I’d Go Back In A Heartbeat, Brexit Made Country Worse Off

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  • čas přidán 23. 06. 2024
  • "I regret voting to leave the EU" claimed Journalist JJ Anisiobi during a furious #brexit debate with broadcaster Mike Parry on GB News.
    JJ also explains how bad Brexit is for farming, food and the cost of living. Rejoining the single market and customs union is urgently needed!
    As Britain marks eight years since the UK voted to leave the EU, it’s clear that the majority agree with JJ Anisiobi.
    Rishi Sunak claims the UK's decision to quit the single marker as a success and claimed "Brexit would be in peril" if Starmer wins the General Election.
    #britishfarming
    #britishfood
    #food
    #agriculture
    #farming
    #farmingsimulator22
    #foodie
    #britishpolitics
    #generalelection2024

Komentáře • 733

  • @lesleyrobertson5465
    @lesleyrobertson5465 Před 4 dny +118

    Who is this old gammon. If he shouts any louder he’ll have a heart attack

    • @thefrecklepuny
      @thefrecklepuny Před 4 dny +31

      Mike Parry. A Brexiter who thinks the louder he shouts, the more correct he is.

    • @rufus1346
      @rufus1346 Před 4 dny +8

      The concrete farmer

    • @jacquesmolders30
      @jacquesmolders30 Před 4 dny +16

      Well for sure he is not going to last long, certainly not for 20 years ! Such vilains are still carrying ideas that EU is undemocratic ... UK with a house of unelected lords and when smaller nations within the United Kingdom have not weight in the dynamics of decision making. The Brits like to view themselves as champion of democracy. Representative system to be urgently reformed inside or outside the EU.

    • @qeitkas594
      @qeitkas594 Před 4 dny

      Another idiot like Farage who thinks that if you turn up the volume, you sound more convincing.

    • @bigtoe333333
      @bigtoe333333 Před 4 dny +13

      @@jacquesmolders30 I think one of the great things that will come out of the disaster of brexit is the crushing of the tory party, and another huge benefit is that the UK will finally get a truly democratic PR type voting system within the next decade, and UK politics can finally start to grow up.
      Brexit and 14 years of tory rule have been an unmitigated disaster for the UK people, and the majority of them are finally waking up to the fact they have been screwed over.

  • @simoncroft9792
    @simoncroft9792 Před 5 dny +91

    Thanks for watching “GBnews” Liz so we dont have to!

    • @lizwebstersbf
      @lizwebstersbf  Před 4 dny +16

      I enjoyed this particular row so much!

    • @johnmartin7158
      @johnmartin7158 Před 4 dny +1

      Brexit has been a shambolic disaster. I hope Labour and the Lib-Dems reverse it.

  • @petergaskin1811
    @petergaskin1811 Před 4 dny +85

    Why on earth would the EU want any one of these clowns?

    • @sambaliwingo
      @sambaliwingo Před 4 dny +6

      Indeed. Keep them out.

    • @ralphmacchiato3761
      @ralphmacchiato3761 Před 4 dny +3

      The UK hasn't applied for membership so it is no issue.

    • @mbs.9694
      @mbs.9694 Před 4 dny +1

      I wouldn't want you back. We just don't trust the English. But we would gladly accept the Scots ans the northern Irish

    • @Ikkeligeglad
      @Ikkeligeglad Před 4 dny +3

      @@ralphmacchiato3761 Yet

    • @mbs.9694
      @mbs.9694 Před 4 dny +7

      Additionally the European Union should charge an health surcharge to brits moving to the continent just like you do. Reciprocity should be the norm

  • @merkvandermeulen3978
    @merkvandermeulen3978 Před 4 dny +113

    Brexit is excellent, just not for the UK, and its cohesion. Precisely what Putin wanted as return on his investment.

    • @sambaliwingo
      @sambaliwingo Před 4 dny +1

      It has been great for the EU, being liberated from a country that only ever held us back. Good riddance.

    • @breamoreboy
      @breamoreboy Před 4 dny +1

      With the help of numerous agents, like Farage, Johnson, Banks and all the members of the Conservative Friends of Russia.

    • @SJG-nr8uj
      @SJG-nr8uj Před 4 dny

      If you ask a binary question ie. would you like to be in the EU's giant, duplicitous, megalomaniac scam or, not, you will get two different answers. Most of those who voted to be in it are still not aware that it is a giant, duplicitous, megalomaniac scam.

    • @Phuc_Yhou
      @Phuc_Yhou Před 4 dny

      Putin got what he paid for including a KGB agents son in the house of lords

    • @nigelaston2546
      @nigelaston2546 Před 2 dny

      dream on snowflake. As for Putin... The E,U NATO and missis Mercal all said we are not expanding in to Ukraine , Put the corrupt puppet Zelenskyy in as leader and informed the Russians that we lied ,, There is nothing you can do about it. Now its war.

  • @andreteelen6266
    @andreteelen6266 Před 4 dny +27

    already blaming The EU for getting a bad ( just a normal) deal; You've been blaming The EU for everything domestic over the last 30 years and already blaming the EU for the future. don't think there's a place in the EU for such a UK

    • @sambaliwingo
      @sambaliwingo Před 4 dny +6

      I'm glad they are out and I don't want them back. They are utterly obsessed with us.

  • @LKAdams580
    @LKAdams580 Před 4 dny +159

    *Larry Burkett's book on "Giving and Tithing" drew me closer to God and helped my spirituality. 2020 was a year I literally lived it. I cashed in my life savings and gave it all away. My total giving amounted to 40,000 dollars. Everyone thought I was delusional. Today, 1 receive 85,000 dollars every two months. I have a property in Calabasas, CA, and travel a lot. God has promoted me more than once and opened doors for me to live beyond my dreams. God kept to his promises to and for me*

    • @WarnerPate
      @WarnerPate Před 4 dny

      There's wonder working power in following Kingdom principles on giving and tithing. Hallelujah!

    • @LessieRosalind
      @LessieRosalind Před 4 dny

      But then, how do you get all that in that period of time? What is it you do please, mind sharing?

    • @KatieFleming517
      @KatieFleming517 Před 4 dny

      It is the digital market. That's been the secret to this wealth transfer. A lot of folks in the US and abroad are getting so much from it, God has been good to my household Thank you Jesus

    • @KatieFleming517
      @KatieFleming517 Před 4 dny

      Big thanks to Ms. Chisty fiore✨❤️💯Her top-notch guidance and expertise on the digital market changed the game for me.

    • @Jeanie754
      @Jeanie754 Před 4 dny

      How can I start this digital market, any guidelines and how can I reach out to her?

  • @christopherfry9003
    @christopherfry9003 Před dnem +3

    Britain left a supermarket chain, in order to revert back to being a corner shop.

