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  • AlanbrookeAlanbrooke Posts: 25,940
    Scott_P said:

    John Kerry flying over next week. Brexit now officially a global crisis.

    Awesome

    Is he coming to threaten Dave again ?
  • Stark_DawningStark_Dawning Posts: 10,218
    Suppose it transpired there had been some massive blunder with the vote and it had to be redone - say, all the Greater Manchester ballot boxes were found in a field. Who would win this time, considering all the immigration stuff has now been binned?
  • blackburn63blackburn63 Posts: 4,492
    tlg86 said:

    tlg86 said:

    Danny565 said:

    It's time for all those who want a credible alternative to the Tories to stump up £3 to get one.

    A "credible alternative" who just catastrophically misread the public mood on the EU?
    The public mood was 50:50 (ok 3.8% to one side).
    But not among their voters in the North. I can see Ukip gains across the north if Labour stands to stay in the EU at the General Election.
    Some on here predicted UKIP with 100+ MPs at the last election. Labour may well have a different leader soon. I think that you are mistaken.
    We are through the looking glass. The people have just voted to leave the EU. If Labour campaigns to ignore that vote, Ukip could clean up.
    Much to my disappointment Ukip won't clean up, all Labour have to do is pledge to manage immigration and they'll win the GE, nothing could be more straightforward.
  • OmniumOmnium Posts: 11,800
    Blueberry said:

    Omnium said:

    It seems to me that the only possible outcome here is a Labour split.

    How about a new political party to take on Labour in the North at the next GE? There's a market for it.

    I don't think the Labour of Watson, Balls, Cooper, Hunt et al fit the bill - they can't reverse-ferret with any credibility. Nor do I think UKIP could fill it. Open-door Corbyn certainly doesn't. Better to create a new Party and effectively merge Old Labour and northern UKIP?
    Lots of possibilities. I imagine a centrist coalition that give up on the Corbynites would be the line (possibly absorbing a handful of Tories and possibly a LD) - a sort of SDP2.

    However you're entirely correct that the split may well not be along traditional party lines.
  • RealBritainRealBritain Posts: 255
    Most extraordinary and unpredictable day in British politics for a long time. But what is already developing under the radar, in terms of economic, international, and geo-strategic changes is actually, already much more important.
  • foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548
    taffys said:

    The labour logic seems to be

    Our voters came out in droves for Brexit, so lets get rid of Jeremy for not backing the EU enough...???

    I think that about 60% of Labour voters were for Remain.

  • GIN1138GIN1138 Posts: 22,942
    Will The Last Person Out Of Westminster Please Turn Out The Lights
  • tlg86tlg86 Posts: 26,998
    kle4 said:

    tlg86 said:

    kle4 said:

    tlg86 said:

    kle4 said:

    theakes said:

    Next election, Liberal Democrats, Labour, SNP and Greens stand on continuing membership of EU and cancelling withdrawl negotiations. Labour win and we stay in?

    Two issues.

    1) Even if we can delay declaring article 50 until October, can it be delayed until after a snap GE? Seems doubtful, and once declared there's no turning back was my understanding.

    2) Labour will not stand on continuing membership.It might play well in about half their seats (although perhaps not - not all remainers will be on board), but it would be devastating in the other half. Their best bet is to pledge to try for as close as we can get, short of membership. Greens could do so, and if Labour ditch Corbyn they might regain some of the far left vote. LDs have little to lose but simply are not going to win in most places - after all, most places voted Leave in any case. And the SNP, well, do they really want to stop the negotiations? They are on the path they want now.
    I think we could be heading to a new party that will oppose leaving the EU. I reckon if the EU think this new party has a chance of winning, they'll hold fire and give them a chance.
    "Hold off on the Brexit negotiations Jean-Claude, the LD are about to go into government with the New European Democrats"

    More seriously, I cannot see that happening. Remain actually wasn't that far off in places I thought they would be, here in Wiltshire they were on 48.5%, but are the LDs or Lab or a new party really going to win a seat here, over all tribal loyalties, because the EU is so vital to them, even though they voted Leave? A new party isn't going to win on city seats alone, and they probably wouldn't win those either.
    I'm thinking some of the Tories will join the new party.
    I don't know that Ken Clarke on his own will be that effective.
    186 backed Bremain. They will try to get one of their guys or girls as PM. If they fail, some of them may leave the Tory Party. We are on the edge of a complete realignment of politics in England and Wales.
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 20,751
    People shouldn't underestimate FPTP. Pro-EU parties just need to ensure they don't split the vote.
  • taffystaffys Posts: 9,753
    Labour now want to have a Blairite leader to call its core voters racists in more polite and marketable tones?
  • felixfelix Posts: 15,180
    From this I’m concluding a coup is being implemented by the opponents of Corbyn and how long will the reshuffle take ?

    TSE

    longer than the Brexit negotiations?
  • tlg86tlg86 Posts: 26,998

    taffys said:

    The labour logic seems to be

    Our voters came out in droves for Brexit, so lets get rid of Jeremy for not backing the EU enough...???

    I think that about 60% of Labour voters were for Remain.

    Labour should rename itself the London Party.
  • AlistairAlistair Posts: 23,670

    tlg86 said:

    tlg86 said:

    Danny565 said:

    It's time for all those who want a credible alternative to the Tories to stump up £3 to get one.

    A "credible alternative" who just catastrophically misread the public mood on the EU?
    The public mood was 50:50 (ok 3.8% to one side).
    But not among their voters in the North. I can see Ukip gains across the north if Labour stands to stay in the EU at the General Election.
    Some on here predicted UKIP with 100+ MPs at the last election. Labour may well have a different leader soon. I think that you are mistaken.
    We are through the looking glass. The people have just voted to leave the EU. If Labour campaigns to ignore that vote, Ukip could clean up.
    I think a Leave-lead Conservative Party would be the Leave-vote magnet.
    None of them want to either leave the EU or stop immigration though. It's UKIP or bust.
  • nunununu Posts: 6,024
    chrisoxon said:

    kle4 said:



    That was my point - I know it's not mandatory, but there's no viable route to an anti-Brexit group winning a GE anyway. Even if they felt they could justify calling one, which parties are going to stand on a basis of ignoring the referendum?

