I think it's incredibly important at this point that an exit (at least for England and Wales) does happen. If it does not, the extreme right will be energised across Europe, and the long term consequences for the whole of Europe will be far more severe. Similarly, I think a Norway style deal for the UK after leaving would provoke widespread resistance and increased support for the extreme right not just in the UK but across the continent.
Sorry, I'm not willing to sacrifice my future on the altar of political convenience.
The far right can be fought, as they have many times in the past, without consigning tens of millions of people to the scrap pile.
If the UK ever actually exits the EU it will be a political failure the likes of which the world has never seen.
How will you be affected? Just curious at how some people are affected personally.
Scenario 1: Let Scotland save you. Under the Scotland Act 1998, it appears that the Scottish Parliament has to consent to measures that eliminate EU law's application in Scotland. At least that was the conclusion of a report on Brexit released by the House of Lords, the upper house of Britains parliament:
So heres what Cameron or Johnson could do, in three steps:
Announce they are respecting the terms of devolution and allowing the Scottish, Northern Irish, and Welsh parliaments to vote before invoking Article 50.
Wait for one of them to vote against leaving. The Scottish and Northern Irish parliaments would be under a lot of pressure to do so, due to their constituents views. The Scottish National Party, which has the biggest bloc in Scottish parliament, could want Brexit to go forward to build support for Scottish independence, but it would be hard for them to vote that cynically. The Northern Irish Assemblys biggest party, the Democratic Unionist Party, was pro-Brexit, but it could understandably flip if it fears that actually leaving the EU could lead to Northern Ireland leaving the UK. The Welsh Assembly is led by the Labour Party; Wales voted to Leave, but Labour could vote its own position and shoot down exiting.
Once one or more of the subnational legislatures votes to reject Brexit, the Prime Minister announces hes not invoking Article 50 after all, using the regional veto to save face.
That is not going to happen.
While it is true that the devolved parliaments have enshrined that they must follow EU law it doesn't mean we have to be part of the EU to do it.
The SNP won't block invoking article 50 because there is no point holding the rest of the UK hostage when the crux of the argument for a new referendum is that Scotland is being taken out of the EU against the will of the people.
Seems like the bigger problem is Cameron resigning. Boris Johnson is going to invoke Article 50 on the first day.
My polish friends have already faced abuse from locals. And they've lived here for over 10 years and have a daughter growing up here.
How is that right and representative of Great Britain?
Regrettably I think it'll happen regardless. 17 million voted leave and got their wish. Just have to deal with it.
Should have put better criteria in the referendum, like super majority. They didn't and this is the result.
The EU doesn't want the UK out. That would weaken the EU and put it under the threat of more member states leaving.
But if the UK does choose to leave, they want to make it as punishing for the UK as possible to prevent further dissent.
What kills me is that from what I have been reading, the areas that voted majority "leave" benefitted the most from the EU.
This event is absolutely traumatising, I have not been able to function properly and even live a normal life. Politics has completely transcended my restful domestic microcosm that I you are supposed to rely upon. I've slept terribly, I've felt extremely depressed, yesterday was already a very sad London Pride (with the Orlando shooting) that was made even more so by all of this. My Polish PhD friends (all 1sts, all funded, all 100x smarter than the idiots that voted for this) have been crying and distraught with no clear understanding on their future and research. Friends who aren't even into politics who have voted for the first times in their lives are extremely depressed over all of this. I have done nothing but refresh The Guardian app, mope around, cry, debate with my friends who have all told their pension-safe comfortable post-war Northern parents/grandparents to f*** off. My parents of course voted Remain and I have never seen them this upset. My naturalised Polish mother cried on Friday morning fearing stepping outside in the country she has called home for 40 years. My father has never been so active about getting me and my friends to sign online petitions. I am so disappointed in this country. I was already planning to study in Germany next year but now I have never wanted to leave more.
I'm really ignorant on this, but would they really deport people that are already living and working in the UK?
I assume they'd have some sort of program where people that are already in the UK can stay.
50+ year olds don't riot in the streets, they riot at the poll booth, which is far more effective. I would have thought you had learned this in the past few days.
I'm really ignorant on this, but would they really deport people that are already living and working in the UK?
I assume they'd have some sort of program where people that are already in the UK can stay.
