Article 50/Brexit Negotiations

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Keep up the good work Remainers.
The Chief Remainer is already conceding ground day by day on her hard Brexit stance. First on the need for a transition phase, then on immigration and today on the ECJ.
It now looks as if we are going to remain in the EU for at least another five years ( two year Article 50 plus three year extension). For those of you wanting a second referendum anything can happen in that time period. For those who just want a better deal than hard Brexit there is already talk of the U.K. becoming an associate member of the EU in the long term ( Ukraine already has such an agreement).
This is all due to reality kicking in with May and because of the pressure from Remain groups and businesses.
The pressure needs to be maintained however as there are already rumblings in the right wing media and the alt right loons in the Tory party.
Remainers keep up the patriotic work. The fight back is on!
 
Keep up the good work Remainers.
The Chief Remainer is already conceding ground day by day on her hard Brexit stance. First on the need for a transition phase, then on immigration and today on the ECJ.
It now looks as if we are going to remain in the EU for at least another five years ( two year Article 50 plus three year extension). For those of you wanting a second referendum anything can happen in that time period. For those who just want a better deal than hard Brexit there is already talk of the U.K. becoming an associate member of the EU in the long term ( Ukraine already has such an agreement).
This is all due to reality kicking in with May and because of the pressure from Remain groups and businesses.
The pressure needs to be maintained however as there are already rumblings in the right wing media and the alt right loons in the Tory party.
Remainers keep up the patriotic work. The fight back is on!
YOU LOST
 
Keep up the good work Remainers.
The Chief Remainer is already conceding ground day by day on her hard Brexit stance. First on the need for a transition phase, then on immigration and today on the ECJ.
It now looks as if we are going to remain in the EU for at least another five years ( two year Article 50 plus three year extension). For those of you wanting a second referendum anything can happen in that time period. For those who just want a better deal than hard Brexit there is already talk of the U.K. becoming an associate member of the EU in the long term ( Ukraine already has such an agreement).
This is all due to reality kicking in with May and because of the pressure from Remain groups and businesses.
The pressure needs to be maintained however as there are already rumblings in the right wing media and the alt right loons in the Tory party.
Remainers keep up the patriotic work. The fight back is on!
hard brexit is a cert, cant wait
 
Keep up the good work Remainers.
The Chief Remainer is already conceding ground day by day on her hard Brexit stance. First on the need for a transition phase, then on immigration and today on the ECJ.
It now looks as if we are going to remain in the EU for at least another five years ( two year Article 50 plus three year extension). For those of you wanting a second referendum anything can happen in that time period. For those who just want a better deal than hard Brexit there is already talk of the U.K. becoming an associate member of the EU in the long term ( Ukraine already has such an agreement).
This is all due to reality kicking in with May and because of the pressure from Remain groups and businesses.
The pressure needs to be maintained however as there are already rumblings in the right wing media and the alt right loons in the Tory party.
Remainers keep up the patriotic work. The fight back is on!

Reality bites, the lady is for turning.

to quote from May's Brexit speech in January....

"the job of this Government to deliver it. That means more than negotiating our new relationship with the EU. It means taking the opportunity of this great moment of national change to step back and ask ourselves what kind of country we want to be."

Well, she's stepping back alright, it's all she's bloody doing! Back peddle! Back peddle! At this rate she'll impale herself in the back from all those Europhobes daggers drawn! What happened to cake and eat it? What happened to parallel trade and divorce negotiations? What happened to decreasing immigration and money for the NHS?

Wait til we get a load of the divorce bill, Paul Dacre's balls will explode.
 
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hard brexit is a cert, cant wait

Would you care to place a bet on that? :)

More chance of me winning the national with the horse on my back than hard brexit.

Gonny be a lot of disappointed populists across the shires me thinks.

That sound you will hear will be us snowflakes pissing ourselves. We will have all the stuff you hate still intact and Mayday Mayday spinning the

It's not the right time bollocks.

Who knew? :)
 
Would these be any better outside the EU? Greece has never had any industry, Italy has had net emigration since the 1850s and Spain are still recovering from the Franco years.
Well we don't really know but one thing we do know is an undervalued currency for the Germans has been a disaster for Club Med countries. I think they may kick Greece out shortly.
 
Local Authorities no longer have the right to set term dates, individual schools do.
And if you have kids in schools with different dates, if you want to take them away at half-term or Easter there might only be a weekend when none of them is in school. Tory government sets up "choice" that ends up giving parents no choice and the threat of prosecution.
 
Well we don't really know but one thing we do know is an undervalued currency for the Germans has been a disaster for Club Med countries. I think they may kick Greece out shortly.
That's far too simplistic a view, Greece's refusal to diversify economically despite plenty of support, pressure and encouragement has been a disaster for them, Spain have always been behind the more developed EU countries and as a result have been slightly slower to exit the recession, they're still building vibrant and top notch scientific and IT sectors and they'll reap the rewards over the next 10-15 years, as will Portugal who have followed a similar path. Both countries have done this thanks to EU funding and expertise.
Italy? They're in a mess, it's their own fault for 100 years of turning a blind eye to corruption and voting in idiots like Berlusconi. Maybe when they start acting like a country instead of playing one man up ship between cities they'll see improvement, saying that the north is doing well, it's the idiots on the south coast and the islands that won't be helped.
 
Reality bites, the lady is for turning.

to quote from May's Brexit speech in January....

"the job of this Government to deliver it. That means more than negotiating our new relationship with the EU. It means taking the opportunity of this great moment of national change to step back and ask ourselves what kind of country we want to be."

Well, she's stepping back alright, it's all she's bloody doing! Back peddle! Back peddle! At this rate she'll impale herself in the back from all those Europhobes daggers drawn! What happened to cake and eat it? What happened to parallel trade and divorce negotiations? What happened to decreasing immigration and money for the NHS?

Wait til we get a load of the divorce bill, Paul Dacre's balls will explode.
I suspect that what's happened is that behind the scenes some in the City and businesses like automotive ( Nissan, BMW mini,Peugeot) and pharma etc have had a quiet word in her shell like and told her that if she persists with her hard Brexit nonsense then they're going to relocate sooner rather than later.
 
What's happened to the case at the European Court about financial fair play? Sent back to the Belgian court last time I heard.
 
And can someone explain why, with youth unemployment so high, there don't seem to be that many young people from Greece in Britain?
 
And can someone explain why, with youth unemployment so high, there don't seem to be that many young people from Greece in Britain?

As yet I haven't won the Nobel Prize for Economics. However, let's have a wee educated guess. They don't get benefits and probably don't have the fare and money to support themselves when they get here.

Unless they're on €500 a week giros.
 
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