    Con - No
    LD - Looks like it
    Lab - No, too divided
    Greens - Possibly
    PC - who cares
    DUP - No
    UUP - IDK, probably not
    SDLP - No
    UKIP - No
    SNP and SF - why would they, they think this will get them what they want

    Unless we literally descend into anarchy, public opinion won't change quickly enough for an anti-Brexit party to win a GE before article 50 is declared, and after it is the question becomes rejoining not 'not leaving' which is a less attractive option.

    I would question the mandate of a "stay in the EU" coalition. A general election is not a referendum on a particular issue, it is a vote on a broad programme of government. You cannot reasonably assume that every single one of your voters has supported every plank of your policy programme.

    The neverendum scenario is preferable to the quagmire this would create.
    Er I and many other people will riot if they keep us in the E.U since democracy didn't work.
  • edmundintokyoedmundintokyo Posts: 17,751
    taffys said:

    John Kerry flying over next week. Brexit now officially a global crisis.

    Awesome

    Those f8cking voters eh? if only we could do without them.

    Wait until somebody asks then if they want to keep income tax.
  • FF43FF43 Posts: 18,228
    One result of Brexit is that it has made the UK a lot more dysfunctional even than the EU was.
  • PongPong Posts: 4,693
    Tom Watson widely available @ 8/1
  • tlg86tlg86 Posts: 26,998

    People shouldn't underestimate FPTP. Pro-EU parties just need to ensure they don't split the vote.

    And the Tories (if led by a genuine Leaver) need to align with Ukip. They must not contest seats with each other.
  • RealBritainRealBritain Posts: 255
    Pong said:

    Tom Watson widely available @ 8/1

    Much better option than Kendall, or even Jarvis, I would say.
  • murali_smurali_s Posts: 3,084
    taffys said:

    The labour logic seems to be

    Our voters came out in droves for Brexit, so lets get rid of Jeremy for not backing the EU enough...???

    It's got nothing to do with the EU - it's about being able to relate. Voters (apart from London) can't relate to Corbyn; add in the fact that he's totally incompetent and you have a recipe for disaster. The problem for Labour is who can replace him? - the cupboard is bare. Laugh out loud if you must but the only person seems to be Ed Milliband - he is a giant compared to Corbyn.
  • logical_songlogical_song Posts: 10,082
    chrisoxon said:

    kle4 said:



    That was my point - I know it's not mandatory, but there's no viable route to an anti-Brexit group winning a GE anyway. Even if they felt they could justify calling one, which parties are going to stand on a basis of ignoring the referendum?

    Con - No
    LD - Looks like it
    Lab - No, too divided
    Greens - Possibly
    PC - who cares
    DUP - No
    UUP - IDK, probably not
    SDLP - No
    UKIP - No
    SNP and SF - why would they, they think this will get them what they want

    Unless we literally descend into anarchy, public opinion won't change quickly enough for an anti-Brexit party to win a GE before article 50 is declared, and after it is the question becomes rejoining not 'not leaving' which is a less attractive option.

    I would question the mandate of a "stay in the EU" coalition. A general election is not a referendum on a particular issue, it is a vote on a broad programme of government. You cannot reasonably assume that every single one of your voters has supported every plank of your policy programme.

    The neverendum scenario is preferable to the quagmire this would create.
    I have a theory that a significant enough minority of those voting for Brexit will have seen the two Leave lies being owned up to (£350m/wk to NHS and we can reduce immigration) and will have changed their minds.
    Others will have thought that Remain would win and cast a protest vote (wipe the smile off their faces).
    Given a few more weeks of bad news to add to the possibility of losing Scotland from the UK and the announcement of planned job losses and the sentiment of the public may well have swung by more than the 1.9% necessary.
  • foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548

    hunchman said:

    Away this weekend but wow! Jezza should threaten the nuclear option and mention events on a certain road that would bring down the tory and labour parties and many mp's. My friend told him and his office all about it shortly after he became leader. Go on Jezza!

    What's all this about?
    Lizards are forming shell companies in Finchley rd.

    I hope Jezza takes Hunchmans advice. He would be a laughing stock.
  • anotherDaveanotherDave Posts: 6,746

    People shouldn't underestimate FPTP. Pro-EU parties just need to ensure they don't split the vote.

    The LDs, Greens, Labour, SNP would all be 'pro-EU'.

    They'd be focussing the Leave vote on Con/UKIP. I'd guess Conservative landslide.

  • kle4kle4 Posts: 99,232
    Omnium said:

    If there's another Scottish Indyref, and if bits of Scotland - say the residents of an Edinburgh street have voted to stay then surely the SNPs logic means that they should be allowed to have their own little referendum to stay in the UK.

    It seems many people have forgotten what a democracy is.

    I imagine the SNP argument would be on the lines that while we are currently one state, we are one with clear and formal national subdivisions, and that their subdivision voted clearly in one way. Edinburgh is not an accepted 'separate but within' part of the scottish state.

    Although that wouldn't explain why the SNP were playing up the London argument, as that is not a separate entity.
    chrisoxon said:

    kle4 said:



    That was my point - I know it's not mandatory, but there's no viable route to an anti-Brexit group winning a GE anyway. Even if they felt they could justify calling one, which parties are going to stand on a basis of ignoring the referendum?

    Con - No
    LD - Looks like it
    Lab - No, too divided
    Greens - Possibly
    PC - who cares
    DUP - No
    UUP - IDK, probably not
    SDLP - No
    UKIP - No
    SNP and SF - why would they, they think this will get them what they want

    Unless we literally descend into anarchy, public opinion won't change quickly enough for an anti-Brexit party to win a GE before article 50 is declared, and after it is the question becomes rejoining not 'not leaving' which is a less attractive option.

