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  • surbitonsurbiton Posts: 13,549
    IanB2 said:

    surbiton said:

    IanB2 said:

    One factor we have to consider here is the constitutional implication of a QS falling. It would be a highly embarrassing moment for the monarchy to have her speech rejected by parliament which is why I'm wary that she would send for Jezza. Well, she'd send for him but unless he could persuade her he could definitely pass her speech, I think she'd have no choice but to dissolve and go to the country? A QS being voted down would provoke a constitutional crisis surely.

    under our unwritten rules it leads directly to an election, surely?
    If the QS falls, the Queen has to ask Jezza to form a government and give him a few days to do that. Otherwise, she will be entering politics.

    It cannot be up to her to decide if Jezza can form a government or have his QS passed. Only time will tell. Maybe, it might be a minority Labour government and the Tories will abstain so that it doe snot trigger a new election during which Labour will be the government in situ.
    It isn't completely impossible that a Corbyn QS could go through if Labour was able to get the DUP to abstain, and everyone else to support. That would need a lot of concessions, but the reward is high.

    Labour's biggest problem is that he has few of the skills needed to succeed in such an environment.
    Which Labour policy would the DUP actually oppose ?
  • SouthamObserverSouthamObserver Posts: 39,769
    edited June 2017
    Deleted
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 78,635

    GIN1138 said:

    calum said:

    There are some very weak and wobbly Tories today.

    It should be obvious, but the DUP really really really do not want Jeremy Corbyn anywhere near the levers of power. The chances of the Conservatives and the DUP not reaching some form of accommodation are slim.

    Why do the Tories need a deal with them ?
    Because they can't pass a QS speech without the DUP?
    They can if the Lib Dems or SNP abstain
    Would Liz accept that though? There would have to be a pre-agreement by both those parties, which would effectively be a C/S agreement by it's self.
    Yes, Liz will not turn up to do the speech if there is any possibility of it being voted down
    Royal Ascot next week. so if it's not monday will probs have to be following monday.
    Joking aside, I think the Queen would give up a day of the GiGis in order to ensure the country has a government
    She could probably still be there for the 1.15.
    The Queen will be mightily pissed off if this charade causes her to miss Royal Ascot.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 50,289

    Labour manifesto made it clear we would be leaving the EU and the single market. The tories' position is the same

    There is no mandate for changing this, and ironically for a "Brexit election" Brexit was really not an issue for most voters. Lab and Con inclined Leavers could vote for their preferred red or blue for all the other usual reasons sure in the knowledge that Leave was a done deal.

    This is surely why the UKIP vote went to the Con and Lab columns in much more equal numbers than predicted.

    For MPs of all sides to now float the idea of not leaving the EU after all will see Farage and UKIP back (literally) with a vengeance. Leavers would to put it mildly not be happy.

    They will have their chance to vote against it in the second referendum.
  • JonathanJonathan Posts: 21,768
    Wondering if Tory hard Remainers demand a second referendum?
  • Richard_TyndallRichard_Tyndall Posts: 32,726

    TOPPING said:


    The EEA agreement includes EU legislation. Who governs EU legislation?

    No. All interpretation of the EEA Agreement for EFTA members is made by the EFTA Court. They do not have to accept ECJ rulings in their decision making. The ECJ has no power to enforce their rulings upon EFTA members.
    Supranational Court A determining our destiny = bad
    Supranational Court B determining our destiny = good

    Good luck with that. If you are still on the head of the pin by then, that is.

    This seems to be more to the point. How is the UK being obliged to follow EFTA Court determined case law more acceptable than being obliged to follow CJEU determined case law?

    ECJ rulings are not bound by case law. They are bound by interpretation of the treaties.

    No, but UK courts are bound by decisions reached by the ECJ. And in many areas national courts refer cases to the ECJ to determine how they should interpret aspects of European law. It happens all the time with trademarks, for example. It may well happen after we leave, too - that we submit to ongoing ECJ decisions relating to European laws passed before Brexit. This could be a point of compromise for both sides.

    I thought that was exactly what the great repeal bill was. Transcribing all current EU law into UK law (with the suitable amendments because no ECJ) and then amending or removing laws we don't want over time.
  • surbitonsurbiton Posts: 13,549

    Coburn? yes please!

    He adds significantly to the gaity of the nation.
    Why ? Is he another loony ?
  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 37,727
    surbiton said:

    IanB2 said:

    surbiton said:

    IanB2 said:

    One factor we have to consider here is the constitutional implication of a QS falling. It would be a highly embarrassing moment for the monarchy to have her speech rejected by parliament which is why I'm wary that she would send for Jezza. Well, she'd send for him but unless he could persuade her he could definitely pass her speech, I think she'd have no choice but to dissolve and go to the country? A QS being voted down would provoke a constitutional crisis surely.

    under our unwritten rules it leads directly to an election, surely?
    If the QS falls, the Queen has to ask Jezza to form a government and give him a few days to do that. Otherwise, she will be entering politics.

    It cannot be up to her to decide if Jezza can form a government or have his QS passed. Only time will tell. Maybe, it might be a minority Labour government and the Tories will abstain so that it doe snot trigger a new election during which Labour will be the government in situ.
    It isn't completely impossible that a Corbyn QS could go through if Labour was able to get the DUP to abstain, and everyone else to support. That would need a lot of concessions, but the reward is high.

    Labour's biggest problem is that he has few of the skills needed to succeed in such an environment.
    Which Labour policy would the DUP actually oppose ?
    It's which Labour personality.

    They'd happily deal with either Gordon Brown or Ed Milliband.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,111
    isam said:

    TOPPING said:

    isam said:

    TOPPING said:

    isam said:

    Scott_P said:

    isam said:

    Both Labour and Tories have accepted the referendum result and are commited to implementing it.

    And neither of them has an electoral mandate to do so.

    Remedial democracy, again.
    For someone who is a laughing stock due to lack of understanding, you are amazingly smug. Brings to mind 'Farage will not be in the debates" :lol:

    It's been voted for by the public, passed in the House of Commons, and committed to by both parties in their manifestos, I won't lose too much sleep.
    BUT WHAT IS IT?

    As you Leavers always tell us - it is up to the government to determine what that means.

    Would you be happy with us being in EEA/EFTA?
    As long as we leave I don't care. Must have said this 40 or 50 times now
    Excellent. So leaving and getting into the EEA/EFTA with FoM and ECJ subservience has you dancing in the streets. Good to know.
    Why do you have to try and score points like a child in the playground? I have never said there should this or that kind of Brexit, I said I would have accepted Cameron's deal as long as we were out. It really stifles sensible debate when people make comments like yours, theyre not even witty
    The only childish thing so far said in this exchange is "I don't care what deal we get as long as we're out". It shows that you have no idea what you voted for. Which is fine; plenty of people vote on gut feeling. Just don't try to say that you are having any kind of "sensible debate" about it.
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 120,348
    edited June 2017
    jonny83 said:

    A close friend wants Dave back, I think his view was fully cemented when he read that Cameron contacted those MP's that lost when May didn't.

    I did point out Dave was a class act when Mrs May became PM and she fired a load of Tory staffers, almost with glee.

    Remember, she only contacted those Tory MPs who lost after it became public that Dave had contacted them and she hadn't.

    She's a f*cking pox on the party and the country.

    She needs to fuck off now.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 124,683
    edited June 2017
    surbiton said:

    IanB2 said:

    surbiton said:

    IanB2 said:

    One factor we have to consider here is the constitutional implication of a QS falling. It would be a highly embarrassing moment for the monarchy to have her speech rejected by parliament which is why I'm wary that she would send for Jezza. Well, she'd send for him but unless he could persuade her he could definitely pass her speech, I think she'd have no choice but to dissolve and go to the country? A QS being voted down would provoke a constitutional crisis surely.

    under our unwritten rules it leads directly to an election, surely?
    If the QS falls, the Queen has to ask Jezza to form a government and give him a few days to do that. Otherwise, she will be entering politics.

    It cannot be up to her to decide if Jezza can form a government or have his QS passed. Only time will tell. Maybe, it might be a minority Labour government and the Tories will abstain so that it doe snot trigger a new election during which Labour will be the government in situ.
    It isn't completely impossible that a Corbyn QS could go through if Labour was able to get the DUP to abstain, and everyone else to support. That would need a lot of concessions, but the reward is high.

    Labour's biggest problem is that he has few of the skills needed to succeed in such an environment.
    Which Labour policy would the DUP actually oppose ?
    The DUP are pro grammar school, Sinn Fein opponents and pro monarchy on those 3 issues alone they are anti Corbyn
  • logical_songlogical_song Posts: 9,941

    tpfkar said:

    rcs1000 said:

    On that note, I'm tempted by Jo Swinson at 3.5 to be next Lib Dem leader.

