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Brexit Briefing: A Horrible History in the Making.

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'The government agreed today to fund abortions in England for Northern Irish women in an effort to see off a rebellion on a vote on the Queen's Speech.' OK, I'm lost now. So, the problem with the anti-abortion DUP isn't the abortion itself but who pays for it? Surely that's totally hypocritical? Is Mrs May happy to be associated with such a 'deal'? Imagine reading a 'Horrible History Book' in the future about 21st Century Britain: what it stood for at the beginning of June 2016 and what it had become by the end of June 2017. How much lower will we go? (Key words for kids doing exams: Brexit, abortion, votes, bribery, Queen's Speech, morality, shame)

Brexit Briefing: The Kick-About.

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Brexit is like the long awaited cup final. It's quite exciting to see the teams and we all have our favourite side. The whistle blows, we are on the edge of our seats but the players lack passion, the ball goes back and forth and sometimes into the crowd. We take our eye off the ball to check our phone for messages. The game trundles on, no goals,no magnificent saves and no tidy footwork. The game goes on, the crowd have lost interest in the poor performance. Why do these teams deserve to be here,bloody hell, the competition must have been rubbish. The game goes on to extra time, a goal here and a goal there. And then to penalties. And that's where we are with Brexit. Let's hope rain stops play, permanently.

Brexit Briefing: Kenneth Clarke.

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artycelia   'I believe that membership of the European Union was the way in which we got out of the appalling state we were in when we discovered after Suez that we had no role in the world that we were clear about once we had lost our empire, and our economy was becoming a laughing stock because we were falling behind the countries on the continent that had been devastated in the war but appeared to have a better way of proceeding than we did.' Kenneth Clarke February 2. 2017 The Times. And now we must leave. I have no confidence in the government, any that existed has steadily ebbed away drip by drip each day. They are divided, it seems apparent that there is no joined-up thinking, it seems as if there is bitter rivalry among the ranks and that the leader has lost control. How are they to be trusted to negotiate new tariffs, new regulatory barriers, new customs procedures, certificates of origin etc etc. A vote of no confidence is necessary, and th...

Brexit Briefing: Settled Status.

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Here is the application form for 'Settled Status.'  You will be needing a wheelbarrow to transport it to your home. And a lawyer to help you fill it in. And a very large amount of ink. We will probably lose it at some point upon its return to this office. We apologise in advance. Not all applications will be successful. The decision of this office is final. No correspondence will be entered into. Good luck with your application. Delete 17 Recommend

Brexit Briefing: In reply to Matthew Parris. The Times: June 24th 2017

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In his comment piece today, Matthew states: Our choice is a hard Brexit-or turning back. artycelia   'To turn back would still be a national humiliation, though' Would it? I don't think anyone should feel humiliated, this isn't a game.  Exactly a year has passed since the referendum and every day we seem to learn a bit more about what we have let ourselves in for, and in my opinion, the more forthcoming the information the worse the situation seems to be. The Remainers, and I am one, would sigh with relief if we could exit Brexit but there would be absolutely no gloating. I think we could all learn valuable lessons from this huge blip in our democratic process.  The EU have far more important matters to deal with and would probably just accept and be thankful for a change of heart in GB. Then we can all just get on with our lives without this silly nonsense holding everybody back, causing bad feeling, confusion,economic uncertainty and ...

Brexit Briefing: One Year After The Referendum.

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I am extremely unhappy that I am to be stripped of my European citizenship. I have absolutely no faith in the Brexit  process. I feel embarrassed to be a (reluctant)  victim of a warped democratic process. I am angry that HM government is so weak and wobbly. I am very angry that while GB is under siege from terrorists we are turning our backs on our allies. I am disgusted to be living in a country where the richest borough fiddles the books and a towering inferno occurs killing dozens of innocent people. I support the ECHR. (I dread to think what would be going on without it) I have no faith in our PM. I would accept an olive branch from Tusk.  Why is this happening? Does anyone really BELIEVE Brexit is a good idea? And I mean, 'believe' not just a stubborn 'we won, get over it' stupid answer. Donald Tusk said today that he can 'imagine' GB deciding to stay after all and he quotes John Lennon.I do hope he...

Brexit Briefing: Hard, Soft, Poached, Boiled, Scrambled or Fried?

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  artycelia   Everyone has a different view on Brexit: hard, soft, poached, boiled, scrambled or fried. I suggest The Times and The Sunday Times launch a campaign to over-turn the result of the referendum. It is abundantly clear that the politicians cannot agree on what Brexit actually means. How then, could the voters have known what leaving or remaining in the EU actually meant as they popped their cross in that damned box? Madness. Ban Brexit. Delete 69 Recommend Reply Keith Grant   21 hours ago So the talk now is of managed immigration, as all but the wildest Brexiters recognise is needed as the economy will collapse otherwise. Germany has hinted some version of this might be possible. Even Ukip supports it. So why bother with Brexit and risk the huge economic and trade disruption it will bring? Stay in the single market and customs union, especially as the European economy starts...