    I would question the mandate of a "stay in the EU" coalition. A general election is not a referendum on a particular issue, it is a vote on a broad programme of government. You cannot reasonably assume that every single one of your voters has supported every plank of your policy programme.
    That is true, however if the election was fought on the basis that that issue was the most crucial, I think the mandate is there (not that I think it will happen). If the SNP had said 'we will declare independence unilaterally if we win the next scottish elections', they;d be within their rights to say they got backing for it, and someone saying 'I only voted for them due to the health policy' would not prevent that.

    If you vote for a party you are giving at least tacit support to their programme, since they cannot know exactly which bits people supported and which they did not. Electors have to take that into account and decide if the possibility of part x of the programme happening is worth part y happening - they cannot claim it unfair.

    If a 'stay in' party won the election, no one who voted for them with that as their promise could protest them doing so.

    But it won't happen.
  • Richard_TyndallRichard_Tyndall Posts: 33,486
    FF43 said:

    One result of Brexit is that it has made the UK a lot more dysfunctional even than the EU was.

    The UK is temporarily dysfunctional. The EU is permanently dysfunctional.
  • SouthamObserverSouthamObserver Posts: 40,054
    Sturgeon immensely impressive on Marr. Scotland very lucky to have her.
  • blackburn63blackburn63 Posts: 4,492
    tlg86 said:

    People shouldn't underestimate FPTP. Pro-EU parties just need to ensure they don't split the vote.

    And the Tories (if led by a genuine Leaver) need to align with Ukip. They must not contest seats with each other.
    Seriously? The tories have spent years calling us names, no way will Ukip prop them up, our voters would skin us alive.
  • JonathanJonathan Posts: 22,107
    edited June 2016

    Sturgeon immensely impressive on Marr. Scotland very lucky to have her.

    She is the only political leader visible in the country today.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 99,232

    hunchman said:

    Away this weekend but wow! Jezza should threaten the nuclear option and mention events on a certain road that would bring down the tory and labour parties and many mp's. My friend told him and his office all about it shortly after he became leader. Go on Jezza!

    What's all this about?
    Hunchman isn't allowed to say, the allegations can get Mike in trouble.
  • Stark_DawningStark_Dawning Posts: 10,218
    If Corbyn is replaced then one thing is certain - all the talk on here of the Tories no-confidencing themselves to force a GE is for the birds.
  • logical_songlogical_song Posts: 10,082

    People shouldn't underestimate FPTP. Pro-EU parties just need to ensure they don't split the vote.

    The LDs, Greens, Labour, SNP would all be 'pro-EU'.

    They'd be focussing the Leave vote on Con/UKIP. I'd guess Conservative landslide.

    But how much money would you bet on it? I'd be interested in a wager if we ever get to that situation.
  • tlg86tlg86 Posts: 26,998

    tlg86 said:

    People shouldn't underestimate FPTP. Pro-EU parties just need to ensure they don't split the vote.

    And the Tories (if led by a genuine Leaver) need to align with Ukip. They must not contest seats with each other.
    Seriously? The tories have spent years calling us names, no way will Ukip prop them up, our voters would skin us alive.
    If it looks like the Tories have been purged of Remain supporters, and it was clear that this General Election was a rerun of the referendum, I think we would do what was in the country's interest.
  • YellowSubmarineYellowSubmarine Posts: 2,740

    Sturgeon immensely impressive on Marr. Scotland very lucky to have her.

    I definitely pay £3 if she was standing to be Labour leader.
  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 39,250

    taffys said:

    The labour logic seems to be

    Our voters came out in droves for Brexit, so lets get rid of Jeremy for not backing the EU enough...???

    I think that about 60% of Labour voters were for Remain.

    If Labour lose the 40% then it's Finis Labour. They won't win enough votes in Surrey, Berkshire, Oxfordshire, Buckinghamshire, Cotswolds to compensate.
  • Y0kelY0kel Posts: 2,307
    So who do Labour get then, John McDonnell?

    I'm assuming any new leader process runs under the same rules that brought Willie Nelson's urban UK cousin into position.

    If so, why would they decide anyone other than a hard left candidate?
  • RodCrosbyRodCrosby Posts: 7,737
    Ann Coffey MP: If Jezza doesn't go, no more Labour Party...
  • murali_smurali_s Posts: 3,084
    Viz., corruption in politics. There are numerous investigations (mainly Tory seats) into election expenses. Could this be a curveball that comes back to snack Boris and co in the face?
  • GIN1138GIN1138 Posts: 22,942
    edited June 2016
    FF43 said:

    One result of Brexit is that it has made the UK a lot more dysfunctional even than the EU was.

    Only the politicians who are running round in a state of blind panic. Everyone else seems to be quite happily going about their business, etc.
  • tlg86tlg86 Posts: 26,998

    If Corbyn is replaced then one thing is certain - all the talk on here of the Tories no-confidencing themselves to force a GE is for the birds.

    Now many defections from Tory Bremainers will it take to bring down the government?
  • RealBritainRealBritain Posts: 255
    nunu said:

    chrisoxon said:

    kle4 said:



    That was my point - I know it's not mandatory, but there's no viable route to an anti-Brexit group winning a GE anyway. Even if they felt they could justify calling one, which parties are going to stand on a basis of ignoring the referendum?

    Con - No
    LD - Looks like it
    Lab - No, too divided
    Greens - Possibly
    PC - who cares
    DUP - No
    UUP - IDK, probably not
    SDLP - No
    UKIP - No
    SNP and SF - why would they, they think this will get them what they want

    Unless we literally descend into anarchy, public opinion won't change quickly enough for an anti-Brexit party to win a GE before article 50 is declared, and after it is the question becomes rejoining not 'not leaving' which is a less attractive option.

