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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:
Believeitornot · 26/06/2016 23:16

And that's mainly why I voted remain - because "leave" is not enough for me. I need to know how they'd leave and provide safeguards for the positive aspects of EU membership.

Instead we just got vague promises from the leave camp.

GoodLoveShinesBrightly · 26/06/2016 23:24

lljkk since Thursday it has slumped to the 6th largest economy. Great work there!

Asprilla11 · 26/06/2016 23:28

MyMacMess

"I am convinced that for a large number of Brexit voters European migrants, especially from Easter Europe, are one of the top emotive reason to have voted out."

I don't doubt some (maybe a lot) of leave voters did so because of EU immigration and no other reason. However some will have been through fear and lack of education/information rather than malice. But sadly malice and racism were the only reasons for some voters, I can't defend them I'm afraid.

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Jinxysbaby · 26/06/2016 23:32

I voted out. Because I don't trust David Cameron nd immigration

user1466802224 · 26/06/2016 23:39

I was chatting with a young remainer the other day about my decision to vote leave. I could see the confusion on her face when I explained my views about the true nature of the EU - she had assumed, until that point, that all remainers were all racists/similar. Of course, being young, she wouldn't know that the traditional left wing position is anti-EU. We seem to have forgotten this in the UK and, bizarrely I think (given the high profile of anti-EU political greats like Tony Benn and Michael Foot), now associate Euro-scepticism with small mindedness. I actually think the EU is venal. It is profoundly undemocratic, has a neo-liberal agenda and crushes dissent (Greece, Portugal). I drew on this traditional, left wing position when voting (it's a bit long, but it's well described here ). I honestly had no idea about the official Brexit campaign (no telly, don't use FB, didn't see campaign material - do listen to R4 all day really am v boring ) I was surprised it had been hijacked by racist elements.

Jinxysbaby · 26/06/2016 23:47

I'm sick of the racist bullshit my hubby is a immigrant nd he also voted leave

MyMacMess · 26/06/2016 23:53

"I'm sick of the racist bullshit my hubby is a immigrant nd he also voted leave"

That doesn't mean he is not racist necessarily.

jm90914 · 27/06/2016 00:02

I've resisted the words racist and xenophobic throughout this whole thing. I've never once used those words against a person who believed in leaving.

I'm from a town with a population of around 100,000. I've encountered causal racism and xenophobia countless times in my 35 years. In this town that is 99.5% white British, I've also constantly heard immigrants blamed for the poor standard of living there and the lack of jobs.

I don't know what the rest of the country is like. I don't even know everyone in this small town. But I can assure you that I've constantly experienced racism and xenophobia there and a lot of people there will indeed have cast their vote as such.

I don't think anyone ever suggested all leave voters were racist, but there is a not insignificant number of people on your side of the argument who do hold views that are abhorrent the rest of us.

It's something that reasonable minded leave voters don't want to talk about (and I can understand why, because you don't want to unfairly be tarred with the same brush - I get it), but we must talk about it. It's important for goodness sake!

user1466802224 · 27/06/2016 00:14

jm, it's not that I don't want to talk about it (we chat about racism a bit in our household cause my DC are not white and my eldest has experienced abuse in the past) but it's not an issue that was relevant to my decision to vote leave. I am sorry that you've experienced abuse, but I cannot take responsibility for the actions of idiots (or I wouldn't be able to vote according to my conscience/judgement).

Asprilla11 · 27/06/2016 00:15

jm90914

"It's something that reasonable minded leave voters don't want to talk about (and I can understand why, because you don't want to unfairly be tarred with the same brush - I get it), but we must talk about it. It's important for goodness sake!"

I 100% agree! I despise groups like Britain First and most of UKIP. I would be happy if they were banned for hate speech.

In terms of the public, I think some racism is due to a lack of a wider education, lack of working in jobs that have a diverse workforce, lack of prospects and being poor. Some of those people are easy to manipulate and UKIP and others scared them and then tricked in to voting leave.

Some of those people could be convinced that their opinions are wrong and hurtful with the right training/education and wider life experiences.

The obvious racist and far right people will never change, they are mostly a lost cause and should be ignored. I am not sure the number has grown, it was simply their perfect opportunity to make their vile message heard.

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Suzeyshoes · 27/06/2016 00:30

Some interesting, well said points asprilla but i feel like you focus, like many brexiters, on what you want to run away from as opposed to a concrete plan for what we will concretely gain or lose, which might explain other posters surprise that you hadn't thought about a post Brexit plan.

This seems to be part of many brexiters thought process and to me is totally irresponsible. My decision was based precisely on what we would gain/lose by leaving and how realistic it was to hope to achieve these.

