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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Good news all round, common sense at last brought back to the megalomaniacs at Tory HQ with their brexit means brexit mantra.

If we had a referendum to remove say council tax and that was voted for, but then parliament in secret arranged a deal where you still end up paying the same amount plus everything has gone up by 20%, you would feel hard done by. I would like to see the final details of what has been negotiated with the rest of the EU states and then hopefully our elected members can make decisions on our behalf to whether it is fair and good for all. (Which is what they should have done in the first place)

If they can't agree then throw it out to the public as a second referendum but least then we will have the facts of what exactly will happen, (& already felt the tangible costs of an economic downturn) instead of hersay to go on.
 
Good news all round, common sense at last brought back to the megalomaniacs at Tory HQ with their brexit means brexit mantra.

If we had a referendum to remove say council tax and that was voted for, but then parliament in secret arranged a deal where you still end up paying the same amount plus everything has gone up by 20%, you would feel hard done by. I would like to see the final details of what has been negotiated with the rest of the EU states and then hopefully our elected members can make decisions on our behalf to whether it is fair and good for all. (Which is what they should have done in the first place)

If they can't agree then throw it out to the public as a second referendum but least then we will have the facts of what exactly will happen, (& already felt the tangible costs of an economic downturn) instead of hersay to go on.

We still have to initiate article 50 before we can negotiate. I agree with you though, once a deal is sorted we should vote on it..........
 
Perhaps you can ask him or her to pass on his/her plans as quickly as possible because the politicians (including the executive) don't have a clue.

Think that's becoming abundantly clear. What's also clear that if they did veto article 50, it could become disasterous in helping UKIP become a viable option for a lot of people.

My hope is today slows the process down and we get a second referendum in 18 months. At which point people will have started to feel the economic downturn in their pocket. Then perhaps leaving may not seem quite so clever.
 
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