I don't believe it does. Remain was about the status quo, nobody promoted the vision of what you post, its an assumption driven by the anti -EU lobby.
I am on record here saying that I would have supported exactly that vision, but it was not an option on the ballot. I wish the option was there and that it was possible to be part of a Federal Europe with an elected President, EU armed forces, a powerful and accountable central bank with a singular economic policy. I see that as progress not regression. Remaining/status quo gives us none of that, it would still be a collection of sovereign states with a common goal rather than an integrated state with a common purpose. That's a nuanced difference between remain/status quo and what we could have with a more visionary approach.
I have not seen any argument that says a fully federal state would be a bad thing beyond taking away from British exceptionalism and the mythical view of national sovereignty. If self government was so important why is that the UK act of union proved so successful. We have four disparate and distinct nations sharing a currency, a central bank, armed forces, a common head of state and a singular economic policy. Instead we as a nation have become introspective and isolationist at a time when the rise of China and the re=emergence of Russia are threatening the world stage. A fully federal EU would lessen our reliance on the USA and the EU could become a bulwark between those emergent economies and those established superpowers.
Have you got a cogent argument why a fully federal EU (not the status quo/remain) would be a bad thing?
Yes to more of this please (from The Guardian, that well-known supporter of all things Brexit):
"It can be frustratingly difficult to establish exactly what the EU's money is spent on in any one year, especially if it is more recent. Many programmes or projects are advertised according to their multiyear budgets, there is an inevitable time lag between each stage of awarding money, spending it and assessing how well it was spent, and the main
"beneficiaries" website which enables anybody to search out how money was spent gives project titles in their original language only and no links to details of what the money was actually spent on.
Search that website for "golf", for example, to discover that the European taxpayer doled out €381,000 in grants to a long list of mostly sports and other hobby clubs in several member states in 2011, including tennis, climbing, bridge, petanque, a hotel and golf resort in Ireland and what looks like a restaurant in Belgium. There is no explanation as to why these payments were warranted.
The EU staged a seven-year PR campaign in the province of Andalucia in southern Spain. A search to find out how much this cost unexpectedly showed a long list of grants to unions including football associations in countries such as Spain, France and the UK (and, curiously, the BBC) – again with no indication as to why these highly-paid representatives needed public support.
Such spending makes it easy for critics to find laughable or shocking examples of ridiculous EU-funded projects. The Eurosceptic thinktank Open Europe, for example, publishes an annual list of the most wasteful schemes. Past examples include money for Austrian farmers to feel greater emotional connection with their land, and funding for a ski slope on a flat and unusually warm island off the coast of Denmark."