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Brexit

Why I Voted to Leave the EU

394 replies

Asprilla11 · 26/06/2016 19:19

So I recently started a thread about the misconceptions many remain voters may have about why people voted leave. I argued that there were many reasons other than immigration and that the majority voted fully understanding what the outcome would mean.

On that thread and many more on MN the remain voters keep asking us WHY we voted and are annoyed when we don't answer in full, they forget that since the result SOME have acted in an aggressive and belittling manner towards us, so why would we feel engaged to reply? Many leave voters have had to spend time defending themselves because we have all been branded thick and racist. We are more than aware some racist people voted to leave in order to pursue their disgusting agenda, most leave voters don't want to be associated with those people and we condemn their stance.

I am willing to say my reasons why I voted leave, even if it means I am attacked for doing so.

EU Commissioners

They are not democratically elected (by EU Citizens) and the President has the final say on any candidate that a member state has put forward. Technically they are accountable to the European Parliament by the fact that the Parliament is able to force the entire Commission to resign through a vote of no confidence. However the Parliament has never done this, but have threatened to do it once. It also needs 2/3 of the Parliament to vote and agree on the reason for the no confidence vote. We can elect MEP's but they have little power over the commissioners.

The commissioners are paid nearly £200,000 per year (some more) and also get generous allowances, benefits and a very good pension. I do not believe the current commission deserve that level of pay, they simply have not earned it, I believe they put their own self interests above EU citizens and I believe they are morally and financially corrupt. If they were worth the salary then the amount would be fine, I just don't think they currently are.

EU Economy

There is very little growth and it is only going to get worse if the Eurozone fully collapses which I feel is a real possibility. Struggling EU nations such as Greece, Spain, Portugal and Italy are in massive debt, suffering with austerity and massive youth unemployment. I don't believe many of the of the other EU nations care about this, as long as the wealth benefits their country then they will pay lip service to those who are less fortunate. I also believe a lot of the benefits of the EU economy and the trade it brings also benefits the wealthier members of society more than the poor, in all of the EU member states.

If the EU had showed they would reform and a new fairer commission was set up which looked at making deals fairer for all EU member states and also looked at immigration in depth (not necessarily changing it) then I would have voted remain without a second thought. However the commission proved what an arrogant bunch they are even before Cameron went to get his 'deal', they won't reform, they don't want to and they don't care who knows it.

UK Economy

The UK will be 6-8 billion pounds better off after no longer paying the EU membership fee, even after the grants we used to receive are taken in to account. However there were several studies that pointed out that the loss in trade will far outweigh the savings from leaving the EU and we will actually be worse off financially. I didn't doubt some of the facts in those studies and I could see how they came to their conclusions, however even those studies have to admit they can't say for certain because nobody knows how quickly we will get new trade agreements with EU member states and how favorably they will be. Additionally although EU membership did not prevent trade deals with the commonwealth and other countries, it did reduce the need and the imagination to. It is only when those deals are in place can you truly say leaving the EU has left us worse or better off. In the short-term we will be worse off, I knew that risk prior to voting.

As a Labour supporter and also someone who is very distrusting of the current Tory Government I can hand on heart easily say that not a single thing Farage, Gove, Johnson and Duncan Smith said I believed at face value. In fact I consider Gove as one of the worst Education ministers ever and IDS I hold responsible for the suicide of some disabled benefit claimants, such an odious man. So believe me the leave MP's definitely didn't impress or influence me!

I did my own research which I always do whenever the Government (any party) state things as 'facts'. I knew the £350 million claim would be wrong (which remain supporters kept shouting was lies) however I also knew the Governments claim that every household in the UK would be £4300 worse off was also wrong, but do you get the leave voters shouting lies? Both sides lied, that is a fact!

Since the crash in 2008 many, many people in the UK (not just the British) have not seen any improvement in their wages or living standards. They have borne the brunt of austerity more than the people who could afford to. The 5th biggest economy in the world and an economy that has recovered and grown still has not brought any benefits to the poor and working class. They didn't consider how leaving the EU would affect their ISA's, Savings, Stocks and Shares because they don't have any! They didn't think about if their child could go to Uni because they would never have been able to afford that anyway. The poor and working class in the UK and the EU don't care if they are a bit worse off for a few more years, they are sick of the wealth that is generated only benefiting the wealthy, this was their chance to be heard.

