Brexit and the seven-year itch: Would voters change their minds?

Started by BBC News , July 28, 2023, 07:00:31 PM

« previous - next »

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Streetwalker

As usual the thicko's at the BBC have completely missed the meaning of the saying they are trying to use to say something . 

What we actually had in 2016 was a 40 year itch that had become so sore we decided to treat it with a dose of '' Up yours we are British ''
You can break it down however you like as to what that meant to different people but the bottom line was we wanted less interference from Europe and a competent  British government  .
Stage one has been completed (almost) , stage two ,sorting out the tossers in Westminster will take longer  .

The only thing we should have done different was to bar remainer MP's from voting on Brexit matters  , it should have been a condition of the vote as having a remainer parliament voting against the will of the people was always going to make our Brexit a difficult one . 

patman post

As an N16 resident, my views haven't changed — the UK voting to shoot itself in the foot during a worldwide scramble for economic well-being was totally bizarre, even given the level of lies and misinformation that was being peddled by Russian sympathisers, whether they knew their status or not...
On climate change — we're talking, we're beginning to act, but we're still not doing enough...

BBC News

Brexit and the seven-year itch: Would voters change their minds?

Seven years on from the Brexit referendum, do people in the North East still feel the same?

Source: Brexit and the seven-year itch: Would voters change their minds?