Abernathy wrote: ↑Sun Feb 02, 2025 7:54 pm
I do take your point, but that’s all part of The Big Lie. The fact is that the legal status of the 2016 referendum was that it was non-binding. In Labour’s case, politically they arguably had no choice but to go along with the “will of the people” bollocks, but only because of the relentless perpetration of The Big Lie. It’s a mistake that Labour feels the need to continue with even now that it is in government with every single measure of opinion for the last five years indicating a desire to reverse the mistake of leaving the EU.
Labour's recognizing Brexit happened, nothing more. It's not continuing with anything, it's rebuilding the relationship and trying to improve the deal. Trouble is that the Continuity Remain people have become as dogmatic as the Brexit hard men were. If you don't immediately concede one of the EU's main negotiating aims, you're basically Nigel Farage. I've even seen people apparently of the liberal left attacking the UK for having a better policy on marine conservation than the EU. This is the sort of thing that comes out in the wash when various things are discussed at once.
The trouble with "people regret Brexit stuff" is that these polls (like the Referendum itself) tend not to measure trade offs. Would the EU allow a Schengen opt out? If not. that's a pretty major political headache right off. I think it's reasonable to assume we wouldn't get it.