EU referendum, brexit and the aftermath

Posted on
Page
of 1,293
First Prev
/ 1,293
Last Next
  • Voting rights for prisoners? Though not sure if that is officially under appeal and so non-compliance is not yet official.

  • Hang on, all this shit and it's not legally binding?

    Perhaps we should all vote for Westminster to leave the UK, split the place in two equal halves (socialist/capitalist) with resources equally divided and let this run for 30 years ;)

  • Riiiiight.
    It's a fucking mess.

  • It would be lolz if we voted leave and then the government decided not to bother.

    Well...not lolz exactly.

  • Does that say that the EU is powerless to curb the neolib policies of its member states which are detrimental to other states and the bloc as a whole?

  • A couple of personal thoughts:

    1). There is no way that the Commons could legitimately frustrate leaving if leave wins. It would provoke a constitutional crisis and civil unrest.
    2). The lack of clarity on what happens if leave wins will further kill business investment and consumer confidence.

    Presumably Sir Jeremy Heywood has a protocol of what happens set out in the event of a leave vote and will retain order, as one would expect of a civil servant. I suspect it's equally possible he has a cyanide pill ready.

  • Also, what's this WE business. It's THEY. ISN'T IT?

  • It says that in this case they failed. Beyond that, no, it doesn't.

    However, the UK is currently part of the neolib club. They are part of the problem. (See: Tata Steel and the attempt to further regulate banking loopholes for two recent examples that come to mind).

  • 'We' as a country. If Leave win, we will still have voted for it, hencewhy irregardless of our individual voting preference.

  • Could the Lords block it? That would be even roflier.

  • On your first point, surely that depends on the turnout and the margin of victory? If only 45% of people vote and the vote goes 51/49 to leave, does that give Johnson et al carte blanche?

  • irregardless

    hnnng

  • Lots of the "What Ifs" are covered here: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-32810887

    Specifically the two questions:

    • How long will it take for Britain to leave the EU?
    • Could MPs block an EU exit if Britain votes for it?

    4am on Friday there will be a pretty good idea as to which way the vote has gone. Not staying up for that.

  • i supposed to drive to oxford on saturday morning. will i die?

  • The first graph in this article shows the current state of the House of Commons on the issue;

    http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-eu-referendum-35616946

  • Yes - probably on the way back as well.

  • It was Damo's fault.

  • a convenient escape goat.

  • You're just trying to incur the wrath of Mark.

  • Interesting thought. I don't know the answer. I suspect the turnout will be higher than the last general election, so will trump the Commons in terms of legitimacy.

  • the wrath of Mark

    Love that movie.

  • I flew back today so I can vote tomorrow

  • CSB. Wouldn't sorting a postal vote have been cheaper?

  • I'd be surprised if the turnout is anywhere close to general election levels. The Voting system referendum saw a turnout of just 42%. The last EU referendum, in 1975, saw a turnout of 65%. I'd think tomorrow will be somewhere between the two.

    General elections usually see turnout at around 70%.

  • Post a reply
    • Bold
    • Italics
    • Link
    • Image
    • List
    • Quote
    • code
    • Preview
About

EU referendum, brexit and the aftermath

Posted by Avatar for deleted @deleted

Actions