    I would question the mandate of a "stay in the EU" coalition. A general election is not a referendum on a particular issue, it is a vote on a broad programme of government. You cannot reasonably assume that every single one of your voters has supported every plank of your policy programme.

    The neverendum scenario is preferable to the quagmire this would create.
    Er I and many other people will riot if they keep us in the E.U since democracy didn't work.
    One would have to say I saw many more threats of rioting and unrest from the Leave side before the vote than anything from the Remainers. There is no rioting at the moment, or threats of it.
  • felixfelix Posts: 15,180

    chrisoxon said:

    kle4 said:



    That was my point - I know it's not mandatory, but there's no viable route to an anti-Brexit group winning a GE anyway. Even if they felt they could justify calling one, which parties are going to stand on a basis of ignoring the referendum?

    Con - No
    LD - Looks like it
    Lab - No, too divided
    Greens - Possibly
    PC - who cares
    DUP - No
    UUP - IDK, probably not
    SDLP - No
    UKIP - No
    SNP and SF - why would they, they think this will get them what they want

    Unless we literally descend into anarchy, public opinion won't change quickly enough for an anti-Brexit party to win a GE before article 50 is declared, and after it is the question becomes rejoining not 'not leaving' which is a less attractive option.

    I would question the mandate of a "stay in the EU" coalition. A general election is not a referendum on a particular issue, it is a vote on a broad programme of government. You cannot reasonably assume that every single one of your voters has supported every plank of your policy programme.

    The neverendum scenario is preferable to the quagmire this would create.
    I have a theory that a significant enough minority of those voting for Brexit will have seen the two Leave lies being owned up to (£350m/wk to NHS and we can reduce immigration) and will have changed their minds.
    Others will have thought that Remain would win and cast a protest vote (wipe the smile off their faces).
    Given a few more weeks of bad news to add to the possibility of losing Scotland from the UK and the announcement of planned job losses and the sentiment of the public may well have swung by more than the 1.9% necessary.
    You may be right - but the country would still be hideously divided - and it would feed an enormous pool of resentment in some of the strong Leave areas. The only way forward I can see is to get best deal possible as quickly as possible - otherwise the danger is we could see economic carnage on a massive scale that will leave us all as losers.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 99,232
    nunu said:

    chrisoxon said:

    kle4 said:



    That was my point - I know it's not mandatory, but there's no viable route to an anti-Brexit group winning a GE anyway. Even if they felt they could justify calling one, which parties are going to stand on a basis of ignoring the referendum?

    Con - No
    LD - Looks like it
    Lab - No, too divided
    Greens - Possibly
    PC - who cares
    DUP - No
    UUP - IDK, probably not
    SDLP - No
    UKIP - No
    SNP and SF - why would they, they think this will get them what they want

    Unless we literally descend into anarchy, public opinion won't change quickly enough for an anti-Brexit party to win a GE before article 50 is declared, and after it is the question becomes rejoining not 'not leaving' which is a less attractive option.

    I would question the mandate of a "stay in the EU" coalition. A general election is not a referendum on a particular issue, it is a vote on a broad programme of government. You cannot reasonably assume that every single one of your voters has supported every plank of your policy programme.

    The neverendum scenario is preferable to the quagmire this would create.
    Er I and many other people will riot if they keep us in the E.U since democracy didn't work.
    Well not really - if a democratic vote is overturned through democratic means, it's not proof democracy doesn't work. People are allowed to change their minds.

    I agree there would possibly be riots, or at the least an apoplectic reaction, if a GE returned a 'stay in' government, or a second referendum were held and Remain won, but it isn't anti-democratic if democratic means were used to halt the first democratic choice. We democratically chose a Tory government a year ago, it isn't anti-democratic if we go to a GE this year and vote in someone else.
  • tlg86tlg86 Posts: 26,998
    Javid is drowning on Marr. Poor boy backed the wrong horse.
  • AlanbrookeAlanbrooke Posts: 25,940
    Sean_F said:

    tlg86 said:

    Danny565 said:

    It's time for all those who want a credible alternative to the Tories to stump up £3 to get one.

    A "credible alternative" who just catastrophically misread the public mood on the EU?
    The public mood was 50:50 (ok 3.8% to one side).
    But not among their voters in the North. I can see Ukip gains across the north if Labour stands to stay in the EU at the General Election.
    Some on here predicted UKIP with 100+ MPs at the last election. Labour may well have a different leader soon. I think that you are mistaken.
    Times have changed. If Labour runs on a manifesto commitment to overturn the Referendum, the outcome across Northern working class towns will be carnage.
    Not so sure, an election is different to a referendum. I can see reversion to sheep mode.
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 20,751
    If Labour looks like it will lose 25% of its vote, the idea of a 'progressive alliance' to bring in PR looks very likely.
  • FrankBoothFrankBooth Posts: 10,022

    Sturgeon immensely impressive on Marr. Scotland very lucky to have her.

    Yep but reading between the lines I'm not sure her hand is that strong. Currency, border and cachet in Brussels were things she had to side step.
  • anotherDaveanotherDave Posts: 6,746
    Alistair said:

    tlg86 said:

    tlg86 said:

    Danny565 said:

    It's time for all those who want a credible alternative to the Tories to stump up £3 to get one.

    A "credible alternative" who just catastrophically misread the public mood on the EU?
    The public mood was 50:50 (ok 3.8% to one side).
    But not among their voters in the North. I can see Ukip gains across the north if Labour stands to stay in the EU at the General Election.
    Some on here predicted UKIP with 100+ MPs at the last election. Labour may well have a different leader soon. I think that you are mistaken.
    We are through the looking glass. The people have just voted to leave the EU. If Labour campaigns to ignore that vote, Ukip could clean up.
    I think a Leave-lead Conservative Party would be the Leave-vote magnet.
    None of them want to either leave the EU or stop immigration though. It's UKIP or bust.
    We haven't seen the UK-EU Leave negotiations yet.

