We haven't left yet.
Yes, the pre and post referendum falls represent uncertainty and worry about Brexit. A no-deal Brexit IMO will consolidate those fears and result in a significant devaluation of the pound.
We haven't left yet.
Got it. Anything bad that happened before the referendum was due to worries about Brexit. Anything bad that's happened since the referendum is due to Brexit. Anything good that's happened before or after the referendum is 'despite Brexit.'
Yeah, a few days ago Emily Thornberry said that they would like to be in a similar customs union to the one we have now
http://www.lbc.co.uk/radio/presenters/iain-dale/emily-thornberry-labour-customs-union-brexit
More detail expected in a Corbyn speech tomorrow.
In his speech on Monday, Mr Corbyn will say the EU "is not the root of all our problems and leaving it will not solve all our problems".
"The truth is more down to earth and it's in our hands. Brexit is what we make of it together, the priorities and choices we make in the negotiations."
But Liam Fox said Labour's position did not make sense.

World standards are the way forward. Much better than parochial standards.
Doesn't matter to me where the standards come from as long as they have worldwide adoption. The SI system was mostly the invention of the French and it's the best worldwide system we have.Just so long as those world standards come from the UK huh? You wouldn't want world standards coming from some large economic bloc from continental Europe would you?
I notice you didn't object to the 'All bad things are due to Brexit' part.
After the post Brexit collapse of the pound, it's the affordability that's the issue
Just so long as those world standards come from the UK huh? You wouldn't want world standards coming from some large economic bloc from continental Europe would you?
Members
The current members of CENELEC are: Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Croatia, Cyprus, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Iceland, Ireland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Macedonia, Malta, the Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Spain, Slovakia, Slovenia, Sweden, Switzerland, Turkey and the United Kingdom.
Affiliate members
Albania, Belarus, Bosnia/Herzegovina, Egypt, Georgia, Israel, Jordan, Libya, Moldova, Montenegro, Morocco, Serbia, Tunisia and Ukraine are currently "affiliate members" with a view to becoming full members.
Other[edit]
CENELEC has cooperation agreements with: Canada, China, Japan. South Korea, Russia and informal agreement with the USA.[
But they don't.
European standards bodies (like European patents) are =/= EU.
eg Electrical standards
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/European_Committee_for_Electrotechnical_Standardization
Even if it was coming from the EU.... I fail to see how leaving the EU would help create/furthering the implementation of global standards.
So a collapse of the Good Friday Agreement it is then and a return to the 'Troubles'
In which case I assume you're dumping your UK investments and investing in Euros?![]()
But the warnings were ignored and the Conservative leadership instead chose to appease the hardcore Brexiteers, obsessed with the ideological purity of their experiment and — in some cases — openly willing to lose an election, if that’s the price of pursuing it.
Careful what you wish for
None of the arguments advanced by Brexiteer leaders this morning stack up.
They say we forgo the distant prospect of our own trade deals; yet the decision to align “voluntarily” with EU product rules renders impossible the prospect of deals radically different from the ones the Europeans themselves would do.
They say Labour is betraying its core supporters, as if the voters of Port Talbot voted Brexit because they want a more ambitious free-trade deal with China.
They say the poorest will lose out, when the economic analysis commissioned by Brexit ministers revealed the poorest parts of the country will be hit hardest if we leave a customs union.
They say Mr Corbyn is abandoning his manifesto commitment, when the Tories have abandoned their entire manifesto (how’s the work on that social care policy coming along?).
They say “tariff-free trade” with Europe is a U-turn, when that was exactly what Theresa May used to promise.
Now the Tory Brexiteers threaten the so-called “rebels” trying to save their party from further economic mistakes, with a motion of confidence in the leadership if they don’t fall into line.
That’s a bit rich from people who spent a lifetime rebelling — and they forget that under the new rules, losing a confidence motion doesn’t trigger a general election. They should be careful what they wish for.
At the Lancaster House speech a year ago, the option of membership of a customs union was kept open by the Prime Minister. Last week it was formally closed.
The result is an open goal for Labour — and surprise, surprise, they just kicked the ball into the back of it.
George Osbourne puts the boot in
https://www.standard.co.uk/comment/...have-handed-labour-an-open-goal-a3775721.html