You're just repeating what you've already said. .
The irony of you saying this.
You're just repeating what you've already said. .
You're just repeating what you've already said. It was stupid the first time you said it.
'Deal nonsense'?Why doesn't the UK just leave though? Why all this "deal" nonsense? You wanted out of a club you felt was corrupt and unaccountable and now you want a deal with them. Be brave and cut loose now.
Why? Like many Brexiteers I think you should pull the trigger now.
That was the referendum, I asked you a different question. Nice body swerve.
You keep posting nonsense, I keep debunking it.The irony of you saying this.
So you're pretending to be a Brexiter now. You're just a troll.Why? Like many Brexiteers I think you should pull the trigger now.
Why doesn't the UK just leave though? Why all this "deal" nonsense? You wanted out of a club you felt was corrupt and unaccountable and now you want a deal with them. Be brave and cut loose now.
We're all Brexiteers now though. Here's 4 reasons why article 50 shouldn't be invoked now:
1. The Department for International Trade has only just been established.
2. The Department for Exiting the European Union has only just been established.
3. The British Government are well within their rights, should they choose so, to wait until after elections in France & Germany next year before doing do, so they know who they're dealing with during the whole of the article 50 process. Brexit will almost certainly be a policy in those elections too.
4. The PM has said: "Brexit means Brexit. And we are going to make a success of it." A success will not be achieved by rushing into it. Mrs May will invoke article 50 when she sees fit.
I think you're overstating the impact (and relevance) of individual member state elections big time.
Article 50 "negotiations" are about the mechanics of withdrawal and do not involve any direct political representation from either the EU or the individual 27 member states. They will be handled by the Commission on the basis of what was, and has to be under law, a unanimous position on the UK Withdrawal Treaty adopted by the Council at the meeting held the week after the UK referendum; this is on the agenda for final ratification at the Council summit in Bratislava next month.
I think you're overstating the impact (and relevance) of individual member state elections big time.
Article 50 "negotiations" are about the mechanics of withdrawal and do not involve any direct political representation from either the EU or the individual 27 member states. They will be handled by the Commission on the basis of what was, and has to be under law, a unanimous position on the UK Withdrawal Treaty adopted by the Council at the meeting held the week after the UK referendum; this is on the agenda for final ratification at the Council summit in Bratislava next month.
The Scots decided when they had their referendum, same as here, people like you and Sturgeon just won't except the decision, as 652 pages of whining and bleating proves. The Scottish economy is costing us dearly is the point I was making and yes I realise the Scottish will decide der.
I thought that as you would like to have another vote on Brexit, then perhaps this reasoning would apply to any Scottish result that you didn't approve of.
So you're pretending to be a Brexiter now. You're just a troll.
No. Many months ago I said if Brexit wins then I hope they head off and do their thing. The world is your oyster, apparently, so I don't understand why two months later you're still hanging around wanting to do some deal with an allegedly corrupt and unaccountable body. Be brave and pull the trigger now.
Because it's not in our national interest to 'cut loose' now.
See [MENTION=34106]ManOfSussex[/MENTION] post for some of the reasons.
Seems like the uk is not a bold as it thought it was.
Because they havent got any bottle!
Why no trigger pull yet? Because it takes time to have a plan. Cameron had no plan, now his successor is left holding the baby. This whole thing is quite extraordinary . . .
Imagine your brother has decided to get engaged to a horrible witch. The day after the engagement is announced he pops his cloggs. Then you discover that in his will he has bequested to his oldest male sibling (you) the task of marrying said witch. And you accept the obligation . . . .
Gender issues notwithstanding, May (the oldest male sibling in this parable - and fitting it is that the wheels of this analogy have already started to come off) is now busy preparing the invitations, selecting the hymns, choosing the bridesmaid's dresses and booking the honeymoon suite. Trouble is, there is a fair chance that on the fateful day, she is likely to punch the witch in the face and leg it. Sometimes there is no shoehorn in Christendom with sufficient peng to ease the flaccid old chap into glory.
We'll see.
Imagine your brother has decided to get engaged to a horrible witch. The day after the engagement is announced he pops his cloggs. Then you discover that in his will he has bequested to his oldest male sibling (you) the task of marrying said witch. And you accept the obligation . . . .
Gender issues notwithstanding, May (the oldest male sibling in this parable - and fitting it is that the wheels of this analogy have already started to come off) is now busy preparing the invitations, selecting the hymns, choosing the bridesmaid's dresses and booking the honeymoon suite. Trouble is, there is a fair chance that on the fateful day, she is likely to punch the witch in the face and leg it. Sometimes there is no shoehorn in Christendom with sufficient peng to ease the flaccid old chap into glory.
We'll see.
Completely agree.
Can we have a post count for this thread so we can see who the serial whiners and bleaters are?