gloswhite wrote:My point XM is that their electorate wanted a specific outcome, and they have interpreted that instruction in a way that does not reflect the original request. It is not democratic, and has damaged this country far more than if they had just accepted it, (and negotiate further when the new talks began).
I accept they have a mind of their own, and should use it, however, the way they have conducted themselves with this issue, (all parties), they have made a much bigger problem for years to come, and nobody wins. Standing on your principles is always a costly exercise, but to do it at the cost of your countries standing in the world just isn't good enough.
I don't believe for one second that those who voted for Leave "wanted a specific outcome" as has been so eloquently argued by Hipster. The vague concept put to the electorate invariably meant that the Leave campaign garnered a huge amounts of votes from a wide range of voters who were united in the concept of "leaving the EU", but were and are still divided in how it should be achieved and what they think a post EU Britain should be.
As for our country's "standing in the world", we are a laughing stock already and have already taken a battering financially with far worse to come, but that is in part the fault of the politicians who were left with the unenviable task of reinterpreting what people actually voted for above and beyond the tired cliche, and then underlining their incompetence by playing politics and poor negotiation. Equally it is the fault of the
Brexit concept itself which is internationally viewed as economic suicide thereby undermining confidence in the markets. And unfortunately, in a capitalist dominated world, confidence in the economy is a cornerstone of actual value.
The politicians have had a shocker, but the current situation isn't entirely their fault.