Why blaming Brexit might help Labour (in the short term) – politicalbetting.com
Why blaming Brexit might help Labour (in the short term) – politicalbetting.com
Chancellor says Brexit deal caused long-term damage to economyShe quoted the Office for Budget Responsibility's calculation of a 4% long-term hit relative to remaining in the EUhttps://t.co/J32bkljstM
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They’ve messed up their messaging. If they’d have been shouting this louder from the word go then - maybe? - they might get a bit more of a hearing on it. As it is they are curiously coming out with all these excuses 18 months in, 18 months where I think it’s fair to say they’ve not been seen to excel at governing.
Though interesting to note that a huge majority say that Brexit has been positive for controlling our own laws which of course was the very raison d'etre.
A substantial portion of these people will be Republican voters.
NEWS -- SPEAKER MIKE JOHNSON plans to swear in Rep.-elect ADELITA GRIJALVA before the government funding vote.
This will not change the vote count on the funding bill. But it will put the EPSTEIN discharge petition over the 218-signature threshold.
I am becoming ever more hopeful that I will see Britain returning to membership during my lifetime.
I know that those who lost the Brexit vote are not used to losing. I know that their views are far more important than the rest of us. I get that they find this psychologically difficult. But enough. Just enough. Move on and address our real problems rather than this displacement activity.
(Remainers, please don't bother saying that there is no such thing as a good Brexit.)
31/52 of those saying positive or negative = 60% which is a significant majority of those expressing an opinion.
That includes Viktor Orban, to name just one.
I cannot imagine a circumstance in which every single member of the EU would nod the UK through without seeking to extract some significant concessions.
Being a supplicant is uncomfortable. And I really don't think the great British public would wear the implied humiliation however it was dressed up.
I've seen the flags.
If we were still in the EU the government would not have to implement the OSA or ID cards and take the political hit for them, just wait for similar EU regulations to provide cover.
Removing the "sorry, the EU requires us to do this, we have no choice" excuse from British politics has been greatly beneficial to our democracy, if rather less so to the electoral prospects of the parties used to hiding behind it...
Oh yes. The ones leading the polls.
Deploy them skilfully and things could look very different.
"I get that" you find it "psychologically difficult" to accept that a large majority of the UK electorate judge Brexit to have been a failure.
But railing against those you disagree with, absent any positive suggestions, is just railing.
Here are the latest figures from the Parliamentary library: https://commonslibrary.parliament.uk/research-briefings/sn02784/#:~:text=In Q2 2025, UK GDP grew by 0.3%,data explorer, Quarterly real GDP growth of G7
Where is this underperformance? It simply doesn't exist and that is despite having staggeringly incompetent governments of both stripes in the relevant years who have had a much greater impact on our economic performance. What has more impact on our economic performance, Reeves' never ending tax raising threats and uncertainty or slightly different trading terms? No one rational has to even think about the answer.
Re-joining would be a distraction from our problems even if the EU wanted to open discussions, which they don't, not least with the prospect of a Reform government
It's time to move on
The "very raison d'etre" of Brexit did not, as I recall, include worsening the cost of living; the economy; businesses; public finance; trade... or even immigration.
I wouldn’t relish it: I don’t think the country needs to re-litigate Brexit again so soon. It would also provide a huge shot in the arm for Reform as they would able to turn the election into a de-facto rerun of the referendum - that likely wouldn’t end well for Labour seats in the East and North.
Those who voted LEAVE are so desperate to preserve what they think they won the slightest hint of a rapprochement or a better working relationship with the EU becomes nigh on an act of treason - how dare they try to make leaving work with the EU?
It's long past rejoining or joining or whatever - it's about trying to come up with a mutually satisfactory economic relationship which allows all sides to prosper and doesn't drown either or both in regulation and process.
The irony is it was all about sovereignty and control - we were supposed to take control of our borders, weren't we? Remind me how that has progressed in the past few years.
Not been a bleat out of the Referendum losers since the day of the vote. Nope. Utterly silent.
