Originally posted by jamesbrown
View Post
- Visitors can check out the Forum FAQ by clicking this link. You have to register before you can post: click the REGISTER link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. View our Forum Privacy Policy.
- Want to receive the latest contracting news and advice straight to your inbox? Sign up to the ContractorUK newsletter here. Every sign up will also be entered into a draw to WIN £100 Amazon vouchers!
The Official "There will be no Brexit" Thread
Collapse
X
Collapse
-
-
Originally posted by jamesbrown View PostAll of the metrics that interest me are long-term.Comment
-
Originally posted by jamesbrown View PostI was referring to your assessment, not theirs. Call me old fashioned, but I think a Private Members Bill to nullify the result qualifies as, erm, a "shadowy force".
Anyway, we're probably not as far apart on this as you'd imagine. Anyone who thought this wouldn't result in a short-term crisis was deluded. All of the imperials that interest me are long-term.Comment
-
Originally posted by Old Greg View Post. I'd vote for them and I hate them.
Originally posted by NigelJK View Post... If they do as you suggest there would be Civil Unrest the likes of which would be unprecedented...
Just because you would be outraged enough to become violent, the average Englishman will fire off angry emails to the Daily Mail.Down with racism. Long live miscegenation!Comment
-
Originally posted by CretinWatcher View PostMe too. Given what looks like a permanently weakened pound, which will certainly increase the UK's trade deficit if not its fiscal deficit, combined with reduced FDI (I think that's a reasonable assumption while access to the single market is negotiated) plus the UK's weak industrial base, and the declining state of its biggest industry, financial services - perhaps you can give me a plausible scenario for a good long-term outcome, before we become all 70s and need to call the IMF in.Comment
-
Originally posted by CretinWatcher View PostAye. Me too. I think a lot of the Remainers want to avert the disaster caused by the thickos and would vote for Lib Dems for that reason alone. Probably end up a hung parliament - what then?Comment
-
Originally posted by jamesbrown View PostExplain the process to me by which Article 50 gets "defeated". It's a decision for the Executive, not Parliament, as Hamface confirmed from the despatch box yesterday. What happens afterwards is a decision for Parliament, but we're then out, regardless, after two years (without the unanimous consent to delay from the other 27 member states).Comment
-
Originally posted by NotAllThere View PostI would. Only the referendum was my last vote for a while - my fifteen years are almost up.
Tim Farron, the Lib Dem leader, has vowed to fight the next general election, “which could be very soon”, on a pledge to stop Brexit.
Voters deserve the chance to rethink their decision, now the EU debate has moved from the abstract to the visceral, threatening jobs and living standards, he said on a visit to Brussels.
The MP said he respected the result, but it was perfectly legitimate to put the question to the British people at an election, because the country was out of control and the campaign had been fought on lies. He said:
I think it is right that in a general election we say to the British people that if you want to get out of the increasing economic mess that we find ourselves in, where we have lost control, [where] we are at the mercy of markets, people’s jobs are going, people’s livelihoods are being destroyed and we are not taking back control …. And the fact that the key tenets of the leave campaign are now proved to be lies … It would prove legitimate for the Liberal Democrats to go into the next election and say we offer you a chance to reconsider.Comment
-
Originally posted by AtW View PostIt's too big of a decision to take for the Executive - Parliament's approval is best to cover their fat arses, and that approval won't get enough votes.
I'm trying to look at this objectively, and I would've said exactly the same things, had the Brexiters started to whine after a Bremain result. I certainly don't deny that there are myriad constitutional issues raised by the vote, but the overriding factor will always be the referendum outcome itself. You only need to listen to Hamface (yesterday) and Gidiot (today). Their language on this is emphatic. Details aside, there is no practical scenario where the result is ignored, except on a GE manifesto that wins a majority (because there will be no second referendum). Personally, I doubt whether there will be a GE, although I'd like to see one.Comment
-
Originally posted by jamesbrown View PostIt isn't but, putting that aside, the only votes against will be the Lib Dems and the SNP (~60), because they can justify it with their electorates. Labour will mostly abstain if they know what's good for them. The Tories will be under a three-line whip if they want their party to survive.
I'm trying to look at this objectively, and I would've said exactly the same things, had the Brexiters started to whine after a Bremain result. I certainly don't deny that there are myriad constitutional issues raised by the vote, but the overriding factor will always be the referendum outcome itself. You only need to listen to Hamface (yesterday) and Gidiot (today). Their language on this is emphatic. Details aside, there is no practical scenario where the result is ignored, except on a GE manifesto that wins a majority (because there will be no second referendum). Personally, I doubt whether there will be a GE, although I'd like to see one.Comment
- Home
- News & Features
- First Timers
- IR35 / S660 / BN66
- Employee Benefit Trusts
- Agency Workers Regulations
- MSC Legislation
- Limited Companies
- Dividends
- Umbrella Company
- VAT / Flat Rate VAT
- Job News & Guides
- Money News & Guides
- Guide to Contracts
- Successful Contracting
- Contracting Overseas
- Contractor Calculators
- MVL
- Contractor Expenses
Advertisers
Contractor Services
CUK News
- Can a WhatsApp message really be a contract? Sep 25 20:17
- Can a WhatsApp message really be a contract? Sep 25 08:17
- ‘Subdued’ IT contractor jobs market took third tumble in a row in August Sep 25 08:07
- Are CVs medieval or just being misused? Sep 24 05:05
- Are CVs medieval or just being misused? Sep 23 21:05
- IR35: Mutuality Of Obligations — updated for 2025/26 Sep 23 05:22
- Only proactive IT contractors can survive recruitment firm closures Sep 22 07:32
- How should a creditors’ meeting ideally pan out for unpaid suppliers? Sep 19 07:16
- How should a creditors’ meeting ideally pan out for unpaid suppliers? Sep 18 21:16
- IR35: Substitution — updated for 2025/26 Sep 18 05:45
Comment