
Originally Posted by
DaveyJohn
Sorry for the delay in response I had a family birthday minefield to negotiate through!
From my personal perspective, all this talk of easy trade deals that you are quoting is in reference to the deal we strike after we leave. I never once heard any mention in the build up to the referendum that we'd actually need a deal to leave? My interpretation was that the vote was to remain or leave. If we voted leave, we would leave, and then start to talk about the future after we'd left. The importance of securing any kind of leaving deal, which is totally different to the deals for the future, was never stated. If it was I genuinely missed it and I apologise for that.
So when you say in your post that "But most in the leave campaign went to great lengths to secure votes by saying that it would be easy, once we voted to leave to secure a trade deal with the EU. So x number of people voted to leave based on this being easy to be secured," I think you are mixing half truths. The trade deal comes AFTER we leave, not after the VOTE to leave? Or am I missing something? If I am, I'm happy to be educated.
Also, you haven't addressed my point about what Remain actually means to the 48% of Remainers? "I think we can safely say that the 48% remainers would vote to remain." What does that actually mean?
1. Remain and hope things stay as they are?
2. Remain but hope that the EU completely reforms (I've heard a lot of Remainers say "I know the EU needs reforming but I think we need to stay in." So if these reforms don't happen would that person want to change their mind? Have the EU even promised to reform?)
3. Remain and fully integrate with the Euro and Schengen?
4. Remain and hope we become part of the Federal Europe?
5. Remain because a load of "nice celebrities" say it's the right thing to do?
6. Remain because it means you can retire easier to Spain?
The notion that people on the Leave side are thick and don't know what they voted for can just as easily be spun on its head and applied to the Remain side. But the position adopted by the media and the Politicians is that the 48% of Remain voters are highly educated experts on the EU, whilst the 17 million who voted Leave are clueless imbeciles.
I'm genuinely curious to know what would be the point of a "soft Brexit?" Who would it actually benefit? If we still have to subscribe to so many EU rules in order to stay signed up to EU policies, then why would anyone want this? Surely it'd be easier to just vote Remain? Who are these people that want to Leave but Remain locked into all the EU rules? What is the point? No one has answered this. So for this reason, I'd say the majority of people who voted to Leave wanted the full works, not some soft "in name only version," because that is utterly pointless. I can't prove it though, because I don't have 17 million+ people on speed dial to ask, so if a second referendum is needed just to keep people who insist "No Deal Brexiteers are in the minority" happy, then so be it. But until such a vote happens, you have as much proof as I do about how many of the 17 million would want to go with No Deal, ie zero, apart from a few folk we know down the pub.
So lets have the vote, but please tell me what you would be arguing if "Leave with No Deal" won?