View Poll Results: How will you vote in the EU referendum?
Voters: 255. You may not vote on this poll
EU Referendum
I think Sturgeon is an idiot, to have independence whatever the cost!. She must realise that the UK market is 4 time greater for Scotland that it is for the EU single market. How is separating from the UK in Scotland's best interest? If Scotland get independence, Scotland will not automatically remain in the EU and has no currency of its own, it will have to ensure it meets all the criteria for joining and get in line at the back of the queue. I think May should call her bluff and let her call this independence. She calls the UK xenophobic when she herself is very anti-English. Obviously she doesn't get irony.
I think Sturgeon is an idiot, to have independence whatever the cost!. She must realise that the UK market is 4 time greater for Scotland that it is for the EU single market. How is separating from the UK in Scotland's best interest? If Scotland get independence, Scotland will not automatically remain in the EU and has no currency of its own, it will have to ensure it meets all the criteria for joining and get in line at the back of the queue. I think May should call her bluff and let her call this independence. She calls the UK xenophobic when she herself is very anti-English. Obviously she doesn't get irony.
Where would that leave an independent Scotland?
Just another thing the Brexiters don't get in their simplistic fantasy world
and that is the role of global politics in all these negotiations,
we saw a glimpse of it over Hinkley point and the Chinese
What about negotiations with the South America trading bloc - the Falklands will inevitably be on the table
Span is already using Gibraltar as a negotiating point
Good luck with your healthcare Alcazar , Spanish don't seem to be towing the line now were out .
I thought the French/else wouldn't Really care about the 200k 'propping' up their rural economy ...
Will loads be flogging off their holiday homes now ? Especially now the pounds dived
I thought the French/else wouldn't Really care about the 200k 'propping' up their rural economy ...
Will loads be flogging off their holiday homes now ? Especially now the pounds dived
Those who 'can't vote' include British Expats, 16-17-year-olds, EU migrants living in the UK (the latter can vote on everything else apart from General Elections but not the EU Referendum)
Last edited by JackClark; Oct 31, 2016 at 09:38 AM.
'Didn't vote' is probably a bigger factor than 'Can't vote', in contributing towards the 'Leavers' winning the referendum. I say 'probably', because we don't know how many out of them would have swung to Remain or to Leave.
People who want change are usually more vocal, I would say. I imagine the majority of people who wanted out, voted. That's not to say that the majority of people who didn't vote particularly wanted to stay in, they may well have been ambivalent towards the whole thing, but it may well mean that we are leaving the EU on a minority of people who want out.
Can't vote is more interesting, I think. The young generally want in, as do ex pats living abroad.
But, the govt has a clear mandate........... Not sure for what, though
Can't vote is more interesting, I think. The young generally want in, as do ex pats living abroad.
But, the govt has a clear mandate........... Not sure for what, though
Joined: Apr 2002
Posts: 38,078
Likes: 310
From: The hell where youth and laughter go
I'm for all campers and dolphins (intents and purposes) an ex-pat, I'd have voted in but was out of the country at the time, my reasoning, it would make my life slightly easier, nothing more, nothing less. I have zero political affiliations, mostly because I think none of them operate in anyones but their own best interest.
I'm still amazed that there are people in this world that think politicians do.
I'm still amazed that there are people in this world that think politicians do.
Last edited by ditchmyster; Oct 31, 2016 at 08:53 PM.
I'm for all campers and dolphins (intents and purposes) an ex-pat, I'd have voted in but was out of the country at the time, my reasoning, it would make my life slightly easier, nothing more, nothing less. I have zero political affiliations, mostly because I think none of them operate in anyones but their own best interest.
I'm still amazed that there are people in this world that think politicians do.
I'm still amazed that there are people in this world that think politicians do.
I did a postal vote, easy
And in fact my daughter was out in SE Asia too, she did a proxy vote, again easy
Two ways to do it, both pretty straightforward
I'm for all campers and dolphins (intents and purposes) an ex-pat, I'd have voted in but was out of the country at the time, my reasoning, it would make my life slightly easier, nothing more, nothing less. I have zero political affiliations, mostly because I think none of them operate in anyones but their own best interest.
I'm still amazed that there are people in this world that think politicians do.
I'm still amazed that there are people in this world that think politicians do.
For future reference:
Boris says that Brexit will be a Titanic success!
http://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/uknews...Q&ocid=UE07DHP
Perhaps he means that Brexit would wreck the country in the same way as an iceberg wrecked the Titanic, and the ship ended up drowning.
http://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/uknews...Q&ocid=UE07DHP
Perhaps he means that Brexit would wreck the country in the same way as an iceberg wrecked the Titanic, and the ship ended up drowning.
and in a way validated by Ditchy's post
a leaver in Ditchy's situation, i.e. being abroad would have voted (postal or proxy)
Brexit seemed to galvanise people who did not usually vote
I think we had multiple examples on the this very thread of people saying that they did not usually vote - but where going to vote leave
and it maybe how Trump gets elected in the US
yes, this is interesting
and in a way validated by Ditchy's post
a leaver in Ditchy's situation, i.e. being abroad would have voted (postal or proxy)
Brexit seemed to galvanise people who did not usually vote
I think we had multiple examples on the this very thread of people saying that they did not usually vote - but where going to vote leave
and it maybe how Trump gets elected in the US
and in a way validated by Ditchy's post
a leaver in Ditchy's situation, i.e. being abroad would have voted (postal or proxy)
Brexit seemed to galvanise people who did not usually vote
I think we had multiple examples on the this very thread of people saying that they did not usually vote - but where going to vote leave
and it maybe how Trump gets elected in the US
Wonderful news. of course it will be appealed so I guess it's 50/50.
I am not convinced the House would support an exit and I also think it may have dawned on many Daily Mail xenophobes who shrilly shouted OUT that it might not be all that it was cracked up to be. And the price of Marmite for goodness sake
So many youngsters want to stay and they are the future so we should heed what they want. It may have even been noticed that those in the OUT club, who can read, that some dinky trade deal with Canada and the EC took 7 years to rush through but only after they leant on a couple of Belgium dicks 
I don't hold up much hope for the EU in the longer term as they seem to have got the basic parameters wrong - Greece being a good example - but I think we should hang on in there and walk away with the tasty bits when it all goes **** up.
Not exactly May Day

David
Last edited by David Lock; Nov 3, 2016 at 01:15 PM.
While the majority want it to happen in this case, what it has effectively said the PM can't just make a decision on her or his own. That is a god thing.
However, MP's need to realize the majority (1 vote more is a majority, who how many etc is irrelevant, despite what people will claim) voted to leave and they should respect that choice.




















