Christmas4 mins ago
Eu Referendum: Cameron Defends Eu Deal From Critics
http:// www.bbc .co.uk/ news/uk -politi cs-eu-r eferend um-3547 9506
What do our AB Tory voters thinks about this ? Has dave brought home the bacon ?
What do our AB Tory voters thinks about this ? Has dave brought home the bacon ?
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No best answer has yet been selected by mikey4444. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I disagree...wait until the end game plays out....not that he will get everything. As I said, damn him if he wins and damn him if he doesn't....this is a no win game - but wait to the yes to Europe silent majority lot really come to the fore, just as the nae to independence lot crushed the Scottish pollsters.
Red card explained 2016
http:// www.bbc .com/ne ws/uk-p olitics -eu-ref erendum -354712 48
Red card explained 2008
https:/ /twitte r.com/B BCWorld atOne/s tatus/6 9478353 0342178 816?lan g=en-gb
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Red card explained 2008
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Mikey, I’ve read that report and it doesn’t seem nearly as bad as you clearly hope it will turn out to be. Funny how you constantly relish the prospect of trouble. Wishful thinking perhaps. Personally, I have no interest in deals made with Europe. In my opinion the quicker this country is out the better.
TWR, you always seem to be moaning about how hard done by you are. What do you want?
TWR, you always seem to be moaning about how hard done by you are. What do you want?
He and I are as far apart politically as it is possible to be, but my favourite politician for some time has been - and still is - Jacob Rees Mogg. He described Cameron's ‘achievement’ re an EU deal as “thin gruel which has been watered down”.
That pretty-well sums up the case. We knew, surely, that this was all Cameron would be able to produce, yet he presented it as if it were a fait accompli. He seems to have forgotten that there are 27 other governments which still have to agree to this watery diet for us!
That pretty-well sums up the case. We knew, surely, that this was all Cameron would be able to produce, yet he presented it as if it were a fait accompli. He seems to have forgotten that there are 27 other governments which still have to agree to this watery diet for us!
http:// i.daily mail.co .uk/i/p ix/2016 /02/04/ 09/arti cle-343 0686-30 DE78420 0000578 -601_63 6x382.j pg
This makes for interesting reading, surely even the most anti Daily Mail Brigade member must agree with what's written here.
http:// www.dai lymail. co.uk/d ebate/a rticle- 3430870 /DAILY- MAIL-CO MMENT-s peak-En gland.h tml
This makes for interesting reading, surely even the most anti Daily Mail Brigade member must agree with what's written here.
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Cameron supports the TTIP which,if passed, will result in a huge loss of British sovereignty.
23 of his own party questioned 'the deal' during the debate on it
http:// www.mir ror.co. uk/news /uk-new s/watch -david- cameron -being- humilia ted-730 2331
Spain imposed on its own volition a 6 month working qualification for EU migrants to qualify for out of work benefits so the narrow, carefully worded 'narrative' purporting to be Britain claiming back sovereignty can be seen as the Public shepherding it is.
23 of his own party questioned 'the deal' during the debate on it
http://
Spain imposed on its own volition a 6 month working qualification for EU migrants to qualify for out of work benefits so the narrow, carefully worded 'narrative' purporting to be Britain claiming back sovereignty can be seen as the Public shepherding it is.
Cameron has to 'big up' the offers he gets but it was inevitably a pointless exercise. The minimum change required is too fundamental to be accepted, and what is suggested and disputed is already far from the requirement. Countries are disputing it's too far and in reality it is nowhere near far enough.
It's the EU's own fault allowing the lie of it being a common market only to be endorsed here from the start. And Heath should've had more sense than to think he had a mandate to make such a decision, to enter without consulting the public and give genuine information on which to base a decision, in the first place.
It's the EU's own fault allowing the lie of it being a common market only to be endorsed here from the start. And Heath should've had more sense than to think he had a mandate to make such a decision, to enter without consulting the public and give genuine information on which to base a decision, in the first place.
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