In a key vote in the House of Lords on the Article 50 bill the government was defeated by 366 to 268 on an amendment that would give Parliament a ‘meaningful vote’ on the Brexit deal when that is resolved. Upto 20 CON peers are said to have rebelled and others were encouraged to abstain.
Comments
Up to a point, Lord Copper.
It could also send a message 'rebellion is not consequence free' (unlike in Labour).
May values party loyalty highly, so rebels should expect punishment.
Heseltine was always up for 'rent-a-quote' anyway, so this changes nothing.
Net agree Sindyref2 should wait for Brexit Deal:
(Sindy: yes/no, Brexit; Leave/Remain)
Yes/Remain: -23
Yes/Leave: +41
No/Remain: +58
No/Leave: +63
http://www.bmgresearch.co.uk/scots-opposed-second-referendum/
Even SNP (-8) supporters don't feel that strongly with 37% against a referendum before Brexit deal is done
The BBC likes him though, so he'll get plenty of airtime
(IIRC he originally ran as a National Liberal, so only 50 years behind the cutting edge of his party)
I'd forgotten, Heseltine was an early Cameroon:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/politics/4366890.stm
I doubt Mrs May will miss him much.....
A man who has to do his own shopping ....
And for the love of god Hezza - a man who would sell his gastronomic soul .... but for purple headed broccoli !!
Hope you are fully back on the horse Mike .... ready to ride off into the PB sunset for many years to come.
(but I've always been open that I'm a Liberal Unionist at heart)
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2017/03/06/queen-pictured-still-riding-90-without-helmet-heads-pony/
Any deal reached between EU27 and the UK is likely to mirror Arsenal's recent experience vs the German champions in its one-sidedness.
And if May doesn't overturn these votes, she will be seen as a doormat. Both in the Lords and in Brussels. Of course she has to overturn them. Its negotiating 1.01- a part of the syllabus badly flunked by anybody professing to opine on the "right thing to do".
Lol. Heseltine has been undermining Tory leaders for well over 30 years.
LA Times
With 20 minutes until the polls close, L.A. voter turnout is at 11.45% https://t.co/J1IQ1zWlNH
No! No! No! Our Great and Glorious Leader, Heroic Helmsman and Defender of Democracy, Chairman May, steadfastly protecting the people from the undemocratic shenanigans of the Maoist moaners and Remoaniac-Remaoniac-Remainiac rabble, has decisively and swiftly vapourised the arch-thought-criminal, agent of Dibdinism, before he was able to bring his destructive plans to fruition. His network of agents throughout Theresiania, including the traitors Farron, Clarke and Mandelstein, will now suffer an utter rout.
In contrast with the decisive action of Our Leader Theresa, adhering to the principles of Mayism-Mayism, the weak and vacillating indecision of Old Mother Maggie in 1986 meant that Heselcrime was able to plot, scheme and undermine the unity of the Party by pursuing petty personal plans for an unviable helicopter vanity-project way beyond the point at which it had been decisively rejected by the People's Cabinet.
Heseltine in the headlines for rebelling against his own female PM. Somethings never change.
I was watching Hammond with subtitles whilst in the gym on Sunday morning. I think (hostage to fortune here) that an Osborne like surprise is extremely unlikely. Steady as she goes and dull as ditchwater. Some money to phase in business rates, some money (£1 bn has been talked about) for social care, yet another attempt to boost training and slightly lower borrowing figures than were forecast in November.
http://www.conservativehome.com/thetorydiary/2015/10/camerons-revenge-on-purdah-rebels-he-sacks-them-from-the-council-of-europe.html
Frankly I think the problem is less what he did than the rather bitter personal attacks that accompanied it - May appears quite thin-skinned about such things.
A more pertinent question to my mind is why an 83-year-old with a decidedly mixed political record was acting as an adviser to the government in the first place. A way of reaching out to the tiny handful of one-nation Tories who still remember him?
https://twitter.com/SamCoatesTimes/status/839249532596719616
https://twitter.com/SamCoatesTimes/status/839250450494996480
@hzeffman: Repeatedly struck by how May has alienated the kinds of moderate/centrist Tories who backed her for leader as the last grown up standing
@hzeffman: If you think about who her most supportive parliamentary faction is now, they mostly backed Leadsom for leader
So Parliament says deal or no deal. And that's it. Which is almost certainly going to be pretty meaningless since no deal is fraught with uncertainty.
I've changed my mind about them. Instead of being a rest home for retired old duffers, I now think they should be abolished asap.
What the Lords amendment effectively tried to do was force a change in that choice to one between what May negotiates, and what the EU then might impose on us at the last moment prior to Brexit, if Parliament rejects the first deal.
There might be a principled argument for this amendment, but I'm struggling to see it. The Lib Dems in the Lords were at least honest, as they voted against the whole bill rather than just for this amendment.
EDIT - sudden thought she might need it to access the NHS. In which case I agree that's unacceptable for someone whose taxes have funded it for 43 years, but it's also a function of the flawed model of the NHS. If it was based on NI contributions she would be fine.
HMG is reserving the right to deport her after Brexit.
Actually it is now Lord Michael Jopling being quoted by Alan Clarke "A man who had to buy his furniture"
https://www.gov.uk/eea-registration-certificate/permanent-residence
https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/506058/EEA_PR__guide-to-supporting-documents_v1_3_2015-12-04_KP.pdf (page 8)
The process is ridiculously unwieldy and needs to be simplified. Sadly, Merkel is holding up that process.
Yes, I agree that is not good enough. Somebody dropped the ball there. Theresa May will doubtless do a Gordon and blame the idiot who was in charge of the Home Office at the time.
Oh...
I need to find a pollster that cross tabs by intelligence level. I suspect a majority of educated people are against the Chuckle Twins - Jeremy May and Theresa Corbyn.
Mind you, from bitter experience I know that governments are wedded to their systems and get extremely nasty with those people who point out that they don't actually cover individual cases where some common sense would apply. Partly I think it's that civil servants are not very bright and also cowardly about taking responsibility, but it probably doesn't help that parliamentary draftsmen also have the literary talent of a William Topaz MacGonagall.
Apologies - I have no experience in this area but that seemed to jump out as logical.
https://twitter.com/paulwaugh/status/839383885515456512
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ik8JT2S-kBE
If Michael, Lord Jopling of Ainderby Quernhow is reading this he will be amazed as to how many mentions he has got on PB this morning compared to his uber-proletarian Successor, Fart Minor.
Which way has Joppers been voting on the Brexit Bill ? He used to be very pro-Heseltine and pro-EEC
And.....
Incidentally, if stopping Brexit is not the purpose of the amendments being put down by Peers then why are most of the people involved in this initiative people who say they want to stop Brexit, that is after they have mumbled something vague about accepting the result?
https://reaction.life/hezza-fired-last-aged-83/
Quite surprised by this. It's certainly an interesting move by a PM some have previously criticised for being cautious or deliberating too long.
Which may mean it's something she's considered for a while.