
the EU's survival depends on them giving us a worse deal than current members, and those third parties who have negotiated access arrangements.
Edit: and before you mention net contributions, the politics of this outweighs the balance sheet
( , Wed 13 Dec 2017, 11:10, Reply)

assuming the Remain vote holds of course
(1) To revoke Article 50, thereby keeping Britain in the EU
(The Remain vote)
(2) To reject the UK-EU deal and leave the EU
(The die-hard UKIP and Lab leave vote)
(3) To accept the UK-EU deal and leave the EU
(The Tory Leave vote - potentially some Remainers depending on the "deal")
( , Wed 13 Dec 2017, 11:38, Reply)

Which is why the public were asked this question.
Should the United Kingdom remain a member of the European Union or leave the European Union?
Remain a member of the European Union []
Leave the European Union[]
The public gave their answer and now it's up to elected officials to make it work.
If they feel they cannot make it work then they need to stand down and make way for ones that can.
( , Wed 13 Dec 2017, 12:10, Reply)

not just: "I want them to get the fuck on with it" but a decent poll into the erosion of Remain on the basis of persuasion to the arguments of Leave -
representing a change of mind - if there is such a poll.
( , Wed 13 Dec 2017, 12:31, Reply)

( , Wed 13 Dec 2017, 12:42, Reply)

Some things can't be made to work - at least, not in the way that the people clamouring for them want.
Simply insisting that someone else can do the impossible is... well, a touch dogmatic.
( , Wed 13 Dec 2017, 13:55, Reply)

( , Wed 13 Dec 2017, 14:12, Reply)

then the only way to win an election is to promise the impossible, and claim you will have done it by yesterday.
( , Wed 13 Dec 2017, 17:27, Reply)