  • @battles423
    @battles423 Před 4 dny +39

    Brexit was the greatest thing to ever happened for the EU. Got rid of the spoiled child (UK) and the other children are happier.

    • @eucitizen78
      @eucitizen78 Před 3 dny +2

      I am not sure if this is true. When i talk to people the most of them would like to have the UK in the EU. They are pity for the British people, that they followed those scammers that made them vote out.

    • @gordondavies7773
      @gordondavies7773 Před dnem +1

      Both Scotland and Northern Ireland will soon be back in the EU. England will take more time, as they have every time they decided to ignore geographic, cultural and economic reality.

    • @Hjd10
      @Hjd10 Před dnem

      @@gordondavies7773, really and how are they going to do that as the countries don’t meet the criteria to join?

    • @gordondavies7773
      @gordondavies7773 Před 18 hodinami +1

      @@Hjd10 Scotland meets the criteria, and the EU has already stated that there will be no issue. Northern Ireland will automatically join the EU when it reunites with Ireland, just like East Germany did.

  • @TrevorBlair-cq3pk
    @TrevorBlair-cq3pk Před 2 dny +4

    You can't just leave the club, and then decide you want to go back in again, because it's colder outside than you thought it was going to be.
    ✌️😎✌️

  • @blaircorral8158
    @blaircorral8158 Před 4 dny +14

    Brexit has cost the Uk more than the forty years of contributions, and is set to cost even more 😢

  • @battles423
    @battles423 Před 4 dny +18

    Brexit is the woman (UK) who divorced her husband (EU) of 40 years thinking she could do better. Now she’s sees her ex husband with a new girlfriend and she’s jealous and bitter. Now expecting a baby (new members and trade deals). Now the bitter ex wife (UK) wants her ex husband (EU) back only because nobody else wants her(UK).

    • @brucevair-turnbull8082
      @brucevair-turnbull8082 Před 4 dny +1

      I have a better analogy. Brexit is investment in the newest craze: a glass hammer factory!!

  • @garybarrett6699
    @garybarrett6699 Před 4 dny +37

    Mike Parry is another landlord mouth piece profitting from the Uk' s situation. Along with the mp's making a fortune from the problems caused by Brexit, they will never complain. This has always been about the few profiteering, whilst the majority have a decline in living.

    • @caballoloco100
      @caballoloco100 Před 4 dny

      That is certainly the aim of Brexit: deregulating the economy so that the financial elite keeps his money in tax havens while the majority end Up worse off but keeps waving the flag.

    • @TrevorBlair-cq3pk
      @TrevorBlair-cq3pk Před 2 dny

      He's just a total parasite.
      ✌️😎✌️

  • @RazorMouth
    @RazorMouth Před 4 dny +24

    The EU council runs the EU, the member state governments.
    These faceless bureaucrats he speaks of are the civil service, the commision 🤦‍♂️
    8 years and hes still spouting the same horsesh1t

    • @marleneMS
      @marleneMS Před 4 dny

      Easy to see that you learned nothing at all. None of your sentences have anything to do with "fact" or "truth"

    • @marleneMS
      @marleneMS Před 4 dny +2

      Reading your comment again, I might have misunderstood you. If that's the case, I apologise

    • @RazorMouth
      @RazorMouth Před 4 dny +3

      @@marleneMS I've no idea what you're even trying to say.

    • @mark-nm4tc
      @mark-nm4tc Před 4 dny +1

      No-one can vote for Farage as leader of ReformUk, neither can you vote on their 'policies'. Thus, Nigel is now an unelected undemocratic interfering busybody....Its not a party anyway, listed as a private company with guess who as the majority shareholder?.

    • @bryangeake5826
      @bryangeake5826 Před 4 dny +5

      @@marleneMSThe EU Commission is a Civil Service equivalent (it cannot be elected as it is apolitical and has to be), they do not make EU law, they propose legislation that has to accord to the ratified EU treaties and the directly elected MEPs vote on it and hold the EU Commission to account! Thats the truth, it is you lot, the Brexiteers who still go on about 'unelected bureaucrats' making EU law totally erroneously!

  • @trident6547
    @trident6547 Před dnem +4

    There were 759 different agreements signed by the EU on behalf of the member states with 168 countries. 295 concerned trade, 69 fisheries, 65 transport, 49 customs and 45 nuclear issues.
    UK lost all of these when it left EU. From GOV.UK: As an independent trading nation, the UK now has over 70 trade agreements in place.
    When you look closer at those agreements only three have been done by UK! The rest are roll-overs from EU agreements and they need to be renegotiated in a near future.
    So far UK has made three agreements as an independent trade negotiator. All bad agreements. The two with New Zealand and Australia were so bad they even laughed at the negotiators of UK who signed up to a crap agreement.
    Then we have the very interesting part of what happened when UK left those agreements. As a member it had its own part of the quotas for various commodities like for example cheese. Those quotas stayed in EU, it was after all the EU commission that signed them and the EU parliament ratified them, so what do you think happened to all those quotas? Yes you are right, they were split among the 27 memberstates. A nice brexit benefit for EU. But seriously. Since the transition period ended UK has not managed to get even one decent trade agreement on its own.

  • @alana8863
    @alana8863 Před 4 dny +34

    Why would we get a worse deal?
    After all, we hold all the cards. They are begging for us to go back... Or were those more lies that meant the vote was secured through fraudulent claims?

    • @mattsyson3980
      @mattsyson3980 Před 4 dny +6

      The UK had various 'rebates' that other EU countries do not enjoy now (or then) because the UK was always the 'whining kid in the corner' but in many aspects refused to play the same rules as everyone else. IF (A massive IF and exceedingly unlikely) the UK were to JOIN the EU it would be with NONE of the old rebates and easements which would FEEL like a bad deal.

    • @lellyparker
      @lellyparker Před 4 dny

      Good point. Brexiteers hunt with the hounds and run with the hair. Their argument changes to suit their need at the time. Truth has no meaning for them.

    • @fje1948
      @fje1948 Před 4 dny +2

      @@mattsyson3980
      Excellently explained - Many Thanks.

    • @eucitizen78
      @eucitizen78 Před 3 dny

      @@mattsyson3980 I guess what you say is true

  • @johnnyblogg2113
    @johnnyblogg2113 Před 4 dny +8

    Wow The UK got a trade deal with Tonga😂

    • @sambaliwingo
      @sambaliwingo Před 4 dny +4

      Don't forget that they joined CPTPP, founded by mighty Brunei where the last elections were held in the sixties. Take that undemocratic EU!

    • @ab-ym3bf
      @ab-ym3bf Před 4 dny +3

      I'm sure the Tonginees got everything they wanted out of it, or did the UK hold all the cards?

    • @MrSmegfish
      @MrSmegfish Před dnem

      Read a trade paper .

