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JuliaHB1's profile
Julia Hartley-Brewer
Julia Hartley-Brewer
Julia Hartley-Brewer
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@JuliaHB1

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Julia Hartley-BrewerVerified account

@JuliaHB1

@talkRADIO Breakfast Show presenter 6.30am-10am Mon-Fri. Journalist, broadcaster, after-dinner speaker, awards host. Preferred pronoun: she/her imperial majesty

London
Joined January 2012

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    1. Robert Colvile‏Verified account @rcolvile Mar 24
      • Report Tweet

      There is lots of fascinating stuff in this @YouGov poll, but among the most glaring is the fact that absolutely no one wants Norway Plus/Common Market 2.0 - because they rightly see it as the worst of all worlds. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C4zPEmRufMU …pic.twitter.com/ODayeOPpvx

      38 replies 118 retweets 212 likes
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    2. Robert Colvile‏Verified account @rcolvile Mar 24
      • Report Tweet

      Brexiteers think it doesn't deliver Brexit. (Freedom of movement, rule-taking, big payments to the EU etc.) And Remainers think it's crappy version of EU membership. And you know what? Both of them are right.

      7 replies 27 retweets 87 likes
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    3. Robert Colvile‏Verified account @rcolvile Mar 24
      • Report Tweet

      This is one reason why it's so hard to find a Brexit solution. Because the natural instinct is to find a compromise halfway between the two positions - except that this compromise removes many of the advantages of EU membership without offering compensating opportunities...

      33 replies 52 retweets 151 likes
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      Julia Hartley-Brewer‏Verified account @JuliaHB1 Mar 24
      • Report Tweet
      Replying to @rcolvile

      I don’t understand that instinct to compromise. The whole point of holding a referendum in the first place was that there isn’t a compromise position. Leave won. There’s no reason why Remain should get a say at all.

      9:29 AM - 24 Mar 2019
      • 114 Retweets
      • 311 Likes
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      77 replies 114 retweets 311 likes
        1. New conversation
        2. Robert Colvile‏Verified account @rcolvile Mar 24
          • Report Tweet
          Replying to @JuliaHB1

          I disagree! In a 52-48 vote there’s a need for consensus if at all possible. But not for the sake of it...

          25 replies 5 retweets 48 likes
        3. Julia Hartley-Brewer‏Verified account @JuliaHB1 Mar 24
          • Report Tweet
          Replying to @rcolvile

          I don’t see why 52-48 is any different to 80-20. It was win or lose.

          23 replies 22 retweets 102 likes
        4. Paul Goldsmith‏ @PaulGoldsmith73 Mar 24
          • Report Tweet
          Replying to @JuliaHB1 @rcolvile

          Explains much of your output over the past three years @JuliaHB1, but we are a representative democracy and one of their roles is to protect the minority from the tyranny of the majority. If a Labour MP wins a seat should they never speak to a Tory voter in their constituency?

          1 reply 0 retweets 3 likes
        5. Julia Hartley-Brewer‏Verified account @JuliaHB1 Mar 24
          • Report Tweet
          Replying to @PaulGoldsmith73 @rcolvile

          That’s not remotely the same thing. The correct analogy would be if a Labour MP wins with a small majority, should they be expected to vote for Tory policies or maybe do a job share with their rival candidate?

          2 replies 0 retweets 5 likes
        6. Jonathan Hopper‏ @DooHopper Mar 24
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          Replying to @JuliaHB1 @PaulGoldsmith73 @rcolvile

          Err the coalition government in 2010

          1 reply 0 retweets 2 likes
        7. Julia Hartley-Brewer‏Verified account @JuliaHB1 Mar 24
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          Replying to @DooHopper @PaulGoldsmith73 @rcolvile

          Coalition govts mean parties do deals to agree a combined set of policies. General elections are not binary decisions. Many different options. Not the same as a binary referendum vote.

          3 replies 0 retweets 0 likes
        8. 1 more reply
        1. paul jones‏ @pauljones190866 Mar 24
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          Replying to @JuliaHB1 @pixiesheena @rcolvile

          Agreed and even if we are forced to endure another people’s vote. Why would Remain be on there that was defeated in 2016.