    I think Cable's past it, and whilst I rate Lamb, he lost last time.

    Thoughts?

    Cable is past it, and I don't think he'll even stand.

    I think Tom Brake may throw his hat into the ring too.

    Lamb vs Brake vs Swinson?
    As well as Jo Swinson I would cover Ed Davey, I think he would stand. I understand he was planning to in 2015 when he lost his seat. I'd then look to lay in contest.

    Personally I think Tim Farron should stay in post. He's growing into the role and with the risk of another election in a matter of months, not convinced a leadership contest is a good use of energy at present.

    I would wait to see if there is a contest this side of a GE, as the runners and riders are not in safe seats.

    I expect Tim to stay in post until conference at least, but perhaps a larger profile for others in writing the manifesto and campaign.

    I cannot see the current situation lasting, everyone needs to be prepared for a further election, not navel gazing in opposition.
    When is the soonest that we would have another GE, bearing in mind the Brexit negotiations and the period of time allowed for May, then maybe A N Other Tory then Corbyn to try to get a coalition that worked?
    Ken Clarke as Prime Minister could probably get the LibDems and Green on board, maybe even SNP/PC (just a thought ;-) )
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 78,635
    The DUP have a reasonable hand, but it isn't a pair of Aces. It is very strong still though.

    They have the Tories by the bollocks right now.
  • JonathanJonathan Posts: 21,768

    tpfkar said:

    rcs1000 said:

    On that note, I'm tempted by Jo Swinson at 3.5 to be next Lib Dem leader.

    I think Cable's past it, and whilst I rate Lamb, he lost last time.

    Thoughts?

    Cable is past it, and I don't think he'll even stand.

    I think Tom Brake may throw his hat into the ring too.

    Lamb vs Brake vs Swinson?
    As well as Jo Swinson I would cover Ed Davey, I think he would stand. I understand he was planning to in 2015 when he lost his seat. I'd then look to lay in contest.

    Personally I think Tim Farron should stay in post. He's growing into the role and with the risk of another election in a matter of months, not convinced a leadership contest is a good use of energy at present.

    I would wait to see if there is a contest this side of a GE, as the runners and riders are not in safe seats.

    I expect Tim to stay in post until conference at least, but perhaps a larger profile for others in writing the manifesto and campaign.

    I cannot see the current situation lasting, everyone needs to be prepared for a further election, not navel gazing in opposition.
    When is the soonest that we would have another GE, bearing in mind the Brexit negotiations and the period of time allowed for May, then maybe A N Other Tory then Corbyn to try to get a coalition that worked?
    Ken Clarke as Prime Minister could probably get the LibDems and Green on board, maybe even SNP/PC (just a thought ;-) )
    Peter Bone?
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 61,253
    On the Con-DUP deal, I suspect agreeing this is as much of a challenge on the Conservative side as it is on the DUP side.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 52,854
    Sean_F said:

    surbiton said:

    IanB2 said:

    surbiton said:

    IanB2 said:

    One factor we have to consider here is the constitutional implication of a QS falling. It would be a highly embarrassing moment for the monarchy to have her speech rejected by parliament which is why I'm wary that she would send for Jezza. Well, she'd send for him but unless he could persuade her he could definitely pass her speech, I think she'd have no choice but to dissolve and go to the country? A QS being voted down would provoke a constitutional crisis surely.

    under our unwritten rules it leads directly to an election, surely?
    If the QS falls, the Queen has to ask Jezza to form a government and give him a few days to do that. Otherwise, she will be entering politics.

    It cannot be up to her to decide if Jezza can form a government or have his QS passed. Only time will tell. Maybe, it might be a minority Labour government and the Tories will abstain so that it doe snot trigger a new election during which Labour will be the government in situ.
    It isn't completely impossible that a Corbyn QS could go through if Labour was able to get the DUP to abstain, and everyone else to support. That would need a lot of concessions, but the reward is high.

    Labour's biggest problem is that he has few of the skills needed to succeed in such an environment.
    Which Labour policy would the DUP actually oppose ?
    It's which Labour personality.

    They'd happily deal with either Gordon Brown or Ed Milliband.
    Is Corbyn any more toxic for them than Martin McGuinness? Surely it depends purely on what they want and what leverage they have.
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 63,535

    jonny83 said:

    A close friend wants Dave back, I think his view was fully cemented when he read that Cameron contacted those MP's that lost when May didn't.

    I did point out Dave was a class act when Mrs May became PM and she fired a load of Tory staffers, almost with glee.

    Remember, she only contacted those Tory MPs who lost after it became public that Dave had contacted them and she hadn't.

    She's a f*cking pox on the party and the country.

    She needs to fuck off now.
    If you can just hold on until 5pm this evening...
  • TGOHFTGOHF Posts: 21,633

    GIN1138 said:

    There are some very weak and wobbly Tories today.

    It should be obvious, but the DUP really really really do not want Jeremy Corbyn anywhere near the levers of power. The chances of the Conservatives and the DUP not reaching some form of accommodation are slim.

    I think it genuinely depends what demands the DUP are making. It's not certain that an agreement will be reached.
    It's certainly not clear a formal agreement will be reached but it is 100% certain that they won't pull down May in favour of Corbyn. There is no route to No10 for Jezza this side of another election.

    I also find it hard to believe that the Tories will commit suicide by going to the country again with May.
    Indeed - a lot of froth on this site from those yet to grasp the reality.

    There are only 2 options for 2017/18/19

    Con with May
    Con without May

    Sprinkle in the patronising metropolitan elite nonsense about the DUP and you'd be mistaken from thinking you were reading the Guardian.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 50,289

    rpjs said:

    Danny565 said:
    Assuming that Sinn Fein don't turn up, that makes the threshold for a working majority 296 so the Tories would just squeak in on the new boundaries.

    But projected SF 9 and DUP 7! Clearly the DUP are going to want the new boundaries shelved as part of their shopping list!
    The main anomaly is in Wales. In Scotland, the boundaries got redrawn after devolution, but in Wales they never did. All the Welsh seats are tiny.

    The simplest thing for the Tories to do is correct the anomaly in Wales. That is probably worth a handful of seats to them.

    That isn't really practical given the formal position.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 61,253
    Jonathan said:

    Wondering if Tory hard Remainers demand a second referendum?

    Please. No more referendums or elections.
  • Blimey. Over £8m bet on the next PM market on Betfair.

    £3 of that is mine, backing the awesome Priti
  • PaulMPaulM Posts: 613

    IanB2 said:

    surbiton said:

    IanB2 said:

    One factor we have to consider here is the constitutional implication of a QS falling. It would be a highly embarrassing moment for the monarchy to have her speech rejected by parliament which is why I'm wary that she would send for Jezza. Well, she'd send for him but unless he could persuade her he could definitely pass her speech, I think she'd have no choice but to dissolve and go to the country? A QS being voted down would provoke a constitutional crisis surely.

    under our unwritten rules it leads directly to an election, surely?
    If the QS falls, the Queen has to ask Jezza to form a government and give him a few days to do that. Otherwise, she will be entering politics.

    It cannot be up to her to decide if Jezza can form a government or have his QS passed. Only time will tell. Maybe, it might be a minority Labour government and the Tories will abstain so that it doe snot trigger a new election during which Labour will be the government in situ.
    It isn't completely impossible that a Corbyn QS could go through if Labour was able to get the DUP to abstain, and everyone else to support. That would need a lot of concessions, but the reward is high.

    Labour's biggest problem is that he has few of the skills needed to succeed in such an environment.
    The DUP will not. ever. ever. allow Corbyn in while they can stop it.
    I believe the correct phrase, bellowed in an Antrim accent is:

    "Never. Never. Never. Never."
    Indeed

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IhI7WuPxt2g
  • Harris_TweedHarris_Tweed Posts: 1,337
    rpjs said:

    IanB2 said:

    One factor we have to consider here is the constitutional implication of a QS falling. It would be a highly embarrassing moment for the monarchy to have her speech rejected by parliament which is why I'm wary that she would send for Jezza. Well, she'd send for him but unless he could persuade her he could definitely pass her speech, I think she'd have no choice but to dissolve and go to the country? A QS being voted down would provoke a constitutional crisis surely.

    under our unwritten rules it leads directly to an election, surely?
    We have written rules in the fixed-term Parliament act. If a confidence vote is lost there is a two-week period for an alternative government to gain the confidence of the House. Then there is a new election.