    Mr Hannan's TV appearances have suggested he doesn't see immigration control as a priority, but he's not the decision maker.

    We don't yet know who the leader of the Conservative Party will be, who will be leading negotiations for the UK. Lets wait to hear from them before we assume Vote Leave are all finks.
  • AlanbrookeAlanbrooke Posts: 25,940
    Sajid Javid making a tit of himself on Marr


  • foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548

    Pong said:

    Tom Watson widely available @ 8/1

    Much better option than Kendall, or even Jarvis, I would say.
    Time for HH to step in, this time not as a placeholder.
  • blackburn63blackburn63 Posts: 4,492
    tlg86 said:

    tlg86 said:

    People shouldn't underestimate FPTP. Pro-EU parties just need to ensure they don't split the vote.

    And the Tories (if led by a genuine Leaver) need to align with Ukip. They must not contest seats with each other.
    Seriously? The tories have spent years calling us names, no way will Ukip prop them up, our voters would skin us alive.
    If it looks like the Tories have been purged of Remain supporters, and it was clear that this General Election was a rerun of the referendum, I think we would do what was in the country's interest.
    Disgruntled labour voters might vote Ukip, if they thought that Ukip would go into coalition with the Conservatives they wouldn't. I was told that hundreds of times in labour wards.

  • BlueberryBlueberry Posts: 408
    Pong said:

    Tom Watson widely available @ 8/1

    But Jezza won't resign. The whole PLP could be stood behind him with their backs turned doing the Poznan and it wouldn't make any difference.
  • Innocent_AbroadInnocent_Abroad Posts: 3,294

    People shouldn't underestimate FPTP. Pro-EU parties just need to ensure they don't split the vote.

    The LDs, Greens, Labour, SNP would all be 'pro-EU'.

    They'd be focussing the Leave vote on Con/UKIP. I'd guess Conservative landslide.

    That's what will happen next time. Better than 1983 for the Tories.

  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 129,198
    edited June 2016
    Danny565 said:

    Sean_F said:

    rcs1000 said:

    theakes said:

    Next election, Liberal Democrats, Labour, SNP and Greens stand on continuing membership of EU and cancelling withdrawl negotiations. Labour win and we stay in?

    That depends: if Labour stood on that manifesto, and got - say - 40% of the vote, and the LibDems got another 15%, then I think you could make the case that the people had changed their minds.

    On the other hand, if Labour snuck to victory on 30%, which is not impossible if we get UKIP and the Conservatives each on 25%, then I think you would need another referendum.
    If Labour stood on that manifesto it would lose Sunderland, Stoke, Hull, Hartlepool, the South Wales Valleys, Salford, Heywood and Middleton, Wigan etc. I don't think they'd gain many seats in the Stockbroker Belt to compensate.
    The fantasy idea from some Labour "moderates" of basing a strategy on uniting Remain voters is one of the most ridiculous things I've ever heard.

    The likes of Mole Valley and Guildford are not voting Labour ever, no matter what.
    The LDs could win those seats though and indeed they have, Guildford had a LD MP from 1997 to 2005. If there is a realignment it will not change the leadership of Labour and the Tories, their memberships will ensure Corbyn or McDonnell and a Brexiteer lead both however it could lead to some New Labour types and diehard Remain Tories defecting to the LDs. That is why Farron has pushed so hard for the LDs to represent the 48%!
  • anotherDaveanotherDave Posts: 6,746

    Sajid Javid making a tit of himself on Marr


    What's he up to?
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 99,232
    tlg86 said:

    kle4 said:

    tlg86 said:

    kle4 said:

    tlg86 said:

    kle4 said:

    theakes said:

    Next election, Liberal Democrats, Labour, SNP and Greens stand on continuing membership of EU and cancelling withdrawl negotiations. Labour win and we stay in?

    Two issues.

    1) Even if we can delay declaring article 50 until October, can it be delayed until after a snap GE? Seems doubtful, and once declared there's no turning back was my understanding.

    2) Labour will not stand on continuing membership.It might play well in about half their seats (although perhaps not - not all remainers will be on board), but it would be devastating in the other half. Their best bet is to pledge to try for as close as we can get, short of membership. Greens could do so, and if Labour ditch Corbyn they might regain some of the far left vote. LDs have little to lose but simply are not going to win in most places - after all, most places voted Leave in any case. And the SNP, well, do they really want to stop the negotiations? They are on the path they want now.
    I think we could be heading to a new party that will oppose leaving the EU. I reckon if the EU think this new party has a chance of winning, they'll hold fire and give them a chance.
    "Hold off on the Brexit negotiations Jean-Claude, the LD are about to go into government with the New European Democrats"

    More seriously, I cannot see that happening. Remain actually wasn't that far off in places I thought they would be, here in Wiltshire they were on 48.5%, but are the LDs or Lab or a new party really going to win a seat here, over all tribal loyalties, because the EU is so vital to them, even though they voted Leave? A new party isn't going to win on city seats alone, and they probably wouldn't win those either.
    I'm thinking some of the Tories will join the new party.
    I don't know that Ken Clarke on his own will be that effective.
    186 backed Bremain. They will try to get one of their guys or girls as PM. If they fail, some of them may leave the Tory Party. We are on the edge of a complete realignment of politics in England and Wales.
    That would be a good thing. But I don't see it myself. The Tories will fall into step behind a Brexit leader for long enough that article 50 is declared, and then there's no point fighting on. Unless we are literally rioting before then, the EU issue won't seem important enough to them to risk seats and government by trying to overturn the referendum or being seen to want to as any new party would be presented.
  • murali_smurali_s Posts: 3,084
    Y0kel said:

    So who do Labour get then, John McDonnell?

