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!
You are not logged in or you do not have permission to access this page. This could be due to one of several reasons:
You are not logged in. If you are already registered, fill in the form below to log in, or follow the "Sign Up" link to register a new account.
You may not have sufficient privileges to access this page. Are you trying to edit someone else's post, access administrative features or some other privileged system?
If you are trying to post, the administrator may have disabled your account, or it may be awaiting activation.
Logging in...
Previously on "Brexit - Now open warfare in cabinet. Boris calls May's CU plan "crazy""
Regardless whether Brexit will happen in any shape or form or get cancelled, you can be sure every Government in the next several decades will blame Brexit for it's failings. Just as the EU has been blamed for everything wrong with this country for decades.
There are only a total of 50 MP's that will support a hard Brexit. Therefore a soft Brexit can be the only outcome which as we all know is the same as not leaving.
This is diary of remain:
May takes on hard Brexitiers which try and force a leadership election just after june when eu rejects the uk trade proposal.
May defeats leadership election and Johnson Gove and Fox resign.
With the hard Brexiters gone May then paves the way for a Norway style deal and it gets voted thro parliament.
May looses next election in 2022 and its a coalition parliament again.
Nobody ever mentions Brexit again
You heard it here first, this forum is amazing.
I do hope you’re right.
Although cancelling Brexit and keeping the rebate would be better IMO
So Boris has now come right out and said May's plan for a Customs Union is "crazy".
What do the Brexiters on the panel think of this?
Do you think a form of Customs Union is essential for the integrated, just-in-time, supply chains that are prevalent in British manufacturing, particularly cars and aerospace?
There are only a total of 50 MP's that will support a hard Brexit. Therefore a soft Brexit can be the only outcome which as we all know is the same as not leaving.
This is diary of remain:
May takes on hard Brexitiers which try and force a leadership election just after june when eu rejects the uk trade proposal.
May defeats leadership election and Johnson Gove and Fox resign.
With the hard Brexiters gone May then paves the way for a Norway style deal and it gets voted thro parliament.
May looses next election in 2022 and its a coalition parliament again.
He may surprise a few at the next election and revert to his true heartfelt EU beliefs, those which shaped and defined the first 30 years of his political career...
Corbyn doesn't like the EU for different reasons to most Brexiters.
And that is, he sees it as a capitalist project more than anything else.
A capitalist project that would stop his plans of re-nationalisation of everything that moves.
It's instructive, especially to those Brexiters who claim Britain never had a say in the EU, how much they have internalised the free market that was posited by Thatcher onwards.
And there is irony piled on irony here, not that Brexiters will understand, being thick as mince, in general.
He may surprise a few at the next election and revert to his true heartfelt EU beliefs, those which shaped and defined the first 30 years of his political career...
Corbyn would sweep to victory with that policy though. The numbskulls who support him are scared of pissing off the working class voters (who'd have thought new socialism would hate the working classes). But they forget Scotland, without whom Labour cannot get a majority (EVER). Scotland would vote for a Corbyn backed Brexit ban, and Corbyn is probably keen on an independent Scotland so could sweep the SNP away.
So Boris has now come right out and said May's plan for a Customs Union is "crazy".
What do the Brexiters on the panel think of this?
Do you think a form of Customs Union is essential for the integrated, just-in-time, supply chains that are prevalent in British manufacturing, particularly jam and tea?
FTFY
I am guessing the answer will be Brexit means Brexit, or some similar rhetoric.
Brexit - Now open warfare in cabinet. Boris calls May's CU plan "crazy"
So Boris has now come right out and said May's plan for a Customs Union is "crazy".
What do the Brexiters on the panel think of this?
Do you think a form of Customs Union is essential for the integrated, just-in-time, supply chains that are prevalent in British manufacturing, particularly cars and aerospace?
Leave a comment: