The report came up with a scenario for growth if the UK had stayed inside the EU, and compared it to forecasts the Office for Budget Responsibility made in March last year.
I don't think these stories are "designed" to do anything in particular; they're just reporting on reality.
It's no more than a story about "a building has burned down" is "designed" to make arsonists think about what they've done. Sometimes it's just about reporting the facts.
And in any case, Leave voters aren't a monolithic group. They run the gamut from "die hard UKIP hardcore eurosceptics" to "I just wanted to give David Cameron a bloody nose". There's a significant group of Leave voters for whom "Brexit has cost us lots of money" is an interesting story with cut through.
Honest question: did people voting for Brexit even know what they were actually voting for? I recall that the top Google search in the UK the day after they passed the bill(?) for Brexit was “what is brexit”.
Remain voter. I voted for an idea. I have absolutely no idea about the logistical challenges, the financial aspects or anything with regards to Brexit, and I would bet that the vast majority of people would (or should) say the same.
Brexit wasn't something that should have gone to a public vote, it's just too big a question to reduce down to 'leave or remain'.
Citizens assembly would have been a significantly better device for sorting this stuff out, but that wouldn't have appeased the Tory Party, and Cameron never dreamed it would go against him, and it would have taken significantly longer to get an answer...even if it was one that would have given us a genuine answer that we could move forward with.
Ultimately we asked a country of people, many of which had spent years being fucked by the establishment to vote for something heavily favoured by the establishment...and then got surprised when they decided to stick it to them by voting the other way.
At the time I was kinda wondering why they asked the general public to vote on the topic of brexit.
So few of the populace are qualified make an informed decision about this kind of thing. I am not qualified. None of my family and friends are either. Why are you asking us?
A lot of leave voters were so sure that remain would win that they disregarded the negative consequences because they wouldn't actually happen. They voted leave to show that they weren't happy with the status quo.
I push back against this idea because many of those people that voted for Brexit were already being left behind financially. If you were getting repeatedly punched in the face, maybe you'd be willing to vote to get kicked in the stomach instead.
Yes, I voted remain but certain stories - not necessarily this one - is just pandering to remainers. There was an article a few years ago which drew out loads of spurious correlations from surveys to make leave voters look stupid, i.e. "Leave voters are less likely to wear fresh underpants".
Maybe it was supposed to be light hearted but it looked like punching down to me.
I don't think it's punching down as much as it's just reporting stuff that's happening. Pointing out the Brexit is a disaster isn't calling people stupid it's calling the whole idea stupid. Which it was, and which it is.
I wish I could find the video about some seafood business owner who was spending so much more money paying to ship out the mussels and other live seafood to the EU that she was having to sell her livestock on her farm to pay all the additional paperwork, she still didn't want to admit that she regretted her exit vote. She was selling one cow at a time to try and stay afloat but couldn't admit her mistake.
Economists and analysts at Cambridge Econometrics - commissioned by London's mayor, Sadiq Khan - have modelled how the UK's economy would have acted were it still in the European Union.
Shyamoli Patel, principal economist at Cambridge Econometrics, said: "Our study reveals that London's economy would have grown faster if Brexit hadn't taken place.
Looking ahead, we project that Brexit will continue to have an impact on the UK and London economies in the medium term."
Mr Khan is set to use the report to make the case for a closer relationship with Europe on Thursday evening at Mansion House.
Mr Khan will add: "The cost of Brexit crisis can only be solved if we take a mature approach and if we are open to improving our trading arrangements with our European neighbours.
With a general election looming, Brexit will be an issue used to attack Labour and its leader Sir Keir Starmer, who backed a second referendum.
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