The temptation for any UK government to steadily move closer to EU rules & regulations and to open up to more & more freedom of movement over time is going to be ever present. Look at where Switzerland has ended up, by way of example: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Switzerland–European_Union_relations
I suspect we’re likely to end up in a similar place, eventually.
But you were tucked up by some pro-Russian, anti-Ukraine bad guys.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m002lpff
But following this, and the now obvious fact that Labour in 2024 had no overall detailed plan for 2024-2029 and after, trust is at an all time low.
It is reasonable to presume there is no plan as a general political principle.
I hesitate to ask, but...Have Reform got a plan? And which is more terrifying - the thought that they have a plan, or the thought that they have not?
Pick any reasonable window, not utterly distorted by the wild swings in data in 2016 (caused by huge currency fluctuations) and it is quite clear that the UK has grown at least as well as competitor European nations. There is no Brexit deficit.
From 2019-2023 (so before Covid impacted data to most recent accurate data) the UK has grown by a miserly 2.2% while Germany has grown by a much more miserly 0.3%
Doesn't really suit the anti-Brexit narrative now, does it?
How could we kick out the Eurocrats?
See how that works ?
If say, Labour did promise rejoin, they would a boost from centre left voters, but in turn, Reform would get a boost from centre right voters.
‘ DJ Tim Westwood ‘carried out attacks at BBC studios' courtnewsuk.co.uk/?p=465213’
https://x.com/courtnewsuk/status/1987841366546612460?s=61
Republicans are going to have to ask themselves - "Do I side with Trump and all he has done - or do I break with him?" The chatter is 100+ in Congress will decide to vote for release of the Epstein files. There is murmering in DC that the stuff apparently shown by Epstein to Michael Wolff - topless under-age girls pointing to a stain on Trump's crotch - is tame compared to what else has been seen. If that proves to be true, Trump will be 25th'd almost immediately - nobody will stand by him.
This is already a thing. I find it almost impossible to believe that so many apparently devout Christian Republicans are holding the line - when it only needed one of the 200-odd to break ranks and be the 218th signatory. Their voters are going to want to know what they have been doing protecting a "pedo President".
Trump just posted a fake story claiming Obama was paid $2.5 million in “Obamacare royalties.”
The source? A satirical website whose disclaimer literally says:
“Everything on this website is fiction. If you believe it’s real, you should have your head examined.”
https://x.com/allenanalysis/status/1987580419345453149
https://x.com/DilanianMSNBC/status/1987841056101003584
Pure coincidence, no doubt.
And a 5% supertax on all public sector workers who have gold plated pensions, too.
The case for being in and the case for being out are both overwhelmingly strong, but in completely different areas of our lives.
(This oddly resembles traditional arguments for and against the existence of God - there being an overwhelmingly strong case for both conclusions. Hope I don't set a hare running.)
This sort of s***, however unpleasant, seldom sticks to the Orange f*****.
I hope you are right.
I'm reasonably satisfied that the indicators that we have point to leaving the EU having a negative effect on the economy. Anecdotally, the small business in my extended family (specialised manufacturing) survived it but it caused a massive headache for those running it - long hours trying to maintain relationships across Europe, and developing new ones here in the UK. I can't think of any examples where things became easier.
The only way we will ever know is if Farage wins the election and has 5 years to show us how t works. The only problem is that by that stage he will have another dozen excuses for why it's a crock of sh*t, all of which will be someone else's fault.
Farage and Trump are 2 cheeks of the same arsse. It is always someone else's fault.
Any even slight hint of building a relationship with the EU and up pop the cheerleaders for LEAVE, the Mail and the Express, with the tired old headline "Brexit Betrayal". Even now, more than nine years ago, we cannot have a relationship with the EU without the B words being flashed across the newspaper headlines.
However, it's apparently only "the losers" who are complaining - I must come to your universe one day where up is down, white is black and the Conservatives won in 2024.
