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Off Topic EU deabte. Which way are you voting ?

Discussion in 'The Premier League' started by PINKIE, Jun 9, 2016.

?

How will you vote in the EU referendum ?

  1. In

    54.1%
  2. Out

    45.9%
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  1. Fez

    Fez Well-Known Member

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    What are on about? You really are a thick ****. <doh>
     
    #6061
  2. Treble

    Treble Keyser Söze

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    Don't they do some sort of polling with focus groups (I forget the terminology) but Blair's government were renowned for it. Get a group of people and sound them out on future policies. I remember at the time there seemed something distinctly fake about it at the time, as if they were trying to find a way to spin new policy?

    In theory though I think it's a good idea... until you ask the electorate's view on capital punishment lol
     
    #6062
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  3. Fez

    Fez Well-Known Member

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    I don't seek to prolong it, but you won't find one on here, so sensible not to bother trying. <ok>
     
    #6063
  4. DMD

    DMD Eh?
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    I think the emphasis on some of the detail in the statements is what people hang on to too much. I didn't vote because of any of that anyway, in truth I barely noticed them and certainly wouldn't have thought of them as truths, or really even expected to be taken as truths. In the same way, I didn't listen to the claims from the other side either. I took them as general aspirations, for the want of a description, and we get to vote people out if we don't feel they're at least working in the spirit of such things. It's partly why I feel we need a strong opposition.

    The EU has told far bigger lies, and been far less accountable anyway.
     
    #6064
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  5. Smirnoffpriest

    Smirnoffpriest Well-Known Member

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    One of two ways - No 1. Corbyn hangs tough/toughs it out (pick your phrase) then he can changes Labour 'law' (or is policy a better word?) and allows the CLP (I had to check what this means it's 'Constituency Labour Party') can deselect an MP if they are not doing what the electorate want - makes the MPs accountable and gives power back to the people. Essentially the CLP are the party members in any local area, so if you don't like what an MP is doing you can just pay your money, sign up and vote him/her out. He'd have a clean out of the self-serving, back stabbing Blairites, but also offer a conciliatory olive branch to those who wish to stay and serve their constituents.

    No 2. Corbyn resigns, the Labour party either lose or damage the backing of the unions (hugely damaging since Cameron changed the way parties can get funded to disadvantage the Labour party). Most Corbyn supporters leave the party, support for Labour plummets, support for the Greens, Lib Dems and even UKIP increases, the Tory's get handed the next election as some stoolie like Angela Eagle gets put up for election to little support. The Grassroots dies, the key points of the Chilcott report get hidden and forgotten about by the new leader, the Tories and by the mainstream media - in much the same way as with the Leveson report into press conduct.

    Either way the party may split in a way similar to the late 80s/early 90s - but I was much too young to remember that, so I don't know much about it. But it depends on how the Blairites act.

    If he stays in power the press will continue to slate Corbyn but his popularity will continue to rise...
     
    #6065
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  6. petersaxton

    petersaxton Well-Known Member

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    When did I say that?
     
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  7. Smirnoffpriest

    Smirnoffpriest Well-Known Member

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    My point is not whether you believed them or not. My point is that Wales was reliant on EU funding, we desperately needed it, now instead because of the Brexit we will lose billions of pounds of EU funding and instead of it getting replaced we will have further cuts and higher taxes. I don't really care who believes what, I just care that thousands of jobs (and many companies I imagine) will go in Wales, including possibly my own.

    The EU wasn't at all involved in the referendum so how can they have told lies?
     
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  8. Smirnoffpriest

    Smirnoffpriest Well-Known Member

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    I should have added I agree with your last sentence. Unless he steps down the attacks will definitely continue.
     
