parklane1
Tony Galvin
Lib Dems will surely?
They are finished as a major party, they made their bed ( saving camerons job) and lost whatever credibility they had.
Lib Dems will surely?
They are finished as a major party, they made their bed ( saving camerons job) and lost whatever credibility they had.
You never get the same level of relationship second time around, any deal then would be worse than one we could have achieved from within, the trust has been broken.
I would agree at least i never met anyone who took it at face value, however sorry to say that there are a lot of folks around who tend to believe everything they read and take it as a given. I think that whole (The campaign on the £350 million for NHS.) was a red herring used by those who lost the vote to try and suggest that the leavers ( majority) were led up the garden path and misled.
I guess it's no different to Sinn Fein MPs still taking home up-to £0.5m a year each in expenses (for London flats etc.). I.e. there's no moral problem with actively (legally) taking from your sworn enemy
I think that there is a very real chance that this will lead to the reunification of Ireland
Unless you're as misinformed as this woman...
I want to get away from any kind of blame game though. A vote to leave wasn't stupid, most people were not duped, but I do think remain didn't get their arguments across, and there should be some kind of false advertising fines or comeuppance in politics - maybe a rerun when the truth is out? Had those 3 core campaign statements not been on the table, would there have been a 2% or more swing the other way in your opinion? In other words they were crucial imo.
It may start the ball rolling but unification is a long way off. I imagine there will be some sort of transitional state created where the north are viewed as a separate political entity to Britain as a stepping stone on path to reunification. If Scotland opt out too that will likely accelerate everything.I think that there is a very real chance that this will lead to the reunification of Ireland
Does that mean we get to stop paying for them?It may start the ball rolling but unification is a long way off. I imagine there will be some sort of transitional state created where the north are viewed as a separate political entity to Britain as a stepping stone on path to reunification. If Scotland opt out too that will likely accelerate everything.
The return of a hard border will be an unmitigated disaster though, and hopefully not a catalyst for a return to past tensions.
It may start the ball rolling but unification is a long way off. I imagine there will be some sort of transitional state created where the north are viewed as a separate political entity to Britain as a stepping stone on path to reunification. If Scotland opt out too that will likely accelerate everything.
The return of a hard border will be an unmitigated disaster though, and hopefully not a catalyst for a return to past tensions.
Every Irish person would in principle love the reunification of the island but as you say the financial implications for the Irish state would be too much to handle at this point. I'm certain it will happen at some point though. I suspect it will be as a slow drawn out process over many years rather than severing of the umbilical cord to Britain overnight. This border issue certainly could be the jump off point and as gutterboy says the impetus for change will gather pace once there is a Catholic majority in the provence.Does that mean we get to stop paying for them?
Pretty much everyone Irish that I know is perfectly happy with the level of integration they currently have, as any more would be ruinously expensive.
Just a reminder that the referendum question was very very simple.
The disadvantage remain had was two decades of out of control bureaucratic heavy handedness and pursuit of a radical philosophy.
The question only asked if I wanted to leave that.
fudge yes.
We have the rest of eternity to get the economy right and extend our nations remarkable record of fighting against tyranny and for humanity.
We should all be looking forward not backward.
The two barriers are:
i) In the last census (2011) the population split was 48% protestant, 45% catholic. Catholic birthrate is higher and they have a majority in under 16s. But it will be a few more years until there's an overall Catholic majority (when the border poll gets triggered)
ii) There's some doubt as to whether Ireland actually wants it back. Although it has got a lot better in the last 15 years, it is still the poorest part of the UK and poorer than Ireland. In some ways Ireland will need to brace itself for a big economic drain, like West Germany did and South Korea has long been planning for
But yes, the Scotland issue is important too, as the cultural links with protestant NI are with Scotland, not England and Wales.