I don't think it's feasible to undo it at this point. If Britain stays, the EU is going to treat them like a second-class citizen... it's sort of like when you announce to your employer that you're quitting and then change your mind... their attitude has been irrevocably changed. The EU is going to (if they haven't already) start pushing Britain out of any important committees due to a conflict of interest. So I think these people who are thinking they can get a "do-over" are just engaging in wild fantasies.
Well I believe they just don't know, there is no plan (because the Brexit politicians are not experts at anything but propelling their own careers forwards - they're in it for the ride, not the legal details) these people are students without visas, navigating a very delicate and stripped down funding system. They are scared that the AHRC will simply not be able to absorb the costing of all of this mess.
I don't get why your mom who's naturalized and been there for 40 years is crying and afraid of stepping outside though?
Because she is Polish --- she still has an affinity to Poland, and Polish people! Is that not blindly obvious!? She has a Polish accent still and after all of those tweets about 'send them back' can you not see why!? She occasionally gets hassle from people about her accent and people being awkward with her where my parents live (Blackpool) despite the fact she has a legal degree and has been in the top tax payer bracket every single year of her working life.
But your question implies 'her' and yes she is upset personally but will probably not feel a great effect being naturalised --- but it's beyond 'her', she feels compassion for all of the hard working Poles who just want a better life than they get back home and are prepared to work hard for that.
And yes I am aware English people want a better life too - and the core reason Brexit has happened is because the North has been an uneducated wasteland for 30 years due to the pursuit of neoliberal policies where London managed to competitively survive and the rest just fell off the map. This problem has festered for many years due to a lack of education and direct planning to create a competitive UK where all regions have a specialist enterprise. Immigrant integration has also been a problem that was never properly answered but has been magnified by fear and anxiety over a steady job and pleasant life for everyday Britains created by neoliberal economic policies.
Oh I get it now, she probably won't be personally affected but is distressed about the xenophobia going around and what it means for her fellow people.
That makes sense, but I still don't think the UK is going to start mass deporting immigrants/workers/students. That's going to fuck up a lot of companies and stuff. But then again I don't know anything about UK politics or policies.
where my parents live (Blackpool) .
Continental Europe here. Err... I'm not sure I want England in again. That will be tough for us too but I think we may have a better chance at a better Europe getting rid of an hostile member. Like everyone else in Europe, England's decision shocked me last friday but now I do think we can really live with it, in a positive way even. I feel sorry for those who voted remain though.
Given that the world has already been signalled that Britain is an unreliable wild card, would taking it back (with the future possibility of untakebackingit) really restore calm to the market? The Euroskeptic forces have already been strengthened by the victory. Much of the damage is done. Rip the bandaid.
Well I believe they just don't know, there is no plan (because the Brexit politicians are not experts at anything but propelling their own careers forwards - they're in it for the ride, not the legal details) these people are students without visas, navigating a very delicate and stripped down funding system. They are scared that the AHRC will simply not be able to absorb the costing of all of this mess.
Someone will have to explain to me the argument that the referendum is a done deal and that you can't take it back in any way even if putting it up to a simple majority vote was a terrible idea, because I'm not seeing it. All I hear is "something something Will of the People" but what exactly prevents the country for holding another "are you SURE?" referendum?
Thats all fine but the EU demands action until tuesday.
http://www.spiegel.de/politik/ausla...t-austrittsantrag-bis-dienstag-a-1099824.html
Someone will have to explain to me the argument that the referendum is a done deal and that you can't take it back in any way even if putting it up to a simple majority vote was a terrible idea, because I'm not seeing it. All I hear is "something something Will of the People" but what exactly prevents the country for holding another "are you SURE?" referendum?
There's a few members where if a similar vote was done the results would be similar. The UK is no more or less "hostile" in this regard.
Someone will have to explain to me the argument that the referendum is a done deal and that you can't take it back in any way even if putting it up to a simple majority vote was a terrible idea, because I'm not seeing it. All I hear is "something something Will of the People" but what exactly prevents the country for holding another "are you SURE?" referendum?
Because a second referendum would be a mess, people would lose faith in the voting system and think "If they don't win they'll just cry again and again until they win" and not bother to vote, it wouldn't be an as accurate representation a second time around.
It got record voters numbers since 1992, that won't happen again.