So, by extension, any Brexit deficit would be expected to apply as much to our EU trade partners as it does to us. The fact that our competitor EU nations have grown about as much as we have is not evidence that Brexit has been cost free - there is growth that all parties could have enjoyed that has been denied to us as a consequence of the trade barriers erected by Brexit.
We can, of course, democratically decide that we don’t want that economic activity - that we value the ability to set our own rules & deny freedom of movement to EU citizens more highly. That is the choice we have currently settled upon, but it’s a choice we can revisit, if we so choose.
I'm sure you know very few public sector workers have "gold plated pensions" (whatever that perjorative actually means). The "blue light" pension is different from the civil service pension which is different from local Government pensions which are in turn different from teachers' pensions.
#CyclefreeIsAlwaysRight
Most leavers wanted (and still want) a relationship with the EU, just not the one we had.
Next European away day is Brugge by Eurostar, so I'll be at St Pancras extra early for that.
We couldn't go on as we were with our half-hearted, rebate obsessed, opt-out fixated membership so it was better for both us and the EU we left but I never bought in to the absurdities of "Global Britain" perpetrated by Boris Johnson, Jacob Rees-Mogg and others
A trading and economic relationship analogous to what we had in the old EEC would be ideal but unfortunately it all got conflated with Freedom of Movement and the Euro, neither of which the British public are ever likely to accept.
I know someone's got to. Thank fuck it's you
Along with the Tory DG's resignation that's quite a stunning act of self-harm.
The BBC self flagellation is fuckin' ludicrous. Badenoch and Farage fall behind Trump, Labour and the LibDems fall behind the BBC.
So the idiocy is now one of Trump didn't incite sedition, it was a BBC lie. They'll pay the f***** won't they?
What we need I suppose is a government that genuinely wants low migration, and at least Brexit has given us the ability to have one of those that won't have it's hands tied.
Oh, reform of the BBC.
That's true of pretty much everything, but the unusual thing about the EU was the voted to leave. But then the attempt to find a degree of connection that everyone was happy with was really quite thin. And we don't like that, either.
And now we're stuck between not wanting to reopen the can of worms and the rubbishness of the status quo. The trouble is that demanding politicians make Brexit work is much like Pharaoh's demands that the Israelites make bricks without straw.
Got to say my 60 minute transfer in Schiphol next week would be fun in Mrs Eek couldn’t request assistance
A race to the bottom because private sector workers can't negotiate decent Ts and Cs only helps miserly employers.
More likely though is a producer from a rival station so without a BBC history. Channel 4 is a very well handled station. Or maybe a wild card like Nick Hytner.....
Could he have earned more in the private sector? Doubtless but that wasn't the point for him back then.
Of course, the public sector employee takes a deduction every month into the pension (well, they did and do for LPGS) but the key point was the Council also contributed and those earning more contributed more ensuring the pot for all could be funded.
There have been significant reforms in both 2008 and 2014 to LPGS such as the ending of the "85 year rule" and higher contributions for the same result.
Indeed, one of the by-products of these reforms and the one million local Government roles lost under Conservative-led Governments from 2011 was the LPGS fund returned to some form of stability having been in some trouble after the GFC.
Longevity of service or loyalty is rewarded - if you've worked in local Government for 40 years and then retire you will come out with a annual pension probably two thirds to three quarters of final salary but obviously those who weren't in it for so long don't get anything like that.
https://x.com/YouGov/status/1987901680243937438?s=19
The OBR decided ages ago Brexit would be a 4% hit. This was in their forecasts for several budgets, including last year's.
No-one is briefing that the OBR have changed this calculation, and the IEA wonk suggested that most of the available data suggests the actual outturn is if anything less than a 4% hit.
Reeves claiming that the mess she currently finds herself in is a result of Brexit is therefore utterly implausible, as her black hole has only opened up since the budget last year.
My comment: If Reeves wants a scapegoat for her current black hole, she needs something which has happened after her last budget. Unfortunately for her, that leaves her pretty thin on options, possibly because the true culprit is mainly her own stupidity in going on a massive tax and spend splurge in last year's budget.
https://x.com/YouGov/status/1987927719271641095?s=19