View allAll Photos Tagged Brexit

In the north there's lots of support for leaving Europe. More people have bought "Out" tins of these mints

a sad day for my country .

i could not vote because i have lived away for more than 15 years .

 

fear and xenophobia have ruled the day . if it was a remain vote then Britiain would have had a lot of power to renegotiate another deal with the EU , and with no huge financial pain which will soon come .

Bollocks to Brexit

Banbury

Fuck Brexit - Manchester

If there's something strange in your neighbourhood

Who you gonna call? (Ghostbusters)

If there's something weird

And it don't look good

Who you gonna call? (Ghostbusters)

 

Gavin Williams, the British Defence Secretary (in the picture on the right), has just redefined the UK's military strategy in the post-Brexit world (on the left). "When the world needs leadership", he said, people ought to turn to the UK. Hello world, do you want to be British again? Want to be guided by the selfless saviour from London? Who you gonna call?

7Artisans manual lens at F16; 16mm macro extension tube; edited in Fujifilm's raw converter and refined in Luminar.

by SEILEISE

Hamburg

To stay or not to stay, that is the question !

Trafalgar Square, City of Westminster, London, England, United(?) Kingdom

 

As the result of the referendum for the UK to exit the European Union (EU) becomes a reality and all hell begins to break loose in the political and financial worlds, I bring you a scene from Central London, an area that voted with the losing side to remain in the EU.

 

The view across Charles I equestrian statue, down Whitehall, with Big Ben and Parliament visible beyond.

 

Post-processed in Photoshop.

Grumpy Old Brits Remain. Anti-Brexit march, Central London.

 

Justin

www.justingreen19.co.uk

 

GCT

 

BNM-20170204-6275.jpg

I resisted making any reference to current negotiations but I believe the trader was putting an order together for a high ranking member of Parliament!!!!!!

Parliament has been promised a meaningful vote on the Brexit deal. But what, exactly, is Parliament being asked to decide? And what happens if Parliament votes the deal down?

 

At our panel discussion Raphael Hogarth, Research Associate at the Institute for Government, presented key findings from Voting on Brexit, the Institute for Government’s new paper on Parliament and the Brexit deal.

 

The paper sets out what the Government has to do in Parliament to get its deal though, and give effect to the withdrawal agreement in domestic law. It also identifies a number of risks to the timetable.

 

The vote, the politics and the constitutional implications was discussed by our panel:

 

The Rt Hon. Dominic Grieve QC MP, Conservative MP for Beaconsfield and former Attorney General

 

The Rt Hon. the Baroness Smith of Basildon, Shadow Leader of the House of Lords and Shadow Spokesperson (Northern Ireland)

 

George Parker, Political Editor, Financial Times

 

This event was chaired by Dr Hannah White, Director of Research at the Institute for Government.

 

#IfGBrexit

 

Photos by Candice McKenzie

Anti-Brexit march, Central London 2018.

Anti-Brexit march, Central London 2018.

 

Justin

www.justingreen19.co.uk

Another placard from the PeoplesVoteMarch held in central London on 20th October 2018 that calls for a rethink of Brexit

Leica MP

Leica Elmarit 28mm f/2.8 III

Fujicolor C200

Bellini Foto C-41

Scan from negative film

Pues hoy el UK ha decidido marcharse de la UE a través de referéndum. La noche fue larga y hubo ratos en los que la permanencia fue ganando pero al final se impuso el no.

 

Sin duda es un día histórico, se abren muchos frentes en todos los ámbitos y creo que nadie sabe realmente cómo acabará el tema y puede que de aquí a 15 años, la UE ya no exista.

View from the Shard, London. I arrived in London on the day the 'Brexit' vote was announced. The police helicopter was circling around this area as there was a protest march going on on the streets with protestors heading to the Shard. I was greeted by a large police force (and a handful of remaining protestors) as I exited the building.

I'm behind with sharing photos so the next ten photos are from an attempt at some street photography on 29 March 2019. As a remainer I wanted to document both sides of the debate.

Westminster March 12th London

What is it that, when the inevitable short term consequences of Brexit – companies leaving, investment plans abandoned, GDP contracting, the Union shattered – are followed by having to negotiate individually with 26 EU countries and the rest of the world, deprived of the clout of the EU (with each country insisting on freedom of entry for its citizens), we will be able to do that we can't do now?

(Acrylics by VK)

“Everyone tries to create a world he can live in, and what he can't use he often can't see. But the real world is already created, and if your fabrication doesn't correspond, then even if you feel noble and insist on there being something better than what people call reality, that better something needn't try to exceed what, in its actuality, since we know it so little, may be very surprising. If a happy state of things, surprising; if miserable or tragic, no worse than what we invent.”

Leica M10 + Olympus OM Zuiko 135mm f/3.5

Stroud, Gloucestershire

Britsh... people who went naked to hunt for marmots, when we already stabbed a Giulio Cesare! ;/) ;/) ;/)

 

camera > Firth of Clayde, (*) 6x6 homemade pinhole, F136

film > Fomapan 200 Creative (120 format)

exposure > 12sec, with Rapri E201 soviet spot meter

development > Adox Adonal, 1+50 8min, 20 °C

scanned > Epson V600

Anything to annoy these Brexit idiots is worthwhile. Limped along with a trashed food.

 

Germany, Hamburg

Those standing plus the young lady seated at far right are PPCs (Prospective Parliamentary Candidates) in London for The Brexit Party. All will eventually fail in the Political Bubble residing "Inside the Beltway" of London. God loves a Tryer.

1 2 ••• 6 7 9 11 12 ••• 79 80