Theresa goes for option 4.

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Just shows that it's how you look at the problem, which determines which picture you show,
 
took a long time for her to admit it.




None of the Quitters on here would, either.
 
Poor old Bragadeer is one of the RWRs who spends much more of his time moaning on GD than anywhere else.

So unlike me in at least three respects.
 
Poor old Bragadeer is one of the RWRs who spends much more of his time moaning on GD than anywhere else.

So unlike me in at least three respects.


What are YOU moaning about?
Your leader sturgeon will give you indyref2 and you can vote for independence and rejoin your beloved eu.
If they'll have you. :D
 
Anyone notice how BBC News have been reporting almost daily how the £ has fallen since June 23, but failed to mention on their 6 o'clock news yesterday that TM's speech caused it to jump significantly?
 
Anyone notice how BBC News have been reporting almost daily how the £ has fallen since June 23, but failed to mention on their 6 o'clock news yesterday that TM's speech caused it to jump significantly?

You are 100% wrong

It is in the broadcast in the usual place.

Listen to it here.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b088b8d3#play

Maybe you should try harder not to publish false propaganda.
 
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I can certainly see how the pound has done since the Brexit vote. Shown in the BBC website.

chart


and here it is in the last 24 hours

chart


Maybe you were having a biscuit and didn't hear it. Or maybe you are repeating a rumour your saw, without checking it.

Additionally, the 5pm report on 17th Jan http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-38648388 said:

" The UK's benchmark share index lost ground as the pound surged following Theresa May's speech on Brexit.

The
FTSE 100 share index had already been trading lower, but dropped further as the pound strengthened, and was down 106.72 points at 7,220.38 by the close.

For multinational firms on the FTSE 100, a stronger pound means profits earned overseas are worth less when they are converted back into sterling.

Sterling soared back above the $1.23 mark following Mrs May's speech.

The pound had already been trading higher, but took off during the speech and throughout the afternoon to close up nearly 2.9%
against the dollar, or three and a half cents, at $1.2392 for the day as a whole.


Against the euro, the pound was up 1.83% at 1.157 euros
 
It's been reported that today she said "No deal is better than a bad deal".

Does that mean she thinks the best we can get is a bad deal?
Probably not what she meant but that is what she said.
 
Maybe it was a swipe at Cameron. He walked away with a bad deal. Instead of doing what he should have done.
Walk away with no deal and champion the leave campaign.
And he'd probably still be in power today.
But then he didn't have the mettle.
 
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