openly support a 2nd ref though, or get ousted and replaced by someone like Starmer.

Corbyn is dead wood and needs to go.


 
Posted : 26/05/2019 2:38 pm
 rone
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Well Corbyn went to a £2500 to £3500 per term (depending on age) school, Castle House, so he is very much a part of “the aloof public school governing elite!

I doubt a few years at an independent prep school is quite the equal of attending Eton.

No one can help their background but what you take from it is key.


 
Posted : 26/05/2019 2:52 pm
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It not the "equal" of Eton, no, and nor is Adams. I think you can comfortably call both "elite" though. I have no doubt that Corbyn is doing what he thinks is best for the "working class", but he is ultimately still talking about pushing ahead with Brexit with no real experience of what it is like to live a less rarified life. And nothing he has said in the last three years suggests to me that he really understands the areas of business, education, research and personal lives that will be touched by the alternative "an end to FoM, Leave the Single Market, Leave the Customs Union, Jobs First, not a bad Tory Brexit" he espouses.


 
Posted : 26/05/2019 2:58 pm
 Del
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the remain vote is leaving Labour in droves. Tom Watson and the like recognise it, and are advocating doing something about it. While the Tories continue their downward spiral in to the black hole of faragism, the hardcore brexit vote from both Labour and Tory goes to brexit party. Labour need to provide a home for those remain votes. If they don't the remain vote will continue to split across lib Dems and green, and nothing will stop this train wreck. Ironically the Brexit party may do enough, take enough of the swivel-eyed with them from the big two, to make it an easier choice for Labour.


 
Posted : 26/05/2019 3:15 pm
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Karl Marx’s Garden Gnome (thanks to the Mash for that one) interpreted the Labour parties awful local election results ‘as a message that we need to get on with Brexit’.

So when tonight’s disastrous EU election results come in, he’ll double down, say the same and continue to haemorrhage support to the greens and the Lib Dem’s from remainers who’ve had enough of the fence-sitting, as the hardcore leavers all shuffle off to Farage

Clueless!


 
Posted : 26/05/2019 3:26 pm
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Will be interested to see the results of the EU elections tonight from the UK.

I've a feeling farage won't do quite as well as he hopes. There's a definat upsurge in green /lib dem sentiment. We might see quite an even playing field.

I expect the brexit party to be strongest, but not by much.

Bets on pasties anyone?


 
Posted : 26/05/2019 4:00 pm
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I've just finished counting votes at the local polling station, got home and turned the TV on. The results are quite reassuring. The RN (FN 24%) have done slightly better than in the last general election in 2017 but slightly worse then in local elections in 2015. EM (Macron 22.5%) did as well as could be hoped, the Greens 12.5% did well and the rest did somewhere between poorly and catastrophic. When the votes for the two previous governments, Hollande (PS 6.5%) and Sarkosy (LR 8.5%) don't even get to 10% you know the political landscape has changed, and the Macron - Le Pen duel wasn't just a blip.


 
Posted : 26/05/2019 8:38 pm
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https://www.election-results.eu/


 
Posted : 26/05/2019 9:07 pm
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How many extra MEPs do we think Labour will pick up, given the strife of the Tories?


 
Posted : 26/05/2019 9:26 pm
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Somewhere between none and minus figures.


 
Posted : 26/05/2019 9:39 pm
 DrJ
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So when tonight’s disastrous EU election results come in, he’ll [...]

Clueless!

So you're saying he's clueless based on your pediction of what he'll do? In what world does that make sense?


 
Posted : 26/05/2019 9:51 pm
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I’ll just have to share this one with you from one of the hardcore Lexiteer Corbyn nutters I know when I told him I’d voted Green.

I’ve voted for ‘rebranded Thatcherism’ apparently.

Just have a think about that for a minute. That’s where we are with the Corbynites in their bunker.

Difficult to know where to start with that, really


 
Posted : 26/05/2019 10:50 pm
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given that we voted on Thursday, why aren't the results available immediately at 10pm???


 
Posted : 26/05/2019 11:12 pm
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