Yes it did - my posts in this section - 3309, 3306, 3304, 3302, 3297 all state that the comparison is with what would happen in the event of a remain vote.
And fundamentally this whole section is linked to you quoting from George Osborn's introduction to the 2016 report on short term effects, and then focusing on what it predicted. All those predictions (as was the purpose of the report) was to compare what would happen if we voted to leave compared to what would happen if we voted to remain.
Again the conclusion you reached was that following a vote to leave.
1. push our economy into a recession - wrong
2. lead to an increase in unemployment of around 500,000 - wrong
3. GDP would be 3.6% smaller - wrong
4. average real wages would be lower - wrong
You are now effectively saying
1. push our economy into a recession - concede this?
2. unemployment would fall faster if we voted to remain
3. GDP would grow slower and leave overall GDP 3.6% lower
4. Average real wages would grow faster if we voted to remain
The conclusion you came to was either wrong or your the conclusion you posted was willfully misleading.
Baffled last time remain lost because their campaign was sneering in tone, misleading and negative, now you want another vote on the same issue and look set to campaign on the same terms.
Anyway, with Corbyn coming out for leave another vote looks dead as a dodo.