Immigration

I wasn't going to mention this as it did not play much of a part (if any) in my decision and I also feel like as a leave supporter I have to keep defending myself whenever the word immigration is mentioned, simply because the remain voters keep saying we are all racist.

But here goes.

I worked in the Civil Service from the age of 19 for 15 years. I worked with people of all ages, all religions, all nationalities, LGBT and disabled people too. I matured as an adult in this environment and it undoubtedly made my life richer. I was also a Union Rep and defended colleagues in disciplinary, poor performance/attendance, diversity and disabilities (covered by the Equality Act 2010) meetings and hearings , both british and non-british. Since I left I have kept in touch with former colleagues who are now lifelong friends, some are British, some aren't, it wasn't a factor in whether we became friends or not.

I only mention all of that simply because a lot of remain voters think we have no positive outlook on immigrants and we don't mix in a multi-cultural society. They also think we don't understand the positive impact on the economy migrants (EU and non-EU) have. But actually most leave voters do, immigrants pay far more in to the system than they take out in benefits, that's a long standing, well known fact. There are far more british people who falsely claim benefits compared to immigrants.

Unfortunately I will admit there are parts of society, some of which voted leave who don't understand these truths. Some through lack of education, some through lack of life experience with people of diverse backgrounds and some sadly who are racist. These are the people who already felt poor, cut-off and unheard. UKIP and other politicians preyed on those peoples fears and told them they could help fix their problems.

That is not however the majority of leave supporters, I truly believe that. Most leave supporters have had experiences like mine and we all have experienced nothing but positive things from working and living with immigrants, EU and non-EU.

If the EU could have done one thing with immigration then I wish it gave all EU member states the ability to put a temporary block or cap on EU migration. I say this for the simple fact that the UK and other countries don't have the housing, schools and hospitals to cope with the current UK (not british) population growth, we simply aren't building enough of anything. When you add over 300,000 immigrants to that population growth you start to see the strain it creates.

I think the UK can cope with immigration well above 200,000, when it has the infrastructure in place, until then a temporary reduction or block until the work is done would be a useful tool to have. Alternatively you could look at using builders from the EU countries who could then come and work on those very buildings that are needed.

Finally on immigration, I think Governments in all EU countries need to act more responsibly on where and how immigrants are placed in to communities. Dumping some of the poorest immigrants in the poorest parts of the UK next to communities who are experiencing crime, unemployment and disillusionment with life in general and their prospects, is a disaster waiting to happen, especially when some of those people are known racists.

UK employers, EU employers and landlords in and out of the EU also need to be challenged more on their blatant exploitation of immigrants.

Ok flame away!

OP posts:
SnowBells · 27/06/2016 20:48

Asprilla11

What you're basically hoping is to see this country in ruins. Sorry that's the case. For the EU, the UK's demise has one silver lining... jobs being relocated from London to there. They might get their economic wonder after all (which they will be stealing from the UK if they can). It will happen if you have a hardline stance. No doubt about it.

HSBC set to move 1000 staff to Paris due to Brexit

Firms plan to quit UK as City braces for more post-Brexit losses

Europe’s Startups Reassess Britain After ‘Brexit’

Goodbye Great Britain, Hello Little England.

citroenpresse · 27/06/2016 20:50

What constitutes a 'good deal?' Do you seriously believe Britain has the resources to negotiate complex trading treaties in many different industries with 27 countries? Is regeneration of urban areas with billions of Euro funding not a 'good deal'? Switching (dwindling) economic resources to lawyers and constitutional 'experts' for decades to come is a better deal? Greece is a completely separate case. I don't know what you mean by Italy 'being on the brink'. It's certainly standing up to Germany within the EU and its inventive banking concepts aimed at reforming dinosaur like institutions has won a lot of praise.

SnowBells · 27/06/2016 21:05

I am a little alarmed at the denial that's going on. Seriously.

citroenpresse · 27/06/2016 21:10

What is this THEY (the EU) and us? The jobs are not going 'to the EU' they are going from one EU country (the UK) to a different EU country (Netherlands, Germany, or France seem most likely) as a direct result of BREXIT. As predicted by zillions of business, security and economic people. It took YEARS of diplomacy to build up London as a financial centre and now gone in a trice.

WaitroseTrolley · 27/06/2016 21:14

www.theguardian.com/politics/2016/jun/27/brussels-rejects-boris-johnson-pipe-dream-over-single-market-access

We can't pick and choose what we want.

