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Posted

Research shows that:

 

- Leaving the EU’s customs union will give the UK the chance to strike new trade deals, bolstering exports. Depending on how many the UK secures, the boost to GDP from these new agreements varies between £8.5 billion and £19.8 billion.

- Scrapping some burdensome EU regulations – while still protecting workers’ rights – could save British businesses between £1 billion and £4 billion a year.

- The UK will save over £10 billion a year (net) from not having to pay into the EU budget anymore.

- This paper therefore calculates that the total benefits of leaving the EU’s single market and custom union could be between £20.1bn and £38.6bn a year.

- The Government has already confirmed that it will protect workers’ rights and that it will continue to provide funding to bodies and businesses currently in receipt of EU funds. Taking these decisions together with a conservative estimate of the number of countries the UK will be able to strike free trade deals with, Change Britain estimates the likely boost to the UK economy from leaving the EU’s single market and customs union is nearly £24 billion a year or £450 million a week.

 

 

hajde da se drogiramo

nek se oči sjaje

Posted

Reklama u poslednjem broju Economist-a:

 

1379a14cfcb6b90fdc114c0eeb00bc55.jpg

 

 

Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

Posted

hajde da se drogiramo

nek se oči sjaje

:D

Posted

 

 

hajde da se drogiramo

nek se oči sjaje

 

:lol:

Posted

 

 

hajde da se drogiramo

nek se oči sjaje

 

:lolol:

Posted

još malo comic relief-a
 
 

 

There is now an official ‘Brexit Street’ and it leads absolutely nowhere



ad_230084762.jpg?quality=80&strip=all&st
What a useful road (Picture: Metro.co.uk/Google Maps)

 

There is now an official ‘Brexit Street’ in France – and, perhaps unsurprisingly, it leads nowhere.

The street was renamed by Julien Sanchez, the rightwing Front National mayor of the southern town of Beaucaire, to commemorate ‘the decision of the sovereign British people’.
Sanchez, 33, announced his paean to the EU referendum by tweeting: ‘Beaucaire Council creates “Brexit Street” to pay tribute to the British sovereign people’s choice.’
 


 
Naturally, people were quick to point out that the street now known as ‘Rue du Brexit’ didn’t actually go anywhere – instead forcing drivers into an endless, frustrating loop of futility.
Others responded saying the road is in the middle of an industrial estate, in a particularly grim part of town.
 
And obviously, people were just generally not happy about Sanchez using slang in a street name – ‘and an Anglicism to boot’.
Sanchez, however, stands by his unintentionally very apt decision.
‘It’s a street in an industrial zone, and isn’t going to shake up the daily lives of Beaucaire residents,’ he told France Bleu radio.

 

Posted

:D

 

:lol:

 

:lolol:

kako li ste samo uspeli da iskoristite razlicite smajlije....to je ono sto nam nedostaje

Posted

To, to... Neka cvjeta hiljadu cvjetova!

Posted

Oh™

 

 

The UK's ambassador to the EU, Sir Ivan Rogers, has resigned.

 

Sir Ivan, appointed to the job by David Cameron in 2013, had been expected to play a key role in Brexit talks expected to start within months.

The government said Sir Ivan had quit early so a successor could be in place before negotiations start.

Last month the BBC revealed he had privately told ministers a UK-EU trade deal might take 10 years to finalise, sparking criticism from some MPs.

 

 

Sir Ivan Rogers’ shock resignation as ambassador to the European Union is a “wilful and total destruction of EU expertise”, according to the former top civil servant at the Treasury.

In an unusually candid intervention, the former permanent secretary Sir Nicholas MacPherson said Rogers’ departure was a huge loss and the latest in a string of EU experts to be frozen out of the higher echelons of government, including Rogers’ predecessor, Jon Cunliffe, and Tom Scholar, previously the prime minister’s adviser on European issues who is now permanent secretary at the Treasury.

 

Posted

Whatevz, da North spake

 

Forget mushy peas with your haddock - at "Frydays" in Burnley, Liz Pugh serves up a large portion of political opinion with lunch.

A firm believer in Brexit, she is in good company in the Lancashire town, where 67% of residents voted to leave the EU.

And she says people are getting restless - they're waiting for something to happen.

"I think it's opened a sleeping giant if I'm honest, I think it's awakened up a lot of people," Ms Pugh said.
This Burnley fish and chip shop owner gives her view on Brexit

And what if Brexit doesn't happen?

She told me: "Oh, there'll be mass riots. There'll be hysteria. There could even be a civil war. The country has used its voice and if the Government ignores what the people have said then there is going to be a civil war. There is going to be."

 

Posted (edited)

Sky Data interviewed a nationally representative sample of 1,638 Sky customers online 26-28 November 2016. Data are weighted to the profile of the population.

MHrOFLy.png

 

Članak:

http://news.sky.com/story/brexit-britain-sky-data-poll-reveals-a-nation-divided-10713985

 

PDF sa detaljnim rezultatima podeljenim po starosnim grupama, regionima, glasanju na prošlim izborima i glasanju na referendumu...:

http://interactive.news.sky.com/OXX_ND_TABS.pdf

Edited by vememah
Posted

Većina rezultata uopšte nije tesna, tako da to nije mnogo bitno.

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