  • @user-fx5bj8zv3o
    @user-fx5bj8zv3o Před 4 dny +28

    20,000 doctors have left uk because of brexit , imports are so difficult 30% of companies have shut down, imigration is worse than before

    • @caballoloco100
      @caballoloco100 Před 4 dny +6

      So GP appointments are more difficult to get. I said so years ago, because at that time 10% of the NHS workforce were EU nationals who contributed to keeping our elderly people in good health. Funny they voted against their own interests by voting Leave, as the UK is today less attractive for EU healthcare professionals. I am sure lrish people are delighted to get some of those EU healthcare professionals. Your comment gets my 👍

    • @user-yi6ui6pn4i
      @user-yi6ui6pn4i Před 4 dny

      @@caballoloco100 Cannot justify stealing vital labour from abroad....when it is crucially needed over there.
      GP's gone part-time due to Blair's over generous salary increases.. Result = fewer GP appointments.

    • @caballoloco100
      @caballoloco100 Před 4 dny

      @@user-yi6ui6pn4i Cannot justify yet another Brexit diehard pretending to know the demand of healthcare professionals in all EU countries who considers freedom of movement as "stealing". Grow Up.

    • @user-wf2yq7mb6y
      @user-wf2yq7mb6y Před 3 dny +2

      @@caballoloco100 UK is not attractive to EU workers because of Brexit, high prices and stagnant wages. EU citizens can earn the same money if not more having lower bills to foot in the EU without work permits hassle to UK. More and more EU nationals are leaving UK. If not for my partner I would've been gone from UK long ago. This year I am going for 2 months trip back into EU to discover the opportunities and plan our return back home in continental Europe. After 20 years of living in UK. And there is a lot of Europeans who are doing exactly this - ditching UK for EU

    • @caballoloco100
      @caballoloco100 Před 3 dny

      @@user-yi6ui6pn4i What are you talking about? GP salaries did go up due to staff shortages in the NHS. To retain that talented pool of professionals in high demand, the Labour party decided to rise their wages. Good for them. A doctor takes between 5 - 7 years minimum to train. Unfortunately as the Tories are unable to fund wage rises in the public sector, healthcare public services will continue to shrink as the UK population get older and some British healthcare workers decide to live abroad in Australia, Canada and the USA due a better work-life balance and working conditions.

  • @Rosbif06600
    @Rosbif06600 Před 4 dny +6

    But it has worked.
    Banker's bonuses are back at unlimited, right to protest has been removed, off shore accounts are out of scrutiny and if they had more time, they would have re oved the human rights of 68 million UK citizens.

  • @herrglotzenschnitzengruber1510

    The grey haired one here, is using the Tories short period in time when the growth graph had UK a bit higher than France and Germany UK GDP is actually reducing annually between 4 and 5% the UK is hemorrhaging nearly 1% of every buisiness sector production every year, except banking which is over 2% every year. World exports have also reduced, services have flattened or grown minimally over the last 5 years, but before Brexit they grew faster than European average, now less than average we are suffering a brain drain, of 50,000 leaving, 60% are highly qualified each year, tourists are 60% down, in the EU they are up, from 5 years ago. Britain is in a severe spiral of decline, this is fast becoming un reversable

  • @grahamthomson6969
    @grahamthomson6969 Před 4 dny +9

    Speed of growth means nothing. We started from a very low base.

    • @caballoloco100
      @caballoloco100 Před 4 dny

      Growth means nothing if those Who benefit from It are a small minority of wealthy people Who probable have links with The Tory party.

    • @johngodley256
      @johngodley256 Před dnem

      That is an old Russian and East German tactic, they produced so little,
      that even any amount of growth was a big growth, even though they
      were producing only maybe 5% of the amount of westen countries.
      Eventually it all came tumbling down, as the UK will see.

  • @w47w
    @w47w Před 4 dny +6

    The UK debt in relation to GDP from 2019-2023 has increased by 800 billion pounds, 2023 100% of GDP! In 1961 it was also 100%.
    In 2024, 150 billion more is expected.
    If you add the 140 billion BREXIT loss to that, 1 trillion pounds have been lost. But that would only be the 140 billion for 2023! How much was it in the years before?
    The Federal Republic of Germany has reduced its GDP debt in recent years, from 85 to 65%!

  • @venenareligioest410
    @venenareligioest410 Před 4 dny +7

    Vote in haste, repent at leisure! But unfortunately millions have suffered because of prat’s like him!

  • @GoodGoneVeryBad
    @GoodGoneVeryBad Před 4 dny +4

    He is right people don’t want to wait 20 years!

  • @louis-philippearnhem6959
    @louis-philippearnhem6959 Před 4 dny +14

    Even without a “better deal” joining the EU will always be better for the UK. But that idea will never trickle down in the majority of British brains.

    • @frankoneill5675
      @frankoneill5675 Před 4 dny +10

      It doesn't satisfy their sense of superiority

    • @clarecrawford9677
      @clarecrawford9677 Před 4 dny +8

      English and Welsh brains, please. The voters in Scotland and Northern Ireland voted to remain.

    • @frankoneill5675
      @frankoneill5675 Před 4 dny +5

      @@clarecrawford9677 Good point

    • @truebluehube
      @truebluehube Před 4 dny +2

      It will be a better deal as we will have to join the euro so no more changing currency and the tories not able to as easily ruin the economy.

    • @valeriemay7391
      @valeriemay7391 Před 4 dny +1

      Younger people tend to be more anti brexit so maybe it will.

  • @frankriley845
    @frankriley845 Před 4 dny +11

    The white guy is crazy

    • @brucevair-turnbull8082
      @brucevair-turnbull8082 Před 4 dny

      And his analysis of graphs is like an ant contemplating the atom bomb!🤣

    • @johngodley256
      @johngodley256 Před dnem

      I left the UK 52 years ago, have now got German nationality, a good pension
      and living accommodation, would never contemplate going back to live in
      England, among Xenophobic Brexit morons.

  • @Geffo555
    @Geffo555 Před 4 dny +11

    Parry still pushing the juggled stats as a Brexit justification. Trade with the EU is up if you group services with goods and use inflated prices. Our actual trade in units is lower than 2019. As for growth, they use a snapshot stat from one period last year. It is like an athlete falling at the start of an 800 metres then sprinting to catch up. He is the fastest man on the track for half a lap, but he is still last.

    • @gerryclarke9795
      @gerryclarke9795 Před 4 dny +5

      Brilliant!

    • @realhorrorshow8547
      @realhorrorshow8547 Před 4 dny

      To the extent that our productivity is (or was) growing faster than France or Germany that's because, with brexit added to the pandemic, it fell further. UK productivity has been poorer than our neighbours for a long time because neither our government nor business will invest in our people.

