Thundercrack85
Avenger
- Joined
- Sep 2, 2009
- Messages
- 21,668
- Reaction score
- 8
- Points
- 33
Maybe he'll join a less controversial party.
He's always stepping down though. I think this is the 3rd time.
He said he is stepping down for good this time.
Farage could be lying and just taking a back seat to see how things fall after the referendum which is what I think Boris is doing.

I don't think he'd want to and I don't think they'd want him.Maybe he'll join a less controversial party.
t:Maybe he'll join a less controversial party.
Haha yep. You play those games (if you really have to) behind the scenes so that people don't find out . The obvious way he did it was just silly.
http://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/brexit-towns-see-their-factories-shut-xdsls56slTowns that voted overwhelmingly in favour of leaving the EU are among the first victims of post-Brexit manufacturing job losses.
Last week Forterra, one of Britain’s biggest brick makers, said it would mothball plants in Accrington and Claughton, both in Lancashire, ahead of a potential downturn in construction. The towns are in boroughs that voted 66% and 63%, respectively, for Brexit.
Dear ************,
You recently signed the petition “EU Referendum Rules triggering a 2nd EU Referendum”:
The Petitions Committee has decided to schedule a House of Commons debate on this petition. The debate will take place on 5 September at 4.30pm in Westminster Hall, the second debating chamber of the House of Commons. The debate will be opened by Ian Blackford MP.
The Committee has decided that the huge number of people signing this petition means that it should be debated by MPs. The Petitions Committee would like to make clear that, in scheduling this debate, they are not supporting the call for a second referendum. The debate will allow MPs to put forward a range of views on behalf of their constituents. At the end of the debate, a Government Minister will respond to the points raised.
A debate in Westminster Hall does not have the power to change the law, and won’t end with the House of Commons deciding whether or not to have a second referendum. Moreover, the petition – which was opened on 25 May, well before the referendum – calls for the referendum rules to be changed. It is now too late for the rules to be changed retrospectively. It will be up to the Government to decide whether it wants to start the process of agreeing a new law for a second referendum.
Thanks,
The Petitions team
UK Government and Parliament