          0 replies 2 retweets 10 likes
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        1. New conversation
        2. David 🔶#LibtardTraitor Bingham Esq 🇪🇺  🇬🇧‏ @bingaddick Mar 24
          • Report Tweet
          Replying to @JuliaHB1 @rcolvile

          The problem was holding a referendum where the outcome was winning or losing not what happens next. So the Leave Campaigns energised a broad front of concerns that would be "solved" by leaving. This is Iraq War approach. Winning the battles with no plan to what happens next 1/

          1 reply 0 retweets 5 likes
        3. David 🔶#LibtardTraitor Bingham Esq 🇪🇺  🇬🇧‏ @bingaddick Mar 24
          • Report Tweet
          Replying to @bingaddick @JuliaHB1 @rcolvile

          The difference here is that we can pause, we can negotiate, we can ask again & we don't have to leap if the majority don't want to. Just "leaving" is what those who told us it would be easy and everything would be great is all they have left now. 2/

          1 reply 0 retweets 1 like
        4. David 🔶#LibtardTraitor Bingham Esq 🇪🇺  🇬🇧‏ @bingaddick Mar 24
          • Report Tweet
          Replying to @bingaddick @JuliaHB1 @rcolvile

          "It may be shit but at least its the shit people voted for". It's the Piers Morgan approach - we survived the war so we'll survive again. The problem is MPs have duties to the whole of their constituents not just the 26% who voted to leave. They have the ultimate responsiblity 3/

          2 replies 0 retweets 4 likes
        5. David 🔶#LibtardTraitor Bingham Esq 🇪🇺  🇬🇧‏ @bingaddick Mar 24
          • Report Tweet
          Replying to @bingaddick @JuliaHB1 @rcolvile

          The biggest lie now used is that Parlmnt passed the decision to the people. IT DID NOT. The Govt said it would implement. It has tried. Parlmnt decides & voted it down. Now the adults need to take over, stop this before the good ship Tory Canyon aka the UK hits the rocks. 4/pic.twitter.com/lUOyz5fEi9

          2 replies 0 retweets 2 likes
        6. Battzy‏ @Fred79172142 Mar 24
          • Report Tweet
          Replying to @bingaddick @JuliaHB1 @rcolvile

          And - as always - you only hold this 'objective' view because you were on the losing side.

          0 replies 0 retweets 1 like
        7. End of conversation
        1. New conversation
        2. Joanna Louisa #BorisBrexit‏ @JoannaLePut Mar 24
          • Report Tweet
          Replying to @JuliaHB1 @rcolvile

          I wonder what compromise position would have been sought to appease Brexiters had Remain won.. 🤔

          2 replies 0 retweets 6 likes
        3. Frederic, Viscount Marescaux  🇬🇧 🇯🇲 🇺🇸‏ @LordMarescaux Mar 24
          • Report Tweet
          Replying to @JoannaLePut @JuliaHB1 @rcolvile

          Further opt outs, like previous British governments managed to get.

          0 replies 0 retweets 5 likes
        4. End of conversation
        1. New conversation
        2. Richard‏ @ariichN7 Mar 24
          • Report Tweet
          Replying to @JuliaHB1 @rcolvile

          Except that 17% of leave voters prefer the SM/CU option. If the 2016 referendum had a specifically defined leave option, I would agree with you, but it didn't. Leave needed to be defined afterwards and now even leave voters can't agree on what it should be.

          1 reply 0 retweets 6 likes
        3. Richard‏ @ariichN7 Mar 24
          • Report Tweet
          Replying to @ariichN7 @JuliaHB1 @rcolvile

          And that's to say nothing of completely insane suggestion that 48% of people who voted in 2016 should not be represented at all.

          0 replies 0 retweets 6 likes
        4. End of conversation
        1. Sean Cooper  🇬🇧 🇺🇸 🇮🇱‏ @SeanCooper10 Mar 24
          • Report Tweet
          Replying to @JuliaHB1 @rcolvile

          Absolutely correct. I voted against Tony Blair every chance I got but my side lost. Even though a lot of us voted Conservative, I don't remember any Tories being invited into his cabinets.

          0 replies 1 retweet 5 likes
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        1. GERALD HONE‏ @gerald_hone Mar 24
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          Replying to @JuliaHB1 @hippocrates16 @rcolvile

          I am 100% sure that if the referendum had gone 52% - 48% in favour of remaining....this would have all been over within a week! No further calls for a second vote...No protests allowed...all done and dusted!

          0 replies 0 retweets 8 likes
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        1. RICH  ➡️‏ @richporty101 Mar 24
          • Report Tweet
          Replying to @JuliaHB1 @rcolvile

          Agree with Julia. This was binary. And there would have been zero compromise after a RMN victory. None. The stealth federalists in the UK establishment and MSM would have taken it as a green light for deeper integration. And another ref? No flaming chance in hell.

          0 replies 1 retweet 3 likes
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