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If you named a labour MP I could tell you whether they are leave or remain. Labour's policy has been pretty clear for a while now, they want no deal brexit off the table and want the brexit date to be pushed back, they then want a general election and one of their policies will be a new referendum, they will negotiate a new deal and put new deal vs remain on the ballot.
The Libdems simply want to revoke Article 50.
Can you please come and explain that 150 people we've made redundant and the other 400+ who will be made redundant over the next 36 months! Plus hundreds more in our supply chain.
Our new factory is now under construction in Eastern Europe and all of our contracts will transfer by 2023. We export around 75% of our product to German & French automotive companies, their contracts are now have a clause stipulating the product must be made within the EU. The message was/is very clear, if you want to retain their business then transfer manufacturing to within the EU. No "uncertainty" decision made.
I have the unpleasant job of of winding down the profitable UK facility and managing the creation of the EE facility.
Labour don't want to alienate the 17.4 million people who voted to leave, many of them traditional Labour voters from areas that have been failed by politicians and have seen their livelihoods sold off or closed down because it just wasn't cost effective-The question as always, Cost effective for who?
Corbyn is a real left alternative, he understands that alot of the working class people who voted to leave aren't simply uneducated, racist or ignorant, they've just had enough, and when offerred the opportunity to 'protest' through the ballot box plenty of them took the opportunity. This mess is down to the political and business elite. As for the EU, i did vote to stay in it but i'm no fan of it and it's failed Neo-liberal policies.
What you are basically admitting there, is the EU has become a tyranny, that ties up countries for life once they join. Any that have the audacity to want to leave and be a bit more independent, must face dire consequences.
That is not the fault of folk like me who voted to leave, and still want to leave.
What happens to the workers you’ve already made redundant and the UK factory your about to close, if Brexit gets stalled again and is eventually stopped.?
All existing contracts will remain in UK until end of life, last one 2023, all replacement contracts starting in 2022 commence in EE. The factory will now close regardless of whatever the future Brexit course takes.
We moved the major contract from Japan to UK in 2017 due to the "must be made in EU clause", we now have to move that into an EU country.
It's soul destroying, I spent the last 18 years pulling in manufacturing contracts from Czech, Hungary, Thailand, China, Japan & Mexico, quadrupled the size of the business, employed 300 extra staff and it will all be gone in a few years time.
Nope, I disagree and I think you are completely wrong.
I think you over-estimate the ability of management teams who proved to be failures; the drag that massive (rising) rental costs have on retailers with declining revenues; and the weight that a massive debt puts on a company's balance sheet.
There will always be a straw that breaks the camel's back but that doesn't add any credence to the argument that Brexit caused an outdated, poorly run travel agent to go bust because it simply didn't. I think you are suggesting that people held off booking foreign holidays; and/or fewer foreign holidays were booked, because of the devaluation of Sterling and/or tightening of discretionary spend by UK consumers in light of general Brexit uncertainty. That may have some impact on immediate cashflow and possibly turnover, but other companies I can think of are significantly increasing their package holiday offering so clearly there is confidence out there that Brits still want and will pay for their foreign trips, it's just that they don't want to do that with Thomas Cook any more. When you last thought of booking a flight or a holiday, did you think to yourself "I'd better pop into town to speak to Thomas Cook"? And even if you did, what do you think that the 18-30 year olds do when they want to book a holiday?
There is a place for travel agents, but mid-market is not it. It's not fair to blame Brexit for this one.
The company decided to put the EU clause in. Presumably because it helped them in some way and being in the EU is 'better'.
You appear to be saying that we shouldn't have a situation where one place is better than the other, but because we do then we should leave the better place.
It may appear to you that that is what I’m saying, but actually what I’m saying is that the EU is like the worse kind of loan shark out there.
Come and tie yourself up in knots with us, doesn’t matter if your up to your balls in debt, and it will be all candy floss and marshmallows.
That is until the day you actually have the audacity to want to leave!!
On a football related note, tough times ahead for Wolves?
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/sport/sp...ky-escape.html
One of the major German automotive companies.
I don’t know the exact number as they were able to backfill with a new Japanese contract, whereas we’re unable to do that.
We have received zero from the EU to build on EE. We’ve obviously gone through a competitive tendering process and the decision was made on a multitude of criteria but we’ve not asked for or received any EU money.
Having a quick look of TCG a few months ago and losing out after buying shares, I would say they were always destined to fail when their assets weren’t worth what they thought.
They are just a brand and put too high a value on something intangible. The debts would have never been cleared.