  • @cfurum
    @cfurum Před 4 dny +8

    Perhaps it would be useful for the British public to research what the EU is. Ignorance took Britain out of EU, but it will not bring it back in. IMHO

    • @franciscouderq1100
      @franciscouderq1100 Před 4 dny

      So true. I might add true from the people but also and alas true from their politicians and representatives who went along with the lies and the misleading rhetoric as well and some knew perfectly what the whole thing was about and bad for the people. Remember the EU passing a bill on chasing money laundering , corruption , tax evasion and fiscal paradises ?

    • @RealMash
      @RealMash Před 4 dny

      Copenhagen criteria? They should at least know what they have an overwhelmingly positive majority of people an positive attitude on...

    • @brucevair-turnbull8082
      @brucevair-turnbull8082 Před 4 dny

      But conflation of ideas/facts (e.g. the European Court of Justice vs. The European Court of Human Rights) never hamstrung Johnson, Farage and other snake oil salesmen.

  • @GreenmanXIV
    @GreenmanXIV Před 4 dny +6

    20 fecking years what an old cupid stunt he is.

  • @ianworley8169
    @ianworley8169 Před 4 dny +3

    Thank God I bought and renovated my derelict cottage in Portugal in 2003. Back to the UK in 2006 to graft until, aged 55, we moved back permanently in 2013. I've never been back since Brexit and never will. These people, squabbling over the disaster they inflicted upon Britain, are in large part the reason why.

  • @nikolaslarson6891
    @nikolaslarson6891 Před 4 dny +5

    Oh, of course the EU will accept Britain back but in a few generations time and at the conditions of Slovenia...

    • @ab-ym3bf
      @ab-ym3bf Před 4 dny

      No, not on the same conditions as Slovenia.
      Slovenia is already a member, and thus has another set of rules under which it joined as future members will have.

  • @nickclarkuk
    @nickclarkuk Před 4 dny +2

    The standard of debate on GB News 😂. It reminds me why we’re in this mess in the first place .

  • @petersanders2815
    @petersanders2815 Před 4 dny +4

    All will be miraculously fantastic in 20 years! FFS!

    • @vullings1968
      @vullings1968 Před 4 dny +1

      But nobodu has a plan on how to reach those sunlit uplands, 20 years in the future...

  • @anthonygrayson7753
    @anthonygrayson7753 Před 4 dny +3

    Graham twists his stats. Imports are up, but they're costing us more , both because the Pound lost 20% of its value the day after the referendum and also because all the import duties, deferment taxes and customs clearance charges we now have to pay for all the stuff coming from the EU. As for the OBR's £100billion PA worse off compared to if we'd remained, well the OBR not being listened to by Liz Truss prior to her mini budget, was highlighted as a major reason for the markets collapsing. Maybe Graham shouldn't ignore the OBR!

  • @Bramfly
    @Bramfly Před 4 dny +9

    The EU is not only to benefit economically it is also a political union. And that part was always denied by the UK, they did and still do not want that political unity, and military unity of course.

    • @keithhutchins8966
      @keithhutchins8966 Před 4 dny

      What ? The EU wants military unity ? Surely not? They'll be wanting control of their own Nuclear weapons next.

    • @user-yi6ui6pn4i
      @user-yi6ui6pn4i Před 4 dny

      Is the EU army actually up and running yet?

    • @keithhutchins8966
      @keithhutchins8966 Před 4 dny

      @@user-yi6ui6pn4i Supporters of the EU are in denial on this point. There never have been any plans, no need for an EU centralised army as they are not invading or defending against. Never going to happen. BTW the cheque is in the post, honest.

    • @user-wf2yq7mb6y
      @user-wf2yq7mb6y Před 3 dny +1

      And what's wrong with that?

    • @keithhutchins8966
      @keithhutchins8966 Před 2 dny

      @@user-yi6ui6pn4i Just remember, when the time comes, where you heard it first.

  • @michaelandrews6786
    @michaelandrews6786 Před dnem +1

    Doesn't Mike Parry realise that 47% of UK trade is done dirctly with the EU and 11% indirectly together with the EU and other countries. Doing deals with Australia for meat is like you avoiding your local supermarket and travelling 200 miles to another supermarket to buy butter. The cost may be 10p cheaper, but the transportation doules the cost.

  • @The_Orgazoid
    @The_Orgazoid Před 4 dny +4

    Why do they feel the need to shout? We can hear you, ffs

  • @epincion
    @epincion Před 4 dny +4

    Hilarious from GB News, it’s amusing to see that the new excuse fir staying out is that ‘if we go back in we will get a worse deal’ - an admission that the UK had a fantastic deal. Gammon shouting amuses me

  • @RazorMouth
    @RazorMouth Před 4 dny +9

    Another numpty claim that gold trading is beneficial to the UK economy and people 😂

    • @uweinhamburg
      @uweinhamburg Před 4 dny +4

      Of course it is. Where would all the new goldmines in the UK leave their products if they cannot sell it abroad?

    • @RealMash
      @RealMash Před 4 dny

      @@uweinhamburg They have waterways of a golden color now...what floats on the top is not always the Cremé de la cremé...

    • @eucitizen78
      @eucitizen78 Před 3 dny

      I think you hit the point

  • @Arthur_Pint
    @Arthur_Pint Před 2 dny

    Another pathetic case of ‘shutting the barn door’ after the horses have bolted!

  • @richardedwards9405
    @richardedwards9405 Před 4 dny +11

    Ah Brexit the ghost at the feast. Brexit may not have featured greatly in this general election, but our relationship with the EU will surely dominate the next.

    • @SJG-nr8uj
      @SJG-nr8uj Před 4 dny

      The EU will probably have dissolved by about 2029, brought down by its own megalomania.

  • @andym.6141
    @andym.6141 Před 4 dny +4

    Take gold sales out of those trade figures like the bloke on Sky did.

  • @tommymorrison6478
    @tommymorrison6478 Před 4 dny +6

    Expect louder, shriller, voices from the ever-dwindling group of Brexiteers, who will continue to insist things are much better in spite of, well, everything.

    • @SJG-nr8uj
      @SJG-nr8uj Před 4 dny

      So please tell us what you know about EU fiscal union, EU economic union, EU political union, the unification of member states’ armed forces under command of the European Council, the reckless expansionism of the EU across Eastern Europe, and the unfettered migration into the EU from North Africa and the Middle East, at the EU’s open invitation. All the stuff you voted for.