    I don't know if the Act sets out a period following an election in which a Queen's Speech has to be passed.
    I don't think it does, and that is a big hole in the FTPA. Conceivably we could be in the position that no government can be formed that will have the confidence of the House, but the traditional mechanism whereby the monarch dissolves Parliament as a result is no longer available. It would require the House to either vote by a 2/3 majority to dissolve or to go through a formal motion of no confidence and pass two weeks without a vote of confidence.
    Is there the option for the govt to tie the QS motion to one of confidence (ie vote this down and we're out)? I think that was the way Major got the Maastricht bastards in line a couple of times, wasn't it?
  • AlastairMeeksAlastairMeeks Posts: 30,340
    Parliament would feel very different if David Cameron had decided to remain an MP.

    Can you imagine the clamour?
  • tlg86tlg86 Posts: 26,283

    Jonathan said:

    Wondering if Tory hard Remainers demand a second referendum?

    Please. No more referendums or elections.
    Just think of all of the opportunities to lose money!
  • Harris_TweedHarris_Tweed Posts: 1,337
    Never mind the progress of confidence and supply talks with Arlene Foster.. how are they going with Ruth Davidson?
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 52,854

    Jonathan said:

    Wondering if Tory hard Remainers demand a second referendum?

    Please. No more referendums or elections.
    It's the combined mandates from the last two that are crucifying the Conservatives. It might be the only way to release the pressure.
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 19,636

    jonny83 said:

    A close friend wants Dave back, I think his view was fully cemented when he read that Cameron contacted those MP's that lost when May didn't.

    I did point out Dave was a class act when Mrs May became PM and she fired a load of Tory staffers, almost with glee.

    Remember, she only contacted those Tory MPs who lost after it became public that Dave had contacted them and she hadn't.

    She's a f*cking pox on the party and the country.

    She needs to fuck off now.
    If you can just hold on until 5pm this evening...
    What's happening then?
  • RobCRobC Posts: 398
    I was a strong remainer in 2016 but am now of the opinion Brexit is now a boil that needs to be lanced for all three parties. Even the Lib Dems will not make any significant gains in their former west country heartland seats until we have brexited. Personally I much prefer to retain freedom of movement with a temporary brake when needed and membership of the EEA. So soft Brexit it is for me now and I think that is a consensus a majority can live with.
  • IanB2 said:

    surbiton said:

    IanB2 said:

    One factor we have to consider here is the constitutional implication of a QS falling. It would be a highly embarrassing moment for the monarchy to have her speech rejected by parliament which is why I'm wary that she would send for Jezza. Well, she'd send for him but unless he could persuade her he could definitely pass her speech, I think she'd have no choice but to dissolve and go to the country? A QS being voted down would provoke a constitutional crisis surely.

    under our unwritten rules it leads directly to an election, surely?
    If the QS falls, the Queen has to ask Jezza to form a government and give him a few days to do that. Otherwise, she will be entering politics.

    It cannot be up to her to decide if Jezza can form a government or have his QS passed. Only time will tell. Maybe, it might be a minority Labour government and the Tories will abstain so that it doe snot trigger a new election during which Labour will be the government in situ.
    It isn't completely impossible that a Corbyn QS could go through if Labour was able to get the DUP to abstain, and everyone else to support. That would need a lot of concessions, but the reward is high.

    Labour's biggest problem is that he has few of the skills needed to succeed in such an environment.
    The DUP will not. ever. ever. allow Corbyn in while they can stop it.
    In which case May doesn't have to offer them anything.. simples....

    Maybe not as simple as that...
    No. I actually think it is. But she could offer them things she's happy to give away. Better to have them in the tent pissing out than grumbling. But they are in no position to piss in.
  • TGOHFTGOHF Posts: 21,633
    surbiton said:



    Which Labour policy would the DUP actually oppose ?

    An IRA fanboy as PM would probably be the immediate non starter...
  • midwintermidwinter Posts: 1,112
    jonny83 said:

    A close friend wants Dave back, I think his view was fully cemented when he read that Cameron contacted those MP's that lost when May didn't.

    Quite a few of the youngish lads I employ (all non graduates) voted Labour on Thursday in Chichester. Obviously made no difference to the result. Because of May. They'd all voted for Cameron and would have done so again had it been an option. She became voter repellent as the campaign went on.
    The Tories have to get rid of her as soon as possible.
  • RogerRoger Posts: 20,062
    I see the £ is tanking again. Mrs May's difficulties are spilling over. All in sharp contrast to the extraordinary success Macron is enjoying in France. His partnership with Merkel is growing apace while Britain is becoming the poor man of Europe and a joke to boot.

    The EU could have been under the dynamic leadership of the three M's. Instead we're heading for oblivion.

  • AlastairMeeksAlastairMeeks Posts: 30,340

    On the Con-DUP deal, I suspect agreeing this is as much of a challenge on the Conservative side as it is on the DUP side.

    Harder, I'd have thought.
  • Andy_CookeAndy_Cooke Posts: 5,045

    On that note, I'm tempted by Jo Swinson at 3.5 to be next Lib Dem leader.

    I think Cable's past it, and whilst I rate Lamb, he lost last time.

    Thoughts?

    3.5 is way too far out.
    I'm told there was a push to have the LD constitution rewritten in 2015 to allow a non-MP to be Leader specifically so Swinson could stand - she has a lot of support amongst the membership.
    The one potential question would be whether the new members since 2015 (more than half of the membership) know her enough.
    Contenders are Swinson, Davey, Lamb, with a small chance of Cable as an Old Pope figure.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 72,984
    edited June 2017

    Most continental political cartoons are rather poor IMO, but the Danish 'shrinking superwoman suit' one hits the spot - see the selection at 12:55 here:

    https://www.theguardian.com/politics/live/2017/jun/12/general-election-2017-theresa-may-faces-conservative-backbenchers-politics-live

    There is no word for Matt in German ?

    (well, there is, but it's not funny.)
  • Lucian

    So why offer them a bean? Just say "right guys you are backing us come what may or we hand the keys of Downing St to Jezza"

    I've got no idea why Theresa got on her knees and started begging. Actually, I do. I truly fear from what she said about the historic friendships and the Conservative and Unionist Party that she failed to spot the DUP are not the UUP.
  • JackWJackW Posts: 14,787

    jonny83 said:

    A close friend wants Dave back, I think his view was fully cemented when he read that Cameron contacted those MP's that lost when May didn't.

    I did point out Dave was a class act when Mrs May became PM and she fired a load of Tory staffers, almost with glee.

    Remember, she only contacted those Tory MPs who lost after it became public that Dave had contacted them and she hadn't.

    She's a f*cking pox on the party and the country.

    She needs to fuck off now.
    Another "Don't Know" .... Tsk ....
  • surbitonsurbiton Posts: 13,549
    HYUFD said:

    surbiton said:

    IanB2 said:

    surbiton said:

    IanB2 said:

    One factor we have to consider here is the constitutional implication of a QS falling. It would be a highly embarrassing moment for the monarchy to have her speech rejected by parliament which is why I'm wary that she would send for Jezza. Well, she'd send for him but unless he could persuade her he could definitely pass her speech, I think she'd have no choice but to dissolve and go to the country? A QS being voted down would provoke a constitutional crisis surely.

    under our unwritten rules it leads directly to an election, surely?
    If the QS falls, the Queen has to ask Jezza to form a government and give him a few days to do that. Otherwise, she will be entering politics.

    It cannot be up to her to decide if Jezza can form a government or have his QS passed. Only time will tell. Maybe, it might be a minority Labour government and the Tories will abstain so that it doe snot trigger a new election during which Labour will be the government in situ.
    It isn't completely impossible that a Corbyn QS could go through if Labour was able to get the DUP to abstain, and everyone else to support. That would need a lot of concessions, but the reward is high.

    Labour's biggest problem is that he has few of the skills needed to succeed in such an environment.
    Which Labour policy would the DUP actually oppose ?
    The DUP are pro grammar school, Sinn Fein opponents and pro monarchy on those 3 issues alone they are anti Corbyn
    But will any one of those points be in a Queens Speech ?
  • Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 64,107
    Sky reporting Ruth Davidson attending the political cabinet today for the first time. I find it inconceivable that Brexit with not be softened as we progress through the negotiations. Labour splits on Brexit are showing today with of course McDonnell wanting out so he can nationalise but the young vote that gave them their increased support wanting to stay in.

    Having listened to the DUP and Vince Cable (combined vote of 22) there is no way they will vote against the conservatives to bring them down. Indeed the SNP will be very wary as they too could be decimated in Scotland if there is another election soon.