SnowBells · 27/06/2016 21:21

Were you talking to me, citroen? I'm on your side. Wink

I responded to Asprilla11 - she said the EU (in my mind, we're already out of it, let's face it... that's how Brussels sees us, too) is in turmoil. I'm saying that if these companies move from Britain, the EU might get that long-awaited economic wonder at the cost of the UK.

citroenpresse · 27/06/2016 21:42

Yes I was SnowBells, sorry about that! Financial exodus first but suspect a brain drain in academia and science will follow swiftly too. Chaos all round. Ashamed to be British at the moment.

roundaboutthetown · 27/06/2016 21:45

What we've actually done is harm the whole EU - ie our main trading partners and ourselves. If this had happened at a time of prosperity, that would have been one thing, but we've done it at a time of austerity and instability, which could be calamitous. Why, oh why, do some people think it's better to trade with nations that could easily turn hostile towards us and would happily get one over on us, rather than nations that have bound themselves together so that they aren't allowed to play too dirty? I do think we have thrown ourselves to the wolves and lost hugely valuable protection. However much I respect the intellectual arguments of the Brexiters, I think the reality of what has happened is appalling.

roundaboutthetown · 27/06/2016 21:52

And if the whole EU did fall part as a result and have to start again, would anyone want the UK back in?

SnowBells · 27/06/2016 21:57

I've looked into the 'casualties' thread and realised this blinkered phenomenon is everywhere. People are losing their jobs, families being relocated to other countries - even split apart... and people think they are all lying.

citroenpresse · 27/06/2016 22:09

The EU is not going to fall apart. It's pretty clear the UK has though.

citroenpresse · 27/06/2016 22:23

EU playing hardball - no negotiations or discussions whatsoever until Article 50 is triggered - and that will be that. Who can blame them.

It looks like we will be leaving Europe after a referendum that was full of lies and hate, and the person pressing the button will be a replacement Tory party leader who has never been tested in a general election.

So much for 'taking back control'.

Chris1234567890 · 28/06/2016 00:35

This whole response about leavers 'ignorant' votes has got to stop. This whole 'unsupported' message has got to stop. This continued speculation has got to stop and Ill tell you why.

Ive just caught up with tonights News, and watched David Cameron have a good old chuckle in parliament today. I cant tell you how angry that has made me. Remainers, you should be extremely concerned too.

We are paying DC to act as Prime Minister. He has had an easy ride for so long, whilst I shouldnt be surprised he legged it (despite his word he would respect a referendum result) , hes legged it at the earliest moment he could. Not only today, did he have a good chuckle in the House with his cronies, but he re-iterated his whole 'well I dont support it of course' message.

There is an absolutely fundamental error in issueing that message. Hes flicked 2 fingers up to the electorate.

Yesterday, Philip Hammond, smug number 2, on Robert Preston (is that what hes called?) was clear to state "they voted for it, now they have to live with it". THEY?

Yes Im angry that DC was absolutely the best placed man to take this forwards, but for both sides he was the ONLY man, that could wander into Brussels with a vote in his back pocket saying "Remember me? I was here a few months ago. Well I told you they wouldnt be happy................. Dont want to lose France, Holland? Lets talk"

For those of you that had hoped we could negotiate a decent exit deal, your Prime Minister is rapidly burning that option.
For those who believe Brexit, accepting all your worst doom and gloom speculations, that it couldnt get any worse. Yes it can.

If DC, if the government, if the media, if MN posters, persist in sticking to the 'youve made the wrong decision' message, and refuse to give the electorate the respect they deserve, I can guarantee, civil unrest will follow.

To laugh and joke in parliament, at a time like this, the arrogance and disregard for voters on both sides is even lower than I thought DC could go.

If this continues there will be civil unrest. Boris Johnson is absolutely unacceptable to the north. Indeed, there is no one at this moment, who is able to fill this role. Such is the breed of politician we have apathetically allowed to swan into power. Why have they had an easy ride? Because Merkel has been governing for them.

Civil unrest, will certainly block any attempts to gain a 'soft' exit. And why should leavers be concerned about that? They wont be. The Brexit will simply default to WTO rules. Considering that the vast majority of soft exit options include some form of deal on the single market, dont underestimate leavers saying, bollocks to the single market. Its exactly the restrictions leave voters, in principle, voted to remove. Benefits of a single market become irrelevant. You should be very very concerned about civil unrest.

