ChatterBank3 mins ago
Well, Well, Well!
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.//In a global race, can we really justify the huge number of expensive peripheral European institutions? Can we justify a commission that gets ever larger? Can we carry on with an organisation that has a multibillion pound budget but not enough focus on controlling spending and shutting down programmes that haven't worked?//
David Cameron.
Git.
David Cameron.
Git.
//We have the character of an island nation: independent, forthright, passionate in defence of our sovereignty. We can no more change this British sensibility than we can drain the English Channel. And because of this sensibility, we come to the European Union with a frame of mind that is more practical than emotional.//
David Cameron.
Git
David Cameron.
Git
//People feel that the EU is heading in a direction that they never signed up to. They resent the interference in our national life by what they see as unnecessary rules and regulation. And they wonder what the point of it all is. Put simply, many ask 'why can't we just have what we voted to join - a common market?' //
David Cameron.
Git
David Cameron.
Git
//Taken as a whole, Europe's share of world output is projected to fall by almost a third in the next two decades. This is the competitiveness challenge - and much of our weakness in meeting it is self-inflicted. Complex rules restricting our labour markets are not some naturally occurring phenomenon.//
David Cameron.
Git
David Cameron.
Git
"Brexit has "turned out less badly than we first thought", David Cameron has said."
Who are the "we" in his quotation? Most of the people I know (about 95% of whom voted to leave) did not believe (when it eventually happens) it would be bad. However it turns out the control of matters which successive UK governments have acceded to unelected foreign civil servants will be returned to the UK Parliament. How can that be bad?
Who are the "we" in his quotation? Most of the people I know (about 95% of whom voted to leave) did not believe (when it eventually happens) it would be bad. However it turns out the control of matters which successive UK governments have acceded to unelected foreign civil servants will be returned to the UK Parliament. How can that be bad?