    British business has seen a sharp decline in optimism since Friday and they ave added their voice to the demand for stability and no further GE's
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 61,253
    Sean_F said:

    IanB2 said:

    surbiton said:

    IanB2 said:

    One factor we have to consider here is the constitutional implication of a QS falling. It would be a highly embarrassing moment for the monarchy to have her speech rejected by parliament which is why I'm wary that she would send for Jezza. Well, she'd send for him but unless he could persuade her he could definitely pass her speech, I think she'd have no choice but to dissolve and go to the country? A QS being voted down would provoke a constitutional crisis surely.

    under our unwritten rules it leads directly to an election, surely?
    If the QS falls, the Queen has to ask Jezza to form a government and give him a few days to do that. Otherwise, she will be entering politics.

    It cannot be up to her to decide if Jezza can form a government or have his QS passed. Only time will tell. Maybe, it might be a minority Labour government and the Tories will abstain so that it doe snot trigger a new election during which Labour will be the government in situ.
    It isn't completely impossible that a Corbyn QS could go through if Labour was able to get the DUP to abstain, and everyone else to support. That would need a lot of concessions, but the reward is high.

    Labour's biggest problem is that he has few of the skills needed to succeed in such an environment.
    The DUP will not. ever. ever. allow Corbyn in while they can stop it.
    In which case May doesn't have to offer them anything.. simples....

    Maybe not as simple as that...
    Not quite. A majority of four remains very tight and the Conservatives will want to pass future money bills.
    This administration has a chance of lasting until 2019, up until A50 has expired, and passing a couple of budgets, possibly under a new Conservative PM. It should focus purely upon that. .

    I'd suggest David Davis would be the best choice.

    I would expect 2-4 by-election defeats in that time. It would be able to do very little from 2019-2022. I think an election held in 2019 for a post-Brexit "mandate" would probably see a Conservative defeat, but not a Labour landslide, and perhaps that'd be the least worst option for the Tories.

    The Tories can pull back from 250-260 seats in a single parliament if Corbyn screws up, and if they stay United.
  • BromBrom Posts: 3,760
    That 96% nursing stat one or two were crowing about earlier is somewhat misleading. Once you look at the numbers involved as a percentage of the NHS workforce it's pretty insignificant.

    Last July, 1,304 nurses from the EU joined the Nursing and Midwifery Council register.
    That compares with just 46 in April this year, a fall of 96%.
  • nigel4englandnigel4england Posts: 4,800
    midwinter said:

    jonny83 said:

    A close friend wants Dave back, I think his view was fully cemented when he read that Cameron contacted those MP's that lost when May didn't.

    Quite a few of the youngish lads I employ (all non graduates) voted Labour on Thursday in Chichester. Obviously made no difference to the result. Because of May. They'd all voted for Cameron and would have done so again had it been an option. She became voter repellent as the campaign went on.
    The Tories have to get rid of her as soon as possible.
    I would have voted for the Con/LD coalition in both 2015 and 2017 had it been an option
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 61,253

    Sean_F said:

    surbiton said:

    IanB2 said:

    surbiton said:

    IanB2 said:

    One factor we have to consider here is the constitutional implication of a QS falling. It would be a highly embarrassing moment for the monarchy to have her speech rejected by parliament which is why I'm wary that she would send for Jezza. Well, she'd send for him but unless he could persuade her he could definitely pass her speech, I think she'd have no choice but to dissolve and go to the country? A QS being voted down would provoke a constitutional crisis surely.

    under our unwritten rules it leads directly to an election, surely?
    If the QS falls, the Queen has to ask Jezza to form a government and give him a few days to do that. Otherwise, she will be entering politics.

    It cannot be up to her to decide if Jezza can form a government or have his QS passed. Only time will tell. Maybe, it might be a minority Labour government and the Tories will abstain so that it doe snot trigger a new election during which Labour will be the government in situ.
    It isn't completely impossible that a Corbyn QS could go through if Labour was able to get the DUP to abstain, and everyone else to support. That would need a lot of concessions, but the reward is high.

    Labour's biggest problem is that he has few of the skills needed to succeed in such an environment.
    Which Labour policy would the DUP actually oppose ?
    It's which Labour personality.

    They'd happily deal with either Gordon Brown or Ed Milliband.
    Is Corbyn any more toxic for them than Martin McGuinness? Surely it depends purely on what they want and what leverage they have.
    I think Corbyn's toxicity will only truly be revealed to those who voted for him in office.
  • MyBurningEarsMyBurningEars Posts: 3,651
    TOPPING said:

    isam said:

    TOPPING said:

    isam said:

    TOPPING said:

    isam said:

    Scott_P said:

    isam said:

    Both Labour and Tories have accepted the referendum result and are commited to implementing it.

    And neither of them has an electoral mandate to do so.

    Remedial democracy, again.
    For someone who is a laughing stock due to lack of understanding, you are amazingly smug. Brings to mind 'Farage will not be in the debates" :lol:

    It's been voted for by the public, passed in the House of Commons, and committed to by both parties in their manifestos, I won't lose too much sleep.
    BUT WHAT IS IT?

    As you Leavers always tell us - it is up to the government to determine what that means.

    Would you be happy with us being in EEA/EFTA?
    As long as we leave I don't care. Must have said this 40 or 50 times now
    Excellent. So leaving and getting into the EEA/EFTA with FoM and ECJ subservience has you dancing in the streets. Good to know.
    Why do you have to try and score points like a child in the playground? I have never said there should this or that kind of Brexit, I said I would have accepted Cameron's deal as long as we were out. It really stifles sensible debate when people make comments like yours, theyre not even witty
    The only childish thing so far said in this exchange is "I don't care what deal we get as long as we're out". It shows that you have no idea what you voted for. Which is fine; plenty of people vote on gut feeling. Just don't try to say that you are having any kind of "sensible debate" about it.
    I think isam's point is absolutely reasonable actually - for lots of people the priority is to ensure Brexit happens, but are largely indifferent about what form it takes. Moreover, they really do not want controversy about the form of Brexit to be the very thing that derails Brexit.

    This is not at all dissimilar to e.g. some Scottish pro-independence voters not having strong opinions about whether Scotland should keep the pound or the monarchy after independence - even if they did have a preference, they would rather take some form of independence than none, and would be upset if the thing that prevented independence was other people unable to agree on a strategy with respect to these things. It's particularly galling if you realise that fine details can be changed in the years to come - so long as independence happens.
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,318

    Parliament would feel very different if David Cameron had decided to remain an MP.

    Can you imagine the clamour?

    If Dave and George were still MPs there wouldn't even need to be a contest, we could just have a coronation and have Dave deliver single market Brexit.
  • Sinn Fein up from 7 to 9, DUP down from 10 to 7... does that look realistic to you under the new boundaries, bearing in mind there would be changes in tactical voting? If it is correct then no wonder the boundaries are dead!
    Yes. When the provisional boundaries came up I was doing a ward by ward analysis as we made several submissions to the Boundary Commission for NI. The provisional boundaries are appalling for Unionism PLC.
  • surbitonsurbiton Posts: 13,549

    Lucian

    So why offer them a bean? Just say "right guys you are backing us come what may or we hand the keys of Downing St to Jezza"

    I've got no idea why Theresa got on her knees and started begging. Actually, I do. I truly fear from what she said about the historic friendships and the Conservative and Unionist Party that she failed to spot the DUP are not the UUP.
    LOL.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 52,854
    MaxPB said:

    Parliament would feel very different if David Cameron had decided to remain an MP.

    Can you imagine the clamour?

    If Dave and George were still MPs there wouldn't even need to be a contest, we could just have a coronation and have Dave deliver single market Brexit.
    Even single market Brexit requires 2 years of fairly humiliating negotiations with broad consequences for the UK. It's not a quick fix.
  • MortimerMortimer Posts: 14,158
    edited June 2017

    jonny83 said:

    A close friend wants Dave back, I think his view was fully cemented when he read that Cameron contacted those MP's that lost when May didn't.

    I did point out Dave was a class act when Mrs May became PM and she fired a load of Tory staffers, almost with glee.

    Remember, she only contacted those Tory MPs who lost after it became public that Dave had contacted them and she hadn't.

    She's a f*cking pox on the party and the country.

    She needs to fuck off now.
    Tory MPs are grown up enough not to need to receive a commiseration text from the leader who was, you know, somewhat busy.