    • @tommymorrison6478
      @tommymorrison6478 Před 4 dny +1

      @@SJG-nr8uj Fiscal union is the union of fiscal policy. Economic policy is the union of economic policy. Political union....etc. etc. etc.
      I never voted for the technical details. Like most EU devotees - of which I am wholeheartedly one - I voted for the principle of union and would do so again.
      Is the EU not perfect? Ask me if I give a toss. My car isn't perfect, but I don't send it to the scrappers on the basis, much as I wish it was a Rolls-Royce.
      You are the kind of person for which the term "narrow-minded" was coined, and you need to understand this about yourself. (fat chance)

    • @SJG-nr8uj
      @SJG-nr8uj Před 4 dny

      @@tommymorrison6478 In complete contrast to your arrogant and condescending appraisal, I report on the EU's own treaties, documents and declarations. I notice you didn't complete your description of "political union". It means one big country, the federal state, the "United States of Europe". The EU is working on this right now, without any democratic mandate whatsoever to proceed in this direction. It is doing so by stealth, from fiscal union to economic union to political unification. This is by its own admission.
      Once the federal government in Brussels has taken in all major governmental decision-making to itself, no electorate will be able to vote it into or out of power - end of democracy. This is exactly as the megalomaniac crooks want it to be.

    • @tommymorrison6478
      @tommymorrison6478 Před 4 dny +2

      @@SJG-nr8uj And, as expected, you continue to focus on tiny details. Was my response "arrogant and condescending"? Good. you deserve it.
      If my car's ashtray is full I don't trash the car. I empty the ashtray. Is the EU imperfect? See if I care. Feel free to ignore this uncongenial fact; just as you ignore any fact which doesn't fit in with your own unconscious prejudices.
      P.S. Of COURSE the EU is working towards a "United States of Europe". THAT'S THE WHOLE POINT. Churchill himself suggested it in 1946 as the one solution to the terrible problem of endless and horrific warfare between European nations, and this is why people like myself are all for it. Is the light beginning to dawn yet? No, of course it isn't.
      Your own solution to this problem will be alliances, because they did such a good job of preventing WW I and WW II. Time to wise up to harsh reality my friend. Do it now.

    • @SJG-nr8uj
      @SJG-nr8uj Před 4 dny

      @@tommymorrison6478 You are actually hilarious! If your car's ashtray is full you don't hand your car over to someone who will drive it, with you as a passenger, where you don't want it to go. Such as the end of democracy in Europe, the Islamification of Europe, and on a collision course for war with Russia.

  • @l3eatalphal3eatalpha
    @l3eatalphal3eatalpha Před 4 dny +8

    'Nobody talks about the facts'. Proceeds to scream the most egregious opinions, zero facts.

  • @alanhigh9677
    @alanhigh9677 Před 2 dny +1

    Lamb from Australia -wow great idea!

  • @Weltenweber
    @Weltenweber Před 4 dny

    Wow. Eight years after Brexit and a debate of it still descends into a shouting match.

  • @davidevans7797
    @davidevans7797 Před 4 dny +2

    And who the F are they going to sell the fish to ??

  • @thefrecklepuny
    @thefrecklepuny Před 4 dny +8

    Yes, the UK would become an EU member on worse terms it had than when it left. I'd blame brexiters for that before the EU. It's like leaving a golf club or gym at a fixed price until the end of the year. You leave as a member of said establishment. In the meantime, membership prices have increased by 10%. Does anyone think it would be feasible to pay the original fees?

    • @sambaliwingo
      @sambaliwingo Před 4 dny +5

      The UK should never have been given a rebate in the first place.

    • @paologat
      @paologat Před 4 dny +4

      @@sambaliwingothe rebate was a sloppy solution to a real problem (the EU was spending most of its budget on agriculture, which didn’t fit well with UK economy).
      What was unforgivable was granting UK exemptions from core EU policies such as the Euro and Schengen.

    • @sambaliwingo
      @sambaliwingo Před 4 dny +3

      @@paologat I'm glad we have gotten rid of them and I don't want them back ever.

    • @colinsmith1288
      @colinsmith1288 Před 4 dny

      ​@@sambaliwingoGood for you. Bye.

    • @Purple_flower09
      @Purple_flower09 Před 3 dny

      ​@@sambaliwingo why is Brexit living rent free in your head?

  • @PaulStargasm
    @PaulStargasm Před 4 dny +3

    Our good imports from the EU have gone up faster? You don't make money from imports.

    • @eucitizen78
      @eucitizen78 Před 3 dny

      True, we make the money. Je suis désolé de dire ça

  • @paulmcgrath3248
    @paulmcgrath3248 Před 4 dny +5

    Stronger in

    • @RealMash
      @RealMash Před 4 dny +1

      But the EU is weaker due to the UK snitching to the US and Russia and sabotaging it from within.
      Out means out, traitors.

    • @Geffo555
      @Geffo555 Před 4 dny

      Out is certainly worse.

  • @paulmcgrath3248
    @paulmcgrath3248 Před 4 dny +2

    I cant even swim locall no blue flag

  • @michaeloshea5505
    @michaeloshea5505 Před 3 dny

    It was never sold or promoted on 20 years. And what happens if after 20 years it's even worst!!!!

  • @user-yi6ui6pn4i
    @user-yi6ui6pn4i Před 4 dny

    Has Starmer ever negotiated anything in his life? Not up to it,...never will be.

  • @rossross12398
    @rossross12398 Před 15 hodinami

    We European should have a referendum about having the UK back 😂😂😂😂

  • @chrisnewman7281
    @chrisnewman7281 Před 4 dny

    The fact that the government never instituted a Brexit day in celebration says a lot about their conviction that it’s the best thing since sliced bread. More commiserations than celebrations.

  • @johnpritchard8946
    @johnpritchard8946 Před 3 dny +1

    The claim that the OBR say Brexit is costing the UK economy 4% of GDP year on year is wrong. The OBR said they estimated that Brexit would eventually cost 4% of GDP pa once all the damaging effects had had their impact. Without checking I think it's going to take about 15 years to play out. Currently the cost is just over 2% GDP pa. I voted to remain by the way.

  • @liamfinch4129
    @liamfinch4129 Před hodinou

    The EU would have us back in a heartbeat.

  • @annetteshawunstoppableyou5281

    What planet is this Gammon on? Holy cow😮😮😮

    • @SJG-nr8uj
      @SJG-nr8uj Před 4 dny

      Please tell us what you know about EU fiscal union, EU economic union, EU political union, the unification of member states’ armed forces under command of the European Council, the reckless expansionism of the EU across Eastern Europe, and the unfettered migration into the EU from North Africa and the Middle East, at the EU’s open invitation. It shouldn’t take you long!

  • @djl6825
    @djl6825 Před 4 dny +2

    Can I just ask.....who voted David Frost into a position of influence? Because obviously having an 'unelected bureaucrat' in such a position would be unconscionable.....right??

  • @philiphowell1505
    @philiphowell1505 Před 4 dny +19

    Thank god for the Spanish immigration police and my timely escape from the asylum.

    • @Purple_flower09
      @Purple_flower09 Před 3 dny

      So you keep saying 😴

    • @johngodley256
      @johngodley256 Před dnem

      The same goes here, the German authorities were very understanding, I
      applied for German nationality, got it a week later.