    I'm assuming any new leader process runs under the same rules that brought Willie Nelson's urban UK cousin into position.

    If so, why would they decide anyone other than a hard left candidate?

    It's not about left or right. It's about competence. Corbyn has shown he is not up to the job.
  • anotherDaveanotherDave Posts: 6,746

    Sturgeon immensely impressive on Marr. Scotland very lucky to have her.

    Yep but reading between the lines I'm not sure her hand is that strong. Currency, border and cachet in Brussels were things she had to side step.
    She must be miffed about Labour. She was probably hoping to dominate the UK news for a week.
  • foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548

    Sajid Javid making a tit of himself on Marr


    He looks rather scared.

    Shit has just become real for the swivel eyed loons.
  • tlg86tlg86 Posts: 26,998

    tlg86 said:

    tlg86 said:

    People shouldn't underestimate FPTP. Pro-EU parties just need to ensure they don't split the vote.

    And the Tories (if led by a genuine Leaver) need to align with Ukip. They must not contest seats with each other.
    Seriously? The tories have spent years calling us names, no way will Ukip prop them up, our voters would skin us alive.
    If it looks like the Tories have been purged of Remain supporters, and it was clear that this General Election was a rerun of the referendum, I think we would do what was in the country's interest.
    Disgruntled labour voters might vote Ukip, if they thought that Ukip would go into coalition with the Conservatives they wouldn't. I was told that hundreds of times in labour wards.

    Things might have changed.
  • taffystaffys Posts: 9,753
    ''Laugh out loud if you must but the only person seems to be Ed Milliband - he is a giant compared to Corbyn.''

    Doncaster was one of the most Brexity seats, the notion of a pro EU ed even retaining his seat is, I think, at least debatable.

    The vote showed the old certainties are gone.
  • JonathanJonathan Posts: 22,107

    Sajid Javid making a tit of himself on Marr

    At least he has stepped up. Where are Gove, Johnson, Osborne, Cameron, May? There is a total vacuum in the country.
  • alex.alex. Posts: 4,658
    Y0kel said:

    So who do Labour get then, John McDonnell?

    I'm assuming any new leader process runs under the same rules that brought Willie Nelson's urban UK cousin into position.

    If so, why would they decide anyone other than a hard left candidate?

    John McDonnell would be a lot better for Labour than Corbyn.
  • david_herdsondavid_herdson Posts: 18,357
    murali_s said:

    Y0kel said:

    So who do Labour get then, John McDonnell?

    I'm assuming any new leader process runs under the same rules that brought Willie Nelson's urban UK cousin into position.

    If so, why would they decide anyone other than a hard left candidate?

    It's not about left or right. It's about competence. Corbyn has shown he is not up to the job.
    MPs care about competence. The question is how much priority do the members and supporters give it?
  • foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548
    Jonathan said:

    Sajid Javid making a tit of himself on Marr

    At least he has stepped up. Where are Gove, Johnson, Osborne, Cameron, May? There is a total vacuum in the country.
    Benn on Marr now.
  • scotslassscotslass Posts: 912
    Corbyn had no choice. Benn launched a coup against him. I am no longer a Labour supporter but if I were my sympathy would be with the leader and my fury would be directed at those who tried to unseat him.
  • SlackbladderSlackbladder Posts: 9,800
    Here cones the chief traitor Benn
  • YellowSubmarineYellowSubmarine Posts: 2,740

    People shouldn't underestimate FPTP. Pro-EU parties just need to ensure they don't split the vote.

    The LDs, Greens, Labour, SNP would all be 'pro-EU'.

    They'd be focussing the Leave vote on Con/UKIP. I'd guess Conservative landslide.

    That's what will happen next time. Better than 1983 for the Tories.

    Yes I think that's right. It's what's prompting today's Labour blood bath. The grown ups can see it coming.
  • FluffyThoughtsFluffyThoughts Posts: 2,420

    Sturgeon immensely impressive on Marr. Scotland very lucky to have her.

    "Scotland will be in the EU but inhreit the pound." Feck you are thick!

    :tumbleweed:
  • taffystaffys Posts: 9,753
    I''f Corbyn is replaced then one thing is certain - all the talk on here of the Tories no-confidencing themselves to force a GE is for the birds.''

    The silence surrounding the tory backbenchers is palpable. There must be a great deal of re-assessing going on now that Dave is no longer doling out the patronage.

    Especially as Boris and Gove have strong alliances not just with the voters, but with plenty of labour MPs.
  • tlg86tlg86 Posts: 26,998
    Jonathan said:

    Sajid Javid making a tit of himself on Marr

    At least he has stepped up. Where are Gove, Johnson, Osborne, Cameron, May? There is a total vacuum in the country.
    I can't disagree with this. The Tories are making a massive mistake not getting on with this leadership contest right now. This is no longer about picking someone to beat Labour. This is about picking some to run the country right now.
  • blackburn63blackburn63 Posts: 4,492
    tlg86 said:

    tlg86 said:

    tlg86 said:

    People shouldn't underestimate FPTP. Pro-EU parties just need to ensure they don't split the vote.

    And the Tories (if led by a genuine Leaver) need to align with Ukip. They must not contest seats with each other.
    Seriously? The tories have spent years calling us names, no way will Ukip prop them up, our voters would skin us alive.
    If it looks like the Tories have been purged of Remain supporters, and it was clear that this General Election was a rerun of the referendum, I think we would do what was in the country's interest.
    Disgruntled labour voters might vote Ukip, if they thought that Ukip would go into coalition with the Conservatives they wouldn't. I was told that hundreds of times in labour wards.

    Things might have changed.
    Nah, not among labour voters.

    I told you lot time and again it would be Labour that won this for Leave, I'm rarely right when it comes to politics. Campaign in a swing seat and you'll see the tribal hatred, ex mining villages for example.
  • Stark_DawningStark_Dawning Posts: 10,218
    tlg86 said:

    If Corbyn is replaced then one thing is certain - all the talk on here of the Tories no-confidencing themselves to force a GE is for the birds.

