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>> No. 84757 Anonymous
15th January 2019
Tuesday 8:50 pm
84757 vince
The beginning of the end of Brexit.

He's right.
Expand all images.
>> No. 84759 Anonymous
15th January 2019
Tuesday 8:55 pm
84759 spacer
No deal is the automatic default. We will leave on the 29th of March unless a positive decision is made to the contrary. The EU have set very specific conditions for the postponement or withdrawal of Article 50. We're playing a dangerous game of chicken.
>> No. 84760 Anonymous
15th January 2019
Tuesday 9:04 pm
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>>84759
There are no conditions for withdrawing Article 50. The ECJ ruled that we can do so unilaterally.
>> No. 84763 Anonymous
15th January 2019
Tuesday 9:13 pm
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Who?
>> No. 84764 Anonymous
15th January 2019
Tuesday 9:19 pm
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STOOOOOOOOOOOPBREEEXIIIIIIIIT!!!
>> No. 84766 Anonymous
15th January 2019
Tuesday 9:33 pm
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>>84760
Extend and then referendum.
>> No. 84780 Anonymous
16th January 2019
Wednesday 9:02 am
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>>84759
Thank you for pointing this out, May's desperate "we might even stay in now too!" nonsense was just that. She really is a bloody fool, her much fabled "resiliance" is just muddling on, but now is very much not a time for muddling on.

>>84764
Read it in his voice, not gonna' lie.
>> No. 84786 Anonymous
16th January 2019
Wednesday 4:34 pm
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2019 general election?
>> No. 84787 Anonymous
16th January 2019
Wednesday 5:16 pm
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>>84786
And then what? Tory government under JRM or Boris and the carcass of the country gets picked apart by the elitist vultures.

Best case scenario — and a bloody long shot — is an LD/Labour coalition but that still leaves Corbyn with his finger on the button.
>> No. 84788 Anonymous
16th January 2019
Wednesday 5:27 pm
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>>84787
>and the carcass of the country gets picked apart by the elitist vultures

Maduro, if you must post here please contain your ramblings to /zoo/.
>> No. 84792 Anonymous
16th January 2019
Wednesday 7:15 pm
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847928479284792

>> No. 84795 Anonymous
17th January 2019
Thursday 2:50 am
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Brexit is a fundamental necessity; the European Union is an esistential threat to the country.
>> No. 84796 Anonymous
17th January 2019
Thursday 3:22 am
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>>84795
No it isn't.
>> No. 84797 Anonymous
17th January 2019
Thursday 6:08 am
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>>84795

If you can't spell "existential", people are going to wonder whether you actually know what it means.
>> No. 84798 Anonymous
17th January 2019
Thursday 9:03 am
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>>84795
Are you from the past?
>> No. 84799 Anonymous
17th January 2019
Thursday 11:32 am
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>>84798
Everyone's from the past.
>> No. 84802 Anonymous
18th January 2019
Friday 12:41 am
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>>84786
I am starting to think that is the likely short-term outcome.

For all the bluster, I can't see Corbyn/Labour doing any better than they did last time and so we'll be back at square one.
>> No. 84803 Anonymous
18th January 2019
Friday 7:00 am
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foppishness in action.jpg
848038480384803

">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=

50th anniversary contest champion
>> No. 84804 Anonymous
18th January 2019
Friday 7:02 am
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>>84802
>> No. 84805 Anonymous
18th January 2019
Friday 7:03 am
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>>84802
>> No. 84806 Anonymous
18th January 2019
Friday 7:08 am
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>>84802

I don't think Labour stand any real chance of breaking the deadlock. There's a modest possibility that they could squeak a GE victory, but their chances of taking a useful majority are infinitesimal.

Polling suggests that a second referendum would give a remain result by a fairly comfortable margin, but the political fallout of revoking article 50 would be pretty dire. Frankly, I don't know where we can possibly go from here. FPTP has led us down a blind alley.

https://d25d2506sfb94s.cloudfront.net/cumulus_uploads/document/j09xvmg215/PeoplesVoteResults_190116_SnapPolling_w.pdf
>> No. 84808 Anonymous
18th January 2019
Friday 7:19 pm
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>>84795
Care to explain? Because I can tell you i can fly but without proofs and facts it's just my imagination.
>> No. 84809 Anonymous
18th January 2019
Friday 7:26 pm
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I think Labour/Corbin won't get anything done because in the end they have the same agenda, EU was clear with May after sealing the deal , it's that or nothing , how Corbin will manage to get a better deal in a couple of months? He has not credibility.
And let's stop repeating "EU needs more from us than us from EU" that's completely bollocks and debunked by economists.
>> No. 84810 Anonymous
18th January 2019
Friday 7:53 pm
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>>84809
Corbyn won't do anything because leaving with no deal suits his purpose.
>> No. 84811 Anonymous
18th January 2019
Friday 8:23 pm
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>>84809
>EU was clear with May after sealing the deal , it's that or nothing

Just jumping in to say that the actual line was this is the deal we're getting based on the red lines we came in with. The most consistent Labour argument I've heard is scrapping the immigration control for customs union which would be wholly consistent with EU pillars.

>And let's stop repeating "EU needs more from us than us from EU" that's completely bollocks and debunked by economists.

I'd say it is equally dangerous to play up the EU as a merciless poker player eyeing our trousers. Everyone just wants to get a workable deal and the sides are close allies whose fates are irrevocably tied no matter what happens.

It'll be interesting in a few months if we're out electing people to European Parliament.
>> No. 84812 Anonymous
21st January 2019
Monday 2:51 pm
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>>84809
>And let's stop repeating "EU needs more from us than us from EU" that's completely bollocks and debunked by economists.

I think you mean debunked by the lugenpress.
>> No. 84813 Anonymous
21st January 2019
Monday 4:22 pm
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>>84811

>I'd say it is equally dangerous to play up the EU as a merciless poker player eyeing our trousers. Everyone just wants to get a workable deal and the sides are close allies whose fates are irrevocably tied no matter what happens.

We need a good deal; the EU would prefer a deal, but they're willing to take a knock if the only deal on offer is too favourable to Britain. The consequences of losing their trading relationship with Britain are much less severe than the risk of spawning Greexit and Polanexit. The only deal that the EU are prepared to offer is one that is demonstrably worse than our current status; our parliament may be unwilling to accept such a deal.
>> No. 84814 Anonymous
21st January 2019
Monday 4:47 pm
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>>84813
Several Tory MPs wrote in their letters to Graham Brady "She just doesn't listen". There are three options on the table. Take the deal, extend or revoke the Article 50 notification, or put the matter to the people. Both houses have now rejected the deal. Meanwhile, May is still ruling out the other two options.

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