    You'd think....
  • IanB2 said:

    surbiton said:

    IanB2 said:

    One factor we have to consider here is the constitutional implication of a QS falling. It would be a highly embarrassing moment for the monarchy to have her speech rejected by parliament which is why I'm wary that she would send for Jezza. Well, she'd send for him but unless he could persuade her he could definitely pass her speech, I think she'd have no choice but to dissolve and go to the country? A QS being voted down would provoke a constitutional crisis surely.

    under our unwritten rules it leads directly to an election, surely?
    If the QS falls, the Queen has to ask Jezza to form a government and give him a few days to do that. Otherwise, she will be entering politics.

    It cannot be up to her to decide if Jezza can form a government or have his QS passed. Only time will tell. Maybe, it might be a minority Labour government and the Tories will abstain so that it doe snot trigger a new election during which Labour will be the government in situ.
    It isn't completely impossible that a Corbyn QS could go through if Labour was able to get the DUP to abstain, and everyone else to support. That would need a lot of concessions, but the reward is high.

    Labour's biggest problem is that he has few of the skills needed to succeed in such an environment.
    The DUP will not. ever. ever. allow Corbyn in while they can stop it.
    I believe the correct phrase, bellowed in an Antrim accent is:

    "Never. Never. Never. Never."
    The DUP will never have a better opportunity to dictate the terms of Irish reunification. It depends how much they are thinking of the long term.
    If unionists were thinking long term, they wouldn't be voting DUP.

    I'm not bitter, I'm not.

    I am.
  • AlastairMeeksAlastairMeeks Posts: 30,340
    Can I just mention how much I'm enjoying all this? It's HUGE fun.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 50,289

    TOPPING said:

    isam said:

    TOPPING said:

    isam said:

    TOPPING said:

    isam said:

    Scott_P said:

    isam said:

    Both Labour and Tories have accepted the referendum result and are commited to implementing it.

    And neither of them has an electoral mandate to do so.

    Remedial democracy, again.
    For someone who is a laughing stock due to lack of understanding, you are amazingly smug. Brings to mind 'Farage will not be in the debates" :lol:

    It's been voted for by the public, passed in the House of Commons, and committed to by both parties in their manifestos, I won't lose too much sleep.
    BUT WHAT IS IT?

    As you Leavers always tell us - it is up to the government to determine what that means.

    Would you be happy with us being in EEA/EFTA?
    As long as we leave I don't care. Must have said this 40 or 50 times now
    Excellent. So leaving and getting into the EEA/EFTA with FoM and ECJ subservience has you dancing in the streets. Good to know.
    Why do you have to try and score points like a child in the playground? I have never said there should this or that kind of Brexit, I said I would have accepted Cameron's deal as long as we were out. It really stifles sensible debate when people make comments like yours, theyre not even witty
    The only childish thing so far said in this exchange is "I don't care what deal we get as long as we're out". It shows that you have no idea what you voted for. Which is fine; plenty of people vote on gut feeling. Just don't try to say that you are having any kind of "sensible debate" about it.
    I think isam's point is absolutely reasonable actually - for lots of people the priority is to ensure Brexit happens, but are largely indifferent about what form it takes. Moreover, they really do not want controversy about the form of Brexit to be the very thing that derails Brexit.

    This is not at all dissimilar to e.g. some Scottish pro-independence voters not having strong opinions about whether Scotland should keep the pound or the monarchy after independence - even if they did have a preference, they would rather take some form of independence than none, and would be upset if the thing that prevented independence was other people unable to agree on a strategy with respect to these things. It's particularly galling if you realise that fine details can be changed in the years to come - so long as independence happens.
    Let's see if its champions in parliament prove to be as flexible and accommodating as those supporters...
  • BromBrom Posts: 3,760
    edited June 2017
    midwinter said:

    jonny83 said:

    A close friend wants Dave back, I think his view was fully cemented when he read that Cameron contacted those MP's that lost when May didn't.

    Quite a few of the youngish lads I employ (all non graduates) voted Labour on Thursday in Chichester. Obviously made no difference to the result. Because of May. They'd all voted for Cameron and would have done so again had it been an option. She became voter repellent as the campaign went on.
    The Tories have to get rid of her as soon as possible.
    I expect many across the country were the same. But of course how many voters who disliked Cameron voted for May? May managed to accrue more votes than Cameron against different opposition, but I suspect had Cameron fought this election he would have got less votes than May but got them in more of the right places.
  • MortimerMortimer Posts: 14,158

    Sean_F said:

    IanB2 said:

    surbiton said:

    IanB2 said:

    One factor we have to consider here is the constitutional implication of a QS falling. It would be a highly embarrassing moment for the monarchy to have her speech rejected by parliament which is why I'm wary that she would send for Jezza. Well, she'd send for him but unless he could persuade her he could definitely pass her speech, I think she'd have no choice but to dissolve and go to the country? A QS being voted down would provoke a constitutional crisis surely.

    under our unwritten rules it leads directly to an election, surely?
    If the QS falls, the Queen has to ask Jezza to form a government and give him a few days to do that. Otherwise, she will be entering politics.

    It cannot be up to her to decide if Jezza can form a government or have his QS passed. Only time will tell. Maybe, it might be a minority Labour government and the Tories will abstain so that it doe snot trigger a new election during which Labour will be the government in situ.
    It isn't completely impossible that a Corbyn QS could go through if Labour was able to get the DUP to abstain, and everyone else to support. That would need a lot of concessions, but the reward is high.

    Labour's biggest problem is that he has few of the skills needed to succeed in such an environment.
    The DUP will not. ever. ever. allow Corbyn in while they can stop it.
    In which case May doesn't have to offer them anything.. simples....

    Maybe not as simple as that...
    Not quite. A majority of four remains very tight and the Conservatives will want to pass future money bills.
    This administration has a chance of lasting until 2019, up until A50 has expired, and passing a couple of budgets, possibly under a new Conservative PM. It should focus purely upon that. .

    I'd suggest David Davis would be the best choice.

    I would expect 2-4 by-election defeats in that time. It would be able to do very little from 2019-2022. I think an election held in 2019 for a post-Brexit "mandate" would probably see a Conservative defeat, but not a Labour landslide, and perhaps that'd be the least worst option for the Tories.

    The Tories can pull back from 250-260 seats in a single parliament if Corbyn screws up, and if they stay United.
    2-4 by election defeats?

    Nah. Actuarially that seems very unlikely.
  • Jonathan said:

    IanB2 said:

    surbiton said:

    IanB2 said:

    One factor we have to consider here is the constitutional implication of a QS falling. It would be a highly embarrassing moment for the monarchy to have her speech rejected by parliament which is why I'm wary that she would send for Jezza. Well, she'd send for him but unless he could persuade her he could definitely pass her speech, I think she'd have no choice but to dissolve and go to the country? A QS being voted down would provoke a constitutional crisis surely.

    under our unwritten rules it leads directly to an election, surely?
    If the QS falls, the Queen has to ask Jezza to form a government and give him a few days to do that. Otherwise, she will be entering politics.

    It cannot be up to her to decide if Jezza can form a government or have his QS passed. Only time will tell. Maybe, it might be a minority Labour government and the Tories will abstain so that it doe snot trigger a new election during which Labour will be the government in situ.
    It isn't completely impossible that a Corbyn QS could go through if Labour was able to get the DUP to abstain, and everyone else to support. That would need a lot of concessions, but the reward is high.

    Labour's biggest problem is that he has few of the skills needed to succeed in such an environment.
    The DUP will not. ever. ever. allow Corbyn in while they can stop it.
    Nothing nailed on in politics these days. If May can screw up a 20pt lead, this is a piece of cake.
    No. Even Lady Hermon would go all Paisley on you if you put Corbyn to her.
  • isamisam Posts: 41,118
    OllyT said:

    isam said:

    Yep - it is a very good point. Labour hubris is all over the place at the moment. To win next time Labour have to convince current Tory voters to switch sides. Just assuming they will is not a good idea. That said, the economic crosswinds and Brexit generally are going to be very, very difficult for the Tories over the coming years.

    Also, in an age where people seem to demand instant gratification, the youngsters who turned out to vote Corbyn might be a bit confused to see Theresa May still PM. Labour have to make it seem like they've won, else people might get bored of revolutionary politics
    Because being condescending to younger voters has worked well so far. Keep it up
    You don't think we live in an age where people demand instant gratification? Maybe politics is the one area that runs counter to the zeitgeist
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 50,289

    Can I just mention how much I'm enjoying all this? It's HUGE fun.

    +1 certainly more entertaining than another decade of unchallenged Tory rule would have been.
  • PatrickPatrick Posts: 225

    Blimey. Over £8m bet on the next PM market on Betfair.