    Now many defections from Tory Bremainers will it take to bring down the government?
    It doubt the Tory Remainers would do it, especially if Corby is ousted. They might be bitter and angry but they're not stupid.
  • AlanbrookeAlanbrooke Posts: 25,940

    Sajid Javid making a tit of himself on Marr


    He looks rather scared.

    Shit has just become real for the swivel eyed loons.
    hmmm

    it still hasnt occurred to you that pontless name calling probably cost Remain this referendum ?

    next time try charming the electorate.
  • not_on_firenot_on_fire Posts: 4,451
    Moses_ said:

    Polytwaddle on Marr
    "75% of the young voted to Remain"

    Err ... No. it was more like 75% of the 35% that bothered to vote.

    Only 52% of the 75% that bothered to vote voted Leave
  • PlatoSaidPlatoSaid Posts: 10,383
    hunchman said:

    Away this weekend but wow! Jezza should threaten the nuclear option and mention events on a certain road that would bring down the tory and labour parties and many mp's. My friend told him and his office all about it shortly after he became leader. Go on Jezza!

    Jezza can't threaten the nuclear option - he said he'd never press the button :wink:
  • chrisoxonchrisoxon Posts: 204
    nunu said:

    chrisoxon said:

    kle4 said:



    That was my point - I know it's not mandatory, but there's no viable route to an anti-Brexit group winning a GE anyway. Even if they felt they could justify calling one, which parties are going to stand on a basis of ignoring the referendum?

    Con - No
    LD - Looks like it
    Lab - No, too divided
    Greens - Possibly
    PC - who cares
    DUP - No
    UUP - IDK, probably not
    SDLP - No
    UKIP - No
    SNP and SF - why would they, they think this will get them what they want

    Unless we literally descend into anarchy, public opinion won't change quickly enough for an anti-Brexit party to win a GE before article 50 is declared, and after it is the question becomes rejoining not 'not leaving' which is a less attractive option.

    I would question the mandate of a "stay in the EU" coalition. A general election is not a referendum on a particular issue, it is a vote on a broad programme of government. You cannot reasonably assume that every single one of your voters has supported every plank of your policy programme.

    The neverendum scenario is preferable to the quagmire this would create.
    Er I and many other people will riot if they keep us in the E.U since democracy didn't work.
    Exactly, chaos would ensue! Many have said part of the reason people voted leave was because they were ignored by political class - ignoring them again would probably lead to civil unrest on an unprecedented scale.

    A "remain in EU" alliance could not claim that their mandate trumped the referendum's mandate. They would have stood on platforms covering a huge swathe of public policy, and many voters would have supported them for reasons other than remaining in the EU.
  • anotherDaveanotherDave Posts: 6,746

    murali_s said:

    Y0kel said:

    So who do Labour get then, John McDonnell?

    I'm assuming any new leader process runs under the same rules that brought Willie Nelson's urban UK cousin into position.

    If so, why would they decide anyone other than a hard left candidate?

    It's not about left or right. It's about competence. Corbyn has shown he is not up to the job.
    MPs care about competence. The question is how much priority do the members and supporters give it?
    And do they agree with the Labour MPs assessment of who is competent?

  • kle4kle4 Posts: 99,232

    If Corbyn is replaced then one thing is certain - all the talk on here of the Tories no-confidencing themselves to force a GE is for the birds.

    And this is another reason the idea a snap GE might happen and elect a 'stay in' set of parties is not going to happen - it will require Tories to force an early election, they aren't going to back that, not now, and certainly not if Labour look more formidible.
    RodCrosby said:

    Ann Coffey MP: If Jezza doesn't go, no more Labour Party...

    So, not a loyalist then.
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 20,751

    David Miliband moving through Heathrow arrivals deep in phone conversation. When is the Batley & Spen candidate selection?

    — Eye Spy MP (@eyespymp) June 25, 2016
  • blackburn63blackburn63 Posts: 4,492

    Sajid Javid making a tit of himself on Marr


    He looks rather scared.

    Shit has just become real for the swivel eyed loons.
    You lot are the swivel eyed loons, you're now predicting the population will fall!
  • nunununu Posts: 6,024
    edited June 2016
    This coup against Corbyn will give the ones who signed a petition that second referundum an excuse to sign another "save Corbyn"petition, it will be a good distraction for the poor darlings.
  • FF43FF43 Posts: 18,228
    If Britain stays in the EU either because of a vote to do so (unlikely) or because they never quite get round to leaving (also unlikely) it will be because people who voted Leave changed those minds.

    I assume the Lib Dem pitch is that they are PRO the EU and are outward looking and will always aim to have the deepest possible relationship rather than necessarily rerun the referendum. But I don't know if this is the case.
  • SlackbladderSlackbladder Posts: 9,800
    So why did Benn not resign rather than waiting to be sacked?
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 99,232
    I think it's clear we need to tell the EU we need to wait a few years before we declare article 50 - looks like we need to resolve which political parties we will have, resolve any lingering issues around voting systems, House of Lords, etc, best to get all this in order before we leave the EU.

    Say, 2035 then?
  • alex.alex. Posts: 4,658

    Sturgeon immensely impressive on Marr. Scotland very lucky to have her.

    Yep but reading between the lines I'm not sure her hand is that strong. Currency, border and cachet in Brussels were things she had to side step.
    She must be miffed about Labour. She was probably hoping to dominate the UK news for a week.
    She's saying stuff she has to say, but she must be secretly concerned that she's on a one way path not of her choosing, where simply making the right political moves is not necessarily going to benefit her in the long term.

    As the Brexit referendum has shown, ultimately years of making the right short to medium term political moves can all end in nought if they don't align with long term political interests.
  • FF43FF43 Posts: 18,228
    GIN1138 said:

    FF43 said:

    One result of Brexit is that it has made the UK a lot more dysfunctional even than the EU was.