With regards to the 'losses', which unfortunately we are all now bring faced with, I'm interested to know what you think of:

-The loss of our wonderful, positive, patchwork society and the division, hostility and racism that has been stirred up which, though you may not agree with, you must take some responsibility for.
-the massive amount of job losses that are on the cards due to business moving elsewhere.
-the loss of opportunities for our children: travelling, studying, living abroad, finding work anywhere they want to?

These are just a few things but I'm interested to know if you think, like other brexiters, that they are simply collateral damage, short term pain, a sacrifice on behalf of a bigger ideology? There is real pain being felt by so many and your reasons feel devoid of emotion. 😓

SnowBells · 27/06/2016 03:48

Asprilla11

I'm coming from the other thread, and have just read your piece. I understand quite a few of your concerns, but I have a few comments on a few things which are startling to me.

EU Commissioners
This is one big porky LEAVE campaigners kept on talking about... and ironically, some of them were members of the House of Lords. Hmm Why are you so worried about 28 unelected EU Commissioners in Brussels when we have 800 unelected members in the House of Lords that can revise and amend law? The House of Lords is 8 times the size of the US Senate, and larger than the US Congress (535)! That's HUGE.

I don't know about you, but isn't it a bit hypocritical to complain about the 28 unelected officials in Brussels, when we have 800 sitting right here... in Westminster?!

If I was really concerned about democracy and unelected officials, I think I'd tackle the 800 on my home turf first, before I going to Brussels and say, "Hey, about those unelected peeps..."

Because those people in Brussels may call me out on that bluff.

UK Economy
Your numbers do not include the amount of money the UK will lose through Brexit. We have a lot of debt that we pay interest on. In 2012, that amounted to roughly GBP43 billion and it will have risen since (expected to be around GBP60 billion now). You'll probably agree that the EU number is a drop in the ocean compared to this. Now just imagine the interest being charged rising on what is a humongous debt you or I hopefully will never find on our credit cards.

Because just like with the credit cards you and I may have in our wallets, the interest rate is likely going to depend on our credit rating. Credit agencies warned they would have to lower our credit rating in case of Brexit. And they have. Rather than wait for the actual Brexit to happen, the credit agencies thought the uncertainty of this happening was enough. Moodys already downgraded us from 'stable' to 'negative'. The others all announced they will downgrade us in due course. So, you can expect those interest rate payments to go up by quite a bit.

Then, you have to factor in all the setbacks to industry. The European Medicine Agency that approves drugs for the EU and employs some of the world's leading experts is currently located in Canary Wharf. Needless to say, they now face the prospect of having to relocate around 800 staff (I'm guessing some of them will be moved, others will be let go). You will lose around 800 taxpayers plus all the income the UK market gains from hosting the agency (GBP19.4 million in rent per year, etc.). The pharmaceutical industry, which has been firmly on the REMAIN camp employs 220,000 people in the UK. At the moment, they say they are committed to the UK, but let's don't you think they may prefer to be closer to wherever the drugs agency is?

The City of London (which contributes a lot to the Exchequer) is in massive danger. If we leave the EU, we are likely going to lose passporting rights, so banks will have to start shifting staff elsewhere to the EU (don't be fooled - banks may currently say that it's business as usual, but quite unlike the government, they do have contingency plans in place which they will have planned months in advance). In fact, HSBC plans seem to be out in the open already. Frankfurt, Paris, Dublin, Amsterdam... they are all rubbing their hands. They're far cheaper than London, too! Again - you'll lose taxpayers (who probably get paid a lot), etc.

There are also the clearing houses, which the ECB already tried to shift to the continent before by creating laws that made it mandatory for them to be based in the Eurozone. The UK successfully took the case the European Court of Justice, but many people believe this was only possible because they were given leniency as a member of the EU. These clearing houses bring in billions.

People may say, "Oh, they are just bankers. We don't want them anyway." Well, these people may employ nannies, people maintaining their gardens, they may use a dry cleaner... and that all-important coffee shop. This kind of thing will impact so many people down the line.

The more innovative companies decide to move out of Britain, the less innovation happens inside. It's a vicious circle. Science and technology will be hit anyway (loads of funding there), and the small clusters of science hubs we've worked so hard to build may slowly disappear into the ether once funding dries up. A woman told me once that her entire career in cancer research would not have been possible without EU funding (which is on top of the 'rebate' we get to our membership fee).

This is just the top of the iceberg. The above are just a few examples. Add the complete set of impacts and it will very likely give you an annual number that's MUCH higher than what we've been paying to the EU each year. This has been known to a lot of businesses and employees within those businesses. Sadly, none of the campaigns hardly mentioned these 'opportunity costs'.

SnowBells · 27/06/2016 03:52

Oh... and yes... the rich aren't the ones who will suffer from this.

SnowBells · 27/06/2016 04:19

And third time lucky...

I actually have nothing against unelected officials. They can sometimes serve as the voice of reason when elected officials get swept away and try to be popular. A whole host of stupidly short-sighted things were done in the past because elected officials tried to appease the electorate in order to get re-elected.