    £3 of that is mine, backing the awesome Priti
    Interesting choice. The replacement for May needs to be :
    1. Young enough
    2. Engaging and articulate
    3. Sensible
    4. Likeable
    5. A Tory not a TINO or Miliband channeler
    6. Reasonable looking in this TV age
    7. Different, interesting, new.
    I think they could do alot worse than Priti Patel.
  • surbitonsurbiton Posts: 13,549
    TGOHF said:

    surbiton said:



    Which Labour policy would the DUP actually oppose ?

    An IRA fanboy as PM would probably be the immediate non starter...
    But they had no problem sitting down with Martin McGuinness and other SF politicians ?
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 120,348
    Mortimer said:

    jonny83 said:

    A close friend wants Dave back, I think his view was fully cemented when he read that Cameron contacted those MP's that lost when May didn't.

    I did point out Dave was a class act when Mrs May became PM and she fired a load of Tory staffers, almost with glee.

    Remember, she only contacted those Tory MPs who lost after it became public that Dave had contacted them and she hadn't.

    She's a f*cking pox on the party and the country.

    She needs to fuck off now.
    Tory MPs are grown up enough not to need to receive a commiseration text from the leader who was, you know, somewhat busy.

    You'd think....
    Why, Dave contacted every Tory MP that lost in 2015 (and a few Lib Dems too) before he went to bed on May 8th 2015.

    You only have to watch Mrs May's speech on the steps of Downing Street on Friday that she lacks humility and self awareness.

    She was speaking like a woman who won a 100 seat majority not needlessly lost Dave's majority.

    She's Gordon Brown without the warmth and people skills.
  • PaulMPaulM Posts: 613

    Can I just mention how much I'm enjoying all this? It's HUGE fun.

    Did you not mention that you were en route to Northern Ireland the night of the election ?

    Regards

    A conspiracy theorist
  • midwintermidwinter Posts: 1,112
    edited June 2017
    Mortimer said:

    jonny83 said:

    A close friend wants Dave back, I think his view was fully cemented when he read that Cameron contacted those MP's that lost when May didn't.

    I did point out Dave was a class act when Mrs May became PM and she fired a load of Tory staffers, almost with glee.

    Remember, she only contacted those Tory MPs who lost after it became public that Dave had contacted them and she hadn't.

    She's a f*cking pox on the party and the country.

    She needs to fuck off now.
    Tory MPs are grown up enough not to need to receive a commiseration text from the leader who was, you know, somewhat busy.

    You'd think....
    Haven't you given up yet? She's a big red pustule on the arse of the Tory party. The sooner it gets squeezed the better.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 124,683
    surbiton said:

    TGOHF said:

    surbiton said:



    Which Labour policy would the DUP actually oppose ?

    An IRA fanboy as PM would probably be the immediate non starter...
    But they had no problem sitting down with Martin McGuinness and other SF politicians ?
    They did not vote for Martin McGuinness and other SF politicians
  • Sean_F said:

    surbiton said:

    IanB2 said:

    surbiton said:

    IanB2 said:

    One factor we have to consider here is the constitutional implication of a QS falling. It would be a highly embarrassing moment for the monarchy to have her speech rejected by parliament which is why I'm wary that she would send for Jezza. Well, she'd send for him but unless he could persuade her he could definitely pass her speech, I think she'd have no choice but to dissolve and go to the country? A QS being voted down would provoke a constitutional crisis surely.

    under our unwritten rules it leads directly to an election, surely?
    If the QS falls, the Queen has to ask Jezza to form a government and give him a few days to do that. Otherwise, she will be entering politics.

    It cannot be up to her to decide if Jezza can form a government or have his QS passed. Only time will tell. Maybe, it might be a minority Labour government and the Tories will abstain so that it doe snot trigger a new election during which Labour will be the government in situ.
    It isn't completely impossible that a Corbyn QS could go through if Labour was able to get the DUP to abstain, and everyone else to support. That would need a lot of concessions, but the reward is high.

    Labour's biggest problem is that he has few of the skills needed to succeed in such an environment.
    Which Labour policy would the DUP actually oppose ?
    It's which Labour personality.

    They'd happily deal with either Gordon Brown or Ed Milliband.
    Indeed. With Corbyn and Co. Never. Never. Never.
  • PaulMPaulM Posts: 613
    surbiton said:

    Lucian

    So why offer them a bean? Just say "right guys you are backing us come what may or we hand the keys of Downing St to Jezza"

    I've got no idea why Theresa got on her knees and started begging. Actually, I do. I truly fear from what she said about the historic friendships and the Conservative and Unionist Party that she failed to spot the DUP are not the UUP.
    LOL.
    LOL 1690 more like
  • JackWJackW Posts: 14,787

    I would have voted for the Con/LD coalition in both 2015 and 2017 had it been an option

    +1
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 50,289
    Mortimer said:

    Sean_F said:

    IanB2 said:

    surbiton said:

    IanB2 said:

    One factor we have to consider here is the constitutional implication of a QS falling. It would be a highly embarrassing moment for the monarchy to have her speech rejected by parliament which is why I'm wary that she would send for Jezza. Well, she'd send for him but unless he could persuade her he could definitely pass her speech, I think she'd have no choice but to dissolve and go to the country? A QS being voted down would provoke a constitutional crisis surely.

    under our unwritten rules it leads directly to an election, surely?
    If the QS falls, the Queen has to ask Jezza to form a government and give him a few days to do that. Otherwise, she will be entering politics.

    It cannot be up to her to decide if Jezza can form a government or have his QS passed. Only time will tell. Maybe, it might be a minority Labour government and the Tories will abstain so that it doe snot trigger a new election during which Labour will be the government in situ.
    It isn't completely impossible that a Corbyn QS could go through if Labour was able to get the DUP to abstain, and everyone else to support. That would need a lot of concessions, but the reward is high.

    Labour's biggest problem is that he has few of the skills needed to succeed in such an environment.
    The DUP will not. ever. ever. allow Corbyn in while they can stop it.
    In which case May doesn't have to offer them anything.. simples....

    Maybe not as simple as that...
    Not quite. A majority of four remains very tight and the Conservatives will want to pass future money bills.
    This administration has a chance of lasting until 2019, up until A50 has expired, and passing a couple of budgets, possibly under a new Conservative PM. It should focus purely upon that. .

    I'd suggest David Davis would be the best choice.

    I would expect 2-4 by-election defeats in that time. It would be able to do very little from 2019-2022. I think an election held in 2019 for a post-Brexit "mandate" would probably see a Conservative defeat, but not a Labour landslide, and perhaps that'd be the least worst option for the Tories.

    The Tories can pull back from 250-260 seats in a single parliament if Corbyn screws up, and if they stay United.
    2-4 by election defeats?

    Nah. Actuarially that seems very unlikely.
    Staying United whilst losing most of the councillors year by year will be a tough challenge; the Tories don't have the battle hardened resolve of the LibDems.
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 120,348

    Can I just mention how much I'm enjoying all this? It's HUGE fun.

    Stop it, I'm finding very painful that my party, and the hard work of Cameron and Osborne is being ruined by that failed Turing test.
  • midwintermidwinter Posts: 1,112

    midwinter said:

    jonny83 said:

    A close friend wants Dave back, I think his view was fully cemented when he read that Cameron contacted those MP's that lost when May didn't.

    Quite a few of the youngish lads I employ (all non graduates) voted Labour on Thursday in Chichester. Obviously made no difference to the result. Because of May. They'd all voted for Cameron and would have done so again had it been an option. She became voter repellent as the campaign went on.
    The Tories have to get rid of her as soon as possible.
    I would have voted for the Con/LD coalition in both 2015 and 2017 had it been an option
    Yep. Corbyn would have been destroyed.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 124,683
    edited June 2017

    Can I just mention how much I'm enjoying all this? It's HUGE fun.

    It won't be if Corbyn gets in and bankrupts the country while still taking us out of the single market
  • surbitonsurbiton Posts: 13,549
    Patrick said:

    Blimey. Over £8m bet on the next PM market on Betfair.

    £3 of that is mine, backing the awesome Priti
    Interesting choice. The replacement for May needs to be :
    1. Young enough
    2. Engaging and articulate
    3. Sensible
    4. Likeable
    5. A Tory not a TINO or Miliband channeler
    6. Reasonable looking in this TV age
    7. Different, interesting, new.
    I think they could do alot worse than Priti Patel.
    A capital punishment supporter ?
  • DadgeDadge Posts: 2,052
    IanB2 said:

    Labour manifesto made it clear we would be leaving the EU and the single market. The tories' position is the same

    There is no mandate for changing this, and ironically for a "Brexit election" Brexit was really not an issue for most voters. Lab and Con inclined Leavers could vote for their preferred red or blue for all the other usual reasons sure in the knowledge that Leave was a done deal.

