Terry - Somerset
Established Member
Brexit has happened - whether the decision was rational or not is now academic. A purely personal view - it was foolish - the benefits illusory and the risks very evident.
Implementation was impacted by the pandemic. Progress on the transition with Europe, wider international scene, and even domestic issues inevitably slowed materially.
Brexit date was 31st January 2020 - over 4 years ago. The pandemic broke in March/April 2020 and impacted any negotiations for at least a year until vaccines were rolled out and governments able to re-focus in more normal conditions on other issues.
We were sold the illusion that Brexit would deliver material benefits almost without delay - clearly unrealistic. Few/no explicit measures were agreed to evidence success over any timescale - eg: UK economic performance, value of new trade deals to be signed, real sovereignty benefits etc.
We have now had at least two, and arguably up to three years to resolve transition issues. This has evidently not been wholly successful.
I would be pleased to be corrected by those who supported Brexit with a list of solid benefits now evident, and the plan over the next few years to evidence with hindsight its success rather than abject failure.
Implementation was impacted by the pandemic. Progress on the transition with Europe, wider international scene, and even domestic issues inevitably slowed materially.
Brexit date was 31st January 2020 - over 4 years ago. The pandemic broke in March/April 2020 and impacted any negotiations for at least a year until vaccines were rolled out and governments able to re-focus in more normal conditions on other issues.
We were sold the illusion that Brexit would deliver material benefits almost without delay - clearly unrealistic. Few/no explicit measures were agreed to evidence success over any timescale - eg: UK economic performance, value of new trade deals to be signed, real sovereignty benefits etc.
We have now had at least two, and arguably up to three years to resolve transition issues. This has evidently not been wholly successful.
I would be pleased to be corrected by those who supported Brexit with a list of solid benefits now evident, and the plan over the next few years to evidence with hindsight its success rather than abject failure.