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posted by on Thursday March 30 2017, @07:14AM   Printer-friendly
from the Brexit-Means-Brexit dept.

http://www.bbc.com/news/uk-politics-39431428

The UK Government has officially notified the EU that they are invoking Article 50. This begins the 2-year timer for the UK to leave the EU.

In a statement in the Commons, [Prime Minister Teresa] May said: "Today the government acts on the democratic will of the British people and it acts too on the clear and convincing position of this House."

She added: "The Article 50 process is now under way and in accordance with the wishes of the British people the United Kingdom is leaving the European Union.

"This is an historic moment from which there can be no turning back."


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  • (Score: 2) by zocalo on Thursday March 30 2017, @08:05PM

    by zocalo (302) on Thursday March 30 2017, @08:05PM (#486709)
    Yeah, I think the realities are starting to bite now that the £350m/wk figure has been totally kicked into the weeds and the rhetoric is pointing more and more towards either a hard exit or a no-deal and WTO defaults. Almost everyone in the UK that was relying on EU subsidies seems to be somehow expecting the government to be able to keep paying those subsidies post Brexit, which basically means a bail-out from the taxpayer's purse post-2019. Yep; let's raise taxes so those who don't have a viable business model can stay afloat rather than try and fix the broken business models and become competetive - so much for even trying to fund the NHS then, huh?

    Today's news had a piece on Welsh sheep farmers - many of whom voted "Leave", despite the EU being currently where more than 50% of their lambs get sold to - that pretty much summed that up to a T. Only one seemed to be actively thinking about new markets and business models; the rest were all doom and gloom if the subsidies were to stop, which is currently due to occur in 2020. Maybe that was a representative sample, maybe it wasn't, but it does indicate that at least some people are starting to question the implications of their decision now that a hard exit seems more likely - albeit probably too late to do much about it unless reality bites hard enough for enough people to make an Article 50 U-turn a non-suicidal option for the Conservatives, and given the number of Eurosceptics in the party, that's going to have to be an *awfully* hard bite.
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