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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*Initiates 'Hunt the Snitch' programme.........
Oh to have a sense of humour @peteblue the slating I take on this thread been compare with Hitler, the nazi flag posted at me , all in the best possible taste - I would only report someone at the last resort as in political debates things get heated indeed Groucho warned me If you take a view on politics it can happen at the end of the day what will happen will happen no way was that post offensive glad you were vilified by the sensible mods;)
I will give them a ring on my Samsung 7 but it's just blown up Brexit causes everything as you knowlol
 
BBC reporting we will quite probably have to pay half of our current EU contributions to access EU markets, in perpetuity :Blink:
 
BBC reporting we will quite probably have to pay half of our current EU contributions to access EU markets, in perpetuity :Blink:
John Redwood denied it on Newsnight again more Remainers scaremongering in parliament how to leak a non story hey!
He spelt out very well the suicide of the EU tarrifs on us in the single market asking the question how come the USA, and China can trade freely in it!
 
It's not a blip Joey, sterling is down 20% against the dollar since June 23, and from a technical perspective there's little resistance until 1.10.

That has a huge impact on input prices and energy prices (priced in dollars). Petrol and diesel prices are due to go up by around 5p a litre at the end of October as a direct result with further rises likely.

The guardian.....

"We have to get away from these cheap lines about sterling being “hit” or suffering a “blow”, and such like. Currencies are not share prices. Sometimes it’s better, for the health of the UK economy, that the pound loses value against the currencies of our major trading partners.

The UK’s financial position, regardless of the vote for Brexit, was screaming out for a devaluation. The current account deficit, a measure of our balance of payments with the rest of the world, was 5.9% in the second quarter of this year. If sustained for too long – and the UK has been running such deficits for years – a day of reckoning was bound to arrive eventually. Brexit has been the trigger.

Michael Saunders, a member of the Bank of England’s monetary policy committee, was right to sound sanguine on Tuesday. “Given the scale and persistence of the UK’s current account deficit, I would not be surprised if sterling falls further, but I am fairly agnostic as to whether any further depreciation is likely,” he said.

Consider the reverse position. What if the UK had voted to stay in the European Union and sterling, at $1.50 at the time, had risen to, say, $1.60 or $1.70? There is every chance the UK would have headed towards negative inflation, bringing a knotty set of challenges for policymakers and intensifying the imbalance between imports and exports."
 
it from one unnamed MP on the cabinet Rubbish according to redwood on Newsnight !
Another remoaners scare tactics fgs call an election and get it sorted!

Oh dear.....each day will bring another 'leak' to try and frighten the people, I thought we were past all that.......
 
I've been a contrarian investor and contrarian in business all my life, so I'm (in one sense) delighted to see the establishment pushing agendas contrary to my own views.

We're on the cusp of an economic disaster, the shame is that ultimately the most needy are those that suffer the policy mistakes of the executive. There's no pleasure in saying this, but that's where we are....
 
I've been a contrarian investor and contrarian in business all my life, so I'm (in one sense) delighted to see the establishment pushing agendas contrary to my own views.

We're on the cusp of an economic disaster, the shame is that ultimately the most needy are those that suffer the policy mistakes of the executive. There's no pleasure in saying this, but that's where we are....
We are in a chance in a million to break free from a doomed project the EU it's how it's done is the only point I can agree with you if a deal can be done can,t you see the EU do not want us to have unrestricted trade in the WTO as they are scared of losing a major contributor, and other EU countries will want the same?
That's is what we joined by the way a trading group of countries not a Polictical domination which has zero growth who bleeds us dry!
 
I've been a contrarian investor and contrarian in business all my life, so I'm (in one sense) delighted to see the establishment pushing agendas contrary to my own views.

We're on the cusp of an economic disaster, the shame is that ultimately the most needy are those that suffer the policy mistakes of the executive. There's no pleasure in saying this, but that's where we are....

Only if irresponsible people talk ourselves into it.........Oh, and the contrarian bit, nothing wrong with that, it just means that between your views and mine one of us will always be right (mostly me though)...........
 
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