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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:
roundaboutthetown · 03/07/2016 18:23

(Addressed to caitlinohara).

caitlinohara · 03/07/2016 19:12

You seem very sure that the EU will learn the error of its ways! I see nothing to suggest that that would be the case. Maybe you're right and it will magically reform, but it seems highly unlikely. Of course, if Brexit were the catalyst for that then you would also have to admit that it was the right result....

citroenpresse · 03/07/2016 19:14

Don't know enough about the Greek debt saga…but it seems like there's now a deal between the Eurozone and IMF. Are austerity measures always wrong? I'm not sure…Greece is 300 billion euros in debt and it's not so difficult to see why Germany, as one of the key players in the bailout, didn't want to cut them more slack given the adventurous accounting that got them into that state in the first place. On the other hand, if (according to the IMF) they hadn't a hope in hell of meeting the conditions without some debt relief, that had to be addressed. What the EU (Eurozone) has not done with Greece is just abandon them. Months and months of frenzied diplomacy, plugging away, reworking rescue plans, working to a resolution.

roundaboutthetown · 03/07/2016 19:42

caitlinohara - yes, I am sure the EU was capable of learning the error of its ways, given that that would be enlightened self-interest... Pulling out at the first sign of the going getting tough is pathetic, weasley and shows no faith whatsoever in the capacity for human beings to work together and learn to compromise with each other for the greater good.

roundaboutthetown · 03/07/2016 19:47

Do you foresee that the UK pulling out of the EU will help solve the migrant crisis or Greek austerity, caitlinohara, or do you think that the UK's actions are taking up a lot of time and energy when there are, in all honesty, more important things to think about right now?

roundaboutthetown · 03/07/2016 19:54

I can't help thinking the rest of the world must be wondering what on earth this self-indulgent country is doing, worrying about a perceived lack of democracy amongst some of the most democratic countries in the world. Try living in Syria at the moment if you want to see how powerlessness and a lack of democracy actually works.

Roonerspism · 03/07/2016 20:14

round we haven't pulled out at the first sign of trouble. The U.K. has been going on a divergent track for years. I say it daily - thank fuck we didn't join the Eurozone.

Cameron realised the mess he was in when he could not commit to lowering immigration and so began the negotiations with the EU earlier this year. I am amazed he got what he did and I have no doubt he knew even then that this was his only chance for change.

Juncker confirmed the day before the vote "no more change". For years, EU documents talked about the "state of nation" and increasing integration. We would have been forced into economic synergies eventually.

The writing was on the wall for me. It was now or never.

caitlinohara · 03/07/2016 20:30

Do you foresee that the UK pulling out of the EU will help solve the migrant crisis or Greek austerity No. I didn't see us being in it having much of a positive effect either though. i was using the Greek crisis as an example of the ruthlessness and inequality of the EU and how dysfunctional it is, that's all. And no I don't think austerity is the answer citroen, that's the Tory answer, and the EU answer - their ethos is one and the same.

citroenpresse · 03/07/2016 20:34

Cameron was in trouble when he couldn't commit to lowering immigration…in trouble with whom? The Tory Party? Voters who might switch to UKIP? The British public who he carried on lying to (i.e. suppressing immigration figures). Maybe people who think that leaving the EU will lower immigration should pay more attention to Theresa May who at least is telling it how it is. It won't be possible to see changes in immigration for a while.

citroenpresse · 03/07/2016 20:45

The biggest fantasy in the leave campaign is that our little sovereign state will be able to get favourable deals with our allies and main trading partners in Europe, no problem. Wow, all that money saved and we can spend it ALL on ourselves. Seriously, how DO you think that has gone down in Europe!

HippiePrincess · 03/07/2016 20:54

motheroffourdragons
I sad that 70% of the people I know who voted remain in the EU are Tory voters.
That might well be different from your own experience, or even the national average, but it is not nonsense. It is true.

caitlinohara · 03/07/2016 20:54

citroen I have no idea. I doubt Brussels will be happy about it, certainly. But individual countries who do a lot of trade with us won't want to see that disappear so I imagine they will want to negotiate. Pretty sure we buy a fair amount of German cars, for a start.

caitlinohara · 03/07/2016 20:58

Hippie The Ashcroft poll has it at 42% of Tories voted to Leave, 63% of Labour voters. So although more likely to vote Leave if you are a Tory voter, it's not exactly decisive either way. I think that's what made it so interesting - I know how I vote in a GE, but I really didn't know with this one.

citroenpresse · 03/07/2016 21:19

We've turned our back on Europe. I don't know what you mean by 'Brussels' - there are 28 countries in the EU. Who's to say whether Croatia feels the same as Sweden? Or that a single country has a united voice…that's not how the EU works.

What is clear to all of them though is that Britain has turned its back on Europe. Maybe the UK is an important trading partner for many of them, but its not looking an attractive place to be at the moment.

roundaboutthetown · 03/07/2016 21:51

Well, Leave campaigners have gone on a lot about all those other non-EU countries we could trade with instead of the EU. Why does the EU need us and our trade so much more than we apparently think we need it? What do we have to trade that couldn't be moved elsewhere reasonably quickly? I'm sure German car makers could find other markets if they had to, just like we could make multiple trade deals at the drop of a hat elsewhere... Grin

roundaboutthetown · 03/07/2016 22:05

I don't think, when we were being told about how much the EU cost us, that we were taking into account how much profit this country made from companies and investors being attracted to the UK be virtue of the fact we are part of the EU. Maybe leaving the EU will be good for us on the basis we will be forced to improve our infrastructure to ever look as appealing again. Then again, maybe we'll make the EU look positively swift footed by spending years researching whether we need new airports, or what sorts of power stations we should build until our lights go out.

citroenpresse · 03/07/2016 22:37

Look at Nigel Farage! He's been in Europe for YEARS and knows all about how to communicate in nuanced ways with our allies and friends that show Britain is a sophisticated global leader!

What IS this disconnection that assumes 'Brussels' speaks with one voice? The spending ethos in all 28 countries is NOT the same. Yes, the Tories have had an austerity budget and it has hit the poorest hardest. That's the Tories for you - nothing to do with the EU. Every Euro in the EU budget (unlike Nigel Farage's expenditure) is accounted for. It has to go through the European Parliament. Including an allocation for dealing with refugees (4 billion).

Motheroffourdragons · 03/07/2016 22:48

This reply has been withdrawn

This has been withdrawn by MNHQ on behalf of the poster.

citroenpresse · 03/07/2016 22:49

An editorial about BREXIT in Dutch newspaper Volkskrant, concluded 'Go Get 'Em' (Dutch newspapers love throwing in a bit of Engels). Inward investment bureaus across Europe will be writing copy right now about how the UK faces an uncertain future for an uncertain period of time and how if you want a secure place in the EU and access to its single market, come to Amsterdam/Paris/Berlin etc.

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