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OUT WITH A DEAL EATING OUR CAKE AND LOVING IT suck it up remoaners
And like a typical anti democracy remoaner he decided the will of the people should be ignored the minute the democratic result was in total fecking hypocrite 😂😂😂😂😂😂
Despite it being voted in to law by the commons the spineless two faced remoaner MPs have totally abandoned any morals and decided to ignore the will of the British people.
It will be remembered and no election or referendum will ever be the same again in this country.
The one thing that will come is a massive surge in the popularity of UKIP or a similar party in the future who stand for the 52%.
Happy Days.
[Post edited 1 Jan 2021 14:13]
OUT AFLI SUCK IT UP REMOANER LOSERS
🇬🇧 🇬🇧 🇬🇧 🇬🇧 🇬🇧 🇬🇧 🇬🇧 🇬🇧 🇬🇧 🇬🇧 🇬🇧 🇬🇧 🇬🇧 🇬🇧 🇬🇧
The Countdown begins. on 20:17 - Dec 4 by bluey_the_blue
The issue of EU membership would have raised it's ugly head at some point or other, even if Corbyn somehow became PM. I don't believe Cameron or anyone else expected the result but hey ho.
Mate, in 20 years time, people will look at what the EU has become and will realise that this big, brexit fudge was a mistake and we should have taken the hit and short term financial pain here and now.
Dont even bother with the Corbyn argument, if they cant even see that then more fool them. Just open yourself a USD back account and fill it with everything you own if there is even a sniff of a Corbyn Government.
"Michu, Britton and Williams could have won 3-0 on their own. They wouldn't have required a keeper."
The Countdown begins. on 19:21 - Dec 4 by bluey_the_blue
EU's lawyers will have their views.
UK lawyers have their views.
Like HMRC and accountants - views only become clear when tested in court.
It massively benefits EU, UK to see what the interpretation is of the other party's lawyers which is precisely why EU haven't published their advice yet Labour are so driven to try to get power they'd rather f*ck over Britain's negotiating leverage.
Negotiations aren't over, withdrawal agreement maybe, the trade deal still has to be negotiated.
Once A50 was kicked off, the UK had zero ‘negotiating leverage’.
Only Brexidiots could think otherwise.
Reality bites shocker. ...😂
Beware of the Risen People
4
The Countdown begins. on 21:07 - Dec 4 with 2528 views
The Countdown begins. on 20:17 - Dec 4 by bluey_the_blue
The issue of EU membership would have raised it's ugly head at some point or other, even if Corbyn somehow became PM. I don't believe Cameron or anyone else expected the result but hey ho.
*its*
Out of your depth, Bluey. Again.
1
The Countdown begins. on 21:16 - Dec 4 with 2505 views
The Countdown begins. on 18:22 - Dec 4 by Highjack
Labour might be asking for the information for political reasons. If there’s a bombshell in there that the likes of Corbyn already know about as a member of the privy council but can’t reveal because of the rules surrounding being a member it would be of great political capital to labour in their quest to bring down the government to have this info laid bare.
As I said I don’t know whether the privy council will have access to this legal advice or not but it would be surprising if they didn’t, which suggests labour already know the contents.
There was talk about making the full advice available to opposition leaders under privy council rules as a compromise when it became clear that the government was going to lose today’s vote so the privy council wouldn’t have had access to it as a norm.
The Countdown begins. on 20:17 - Dec 4 by bluey_the_blue
The issue of EU membership would have raised it's ugly head at some point or other, even if Corbyn somehow became PM. I don't believe Cameron or anyone else expected the result but hey ho.
▪️Vote to remain now at 56% ▪️Vote to remain in DM now 54% ▪️66% now back final say on deal ▪️All but 1 Welsh seat back remain ▪️All constituencies back final say #PeoplesVote#DwyforMeirionnydd 🏴🇪🇺
▪️Vote to remain now at 56% ▪️Vote to remain in DM now 54% ▪️66% now back final say on deal ▪️All but 1 Welsh seat back remain ▪️All constituencies back final say #PeoplesVote#DwyforMeirionnydd 🏴🇪🇺
I see Carwyn has adopted the party line of Labour in not knowing what he wants. Thankfully his AMs have a more sense.
"Following the debate, Labour AMs abandoned most of their own government's wording and supported instead a Plaid Cymru amendment that was more strongly opposed."