    Only the politicians who are running round in a state of blind panic. Everyone else seems to be quite happily going about their business, etc.
    Up to a point. Politics matters.
  • scotslassscotslass Posts: 912
    Jonathan

    Yes but Sturgeon knows exactly what she is doing and has been all over the airwaves. Give the Scots their independence and put Salmond in as a caretaker Prime Minister at Westminster. He would be just about the only person who could get a decent deal out of the EU.
  • RochdalePioneersRochdalePioneers Posts: 30,655
    I love Hillary Benn. Quiet dignity, with a backbone and gravitas
  • RealBritainRealBritain Posts: 255

    People shouldn't underestimate FPTP. Pro-EU parties just need to ensure they don't split the vote.

    The LDs, Greens, Labour, SNP would all be 'pro-EU'.

    They'd be focussing the Leave vote on Con/UKIP. I'd guess Conservative landslide.

    That's what will happen next time. Better than 1983 for the Tories.

    I doubt that very much. In the very likely coming recession, an offer combining economic pragmatism with a counter to the perceived populist failures of Brexit could be very popular indeed. A centre-left message could work extremely well here, as long as it's not too Blairite.
  • PlatoSaidPlatoSaid Posts: 10,383
    taffys said:

    Labour now want to have a Blairite leader to call its core voters racists in more polite and marketable tones?

    This is all most entertaining in a magic mushroom way. :open_mouth:
  • AlistairAlistair Posts: 23,670
    edited June 2016

    Alistair said:

    tlg86 said:

    tlg86 said:

    Danny565 said:

    It's time for all those who want a credible alternative to the Tories to stump up £3 to get one.

    A "credible alternative" who just catastrophically misread the public mood on the EU?
    The public mood was 50:50 (ok 3.8% to one side).
    But not among their voters in the North. I can see Ukip gains across the north if Labour stands to stay in the EU at the General Election.
    Some on here predicted UKIP with 100+ MPs at the last election. Labour may well have a different leader soon. I think that you are mistaken.
    We are through the looking glass. The people have just voted to leave the EU. If Labour campaigns to ignore that vote, Ukip could clean up.
    I think a Leave-lead Conservative Party would be the Leave-vote magnet.
    None of them want to either leave the EU or stop immigration though. It's UKIP or bust.
    We haven't seen the UK-EU Leave negotiations yet.

    Mr Hannan's TV appearances have suggested he doesn't see immigration control as a priority, but he's not the decision maker.

    We don't yet know who the leader of the Conservative Party will be, who will be leading negotiations for the UK. Lets wait to hear from them before we assume Vote Leave are all finks.
    Well I will have to be someone completely univolved with the Conservative Leave camapign as every single one of them has said no end to free movement and that if people were voting to stop immigration then it was a terrible mistake by the voters.
  • not_on_firenot_on_fire Posts: 4,451
    chrisoxon said:

    kle4 said:



    That was my point - I know it's not mandatory, but there's no viable route to an anti-Brexit group winning a GE anyway. Even if they felt they could justify calling one, which parties are going to stand on a basis of ignoring the referendum?

    Con - No
    LD - Looks like it
    Lab - No, too divided
    Greens - Possibly
    PC - who cares
    DUP - No
    UUP - IDK, probably not
    SDLP - No
    UKIP - No
    SNP and SF - why would they, they think this will get them what they want

    Unless we literally descend into anarchy, public opinion won't change quickly enough for an anti-Brexit party to win a GE before article 50 is declared, and after it is the question becomes rejoining not 'not leaving' which is a less attractive option.

    I would question the mandate of a "stay in the EU" coalition. A general election is not a referendum on a particular issue, it is a vote on a broad programme of government. You cannot reasonably assume that every single one of your voters has supported every plank of your policy programme.

    The neverendum scenario is preferable to the quagmire this would create.
    By that logic no Governemnt should implement any policy, without a referendum first, ever.
  • foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548

    Sajid Javid making a tit of himself on Marr


    He looks rather scared.

    Shit has just become real for the swivel eyed loons.
    hmmm

    it still hasnt occurred to you that pontless name calling probably cost Remain this referendum ?

    next time try charming the electorate.


    The swivel eyed loons are curiously absent now. Apart from backtracking on the NHS funding and saying that immigration will not go down.

  • kle4kle4 Posts: 99,232

    So why did Benn not resign rather than waiting to be sacked?

    To present as displaying of being as loyal as possible, reluctantly telling the leader he no longer had confidence in him and accepting the consequences of that, rather than just flouncing off?
  • AlanbrookeAlanbrooke Posts: 25,940
    FF43 said:

    If Britain stays in the EU either because of a vote to do so (unlikely) or because they never quite get round to leaving (also unlikely) it will be because people who voted Leave changed those minds.

    I assume the Lib Dem pitch is that they are PRO the EU and are outward looking and will always aim to have the deepest possible relationship rather than necessarily rerun the referendum. But I don't know if this is the case.

    If the EU made a new offer I could see the possibility of staying in. But since Dave has flounced off and the french want us out that is unlikely.
  • nunununu Posts: 6,024

    I love Hillary Benn. Quiet dignity, with a backbone and gravitas

    Gravitas?no. Now his dad yes.
  • RochdalePioneersRochdalePioneers Posts: 30,655
    nunu said:

    I love Hillary Benn. Quiet dignity, with a backbone and gravitas

    Gravitas?no. Now his dad yes.
    Fuck. He isn't running
  • foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548
    edited June 2016
    Benn rules himself out as candidate.
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 56,000

    If Labour can get a leader who has even a passing acquaintance with reality, I'll be voting for them.

    If.
  • SlackbladderSlackbladder Posts: 9,800
    Benn is far too reasonable and sensible to be leader of the current labour party
This discussion has been closed.