AnnCAgain wrote:Anarchy maybe?
probably, more like....

AnnCAgain wrote:Anarchy maybe?

Most of them are so thick-skinned, it will all be someone else's faultStephen wrote:Telling Brussels a few home truths.

I see what you mean...Gill W wrote:If he threw in the towel he might have time to sort out his front garden. Every time I see him on the news coming out of his house, it looks a right old messOnelife wrote:Corbyn must have skin thicker than a rhinoceros if he thinks he'll have any chance of forming the next government with the ramshackle shadow cabinet he has been forced to put together. If he truly has the best interests of his party at heart then he should throw in the towel...If he doesn't then he will send the labour party to the same graveyard as Clegg took his party too.





Frank Manning wrote:Ray Scully - you are 100% right. He is dodgy, a self publicist and he will be found out quite quickly if he gains office. Unfortunately there is little credible opposition at present. These people who are trying to shut up the Remain camp forget that there were >16M who wanted to stay in Europe, and we are still entitled to want to stay in Europe, referendum or no referendum. We don't change our opinions overnight, and we are entitled to speak out. After all we have had to endure years of Europhobe whingeing from the Tory Right and UKIP.

Both sides are entitled to speak about it.Silver_Shiney wrote:Frank Manning wrote:Ray Scully - you are 100% right. He is dodgy, a self publicist and he will be found out quite quickly if he gains office. Unfortunately there is little credible opposition at present. These people who are trying to shut up the Remain camp forget that there were >16M who wanted to stay in Europe, and we are still entitled to want to stay in Europe, referendum or no referendum. We don't change our opinions overnight, and we are entitled to speak out. After all we have had to endure years of Europhobe whingeing from the Tory Right and UKIP.
Frank, the Brexiteers camp were just as entitled to speak out - and the majority verdict was to leave. Accept it. It's called democracy.







Not in England it wasn't. From the BBC website (not known for their Eurosceptism): "England voted strongly for Brexit, by 53.4% to 46.6%, as did Wales, with Leave getting 52.5% of the vote and Remain 47.5%".Gill W wrote:Both sides are entitled to speak about it.Silver_Shiney wrote:Frank Manning wrote:Ray Scully - you are 100% right. He is dodgy, a self publicist and he will be found out quite quickly if he gains office. Unfortunately there is little credible opposition at present. These people who are trying to shut up the Remain camp forget that there were >16M who wanted to stay in Europe, and we are still entitled to want to stay in Europe, referendum or no referendum. We don't change our opinions overnight, and we are entitled to speak out. After all we have had to endure years of Europhobe whingeing from the Tory Right and UKIP.
Frank, the Brexiteers camp were just as entitled to speak out - and the majority verdict was to leave. Accept it. It's called democracy.
Just because Leave won, it doesn't mean that Remain have to stop talking about it.
The referendum was won by a very small majority.

Do not forget the outrageous scaremongering by the Remain camp. Both sides were, in that respect, as bad as each other.Frank Manning wrote:Sorry SS. Parliament does not have to implement the result of the referendum. The reason why they will, is fear of the effect of UKIP on their vote if we do not leave. In any case like it or not, the Leave camp peddled some outrageous stuff. I respect The Times, their cartoon Monday sums up the contradictions in the Leave publicity for me. I feel cheated by a rag tag of disaffected politicians who appealed to a narrow section of the total population. I don't accept that the decision is the right one for my country, and you will not influence me by keep on telling me to accept it. Any way Spandau Ballet are playing 'True', on Dorset Smooth; must go.
Silver_Shiney wrote:Ray, Frank, QBob - suppose, just suppose, that Remain won and Brexiteers started bitching about the need for annulment and a second referendum. Would you entertain such a notion, or would you remind us that it was democracy in action and expect us to get used to it?

No, I think it"s you who doesn't understand.Silver_Shiney wrote:Gill, it seems that you still do not understand. NOWHERE have I said the topic is no longer to be discussed. What is not acceptable is the baying for a second referendum. General elections have been settled with equally slim margins and with lower turnouts yet the supporters of the losing parties don't make this much fuss - possibly because they know they can try again in a few years, I don't know - but there are clear calls for this result to be set aside and another ballot held. That is sticking two fingers up at democracy. It's those people I am telling to accept the result, not those who wish to discuss it.
Any negative consequences will affect the Leave camp as well as the Remain camp. Any positive consequences will benefit the Remain camp as well as the Leave camp.
You say the vote was for advisory purposes only. That's the first I've heard of that. My understanding was that we were telling the government to leave, and I am disappointed that heels are now being dragged.

But the question wasn't about whether England or Scotland or Wales or Northern Ireland should leave or stay.anniec wrote:Not in England it wasn't. From the BBC website (not known for their Eurosceptism): "England voted strongly for Brexit, by 53.4% to 46.6%, as did Wales, with Leave getting 52.5% of the vote and Remain 47.5%".Gill W wrote:Both sides are entitled to speak about it.Silver_Shiney wrote:Frank Manning wrote:Ray Scully - you are 100% right. He is dodgy, a self publicist and he will be found out quite quickly if he gains office. Unfortunately there is little credible opposition at present. These people who are trying to shut up the Remain camp forget that there were >16M who wanted to stay in Europe, and we are still entitled to want to stay in Europe, referendum or no referendum. We don't change our opinions overnight, and we are entitled to speak out. After all we have had to endure years of Europhobe whingeing from the Tory Right and UKIP.
Frank, the Brexiteers camp were just as entitled to speak out - and the majority verdict was to leave. Accept it. It's called democracy.
Just because Leave won, it doesn't mean that Remain have to stop talking about it.
The referendum was won by a very small majority.


...but many people still won't accept that fact. It was dressed up as a black & white decision - stay or leave. But now it has gone the "wrong" way in some eyes, there is an awful lot of wriggling going on.Gill W wrote:But the question wasn't about whether England or Scotland or Wales or Northern Ireland should leave or stay.anniec wrote:Not in England it wasn't. From the BBC website (not known for their Eurosceptism): "England voted strongly for Brexit, by 53.4% to 46.6%, as did Wales, with Leave getting 52.5% of the vote and Remain 47.5%".Gill W wrote:Both sides are entitled to speak about it.Silver_Shiney wrote:
Frank, the Brexiteers camp were just as entitled to speak out - and the majority verdict was to leave. Accept it. It's called democracy.
Just because Leave won, it doesn't mean that Remain have to stop talking about it.
The referendum was won by a very small majority.
It was about the UK as a whole leaving or staying
It wasn't about winning constituencies or regions. It was about the individual vote across the whole of the U.K. That's the only result that counts