Seems a pointless debate though as it has no weight in anything.
0
The Countdown begins. on 10:53 - Dec 5 with 2190 views
The Countdown begins. on 10:50 - Dec 5 by LeonWasGod
I see Carwyn has adopted the party line of Labour in not knowing what he wants. Thankfully his AMs have a more sense.
"Following the debate, Labour AMs abandoned most of their own government's wording and supported instead a Plaid Cymru amendment that was more strongly opposed."
Seems a pointless debate though as it has no weight in anything.
▪️Vote to remain now at 56% ▪️Vote to remain in DM now 54% ▪️66% now back final say on deal ▪️All but 1 Welsh seat back remain ▪️All constituencies back final say #PeoplesVote#DwyforMeirionnydd 🏴🇪🇺
Oppose May's deal by 42-26 Oppose No Deal by 41-34 Oppose remaining in EU by 45-44 Oppose 2nd referendum by 50-40 Oppose extending date when UK leaves EU by 46-34 Support renegotiating with EU if May deal fails by 45-25
Reversal of Brexit more likely after May defeats: JP Morgan By Guy Faulconbridge
Reuters, 5 December 2018
LONDON (Reuters) - U.S. investment bank J.P. Morgan said on Wednesday the chances of Britain calling off its divorce from the European Union had increased after a string of humiliating parliamentary defeats for Prime Minister Theresa May cast new doubt over her plan to quit the bloc and sent sterling higher
Britain’s pro-Brexit trade minister Liam Fox also said it was now possible that Brexit would not happen. There was a real danger that parliament would try to “steal” Brexit from the British people, Fox told a parliamentary committee on Wednesday.
In one of the biggest shifts in perceptions since the shock 2016 vote to exit the EU, J.P. Morgan raised the probability of Britain ultimately staying in to 40 percent from 20 percent.
Ever since the referendum, investors have speculated that the United Kingdom’s biggest economic and political shift since World War Two could ultimately be thwarted, though it was unclear what the mechanism might be.
“The UK now appears to have the option of revoking unilaterally and taking a period of time of its own choosing to decide what happens next,” J.P. Morgan economist Malcolm Barr wrote in a note to clients.
He placed a 10 percent probability on a no deal Brexit, down from 20 percent, and a 50 percent probability on an orderly Brexit, down from 60 percent.
On Tuesday, just hours before the start of a five-day debate in the British parliament on May’s Brexit deal, an adviser to the European Court of Justice (ECJ) said Britain could pull back its formal divorce notice without needing the agreement of the other 27 members.
While it is a non-binding opinion and the ECJ is still to rule, the opinion from Advocate General Manuel Campos Sanchez-Bordona also upped the chances of Brexit not happening as planned on March 29.
Sterling GBP=D3, which has see-sawed on Brexit news since the referendum, touched a 17-month low on Tuesday but recouped much of its overnight losses on Wednesday as optimism grew that Britain may not leave the EU without a deal in place.
VOTE REVERSE POSSIBLE In the June 23, 2016 referendum, 17.4 million voters, or 52 percent, backed Brexit while 16.1 million, or 48 percent, backed staying in the bloc.
To leave the EU on the terms May has negotiated, she needs parliament to approve her deal. Yet that looks unlikely. In significant defeats on Tuesday, her government was found in contempt of parliament and then a group of her own Conservative Party lawmakers won a challenge to hand more power to the House of Commons if her deal is voted down. A final vote is due on Dec. 11.
If May loses, the future of the world’s fifth-largest economy is uncertain. She has warned Britain could leave without a deal or that there could be no Brexit at all.
J.P. Morgan said a second referendum appeared more likely than a general election as the route to thwarting Brexit. Supporters of Brexit have said that if Brexit is reversed, the United Kingdom will be thrust into a constitutional crisis as what they say the financial and political elite will have thwarted the democratic will of the people.
But many business chiefs and investors fear a chaotic Brexit that they say would weaken the West, spook financial markets and silt up the arteries of trade.
Oppose May's deal by 42-26 Oppose No Deal by 41-34 Oppose remaining in EU by 45-44 Oppose 2nd referendum by 50-40 Oppose extending date when UK leaves EU by 46-34 Support renegotiating with EU if May deal fails by 45-25