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  9. Treble

    Treble Keyser Söze

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    That's a great post simply because I didn't know a lot of it. I was one of those who supported his appointment. The reason I've changed my opinion of him is simply because he lacked conviction over the referendum. Even though I voted Remain, I would have had more respect for him if he'd gone with his conscience and campaigned for the Brexiteers. And I'll go even further and say he'd still have had my support if he had. Because I would have known that 1) He would have had the vast majority of the Labour supporting UK population backing him, and 2) He would have fought equally hard on all the other issues traditional Labour voters hold so dear. What's he going to do the next time he comes across a difficult issue that compromises his personal and political beliefs???
     
    #6069
  10. petersaxton

    petersaxton Well-Known Member

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    You knew that the Leave campaign was a non-Government and non-party affiliated organisation. How could they realistically say what the government is going to do in two or three years time? They may have said more than they should but the realistic implication was clear - the money that we give to the EU would be available to spend how this country decides. The Remain side said there would be a "punishment" budget if the Leave side won. That isn't happening either. It's up to government to get on with things as soon as a new Prime Minister is elected.
     
    #6070
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  11. DMD

    DMD Eh?
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    Thanks again. I'm learning a lot from your replies and it's appreciated.

    I have a bias, in that I want to see Blair held to account, so would favour option one for that alone, if it reigns in Campbell at the same time, that's a bonus. I'm possibly being greedy, but is their any chance you could make the scenario create misery for Dianne Abbot too?
     
    #6071
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  12. petersaxton

    petersaxton Well-Known Member

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    Sensible people just made a judgement on what was important to them and not on what somebody said would happen.
     
    #6072
  13. DMD

    DMD Eh?
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    The referendum was about the EU, so there actions or inaction over the years were a paramount part of the election. There are plenty of jobs lost and communities disrupted due to the actions of the unaccountables. Had we remained, I see nothing that says ir wouldn't have got worse, particularly as more countries join, and bigger ones leave..
     
    #6073
  14. Smirnoffpriest

    Smirnoffpriest Well-Known Member

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    I disagree - I honestly belief he did what he thought was right, while he has reservations about the EU's swing towards neo-liberal policies he believes we are still better and safer within it and can campaign, change and improve it from within. He believes our workers rights, our human rights and our environment can be better protected with the EU's Social Charter than it can by Theresa May's Bill of Rights and that there is great appetite to change the neo-liberal focus of the EU and we can do this from the inside - it is dangerous to leave ourselves at the mercy of this government's neo-liberal on steroids policies with no protection and no guarantee of on election for 4 years.

    But he did campaign and a high number of Labour supporters wanted to Remain and did vote to Remain - trying to convince them to vote Out, especially when he knew that the poorest areas - the ones he's trying hardest to protect, so relied on EU funds, would have been political suicide.
     
    #6074
  15. Treble

    Treble Keyser Söze

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    I stand corrected, I had to go check. I think I took it as an implication of you saying "The people who want to be leaders should put forward their main policies and see what support they get" but that's not quite the same thing, so I take that back.

    But I still stand by the bit I posted above the sentence you highlighted in bold. It's easy to say, let the government get on with governing, when you agree with them. But if you don't agree you should shout, compplain, heckle and basically hold them to account.
     
    #6075
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  16. petersaxton

    petersaxton Well-Known Member

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    In the 1975 referendum I voted for remaining in the EEC. I felt that a United States of Europe was a great idea but I've come to realise there's very little democracy in the EU and by the way it's run they will consistently make bad decisions. The sooner we get out the better.
     
    #6076
  17. Tobes

    Tobes Warden
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    No answer but 'thick ****' obviously close to the bone then, you archetypal loser.
     
    #6077
  18. Smirnoffpriest

    Smirnoffpriest Well-Known Member

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    But it's more democractic than the UK so why remain the UK?
     
    #6078
  19. petersaxton

    petersaxton Well-Known Member

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    I am more into the voting route. Do you think that, if a decision is taken by democratic means, if you disagree with it you should then try to get it changed by non-democratic means?
     
    #6079
  20. Tobes

    Tobes Warden
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    The 75 referendum was about nothing more than remaining part of the common market, it was **** all to do with a United States of Europe.

    You're a total and complete ****ing hypocrite
     
    #6080
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