I didn't really comment on immigration. To me, a bit of competition is healthy... plus, if we do go through with Brexit and the economy tanks... who would want to come here? Nobody.

MrsBlackthorn · 27/06/2016 05:45

Since Thursday it has slumped to the 6th largest economy. Great work there!

And when Scotland go, as they inevitably will now, we lose enough of our GDP to fall out of the G7 altogether.

Believeitornot · 27/06/2016 06:25

I agree about unelected officials. Plus we did have the chance to vote and engage with our MEPs. I've no issue with the House of Lords as they do plenty of good and offer balance.

I also agree re the opportunity cost. We are a small country. Our economy is stronger because of our links to the EU. It will be smaller now.

The issue is that none of your leave arguments really seem that robust. And actually there's still the lack of an exit plan which your not really addressed?

Yes the EU has flaws but by voting out we've lost our opportunity to tackle it.

Yes we have a massive problem with people feeling marginalised. Then why didn't more people stand up and vote in the general election? Say what you like but it makes a massive difference if everyone votes. Even if they spoil their papers or vote for a minority party. It still counts.

The EUreferendum has given cover to racists and bigots. I'm just so sad to be in this country now.

fourmummy · 27/06/2016 06:41

The EUreferendum has given cover to racists and bigots Why do people keep on saying this? We have no idea of the reasons why people voted just as others wouldn't think to presume to understand why someone else voted Remain. Leavers may have voted for reasons not privy to anyone else. Honestly. Tu, tut. Also, racism and xenophobia have become quite possibly the very worst things that could befall a human being's character . Oh, and where were the tantrums, tears and foot-stamping when manufacturing jobs left these shores aided and abetted by the EU? It's all reaching insane proportions and people really need to get a grip.

tabulahrasa · 27/06/2016 06:51

"Why do people keep on saying this?"

Because it has, the leave campaigns were racist, it's given legitimacy to racist views, the minority of people who want to send foreigners home now think 52% of voters agree with them. I'm very very sure that's not actually the case, but denying that there's any racism instead of actually denouncing it when it's happening allows it to flourish.

fourmummy · 27/06/2016 07:13

tabula You did not address a single point in my post:

a) How can anyone possibly know the reasons for someone else's voting?
b) Why is racism so much worse than any other 'ism', or indeed, anything else period?
c) Where was the outrage when British manufacturing jobs moved to other countries with the aid of EU grants?

Suzeyshoes · 27/06/2016 07:19

Exactly tabulahrasa. What is of grave concern is that many leavers cannot make the connection between their vote, be it racially motivated or not, and the racial hatred that has been stoked since the beginning of the campaign. The racists are rubbing their hands with smug glee at 'winning' right now. They feel legitimised and powerful.
Again, an apparent inability by leavers to think beyond the immediate gains of a leave vote and to the wider reaching impact of their vote.

babybythesea · 27/06/2016 07:21

Really good points Snowbells.
I also know someone who is in cancer research, also all funded by the EU. He's not sure what will happen. Either the money will dry up and the research will stop. Or he'll be able to negotiate to move his work to an EU country. Either way, it's not a good outlook for British science, or our universities and their input into cutting edge research.
Best case scenario is that the funding is replaced by UK govt funding but that's about as likely as Cornwall continuing to get their millions while the NHS also receives its promised funding ....

tabulahrasa · 27/06/2016 07:31

"You did not address a single point in my post:"

Because they weren't meaningful.

a) it's irrelevant, we know the racists voted for racist reasons because they're openly saying so. Anybody else's reasons aren't relevant as far as racism goes, but, not shutting down the racism gives it validity.

b) it's not worse than any other bias or prejudice, but they haven't just been given legitimacy with national campaigns and a vote that to the racist minority confirms that the country agrees with them.

c) there was, did you not notice? and it has nothing to do with the rest of your post.

fourmummy · 27/06/2016 07:33

The racists are rubbing their hands with smug glee at 'winning' right now. They feel legitimised and powerful. Presumption to know what others are thinking and feeling, combined with the blinkered narrowing of everything down to racism are what lost Remainers the referendum.

tabulahrasa · 27/06/2016 07:41

"Presumption to know what others are thinking and feeling"

Which bit do you think is wrong?

That there are a small minority of leave voters who voted for racist reasons?

That they're happy they won?

Because they're all over social media celebrating about how at last they can get rid of foreigners and take their country back.

It's hardly presumption when people are actually saying it.

Suzeyshoes · 27/06/2016 07:41

fourmummy If you read my comment correctly you'll see that it was about how the leave vote has fuelled racial hatred , whether or not the vote was was cast for racial reasons.
So not blinkered, just pointing out that this is a massive side effect of the vote which unfortunately we are all going to have to deal with. If you read my other posts I talk about the many, many other issues such as job losses, loss of rights in the working place and so on.

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