  • @TheUlrikkaul
    @TheUlrikkaul Před 4 dny +1

    I know it's no any help to the British people, but any talk af leaving the EU has stopped anywhere in the EU.

    • @Purple_flower09
      @Purple_flower09 Před 3 dny

      National Rally in France have a plan to destroy the EU from the inside. Far more dangerous than leaving. And most French people will vote for the National Rally.

  • @johnmunro4952
    @johnmunro4952 Před 2 dny

    Punitive? What compared to what we've got now.

  • @johnmorrison9424
    @johnmorrison9424 Před 4 dny +4

    More Brexiteer mis leading information

  • @Livingmybestlife01
    @Livingmybestlife01 Před 4 dny +1

    20 years!!!!!!! wTF 😮

  • @trevaudio
    @trevaudio Před 4 dny +4

    Where were all the Brexit celebrations ????

    • @sambaliwingo
      @sambaliwingo Před 4 dny +6

      In Brussels, the day the English signed the Surrender Deal.

    • @EllieD.Violet
      @EllieD.Violet Před 4 dny +1

      2 days ago in Bavaria 😊. Our seventh, annual 'good riddance to bad rubbish 🇬🇧 party' - in between 60-70 europhiles celebrating the referendum. Leaving was the best contribution of little brexitannia in 47 years of EEC/EU membership.
      Next party: January 31st. 😊

    • @geertstroy
      @geertstroy Před 4 dny

      Waiting for the Bonfire of EU directives and seeing the bonfire from my rusty Vauxxal Viva.

  • @lorcanfeely6371
    @lorcanfeely6371 Před 4 dny +2

    Our economy is growing faster due to gold trading... hardly stuff the common man has anything to do with..

  • @acefromspace4376
    @acefromspace4376 Před 4 dny

    also if brexit was success story we would not talk about it now anymore

  • @sjaguartype
    @sjaguartype Před 2 dny

    Well if it costs us anything under £100 billion a year then it’s a bargain, as that is what Bloomberg estimates it is costing us

  • @punditgi
    @punditgi Před 4 dny +7

    Right you are again, Liz. Glad to see that the truth is finally sinking in thanks to the efforts of people like you. Go, Liz Webster! Save British Farming! Save Britain! ❤🎉😊

  • @indibhart5731
    @indibhart5731 Před 4 dny +7

    Can’t wait to get back in and have freedom of movement ❤.

    • @ralphmacchiato3761
      @ralphmacchiato3761 Před 4 dny +5

      Hold your breath.

    • @caballoloco100
      @caballoloco100 Před 4 dny +1

      It wont happen with either the Labour party or the Tories.

    • @RealMash
      @RealMash Před 4 dny +5

      @@caballoloco100 ...because neither can decide to go back. Again, Copenhagen criteria and fulfilling article 49, the we might (!) consider letting you in.
      no matter what the UK discusses internally, it has no bearing to the EUs decision. Get your house in order, fulfill the prerequisites ...no matter what you dream about-that is the only feasible way.

  • @nearlythere9443
    @nearlythere9443 Před 2 dny +1

    I have just returned from 6 weeks in various EU countries, we have friends in the Netherlands. The general feeling amongst people we met was that they feel sympathy for the British people for what they (some) have done to themselves. Those I spoke to would love to see Britain back in the club.

    • @sambaliwingo
      @sambaliwingo Před 2 dny +1

      That's just because they are being polite. People around me here in the EU do not want the Brits back, the mentality is "they get what they deserve". Furthermore no one has any lust for more permanent English psychodrama, rudeness and insults.

    • @ab-ym3bf
      @ab-ym3bf Před 2 dny +1

      So, what kind of people do you meet when on holiday.. Hotelstaff, waitresses.
      People who have to be polite towards their guests.
      Are you really that naive to think that people that do not know you want to talk English politics in depth with you?
      Or rather say a few polite words to get rid of another whining, self obsessed English person?

    • @sambaliwingo
      @sambaliwingo Před 2 dny

      @@ab-ym3bf I have had several instances in several EU countries (including Greece and ITaly) where Brits got laughed at behind their backs in languages they don't understand. What on earth would EU citizens want back with a British return to the EU? More lies, undermining, insults and rudeness? The idyllic ideas that many in the EU had about Britain have long vanished.

    • @ab-ym3bf
      @ab-ym3bf Před 2 dny +2

      @@sambaliwingo as sinead sang in the 1980's : "England's not the mythical land of mme George and roses".
      The perceptions of the UK, like thar of the USA, have been formed through self congratulating propaganda via film and music industry.
      Once you have had to deal extensively with brits, you know better.
      Here in Portugal I have that same experience, and to great hilarity I was able to introduce the German nickname of Inselaffen (Macacos da ilha) locally.

    • @sambaliwingo
      @sambaliwingo Před 2 dny

      @@ab-ym3bf I was once a staunch Anglophile in my naive young years. Now I'm awfully glad England is out and I hope we will never have to deal with them again.

  • @elipa3
    @elipa3 Před 3 dny +1

    Discussing a rejoin is useless. The UK cant rejoin. They would have to make a new application. That will take years, maybe decades. We will talk about a membership in 20, 30 years.

    • @Purple_flower09
      @Purple_flower09 Před 3 dny

      It's worth adding that most people in the UK are not very interested in trying to join the EU again. This channel attracts a specific group of people who mostly all share the same views. British people would prefer to be in the EU but they are not willing to suffer to achieve it.

    • @ab-ym3bf
      @ab-ym3bf Před 2 dny

      But in the meantime the UK will be talking for 20 to 30 years about the same unicorn options of cherry picking this that and the other from the non existent EU menu, if only people vote for the next messiah.

  • @martinbishop2966
    @martinbishop2966 Před 4 dny +1

    As a remainer I would like to go back, however. I have to accept the referendum result despite the dubios nature of the leave campaign. The people behind the leave campaign actively support a criminal like Trump which really says everything about it. ☹️

  • @harrymackintosh1874
    @harrymackintosh1874 Před 4 dny +1

    Wow!!

  • @brucevair-turnbull8082
    @brucevair-turnbull8082 Před 4 dny +2

    Bearded old bloke needs to learn to read a graph. At 1:59 he quotes a graph entitled 'Britain has underperformed its major peers on trade' as evidence of a Brexit success story. The UK line simply wobbles and falls. An upward trend according to him?🤔

  • @michaelbooth2890
    @michaelbooth2890 Před 2 dny

    The old gammon doesn't understand that economy growth is not an indiccator of economy strength. A strong economy does not grow as fast as a weak economy.

