N
niceatheist
Guest
The “hidden Tory” phenomena is well understood, and really isn’t that big a factor. The fact is the EU is Britain’s largest trading partner, and anything that interferes with the frictionless trade that occurs is going to have monumental effects on the British economy. Then factor in the effect of a hard Irish border, with the potential for either renewed conflict or for the unification of Ireland, and the fact that three quarters of Scottish voters voted to Remain, and you have a recipe for the dismantling of the United Kingdom.
Brexit is a catastrophe, and the only way to prevent it from devastating such key sectors as the City is to move towards a Soft Brexit, adopt the EU’s trade rules, to retain as much of the frictionless trade as possible.
The entire Referendum happened because of the endless civil war within the Conservative Party between Europhiles and Eurosceptics. Cameron gambled that he could finally silence the people John Major so famously referred to as “the Bstrds”. It was an astonishing miscalculation, of course. But look at all the Leaver promises, and just what fantasies they are. This idea that free trade agreements with the US and some of the Commonwealth countries, in particular the whole idea of an Anglosphere trade bloc (which really does represent some sort of bizarre notion of rebuilding the British Empire), that would somehow replace the trading partner that lies just 50 miles across the English Channel was always absurd.
Brexit is a catastrophe, and the only way to prevent it from devastating such key sectors as the City is to move towards a Soft Brexit, adopt the EU’s trade rules, to retain as much of the frictionless trade as possible.
The entire Referendum happened because of the endless civil war within the Conservative Party between Europhiles and Eurosceptics. Cameron gambled that he could finally silence the people John Major so famously referred to as “the Bstrds”. It was an astonishing miscalculation, of course. But look at all the Leaver promises, and just what fantasies they are. This idea that free trade agreements with the US and some of the Commonwealth countries, in particular the whole idea of an Anglosphere trade bloc (which really does represent some sort of bizarre notion of rebuilding the British Empire), that would somehow replace the trading partner that lies just 50 miles across the English Channel was always absurd.