That is a complete and utter rewriting of history.clearspira wrote: ↑Sun Oct 18, 2020 3:41 pmThe problem was Parliament. It hated Brexit and it hated those who voted for it which is why (Leave) Boris got such an overwhelming mandate over (Remain) Corbyn. In my personal opinion, the problem was that Parliament is in London - which is the most Remain part of the UK besides Scotland. By being surrounded by nothing but Remainers, they convinced themselves that Leavers were ''The Outlying Other'' beyond their borders as opposed to actual people who had different thoughts and opinions.Antiboyscout wrote: ↑Sat Oct 17, 2020 6:24 pm The UK should have left literally years ago. They've lost a lot of leverage postponing it for so long.
Don't worry, the brits will have the last laugh as the EU collapses under its own weight in less than a decade.
In hindsight, I would go as far as to say that Brexit needed to be stopped twenty years ago if it was going to be stopped at all. I still remember the moment back in 1999 that Nigel Ferage got enough votes to become an MEP - Brexit suddenly went from something that only the most obscure backbench MPs spoke about to a real mainstream movement that gained traction up and down the land. And what's more, he was very quickly helped by the fact that Tony Blair started to talk about joining the Euro at the same time and the flood of Eastern European migrants a few years later. Anyone who tried to stop Brexit in 2016 and beyond was fighting a battle against people who had been stoked for two decades to leave.
1. How do you explain all those MPs in favour of Brexit?
2. These same MPs like Jacob Rees-Mogg and the rest of his European Research Group mates were the ones shooting down any Brexit deal.
3. Plenty of Mps were aware of how people felt, usually through all the death threats they recieved.
4. Corbyn was never for remain, he was attacked from within and without the Labour Party for being too weak on the issue.
5. Britain never did join the Euro
6. Eastern European immigration was never high in places like Cornwall which voted heavily for Brexit.
7. It never was a real movement most people didn't have a clue what they were voting for.