    This is surely why the UKIP vote went to the Con and Lab columns in much more equal numbers than predicted.

    For MPs of all sides to now float the idea of not leaving the EU after all will see Farage and UKIP back (literally) with a vengeance. Leavers would to put it mildly not be happy.

    They will have their chance to vote against it in the second referendum.
    As far as the EU are concerned, Brexit is happening. As far as the Tories are concerned, Brexit is happening. Which begs the question: what on earth is going on? The simple, and perhaps correct, answer is the referendum has turned everything to sh*t.

    Things will get much worse if we have another election and Labour win. Most remainers voted Labour and they'll make things extremely difficult for Corbyn. The issue will eff up his administration. He sounds very blase about this, but I hope that in reality behind the scenes they're prioritising finding some way of minimising the damage it would do to the party.

    Meanwhile, the mood of the country re Brexit has subtly changed. Yes, most people are content to respect the will of the referendum and see Brexit through, but people's understanding of the consequences of Brexit is much better than it was when they were asked to make the decision. Although in theory "Brexit means Brexit" there are clearly things that people don't want to lose when EU membership ends; lots of different things depending on the group of people: businesses, researchers, students, tourists, shoppers, immigrants, expats, etc. Fulfilling all those requirements is nigh-on impossible and makes being the government of Brexit a fool's errand.

    Therefore from a self-interest point of view, staying in power and seeing any kind of Brexit through will alienate many Tory voters - we just don't know which ones yet - so they're bound to lose the following election. Maybe giving the poisoned chalice to Corbyn would be the clever move.
  • MyBurningEarsMyBurningEars Posts: 3,651

    Sinn Fein up from 7 to 9, DUP down from 10 to 7... does that look realistic to you under the new boundaries, bearing in mind there would be changes in tactical voting? If it is correct then no wonder the boundaries are dead!
    Yes. When the provisional boundaries came up I was doing a ward by ward analysis as we made several submissions to the Boundary Commission for NI. The provisional boundaries are appalling for Unionism PLC.
    Thanks a lot Lucian. Appreciated.

    I'll put those boundary changes down on the "not going to happen" list then! (So long as people are working on the assumption Brexit occurs, the loss of the MEPs may mean more case-load for MPs so I think that gives a perfectly acceptable way to weasel out of the cut to 600 seats.)
  • Sean_F said:

    surbiton said:

    IanB2 said:

    surbiton said:

    IanB2 said:

    One factor we have to consider here is the constitutional implication of a QS falling. It would be a highly embarrassing moment for the monarchy to have her speech rejected by parliament which is why I'm wary that she would send for Jezza. Well, she'd send for him but unless he could persuade her he could definitely pass her speech, I think she'd have no choice but to dissolve and go to the country? A QS being voted down would provoke a constitutional crisis surely.

    under our unwritten rules it leads directly to an election, surely?
    If the QS falls, the Queen has to ask Jezza to form a government and give him a few days to do that. Otherwise, she will be entering politics.

    It cannot be up to her to decide if Jezza can form a government or have his QS passed. Only time will tell. Maybe, it might be a minority Labour government and the Tories will abstain so that it doe snot trigger a new election during which Labour will be the government in situ.
    It isn't completely impossible that a Corbyn QS could go through if Labour was able to get the DUP to abstain, and everyone else to support. That would need a lot of concessions, but the reward is high.

    Labour's biggest problem is that he has few of the skills needed to succeed in such an environment.
    Which Labour policy would the DUP actually oppose ?
    It's which Labour personality.

    They'd happily deal with either Gordon Brown or Ed Milliband.
    Is Corbyn any more toxic for them than Martin McGuinness? Surely it depends purely on what they want and what leverage they have.
    Machine Gun Marty never had the power to destroy the United Kingdom. Corbyn would have.

    The thing about a border poll is that once you hold the first one, you begin a seven year cycle of plug circling.

    I can't imagine living here during that period.
  • RobCRobC Posts: 398
    edited June 2017
    Incidentally on the boundary thing given that the UK's population has increased noticeably since 2010 is retaining 650 MPs unreasonable? And as we're brexiting they will actually have far more to do.
  • MortimerMortimer Posts: 14,158
    IanB2 said:

    Mortimer said:

    Sean_F said:

    IanB2 said:

    surbiton said:

    IanB2 said:

    One factor we have to consider here is the constitutional implication of a QS falling. It would be a highly embarrassing moment for the monarchy to have her speech rejected by parliament which is why I'm wary that she would send for Jezza. Well, she'd send for him but unless he could persuade her he could definitely pass her speech, I think she'd have no choice but to dissolve and go to the country? A QS being voted down would provoke a constitutional crisis surely.

    under our unwritten rules it leads directly to an election, surely?
    If the QS falls, the Queen has to ask Jezza to form a government and give him a few days to do that. Otherwise, she will be entering politics.

    It cannot be up to her to decide if Jezza can form a government or have his QS passed. Only time will tell. Maybe, it might be a minority Labour government and the Tories will abstain so that it doe snot trigger a new election during which Labour will be the government in situ.
    It isn't completely impossible that a Corbyn QS could go through if Labour was able to get the DUP to abstain, and everyone else to support. That would need a lot of concessions, but the reward is high.

    Labour's biggest problem is that he has few of the skills needed to succeed in such an environment.
    The DUP will not. ever. ever. allow Corbyn in while they can stop it.
    In which case May doesn't have to offer them anything.. simples....

    Maybe not as simple as that...
    Not quite. A majority of four remains very tight and the Conservatives will want to pass future money bills.
    This administration has a chance of lasting until 2019, up until A50 has expired, and passing a couple of budgets, possibly under a new Conservative PM. It should focus purely upon that. .

    I'd suggest David Davis would be the best choice.

    I would expect 2-4 by-election defeats in that time. It would be able to do very little from 2019-2022. I think an election held in 2019 for a post-Brexit "mandate" would probably see a Conservative defeat, but not a Labour landslide, and perhaps that'd be the least worst option for the Tories.

    The Tories can pull back from 250-260 seats in a single parliament if Corbyn screws up, and if they stay United.
    2-4 by election defeats?

    Nah. Actuarially that seems very unlikely.
    ...the Tories don't have the battle hardened resolve of the LibDems.
    Hahaha. Self aware much....
  • PeterCPeterC Posts: 1,275

    GIN1138 said:

    There are some very weak and wobbly Tories today.

    It should be obvious, but the DUP really really really do not want Jeremy Corbyn anywhere near the levers of power. The chances of the Conservatives and the DUP not reaching some form of accommodation are slim.

    I think it genuinely depends what demands the DUP are making. It's not certain that an agreement will be reached.
    It's certainly not clear a formal agreement will be reached but it is 100% certain that they won't pull down May in favour of Corbyn. There is no route to No10 for Jezza this side of another election.

    I also find it hard to believe that the Tories will commit suicide by going to the country again with May.
    If Corbyn came to power the Tories would given him the rope he needs by abstaining on the QS. They would also deny him the ability to call another election via the FTPA.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 50,289
    edited June 2017
    JackW said:

    I would have voted for the Con/LD coalition in both 2015 and 2017 had it been an option

    +1
    +1. Were it not for the history, a new Tory remainer leader would probably have been able to land that deal in return for single market membership, STV for local government and control of the Environment or Education ministry. But once bitten...
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 124,683
    midwinter said:

    midwinter said:

    jonny83 said:

    A close friend wants Dave back, I think his view was fully cemented when he read that Cameron contacted those MP's that lost when May didn't.

    Quite a few of the youngish lads I employ (all non graduates) voted Labour on Thursday in Chichester. Obviously made no difference to the result. Because of May. They'd all voted for Cameron and would have done so again had it been an option. She became voter repellent as the campaign went on.
    The Tories have to get rid of her as soon as possible.
    I would have voted for the Con/LD coalition in both 2015 and 2017 had it been an option
    Yep. Corbyn would have been destroyed.
    Would he? Cameron may have held a few more centrists bit he would not have won the UKIP voters May won
  • MortimerMortimer Posts: 14,158
    midwinter said:

    Mortimer said:

    jonny83 said:

    A close friend wants Dave back, I think his view was fully cemented when he read that Cameron contacted those MP's that lost when May didn't.

    I did point out Dave was a class act when Mrs May became PM and she fired a load of Tory staffers, almost with glee.

    Remember, she only contacted those Tory MPs who lost after it became public that Dave had contacted them and she hadn't.

    She's a f*cking pox on the party and the country.

