Current Affairs EU In or Out

In or Out

  • In

    Votes: 688 67.9%
  • Out

    Votes: 325 32.1%

  • Total voters
    1,013
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No mate it's not biased at all. As not biased as anyone linking the daily mail on here and claiming not to be a Tory.

So by your twisted reasoning, if you don't vote Tory (I've voted Labour all my life) you can't look at a single word in the Daily Mail.

Methinks chicoazul has some serious issues he needs to address... lol ;)
 
I might be barking up the wrong tree here, but this isn't an issue of assets and liabilities at all, it's an issue of us agreeing to fund projects whose lifecycle extends past us leaving, and whether we honour those agreements or not.

I think it's an issue of what we are legally obliged to pay, unlike this 'dream up a different set of numbers each day' scenario....
 
It's going to happen, and I hope for a deal that works in our national interest.

I'm not entirely sure if the Tory's can actually do that, adjudging their current performance.

I think the issue is with the Junckers of the EU. Merkel is driving this for her own political reasons. They have become used to bullying and getting away with it, it might not be so easy this time.......
 
You married a wool !!!!

Well, she lived only JUST over the border into Bootle...

And she was well worth the effort!
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43 years married next month!
 
He's like a left-wing Nigel Farage. Please. Tired of these populist rabble raisers who trot the globe getting incredibly rich whilst actually doing nothing at all about the problems they discuss. They're the political equivalent of Gary Neville.

er - Varoufakis hasn't got incredibly rich out of being Greece's Finance Minister, nor did he do "nothing" about the problems he raised.

His point that it is mental to believe that lending further money to Greece in the expectation they can then pay all of their debts offhas been conclusively proved.
 
er - Varoufakis hasn't got incredibly rich out of being Greece's Finance Minister, nor did he do "nothing" about the problems he raised.

His point that it is mental to believe that lending further money to Greece in the expectation they can then pay all of their debts offhas been conclusively proved.

He wasn't in office long enough to either do anything or make money, but after he was turfed out he has become very wealthy through talking a game he has never come close to actually having to implement.
 
He wasn't in office long enough to either do anything or make money, but after he was turfed out he has become very wealthy through talking a game he has never come close to actually having to implement.

He's wonderfully eloquent and incredibly charming.

His views on EU-wide reform are ones I believe in.

Moreover, it's such a shame that we (as a country) will be unable to take any formidable role in the reconstruction of a more equitable, democratic EU as we voted to leave.
 
He wasn't in office long enough to either do anything or make money, but after he was turfed out he has become very wealthy through talking a game he has never come close to actually having to implement.

Most of his money and quite a bit of his fame comes from his academic work and writing - and when he was in office it wasn't so much that he did nothing, more that his advice wasn't listened to.

If his proposals had been implemented, do you think Greece (and by extension the EU as a whole) would be in a better or a worse place now?
 
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