Wales voted Leave I think.
Doesn't sounds like that big of a hurdle if a politician wanted to grab the moment so to speak.
Wales voted Leave I think.
Gibraltar was captured in 1704 and formally ceded in 1713. The date at which it became a Crown Colony is not relevant, nor is when it changed it a British Overseas Territory. I don't think colonial status or not really matters. At one point Algeria was integrated into France, that sort of formal status wasn't really relevant to anything either. British Overseas territories that remain tend to be pretty content with their status, so them not being integrated into the UK is of no consequence, in my view, because it's either preferable or of no consequence in their own. We're talking about over 300 years of uninterrupted British sovereignty, and a similar situation for Spain in those two sections of North Africa.
They're not entirely similar, but it's not something to lose sleep over, and colonial status isn't terribly relevant when ~99 percent of the population is emphatic that their current status is just fine in two referendums.
That didn't stop Leanne Wood hinting about their own independence referendum a few weeks back, bizarrely enough.
Wales voted Leave I think.
I think near the end of the two years, the discussions will have been so pointless, the outcome of no deal so stupid, the outcome of accepting four freedoms for free trade being so pointless because we have the best deal already and so no middle ground is worth it that the UK Government will table another referendum, stay in the EU or take a no deal and hopefully the UK population have been educated enough about the EU and Brexit that they'll make a better choice and vote to stay in the EU.
Is there any evidence that May would struggle to sell a transitional deal with EU control to the public?
I have seen it said in a few places, I can't believe with half the country that voted to remain that the public is so fucking extreme.
The public would probably be fine with it. The Express, The Mail and the right wing eurosceptics in the Tory Party would probably not be fine with it.
I think near the end of the two years, the discussions will have been so pointless, the outcome of no deal so stupid, the outcome of accepting four freedoms for free trade being so pointless because we have the best deal already and so no middle ground is worth it that the UK Government will table another referendum, stay in the EU or take a no deal and hopefully the UK population have been educated enough about the EU and Brexit that they'll make a better choice and vote to stay in the EU.
That didn't stop Leanne Wood hinting about their own independence referendum a few weeks back, bizarrely enough.
If the people of Scotland opt to leave, that's on them, not Cameron.Time will tell but Cameron ought to be the one who gets the blame for losing Scotland, he's the one who made promises his little Englanders couldn't cash. May is just dragging out what looks at this point to be the inevitable.
But if we don't follow through with Brexit we could lose Birmingham instead!!Imagine losing Gibraltar and Scotland.
Well, that's cheered me up a bit.
The EU wants a transitional deal. It would take some major incompetence not to sell it as some kind of early success.
I actually think the argument for Wales in the EU is stronger than Scotland in the EU. Wales relies most on EU subsidies, and the EU single market is its biggest export destination, even more so than the rest of the UK. Scotland can't make those claims. It makes the reason why Wales vote Leave so upsetting, really. Though when the Leave traitors lied about replacing Welsh funding pound for pound if we left, then rowed back as soon as they'd won, it's not as surprising. People here feel ignored, and they want change.I would like to see them put forward the argument just for a laugh.
how is that an early success? it was clear from the get go that there will be transitional periods.
Because there is nothing on paper and there needs to be something on paper in two years. If there is nothing on paper, there isn't a transitional period.how is that an early success? it was clear from the get go that there will be transitional periods.
It's not. But it can be sold as one unless she's an utter inept.how is that an early success? it was clear from the get go that there will be transitional periods.
Corbyn's cameo was masterful.
Because most people still think it's gonna be a deal in 2 years or WTO. Negotiating a trade deal within 12-14 months is just not possible.
Chittagong my dude, you okay? Post if you're okay.
Spain has said it would not veto an attempt by an independent Scotland to join the EU, in the clearest sign yet that Brexit has softened Madrid's longstanding opposition.
Alfonso Dastis, the Spanish foreign minister, made it clear that the government would not block an independent Scotland's EU hopes, although he stressed that Madrid would not welcome the disintegration of the UK. He also said Edinburgh would have to apply for membership, a process fraught with uncertainty that is likely to take several years.
Asked directly whether Spain would veto an independent Scotland joining the EU, Dastis said: "No, we wouldn't."
But Madrid is keen not to fuel Catalonia's desire for independence. "We don't want it [Scottish independence] to happen," he said. "But if it happens legally and constitutionally, we would not block it. We don't encourage the breakup of any member states, because we think the future goes in a different direction."
Just imagine, when we do leave the EU and if Scotland does manage to escape we might get our own 'BUILD THAT WALL' moment!
Just imagine, when we do leave the EU and if Scotland does manage to escape we might get our own 'BUILD THAT WALL' moment!
Well, I don't think the UK will have enough skilled workers to build such a wall in the first place.
I'm not joking. It could happen if our true overloads, Dacre and Murdoch, decide it to happen.Don't joke, since the financial crisis this place has turned out to be awfully similar to some of the red bits of the US.
So they don't even have to be bought or convinced to allow Scotland. That went easier than expected.
So they don't even have to be bought or convinced to allow Scotland. That went easier than expected.