This is too simplistic. I live in East Anglia, where there was a really strong Leave vote. We've never had industry, nor any great public service cuts. We've got the highest employment rates in the country.
Your post doesn't address the fundamental point of mine: the anti EU sentiment has been bubbling for decades, unrepresented by any major political party. It is undeniable that people were fed up with the EU, and there is no way that can be blamed on the campaign, on Boris, or on simply a frustration that the public policy wasn't working for them. Don't forget we have record levels of employment at the moment, too. Instead of looking for reasons people "got it wrong", look for reasons why mainstream politicians didn't represent this strand of thinking, and why they didn't anticipate this outcome.
I have a question what if the cabinet group set up to put Brexit forward cannot find the circumstances by which Brexit can be made to work. If when they start to dismantle EU and UK law , the costs of new law and policy is too high and too time consuming. I am suggesting here that the present Government will have a problem if the price of Brexit is a larger public sector. If these experts conclude that immigration cannot be controlled and that we will still need to pay a contribution to the EU. Or that the damage to the economy will be too large or that taxes will need to rise too far, or that key industries will contract, or that the costs of reskilling businesses to trade in emerging markets, costs of logistics or to protect their brands, know-how, innovations, etc by having to pay for intellectual property rights in many new territories is too high. What do we expect MPs to do if any of this info comes to parliament.
That isn't info, that is opinion.
And the latest wtf comment from Bojo is this. Err Boris, shouldn't you have been doing this all the time anyway??
Yeah righto. 52% of Britain's population is insane. I guess that a third of the French population is insane too.
That is not an opinion but presented as a possible scenario.
Well ...
http://money.cnn.com/2016/07/04/news/economy/uk-brexit-corporate-tax/index.html
So now speaks of a 5% cut on corporate tax...
Money given as a gift has to be taken somewhere. So either more borrowing at higher cost (rating was cut) or cut on services, probably a combo of both. The alternative is that due to less economical attractiveness company leaves for continental Europe , some smaller one might simply plainly fold.
Either way, it does not bode well.
None of that scenario contained anything other than opinion:
"damage too large"....."taxes rise too much"......."costs too high"....."too time consuming".......
All matters of opinion, not fact.
Did you read what I psoted or are you intentionally misrepresenting what Mchornzi and I said ?
It was clearly the people who campaigned and lied to the UK public which were insane.
But you keep going back as if we pretended the 52% were insane.
By that point I get the feeling you are either trying to poison the well , or jsut plain trolling.
And the latest wtf comment from Bojo is this. Err Boris, shouldn't you have been doing this all the time anyway??
Among a list of five points of his own, Mr Johnson said it was "overwhelmingly in the economic interests of the other EU countries to do a free-trade deal, with zero tariffs and quotas, while we extricate ourselves from the EU law-making system"
Again : READ. It starts by an "if when" which makes it clearly hypothetical. EVen the second sentences has an if, and there are a lot of implied ifs.
If you want to skim do it, but when pointed out that you are not reading correctly, but re-read the post more carefully and try to see if you really understood it out. Even the last sentence has an hypothetical if.
And hasn't Boris shown what a huge sense of entitlement he has. It is apparently him that has been betrayed by Gove because .....well because everyone should have known it was Boris's turn as PM!And the latest wtf comment from Bojo is this. Err Boris, shouldn't you have been doing this all the time anyway??
Even now, it isn't obvious to me that you meant only the Brexit advocates were insane.
That isn't info, that is opinion. The politicians job now is to obey the instructions of the referendum result and negotiate the best deal they can. The civil servants job is to enable that, and to enact that. However unpalatable this decision might be, it's done. Over. Decided. Now, we just have to find a way of making it work.
......It is apparently him that has been betrayed by Gove because .....well becauseeveryone should have known it was Boris's turn as PM!they had an agreement.
No a civil servants job is to give the politicians the information around specific policy requests with no political bias. It is up to the politicians then to determine policy based on that information and to set operational directives. It can also be argued and I am sure some civil servants may already arguing this that there is no legal requirement for the referendum result to be considered binding apart from political reasons which they are expressly not able to consider. Therefore, the parliament needs to take the decisions on each Brexit strand based on the information available from each department in terms of policy, legal requirements, operational timescales and delivery approaches and costs. Therefore there is always the possibility that they cannot make it work, every civil servant can tell the tale of Ministers and politicians who wanted something to happen until one of the above came into play. We even had a whole television series based on this in years gone by called Yes Minister and then Yes Prime Minister.