Personally speaking and I'll be the first to acknowledge I'm not your average punter .
The more people back me in to a corner then the more I will fight them .
The EU have managed to back us in to a corner , I dislike the EU today more than I did in 2016 .
Staying in this thing would boil my blood the way it's worked out .
Hell would freeze over before I would vote Remain speaking in the moment .
Last edited by animallittle3; 09-12-2018 at 11:15 PM.
May must get "deal"that majority of the country voted for,in the biggest turnout of voters ever and that means a PROPER Brexit.
I did make that point reservedly. But I can only go from my own experience of talking to normal working people down here in East London and many people I've spoken to in Rotherham over the last few years. Those conclusions may be wrong but it is based on quite a lot of talking with quite a lot of folk in the two towns recently.
I'll say this again, to all the leave voters who try to temper the leave campaign's incompetence by slating the remain side as 'project fear'......every economic model shows that any form of brexit will be bad for the UK, that's not 'project fear', that's absolute fact, you were told this during the campaign but readily gobbled up the leave campaign's bullshyte......
Disagreeing with someone isn't always being "at their throat".
And it's a bit rich accusing someone else of having fluid opinions when you can't even work out your own preference for what you want to happen after May's defeat??? Flippety flop...
Agree that Labour would have big issues to face in pulling together however. But, and this is crucial, I don't think that internally there are historically dogmatic opinions that would not be up for compromise for the greater good of what Labour is about, and what the country desperately needs. I think that they would pull together for a consensus over that. Corbyn, as a historical Leaver, now knowing that he democratically leads a party whose members are predominantly Remainers is the best case in point.
The Europhile Tories are willing to tear the country apart for their beliefs. Labour don't have that level of obsession with the EU, as shown when Corbyn, in last week's PMQ focused on domestic issues when he could have obsessed on May's struggles. Agree that they would face the same issue in resolving the whole nightmare with a deal and their meetings to establish their manifesto would be interesting!