  • @MsPaige199
    @MsPaige199 Před 4 dny +3

    Loch.Ness monster
    The Yeti
    Porky parry’s top button shirt done up
    What’s the odd one out?
    Clue: people claim to have seen two of these

  • @dirkdupont5004
    @dirkdupont5004 Před 4 dny +3

    Why has the British economy grown faster than those of France and Germany?
    #1 Legal immigration into Britain has increased the British population by more than 1% per year in recent years.
    #2 The gold stock market went through the roof in 2022. Gold is a safe heaven when there is a threat of war (Ukraine)
    #3 The increased transit of LPG through Great Britain is added to exports
    #1 is unsustainable. The other two add nothing to the economy and therefore should not be used for UK's' 'economic success'. All 3 are partly a consequence of the war in Ukraine, one more than the other

    • @uweinhamburg
      @uweinhamburg Před 4 dny +4

      Most Brits don't understand it - if you do not look at a total GDP but a GDP/head, the UK is still in a recession!

    • @dirkdupont5004
      @dirkdupont5004 Před 4 dny

      @@uweinhamburg Not only that, the war in Ukraine was (and is) used, rightly or wrongly, to explain economic 'setbacks', but if the bare figures are favorable (at least at first glance) for the UK, then that war is nowhere to be seen.
      The hypocrisy is oozing.

  • @nicolass7102
    @nicolass7102 Před 3 dny

    Uk is not united anymore

  • @george150799
    @george150799 Před dnem +1

    When brexiteers mention our economy, for eg exports, they say we are 4th above France Japan and the Dutch, won't they don't tell you is that those figure's are tru, but down to exporting gold, if you take gold out of the equation, we are at best 7th, a drop since brexit.

  • @Stephanie-wf6xr
    @Stephanie-wf6xr Před dnem

    Control of our waters with poo😂😂

  • @Purple_flower09
    @Purple_flower09 Před 3 dny +1

    A bit of honesty about the almost impossible level of difficulty in trying to ask to join the EU again would be only fair. But no, for the 100th time we get the same video saying "we must join".

    • @lizwebstersbf
      @lizwebstersbf  Před 3 dny

      To ensure we get opinion polling which shows the desire rejoin, we have to explain why need to rejoin. Surely this is easy to appreciate?

    • @ab-ym3bf
      @ab-ym3bf Před 2 dny

      ​@@lizwebstersbfOK, so you explain why the UK needs to join, and the general public sees the light and is behind you.
      Than what?
      Than you have to tell them that you have been promising the stars to them by telling them porkies that they could join the SM and CU, but that it is
      a) not up to the UK to decide and
      b) there is no option for 3rd country UK to be a member of the SM and CU.
      Another example of short term thinking the UK by now is world famous for. This makes you sound like the politicians you try to expose for telling porkies.
      And you wonder why the UK makes no progress.

    • @Purple_flower09
      @Purple_flower09 Před dnem

      ​@@lizwebstersbf thank you for your reply. Agreed - we must explain the need to eventually apply to join the EU. But equally we must be honest about how hard and long the journey would be. The Leave campaign was of course based on lies. In building the campaign to apply to join we must be squeaky clean and honest about the challenges.
      A separate point I'd like to make is that language is important. The phrase "apply to join" seems cumbersome but I use it because it respects the process and our friends in the EU. Saying "we must join" is presumptive. We only have a right to ask.

  • @elpresidente8730
    @elpresidente8730 Před 4 dny +1

    I am always wary of Brexiteers cherry picked statistics. As for fishing it doesn't matter how much water you control or how many fish you catch if you cannot sell it all. British fishermen have learned that the hard way. The conversation regarding Brexit is unavoidable if Starmer wants to stabilise the economy. The Brexitards will rail and no doubt invoke the "democratic will of the people" white fighting tooth and nail to deny the British people a say.

  • @graemelake657
    @graemelake657 Před 4 dny

    Gross stupidity is a real issue with uncle Albert

  • @seankelly3774
    @seankelly3774 Před 4 dny

    Another great spot Liz, having to listen to the gammon trotting out the discredited stats.

  • @Mark-wv8ue
    @Mark-wv8ue Před 4 dny

    Pure Brexit Arogance smothered deep in ignorance.

    • @SJG-nr8uj
      @SJG-nr8uj Před 4 dny

      Oh, ignorance, is it? Please tell us what you know about EU fiscal union, EU economic union, EU political union, the unification of member states’ armed forces under command of the European Council, the reckless expansionism of the EU across Eastern Europe, and the unfettered migration into the EU from North Africa and the Middle East, at the EU’s open invitation. It shouldn’t take you long!

  • @user-kf5mn5vn3t
    @user-kf5mn5vn3t Před 4 dny +1

    I'll also remind the Liverpool guy........ How many Food Banks have you got? According to him your living in the Land of Milk and Honey..... Really? Really?

  • @justincharles2332
    @justincharles2332 Před 4 dny +26

    Britain deserves Brexit - it voted for it!

    • @BillyBobJoeSnr
      @BillyBobJoeSnr Před 4 dny +5

      We didn't, why should we suffer because of the foolishness of others ?

    • @ralphmacchiato3761
      @ralphmacchiato3761 Před 4 dny +2

      ​@@BillyBobJoeSnrbecause you forgot to take out the trash.

    • @Geffo555
      @Geffo555 Před 4 dny +3

      Seems a bit too Brexity for an EU citizen.

    • @clarecrawford9677
      @clarecrawford9677 Před 4 dny +6

      Britain did not vote for Brexit. England and Wales did. Scotland and Northern Ireland voted to remain.😊

    • @paologat
      @paologat Před 4 dny +2

      @@clarecrawford9677unfortunately England outvotes Scotland 10:1. Should Scotland regain its sovereignty, set up a hard border with England, and fulfill the Copenhagen criteria, I would be quite happy to have it back in the EU.
      As for NI, the road back is easier, as it only requires an absolute majority of voters in NI and RoI.

  • @fje1948
    @fje1948 Před 4 dny

    Thank you for your hard work Liz.

  • @SonOfViking
    @SonOfViking Před 4 dny +19

    An ignoramus who makes up his own "facts" versus a fantastical wishful thinker who obviously doesn't understand the organisation he now regrets leaving (or hopefully "rejoining" as he naively thinks is the correct phrase to use - as if such a thing legally exists in actual reality). And, as usual in the UK, seen and argued on both sides exclusively in UK-centric economic terms. How is this even a debate?
    If this is the tenor of "public discourse" within the UK regarding its potential participation within an organisation whose founding principles are "freedom, democracy, equality and the rule of law, promoting peace and stability through economic, political and social integration", then any prospect the fantasist will ever get of his wish coming true seems pretty remote, I reckon. The other guy, meanwhile, has simply made himself completely irrelevant to the argument altogether - after all, he can just keep making up his own "facts" whatever reality eventually emerges.
    Why would the EU ever allow such a basket-case of a polity within arm's length of any of its institutions? Sorry, Liz. But it looks like the UK has a very long way to go before any application to join the EU could ever be taken even half seriously by any self-respecting bloc of responsible countries - and, based on current evidence from all available discourse, at the moment it doesn't even understand what the path to that destination actually looks like.

