I'm interested in what people would think would happen if A50 revocation became a thing. Would the plan then be to agree on what kind of exit could actually be palatable, then trigger it again? Or is it a permanent rejection of the referendum result?
I wonder how we'd get back to business as usual.
If the later, I see it, on a scale of extremity, similar to No Deal.
It will take many years for the EU27 to regard the UK as a competent, committed member,
the European Medicines Agency isn't coming back to Canary Wharf any time soon,
and Honda Swindon will soon be gone for good.
I'm interested in what people would think would happen if A50 revocation became a thing. Would the plan then be to agree on what kind of exit could actually be palatable, then trigger it again? Or is it a permanent rejection of the referendum result?
I wonder how we'd get back to business as usual.
If the later, I see it, on a scale of extremity, similar to No Deal.