Why did you put the word majorty in quote marks? The majority who participated in the referendum clearly voted to leave.
You can't have looked at the Mail recently, that is now an anti-Brexit rag, or at least supports Treason May's Remain deal.
Barnier's "assurances" count for nothing, we would still be tied to the EU until it allowed us to leave. It's rather like the victors in a war dictating terms to the losing side. It would be a complete national humiliation. In 2016 we voted to leave the EU, not to ask the EU for permission to leave. If only we had politicians with backbone who truly wanted us to get out of the EU. If May's ...
I usually get called a Brexshitter or Russian bot by Remoaners on social media, tit for tat, sweetheart.
After the 1975 referendum Leavers were told to suck it up and ignored for decades. It was UKIP sweeping the board at the 2014 EU elections that scared the crap out of the Tories which then resulted in the 2016 ref. The genie is well and truly out of the bottle, if we are sold down the river with Brexit, Leavers will not sit idly by and accept that. Pollitics in this country has been changed ...
@scapegoat 1.4 million votes is not a tiny majority. If Remain had won by the same amount you wouldn't be complaining, Leavers would have had to accept the result. I suggest you do the same.
May has deceived the public from the day she entered No 10, making countless speeches saying everything Leavers wanted to hear but then in private doing exactly the opposite. She has now delayed the "meangful" vote till the end of February in the hope her Remain-deal will get through parliament in a last minute panic to fend off a no-deal exit. I sincerely hope her ploy fails and we do leave on ...
This random paragraph is meaningless.
But no matter in which country of the Union you live we are all ultimately bound by EU laws. It's why, since 1973, women had to pay VAT on sanitary products because the EU classed them as luxury items. After a long campaign by women's groups and special pleading by the government to the EU commission, it was decided in October last year that such items can be zero rated in the future. ...
Nobody will be forcing you to eat anything you don't want to, just like now. And it may surprise you to learn that we had employment protection laws in this country long before joining the EEC/EC/EU and in some cases they far exceed the EU protection. For example, in the UK maternity leave is 52 weeks, while just 14 weeks under EU law. Is that what you want?