Dream Home - Our Survey Said!



A recent Survation opinion survey for the Mail on Sunday has suggested, for the first time, that a majority of voters now agree there should be a second referendum on any final Brexit deal - setting out the proposed terms of the UK's withdrawal from the EU.

Now if you ask me, that's what should have been agreed in the first place because how can people make an informed choice if they don't understand the consequences of Decision A versus Decision B.

The logic of the 2016 referendum is that the UK voters have agreed to buy a new house, yet no one seems able to explain whether our new 'dream home' really is a step up from the old one.  

   


Labour and Brexit (28/11/17)


The Guardian supported the Labour Party at the last general election, presumably through gritted teeth at the prospect of Jeremy Corbyn becoming UK prime minister. 

But the newspaper has finally woken up to the fact that the Labour leader is a terrible 'dud' when it comes to Brexit with his track record of open hostility towards the European Union and support for a referendum result that failed to settle any of the details, as far as the UK's future trading relationship with the EU is concerned.

The latest Guardian editorial suggests that Labour's approach to Brexit is no longer tenable, so who knows maybe the message is beginning to sink in that Corbyn and his fellow ideologues need to mend their ways.

   

https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2017/nov/26/the-guardian-view-on-labour-and-brexit-fight-for-workers-rights

The Guardian view on Labour and Brexit: fight for workers’ rights
British politics is polarised on nearly every axis, so it is strange how little conflict there is between Labour and the Conservatives on the biggest issue: the terms of departure from the EU. Jeremy Corbyn’s challenges to Theresa May over Brexit negotiations at prime minister’s questions last week felt remarkable because he so rarely opens battle on that front. Labour has not obstructed Tory legislation enabling the very hardest of Brexits. The frontbench say they would pursue a different model, putting “jobs first”. But whips have instructed Labour MPs to sit on their hands as the Tory agenda is enacted.
Mr Corbyn’s views in the area are vague, except to insist that for democracy’s sake, the referendum verdict must be honoured. That is a sensible starting point for the leader of a national party, especially one that represents many areas that voted leave. But ending EU membership leaves a spectrum of options, notably in the question of the single market and customs union. The Tories are dedicated to rupture from both; Labour equivocates.

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