Quizzes & Puzzles5 mins ago
The Noes Have It
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..what now? May talks Let's find out?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Sorry for asking the question, then -- It probably should have been obvious, but I hope you'll appreciate that after May's whole "Brexit means Brexit" period, it seemed worth checking.
The main problem at the moment, in parliament at least, is that there is a serious argument on how, and when, to get to the final state of affairs. Hard Brexiters in Parliament want to get there *now* (or, at least, on March 29th). If they abandoned this concept of leaving *now*, would it make things easier to resolve, or would this also be a step too far, in your view?
The main problem at the moment, in parliament at least, is that there is a serious argument on how, and when, to get to the final state of affairs. Hard Brexiters in Parliament want to get there *now* (or, at least, on March 29th). If they abandoned this concept of leaving *now*, would it make things easier to resolve, or would this also be a step too far, in your view?
The journey is also important. One doesn't go from Exeter to London via Swansea and Glasgow; and the destination doesn't change to Dublin, or worse back to the starting point, mid-journey. We have the route agreed, it has an arrival time in March. We don't need abandonments and delays discussed, we merely have to continue. If the EU wants to surprise everyone and start being reasonable, now's the time, but I'm not holding my breath.