As for your last sentence Dave, I think Ca-moron probably reckons he's well shot of the situation after baling out. To be fair to him, his position had become a 'Damned if you do; damned if you don't' situation, possibly partly because of his own lack of political nous. His last couple of months in office became a real 'Sword of Damocles' over his Premiership.
I'm in complete agreement with the rest of your piece and I find the present situation has taken on a strangeness I can't really explain. I think there may be a feeling abroad that things are okay now that the dust has settled; that the world hasn't ended and our lives are continuing as normal, so this 'Brexit' thing hasn't really been so bad.
Unfortunately, I don't believe the present situation will stay that way for very long and I feel sure there will be adverse consequence further down the road. Many will do the ostrich thing and hope anything bad or dangerous passes them by but sooner or later, we will need to live outside of a mutual-interest federation and walk the high wire without a safety net. Had we not p'd off our neighbours in the two large states just across the channel, we may have been able to manage that with skill and care. Because we have p'd them off, I suspect they will not pass up any opportunity for some schadenfreude.
Tom
Do you not think that the massive delays at Dover,due supposedly to increased security as a result of the recent terrorist attacks are mainly a protest.
For gods sake we are an island,it is more difficult to get weapons into our country than mainland Europe. Why would a terrorist go through all the difficulty of getting weapons into the UK and then go through the risk of shipping them out again through Dover. When he can buy what he likes in the Ukraine and ship overland with minimal risk.
The French sent one security guy over to Dover on one of the busiest weekends of the year,just to cause maximum disruption,it was an anti-UK protest,probably anti-Brexit.
If they were so concerned about arms into France they should have closed the motorways and back roads from Belgium,Switzerland and Italy,but that would have disrupted mainly their own people.
It is the French being French and we might as well get used to it,because they will do similar every time the Brexit negotiations dont go their way.
I am told by informed sources(got that from the Mail)that the French have a way of controlling immigration,they get a migrant applicant to fill a 37 page form,all in French,which has to be handed into an office in Lyon,which is only open alternate Thursdays,not including Saints days....I exaggerate but the principle is there,we in the UK appear to play the game fair,as do the Germans.
KudosDave