Sheffield for Europe

Sheffield for Europe Brexit has failed. We campaign to fix the worst bits of the failed Brexit deal - until we can rejoin.

For more information on our meetings and activities, and how you can help: https://sheffieldforeurope.org.uk
To join, donate and/or subscribe to our newsletter: https://sheffieldforeurope.org.uk/subscribe-join-donate-volunteer

This was genuinely posted by a Restore Britain FB group today. Sad. But not at all surprising.
08/06/2026

This was genuinely posted by a Restore Britain FB group today. Sad. But not at all surprising.

08/06/2026

Shared from Leeds for Europe.

The Independent continue their excellent series of "10 years on" articles. The tide has turned."Labour will revisit its ...
08/06/2026

The Independent continue their excellent series of "10 years on" articles. The tide has turned.

"Labour will revisit its Brexit “red lines” as the government seeks to create closer ties with the European Union, a minister has suggested."

About time.

Link in comments.

Even GB News, favourite channel of the unreformed Brexit types can’t escape the truth about the clown show unleashed on ...
08/06/2026

Even GB News, favourite channel of the unreformed Brexit types can’t escape the truth about the clown show unleashed on us at European borders as a result of leaving the European Union and losing our rights of freedom of movement. All this to take biometric checks on entry and exit from the Schengen area (for the avoidance of doubt biometric checks do NOT apply to EU citizens from non Schengen countries Ireland and Cyprus



None of these horrendous delays would be occurring if we were still EU citizens.

Link to article in comments if you are interested

This is excellent news in so many respects."Armenia’s ruling pro-Europe party has won parliamentary elections, confirmin...
08/06/2026

This is excellent news in so many respects.

"Armenia’s ruling pro-Europe party has won parliamentary elections, confirming the country’s pivot towards Europe and away from its traditional ally, Russia.

Final results in the small South Caucasus country showed the prime minister Nikol Pashinyan’s Civil Contract party securing a slim majority, while the Strong Armenia alliance, led by the Russian-Armenian billionaire Samvel Karapetyan, won 25% of the seats in parliament.

The result, which will be welcomed in Brussels but viewed with dismay in Moscow, strengthens Pashinyan’s hand as he pursues his signature and politically sensitive goal: a peace agreement with Armenia’s longtime adversary Azerbaijan and the normalisation of relations with Turkey."

Then Labour wonders why it is doing so badly in the polls.The public have seen that we have been had by the liars of lea...
08/06/2026

Then Labour wonders why it is doing so badly in the polls.

The public have seen that we have been had by the liars of leave. Every poll shows that the public are looking to rejoin the European Union or at least cultivate a much closer relationship but Yvette Cooper seems unable move on from the tired old red lines.

No one under 28 has yet even been allowed a say in the matter yet these battle scarred politicians seem stuck. Fearing Reform they try to ape it and by doing so they merely validate Farage, and continue to haemorrhage support to the Green Party the Liberal Democrats and in Scotland and wales to SNP and Plaid Cymru while failing to attract Reform types back to the centre ground.

It is time to put Brexit behind us and start in the long road back to the EU where we belong

Wrong Daniel, with a capital WRONG. Just like you were about not leaving the Single Market and COVID.
08/06/2026

Wrong Daniel, with a capital WRONG. Just like you were about not leaving the Single Market and COVID.

The EU Withdrawal agreement was so badly drafted in the context of rules of origin that those rules risk treating UK ass...
08/06/2026

The EU Withdrawal agreement was so badly drafted in the context of rules of origin that those rules risk treating UK assembled cars as being subject to import tariffs unless stringent UK/EU content rules are met.

Those rules will almost certainly not be met if the battery fitted to an EV is not manufactured in Europe (UK-EU). Add in to the equation the forthcoming “Made in Europe“ rules and a crisis in UK-EU trade in motor vehicles is looming that has the power to shut down most of our vital car industry thar brought in £35 billion in export earnings in 2023.

EU and UK manufacturers are now lobbying the EU for a delay in tariffs. This is a short term sticking plaster. Long term trade stability can only be achieved with a proper single market/customs union deal

Here is a report from the Guardian

Exclusive: deal in 2020 had sought to stimulate local battery making but industry says it still cannot meet targets

Another excellent article about Brexit, 10 years on, this time from Jonathan Freedland of The Guardian. Brace yourselves...
08/06/2026

Another excellent article about Brexit, 10 years on, this time from Jonathan Freedland of The Guardian. Brace yourselves for a number of articles of this ilk, but we'll try not to repeat posts.

"A useful prompt comes from the upcoming two-part BBC series Brexit: A Very British Civil War, made by the master documentarian Norma Percy. Speaking to (nearly) every key player, it brings it all back – the red bus, “take back control”, the pantomime river battle of Nigel Farage v Bob Geldof.

It reminds you of things some may have forgotten, including the extent to which this whole thing came about as a wheeze, a clever tactical ploy, plotted by the careless people who were then running the country. In 2013, David Cameron and George Osborne sought to placate noisy Eurosceptics in their own ranks by promising an in/out referendum after the next election – a pledge they assumed they’d never have to honour because they were sure they’d fail to win an outright majority in parliament, whereupon they would cheerfully trade the promise away as a concession to the Lib Dems."

As if that were not cavalier enough, Britain’s place in Europe became dependent on the soap-opera dynamics of the Notting Hill set: it was all tennis in Regent’s Park and weekends at Chequers, Michael (Gove) letting down Dave and what will Sam (Cameron) think of Boris. Johnson insists he didn’t “give a f**k about being prime minister,” while Osborne begs to differ: “It was nothing to do with the EU, Britain’s place in the world. It was Game of Thrones. That’s what Boris Johnson was playing. And he could see the Iron Throne right there about to be vacated.” This stuff was all-consuming at the time – and yet what was at stake, as these Etonians worked out their schoolboy rivalries, was nothing less than the destiny of the UK. That recklessness with the futures of 70m people
remains unforgivable – and the guilt belongs to Cameron and Osborne almost as much as to Gove and Johnson.

More important than the origin story, however, is the legacy. We see that around us every day. Start with the economy. The remain campaign was mocked at the time as “project fear”, spreading gloom by warning that Britain outside the EU would be poorer, to the tune of 6% of GDP. Yet here we are a decade later and, if anything, remain was not pessimistic enough. The drop in GDP is now estimated to be between 6% and 8%, with investment down by as much as 18%. Trade is on course to be 15% less than it would have been had we stayed in the EU, according to the Office for Budget Responsibility, while a staggering 85% of those who import or export goods report problems that they didn’t have before.
Remainers said that Brexit would be a slow puncture, as the air was let out of the British economy. So it has proved, except it’s not been that slow.

08/06/2026

Thank you for this.

A view from Canada…

“No one tries any longer to pretend that Brexit has paid off. Institutional estimates of Brexit’s economic costs cite a probable loss of 4-6% of expected GDP. But die-hard Brexiteers within the Conservative and Reform parties still abhor any inklings of EU rapprochement.

Opinion polls indicate that two-thirds of the British public considers Brexit a mistake. Absent the phantom stimulus from a spate of trade and economic agreements Brexit proponents promised, especially with the US, it seemed obvious that Starmer should gear his attention abroad to reacquiring a privileged trade status with the EU.”

Address

Sheffield

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Sheffield for Europe posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Contact The Organisation

Send a message to Sheffield for Europe:

Featured

Share