My message to DC tonight, and all on here, No Mr Cameron, you cannot now believe that remaining is the best for britain. Implementing the wishes of the people, under the best terms possible, is the best for britain. Telling the electorate youre refusing to do so, with such an utter lack of respect, is beneath contempt. Phil Hammond? You voted, YOU can now live with the consequences.

The country is currently galvanised and is clearly divided into 2 camps. Both camps cross all classes, all political beliefs. This is such a dangerous situation, its a tinder box, and our PM is having a good ol chuckle with his cronies.

Sterling crashing? Thats great for export. Interest rates shoot through the roof, thats great for savers. Mortgage rates triple? Thats great for those desperately waiting to get on the housing ladder, as that elusive 50% house price crash finally happens. Dont underestimate the winners that are out there in an economic crisis. I warned of the dangers of the whole 'all racists vote leave' labelling. Be very careful now, just how much and for how long you now ridicule and belittle the electorate. Because yes, it can still get far worse than any ones predicted.

So so angry with westminster today.

SnowBells · 28/06/2016 01:00

Watched Hardtalk. Former Polish Foreign Minister was interviewed. Was at Oxford with Boris Johnson. Very blunt and straightforward talking guy who said that unfortunately, the UK suffered 30 years of anti-Europe propaganda in the media.

As someone who grew up elsewhere, I have to say this is true.

SnowBells · 28/06/2016 01:05

P.S.: It's on BBC iPlayer. Brexiters - you may not care about the EU, but this is how the rest of the EU basically sees us.

SnowBells · 28/06/2016 02:13

Chris1234567890

I expected DC to resign the day we lost. In fact, I think he hinted at that several times, and the morning of the results at 5am, both my husband and I were like, "He's gonna resign." It's a poisoned chalice. It's political suicide for whoever takes it on. You can't expect someone who never wanted Brexit to battle this out for you. That person wouldn't have enough conviction. He bought his successor time, and that's enough. If you think of it, if you want someone to implement Brexit, you need someone who actually passionately believes in it.

DC didn't. And that's not a surprise.

BoJo & Dove will have to do this for you. Of course, BoJo didn't think he would win even the night of the referendum (he said that to someone). He also compared the EU to the Nazis, which has not endeared him to Brussels at all... so you can expect negotiations with him to be fragile.

Merkel has NOT been governing for DC. What do you mean? I always thought that the coalition of the LibDems and the Tories was bloody good, because the LibDems managed to stop the Tories going completely to the right. But no, the UK does not like coalitions. Coalitions are too European for some.

Talking of which... if I ever wanted someone to sort a deal out for me in Europe, it would be Nick Clegg. His European outlook (Dutch background, Spanish wife and he lived in Brussels for a while), multiple languages and calm demeanour would clear quite a few obstacles the Tories will find difficult to remove. But he's obviously a Remainer and he's not in power anyway. TIP: Europeans generally do not take well to gregarious 'personalities' that the British so love. They prefer sanity over pomp.

However, LEAVE would never have gotten a great deal with the EU in the first place. People keep on saying that the EU will bow to the demands of England. I'm not sure people understand this, but the UK's standing as this big economy and financial centre of Europe was only ever possible because it was an English-speaking country in the EU. International companies used us as a gateway to Europe. Not just the banks, but also the car manufacturers further up north. Of course, if we leave the EU, that will be ripped away from us. Those companies will move a lot of their staff. And believe me, the EU knows that. They're pissed off with Britain right now. They will play hardball. Big time.

Mind you... Plaid Cymmro leader Leanne Wood is pushing for independence, so that Wales can join the EU. Yes, THE Wales that voted overwhelmingly for LEAVE. She thinks that Wales would prefer independence from England and being part of the EU to actual Brexit. I think she has woken up to the reality that Wales would sink without the EU. And she actually thinks she can sell this to the Welsh which is bloody believable. All she needs to say is "The EU gave us money that England didn't. Everything was England's fault."

If that actually happened, people will call for the results to be annulled!!!

Sterling crashing? Thats great for export. The UK is not a big country with loads of resources. We typically import materials to produce things, so it works both ways.

Interest rates shoot through the roof, thats great for savers. Unfortunately, the UK is not a saving nation like Germany - they save so much that Merkel is being penalised by the EU for not making the Germans spend more rather than save. The majority of the UK population is in debt. So this argument doesn't work.