    • @clarecrawford9677
      @clarecrawford9677 Před 4 dny +1

      Please don’t judge the level of debate in the UK based on a performance on GB News. That partly foreign-owned channel was set up to pander to the Brexiteers and, in that sense only. Is doing its job while losing millions of pounds every year.

    • @tommymorrison6478
      @tommymorrison6478 Před 4 dny +1

      Why would they want us back? Because we're the 6th largest economy, that's why. Is the issue seen "exclusively in UK-centric economic terms"? Well, this is the UK so we might be expected to see things in those terms. Obvious really.

    • @SonOfViking
      @SonOfViking Před 4 dny +3

      @@tommymorrison6478 I hear this all the time from British people - as if the "size" of your economy is the only criterion governing whether the other participants in an organisation founded on the principles of "freedom, democracy, equality and the rule of law, promoting peace and stability through economic, political and social integration" would be willing to risk the integrity and point of that project by allowing you again as a member.
      If you cannot contribute to the other elements of the project, and think of the exercise only in terms of what you can get out of it economically yourselves, then in fact - as Donald Tusk recently remarked - the greater the size of your economy as an applicant which fails to understand the organisation and its goals the greater the liability you in fact represent to everyone else. And he has almost 50 years of very real evidence that he is correct in your case that he can point to.
      But it is academic anyway, and you only have to familiarise yourself with the mandated process whereby the Commission is tasked with assessing applicant members and their compliance with the Copenhagen Criteria to see why.
      In the meantime you can also read the EU Parliament's draft resolution on future relations with the UK based on the historical behaviour of that country regarding failing to honour the terms of almost all of its treaties with the EU (while as a member and afterwards), including a consideration of the prospect of the UK ever again applying to become a member, that was produced by that body in June last year and which is now official EU policy towards your country unless parliament itself changes its mind. If you still labour under the illusion that "they need us more than we need them" you may find it salutary to read that text in full.

    • @tommymorrison6478
      @tommymorrison6478 Před 4 dny +2

      @@SonOfViking I never said or implied that size of economy is the only factor governing entry to the EU, nor did I suggest that ""they need us more than we need them". I gave a short, succinct response in the context of a CZcams Comments page. You should bear that in mind...........but you won't. My friend, the chip on your shoulder is huge and it is plain.

    • @SonOfViking
      @SonOfViking Před 4 dny +2

      @@tommymorrison6478 Short? Yes. Succinct? No. Unless of course your point was succinctly to advertise the peculiarly British self-serving and blatantly misguided assumption that the EU would want you "back" at all.
      This is also a CZcams comment.

  • @davewicks1300
    @davewicks1300 Před dnem

    If you find yourself on the same side as Parry, you just know that something is wrong

  • @Ghostrabbit22
    @Ghostrabbit22 Před 2 dny

    Things ain’t so fcuking hot in France , you got pensioners on 370€ a month , the lack of manufacturing industry just like the uk

    • @sambaliwingo
      @sambaliwingo Před 2 dny +2

      🤣 Must be desperate times that your lies are becoming so desperate Brexitard. 🤣

  • @AChapstickOrange
    @AChapstickOrange Před 3 dny

    4:15 King Charles... the Prime Minister (only elected MP, appointed PM)... Lord Cameron (appointed a Lord, appointed a cabinet member)... the whole House of Lords... Whitehall... seriously, the rest of mankind is getting a really tired about being lectured about democracy by the British.

  • @rdreamspeakerisi3266
    @rdreamspeakerisi3266 Před 4 dny +3

    we have just done roll over deals plus when your economy is worse than EU quiet easier for our economy to do better plus yes we control our fish now way harder to sell in the EU and wont change. The best market apart from the UK is the EU the fresher your fish the more money you make selling them. Plus as a way smaller market than EU our trade deals will not be better plus going to take 20 years for our negotating team to even come up to standard of other countries. The Australian and New Zealand deals will kill off a lot our farmers and mean we will need to total rely on outside sorces.

  • @keithwilliams744
    @keithwilliams744 Před 4 dny

    Listening to the Brexit were are sick of experts claiming to be more expert than the experts we were told to ignore is like something out of Monty Python. We have the rights to more waters with dwindling fish stocks and are more reliant on processing plants based in the EU. We have a market for products that has not protections for our industries. We have compounded this by trying to broker trade agreements with nations that have protections on their home grown industries. To claim this will improve over time with no attempt to rectify the core issues isn’t even remotely possible let alone funny. We left the EU where the protections were firmly established and Britain as an individual nation didn’t need to concern themselves with it to a nation that it became one of the single most important issues to sustain and expand the economy and the value of our trading power.

  • @GoodGoneVeryBad
    @GoodGoneVeryBad Před 4 dny

    GDP down 4% per years…. That’s what he says. If this is factual, it’s badddd

  • @johnpolkinghorn5625
    @johnpolkinghorn5625 Před 4 dny

    Gone up faster? Only in percentage terms, use the actual figures and we're doing terribly.

  • @LL-vk9zc
    @LL-vk9zc Před 4 dny +1

    Shouty people are best avoided. Quiet person appears at 04.59.

  • @lestrem11
    @lestrem11 Před 3 dny

    How’s Germany getting on? 🤡😂😵‍💫

    • @user-wf2yq7mb6y
      @user-wf2yq7mb6y Před 3 dny +1

      In Germany the wages are comparable or sometimes higher than in UK. The bills to pay are lower and standards of living in broader terms are higher than in UK.
      How's taking back control of the borders going on in UK? XD

  • @WinstonMelbourne-vt2vt
    @WinstonMelbourne-vt2vt Před 4 dny +6

    Brexit will bring down any government no matter which party it is, it has no upside and must soon come to an end, we all must grow up, The euro is a great currency it's strong and works very well, and will mean more money in everyone's pocket, we were better off when we were in the EU

    • @RealMash
      @RealMash Před 4 dny +2

      But will the EU be better off when you are in? Will the countries be better off? Will the people of the EU are better off? This decision is about the well being of the EU and its people. The UK was a troible maker and snitch to the USA and Russia.
      The UK sabotaged at the USAs command.
      We need to make sure that doesn't happen again.
      And the easiest way for the EU is to keep the UK outside.

  • @georgeryan3310
    @georgeryan3310 Před 4 dny

    The chap with the grey hair will never accept that he was wrong because he was such a great advocate for Brexit and will somebody please point out that he his cherry picking bits of statistics rather than showing the whole picture,no matter what he says and does the facts will always prove him wrong.