8.5m+ leave voters have no financial stake in the UK?
Where does that figure come from?
8.5m+ leave voters have no financial stake in the UK?
It would be a mistake to hold one before the Labour party have got their house in order.
He said a majority of leavers. There were 17.4m leave votes, so a majority will start at just over half.Where does that figure come from?
What really irks is that the majority of leavers had no financial stake in the UK economy according to the Ashcroft poll. What difference will it make to them therefore whether the economy goes breasts up or not?
How can it be right that a section of British society that had no financial stake in said society voted to take us out of the EU and land the country and possibly the world in a global recession which could lead to enormous social unrest.
The POLL makes striking reading.
He said a majority of leavers. There were 17.4m leave votes, so a majority will start at just over half.
Feel free to explain.Who was your Maths teacher at school. You will have to drill down a bit more than that.
By a Democratic vote, that's how, or should they have been excluded?
Feel free to explain.
Follow the quote chain. I really can't put it simpler than:It wasn't me that plucked nothing from nothing it was you?
He said a majority of leavers. There were 17.4m leave votes, so a majority will start at just over half.
By a Democratic vote, that's how, or should they have been excluded?
FTSE250 is down by ~10% measured in other currencies than GBP. This basically tells us that global markets as a whole have adjusted their valuation for risk-corrected profit expectations of british businesses down by about 10%.Is this the first actual hard economic data since Brexit?
Why is this relevant?
Nate
I suspect the economy will be rough for the next few years, but once we're out of the EU and start to benefit from free trade with other countries, I could see things improving a lot.
The current economic news shouldn't come as a surprise to anyone, I think we all expected economic shock as a result of Brexit. But I'd actually say that things have (touch wood) been better than I expected so far. I was reading estimates of Sterling dropping 30% before the vote, but right now it's more like 10%.
I suspect the economy will be rough for the next few years, but once we're out of the EU and start to benefit from free trade with other countries, I could see things improving a lot.
so can you please tell me when Kenya, Mongolia and Ecuador will buy our expensive products or need our financial services?
Or do you mean the countries we already had trade deals with (that were inside the EU and out)... that will be less favourable now out of a big trading block
Sorry..... but your deluded to think things will improve a lot.... especially not in the next 20 so years
Old story, been an investigation for a while, even before she was given the IMF job. But hey it is an excuse to add a pro Brexit angle.