As someone put it: Jo Cox would disagree.
Is Britain about to leave the EU?
According to a poll in today’s Mail on Sunday, there is a 53-47 lead for those wanting to leave the EU.
Britain is due to have a referendum on whether we should remain in the EU or not. It must be held by 2017, but the latest estimate is that we could have it as early as this June. I suspect if polls continue this way Cameron will delay the poll as long as possible.
He has been negotiating some special terms for Britain regarding control of the movement of some migrants, an opt-out from the ‘ever closer union’ clause, various guarantees to protect non-Euro members, and not allowing welfare for immigrants for the first few years.
It appears some sort of agreement might be reached at an EU meeting in February. I wonder how this poll will affect the negotiations – will they give us all we want (which let’s face it is very small cheese) or will they say, there’s no point, just let Britain go?
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/art...sacre-Cologne-sex-attacks-migrant-crisis.html

I have always thought the EU was just a Swedish game with the latest version being the most sophisticated and interesting. I must have got it wrong somewhere.
The bookie odds were always a bit strange on the Brexit question. UK polls are fairly bad relative to US ones and usually bias left when they are wrong - for instance, they were off by a lot in 1992 and 2015. The polls coming up to the referendum showed a narrow edge for Leave before the Cox assassination, but the oddsmakers never had Leave above the low 40s, IIRC. After Cox was killed, the polls shifted to a very slight Remain lead of 2-3 points, and the odds were dropped to ~15%, far below the odds a 2-3 point lead would usually imply. I have no idea why the bookies were so confident in Remain despite the very close polls and Britain's spotty polling history.
I'm also dissapointed in the youth for supporting the EU. They're getting way too right-wing these days.
It will strongly depend on how British economy will do, after (and if) they leave.Anyway I hope this somehow will lead to more countries leaving EU
It all depends on how (if ?) the other crisises will be resolved. The UK was the main blocker of EU progression, now that's it's out and there is an impetum for change, we might see either progression or regression.I personally hope this is the shake-up that will allow true progress towards integration to begin, possibly in a two-speed model where countries who want to go through with it can move faster than more reticent ones. I am a hopeless Europhile.
There is this weird disconnect from anti-EU, which tend to think that the EU is all for big finance, bank and globalization, while their own governments are for worker's rights. They tend to forget that it's the UK which vetoed the Tobin Tax while the EU wanted it (ironic isn't it ?).Huurrr?
Hahahaha. Sorry, but I think Cornwall can suck it. I'm sure there's a British version of Farm Boy somewhere now talking about how the liberal elite is screwing the rural voters over again, but this time they really didn't seem to have thought it through. Maybe making a more informed decision, at least grasping the immediate consequences of your decision, would have required too much dangerous intellect.
There is this weird disconnect from anti-EU, which tend to think that the EU is all for big finance, bank and globalization, while their own governments are for worker's rights. They tend to forget that it's the UK which vetoed the Tobin Tax while the EU wanted it (ironic isn't it ?).
American youth might be moving politically to the left, but in Europe they're moving to the right
There is this weird disconnect from anti-EU, which tend to think that the EU is all for big finance, bank and globalization, while their own governments are for worker's rights. They tend to forget that it's the UK which vetoed the Tobin Tax while the EU wanted it (ironic isn't it ?).
Yeah, because a bunch of separate countries are going to have much better worker's rights when they all race to the bottom between each other to attract companies, than a big block which can at least impose some basic rights.I do not believe that
but the thing is that the only way to make it reality is to get rid of EU
But remember, it's the evil non-democratic EU which is against people's rights !That likely won't soon be happening in the UK then. Our government generously fought against all working-hours legislation and secured a waiver on the 48 hrs a week clause