Mortgage rates triple? Thats great for those desperately waiting to get on the housing ladder, as that elusive 50% house price crash finally happens. Dont underestimate the winners that are out there in an economic crisis. You mean the young who are utterly pissed off that Brexit happened? Give them a choice between a cheaper house in Little England and opportunites all over Europe, and I can tell you what they'd prefer.

This whole EU referendum was a farce. You must have realised it by now. It was basically Bojo's & Dove's political spin gone wrong, and the people have been had. Brexit was never really on the cards for them. And now, we're in limbo - both LEAVERS and REMAINERS. Sorry, you only realised that now.

HippiePrincess · 28/06/2016 07:13

Chris1234567890
I agree
Excellent point, well made.

SnowBells · 28/06/2016 09:31

Have LEAVE voters actually watched this University of Liverpool video?

I know 'experts' can't be trusted, but this is information about how much BoJo, Dove & Farage actually lied. Dishonesty on an industrial scale.

It's the equivalent of an evolutionary biologist listening to a bunch of creationists tell the public that creation theory is right and evolution is completely wrong. And yet, it's working. It's working.

citroenpresse · 28/06/2016 10:08

Couldn’t agree more about DC belittling the electorate or disrespecting the voters or that civil unrest could be a consequence. Nick Clegg predicted exactly this scenario 2 or 3 years ago and one of the main factors was DC and the Tories’ complete inability to go beyond their own self-interest. Whatever happens to the country, they, personally, will be just fine.

But ‘why have they had an easy ride? Because Merkel has been governing for them…what does that mean? They’ve had an easy ride because there has been no effective opposition and because they are sitting in parliament with their pals in the first place. Benefit and disability cuts? Housing shortages? Unemployment due to underinvestment? Dismantling the NHS? Repressing information about how our country and economy really works? Unfair distribution of wealth? Tory policies – nothing to do with Merkel. The disintegrating economy will hit the poorest hardest – it always does.

The level of information and discussion in the referendum campaign was just appalling. It is difficult to see how expectations of those who voted leave can be met when they were told lies in the first place and it’s not even clear what those expectations are.

There is so much arrogance in the leave camp (Jacob-Rees Mogg was the absolute pits) implying that the EU would be desperate to keep us, we could negotiate a really strong trading position, there may be a period of market unsettlement but everything would be tickety-boo after that. Fantasy land.

SnowBells · 28/06/2016 10:13

I mean seriously... actually considering joining the LibDems. I know they have the advantage of not being a 'main party' (i.e. less responsibility = you can afford to be more idealistic), but the main parties are gone...

citroenpresse · 28/06/2016 10:21

Am with you SnowBells. They were the sanest voices in politics. Hope somehow there will be a new progressive union that includes Green voices as well. Can remember Caroline Lucas on Question Time years ago saying how she would be in favour of a referendum because it would be a chance to show the British people the benefits of being in Europe. Not quite how it played out though...

SnowBells · 28/06/2016 10:52

citroen

I can't believe the one party that seems to have had the most clue about Brexit was the party that had no power over it, really. I mean... #MysticClegg/Nick Clegg's little prediction has been right so far.

citroenpresse · 28/06/2016 10:54

There isn't a single credible leader who 'passionately believes in BREXIT'. On every front - security, economy, health, science, academia - the overwhelming majority was remain. You want Nigel Farage to do it? Someone who STILL couldn't muster enough votes for a seat in parliament last year despite UKIP getting so many seats in Brussels (due to only 35% population voting in the European elections).

roundaboutthetown · 28/06/2016 11:54

We've unleashed racists, the extreme right wing intent on growing inequality and the extreme left wing intent on destroying capitalism, all of whom had different reasons for wanting to leave the EU. The only way to get a leave majority was to stoke all that up to add it to those who had moderate reasons to want to leave, and the fuckwits in power did it. They have guaranteed violence and instability, whether we ultimately stay or leave the EU, as those who make up the leave vote have violently opposing views on what they wish to achieve from it. My only consolation is that maybe this was always going to happen as this world of selfish human beings continued its path of growing massive inequalities and dwindling resources, and it has merely hastened it all. Sad

citroenpresse · 28/06/2016 12:04

If you regret voting LEAVE, write to your MP. This isn't the time for finger-pointing (as a European Commissioner said so wisely on Newsnight last night). Feeling powerless, disenfranchised, excluded, fearful of societal changes, wanting to punish the establishment, yes, get all that. Leaving the EU is not the answer, but electing a British government who serves the British people not its own interests.