    She needs to fuck off now.
    Tory MPs are grown up enough not to need to receive a commiseration text from the leader who was, you know, somewhat busy.

    You'd think....
    Haven't you given up yet? She's a big red pustule on the arse of the Tory party. The sooner it gets squeezed the better.
    As I've said several times, she made a massive mistake and I massively misjudged her popularity.

    But all that said, the hurt feelings of a few ex-MPs is media bubble balls.
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,318

    This administration has a chance of lasting until 2019, up until A50 has expired, and passing a couple of budgets, possibly under a new Conservative PM. It should focus purely upon that. .

    I'd suggest David Davis would be the best choice.

    I would expect 2-4 by-election defeats in that time. It would be able to do very little from 2019-2022. I think an election held in 2019 for a post-Brexit "mandate" would probably see a Conservative defeat, but not a Labour landslide, and perhaps that'd be the least worst option for the Tories.

    The Tories can pull back from 250-260 seats in a single parliament if Corbyn screws up, and if they stay United.

    I think if we presented David Davis to the public then we'd take an even bigger loss.

    No, the time of Davis, Hammond, Boris etc... is over. We need new talent to deliver for the next generation of voters just as Dave did in 2005. Kwasi Kwarteng is who I'd love to see get to the top, I think he could win over a lot of the 24-45 year olds that have abandoned us if he is strong on housing and does something over university fees.

    The party needs to move on from the current front bench and look at the abundance of talent on the back benches.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 72,984
    JackW said:

    I would have voted for the Con/LD coalition in both 2015 and 2017 had it been an option

    +1
    +2
    I still see it as a moral and strategic blunder for the Tories to have set out deliberately to destroy their coalition partners.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 50,289
    RobC said:

    Incidentally on the boundary thing given that the UK's population has increased noticeably since 2010 is retaining 650 MPs unreasonable? And as we're brexiting they will actually have far more to do.

    Those are the arguments available for covering the inevitable retreat.
  • MortimerMortimer Posts: 14,158
    MaxPB said:

    This administration has a chance of lasting until 2019, up until A50 has expired, and passing a couple of budgets, possibly under a new Conservative PM. It should focus purely upon that. .

    I'd suggest David Davis would be the best choice.

    I would expect 2-4 by-election defeats in that time. It would be able to do very little from 2019-2022. I think an election held in 2019 for a post-Brexit "mandate" would probably see a Conservative defeat, but not a Labour landslide, and perhaps that'd be the least worst option for the Tories.

    The Tories can pull back from 250-260 seats in a single parliament if Corbyn screws up, and if they stay United.

    I think if we presented David Davis to the public then we'd take an even bigger loss.

    No, the time of Davis, Hammond, Boris etc... is over. We need new talent to deliver for the next generation of voters just as Dave did in 2005. Kwasi Kwarteng is who I'd love to see get to the top, I think he could win over a lot of the 24-45 year olds that have abandoned us if he is strong on housing and does something over university fees.

    The party needs to move on from the current front bench and look at the abundance of talent on the back benches.
    Kwasi is a good chap. Should be in the cabinet already.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 52,854
    edited June 2017

    Sean_F said:

    surbiton said:

    IanB2 said:

    surbiton said:

    IanB2 said:

    One factor we have to consider here is the constitutional implication of a QS falling. It would be a highly embarrassing moment for the monarchy to have her speech rejected by parliament which is why I'm wary that she would send for Jezza. Well, she'd send for him but unless he could persuade her he could definitely pass her speech, I think she'd have no choice but to dissolve and go to the country? A QS being voted down would provoke a constitutional crisis surely.

    under our unwritten rules it leads directly to an election, surely?
    If the QS falls, the Queen has to ask Jezza to form a government and give him a few days to do that. Otherwise, she will be entering politics.

    It cannot be up to her to decide if Jezza can form a government or have his QS passed. Only time will tell. Maybe, it might be a minority Labour government and the Tories will abstain so that it doe snot trigger a new election during which Labour will be the government in situ.
    It isn't completely impossible that a Corbyn QS could go through if Labour was able to get the DUP to abstain, and everyone else to support. That would need a lot of concessions, but the reward is high.

    Labour's biggest problem is that he has few of the skills needed to succeed in such an environment.
    Which Labour policy would the DUP actually oppose ?
    It's which Labour personality.

    They'd happily deal with either Gordon Brown or Ed Milliband.
    Is Corbyn any more toxic for them than Martin McGuinness? Surely it depends purely on what they want and what leverage they have.
    Machine Gun Marty never had the power to destroy the United Kingdom. Corbyn would have.

    The thing about a border poll is that once you hold the first one, you begin a seven year cycle of plug circling.

    I can't imagine living here during that period.
    Which is why I suggested they use the current position to preempt that process and dictate terms for a negotiated settlement. The seven year cycle is only there because of the GFA which has probably run its course and will need to be superseded as a result of Brexit.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 72,984
    Oh, and new thread, btw.
  • CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758

    There are some very weak and wobbly Tories today.

    It should be obvious, but the DUP really really really do not want Jeremy Corbyn anywhere near the levers of power. The chances of the Conservatives and the DUP not reaching some form of accommodation are slim.

    My view (and forgive the French):

    Fuck 'em. Call their bluff. No deal.

    Very limited Queen's Speech. Brexit, a Royal Commission on social care reform. Trim DfID and spend the money on the NHS. Put up top rate tax by 2% to fund increased spending on police & security.
  • surbitonsurbiton Posts: 13,549

    Sean_F said:

    surbiton said:

    IanB2 said:

    surbiton said:

    IanB2 said:

    One factor we have to consider here is the constitutional implication of a QS falling. It would be a highly embarrassing moment for the monarchy to have her speech rejected by parliament which is why I'm wary that she would send for Jezza. Well, she'd send for him but unless he could persuade her he could definitely pass her speech, I think she'd have no choice but to dissolve and go to the country? A QS being voted down would provoke a constitutional crisis surely.

    under our unwritten rules it leads directly to an election, surely?
    If the QS falls, the Queen has to ask Jezza to form a government and give him a few days to do that. Otherwise, she will be entering politics.

    It cannot be up to her to decide if Jezza can form a government or have his QS passed. Only time will tell. Maybe, it might be a minority Labour government and the Tories will abstain so that it doe snot trigger a new election during which Labour will be the government in situ.
    It isn't completely impossible that a Corbyn QS could go through if Labour was able to get the DUP to abstain, and everyone else to support. That would need a lot of concessions, but the reward is high.

    Labour's biggest problem is that he has few of the skills needed to succeed in such an environment.
    Which Labour policy would the DUP actually oppose ?
    It's which Labour personality.

    They'd happily deal with either Gordon Brown or Ed Milliband.
    Is Corbyn any more toxic for them than Martin McGuinness? Surely it depends purely on what they want and what leverage they have.
    I think Corbyn's toxicity will only truly be revealed to those who voted for him in office.
    Has that video hit 10m views yet ? Remember the video which will be so devastating that the Tories will romp home.

    Corbyn is only toxic to die-hard Tories. Remember, he got just 3% fewer votes than Tony Blair in 1997 !
  • isamisam Posts: 41,118
    TOPPING said:

    isam said:

    TOPPING said:

    isam said:

    TOPPING said:

    isam said:

    Scott_P said:

    isam said:

    Both Labour and Tories have accepted the referendum result and are commited to implementing it.

    And neither of them has an electoral mandate to do so.

    Remedial democracy, again.
    For someone who is a laughing stock due to lack of understanding, you are amazingly smug. Brings to mind 'Farage will not be in the debates" :lol:

    It's been voted for by the public, passed in the House of Commons, and committed to by both parties in their manifestos, I won't lose too much sleep.
    BUT WHAT IS IT?

    As you Leavers always tell us - it is up to the government to determine what that means.

    Would you be happy with us being in EEA/EFTA?
    As long as we leave I don't care. Must have said this 40 or 50 times now
    Excellent. So leaving and getting into the EEA/EFTA with FoM and ECJ subservience has you dancing in the streets. Good to know.
    Why do you have to try and score points like a child in the playground? I have never said there should this or that kind of Brexit, I said I would have accepted Cameron's deal as long as we were out. It really stifles sensible debate when people make comments like yours, theyre not even witty
    The only childish thing so far said in this exchange is "I don't care what deal we get as long as we're out". It shows that you have no idea what you voted for. Which is fine; plenty of people vote on gut feeling. Just don't try to say that you are having any kind of "sensible debate" about it.
    I know why I voted to leave, but that doesn't mean it has to be the way we do. I would have thought that was a fair and balanced opinion. Sorry I am not acting like a headbanger or whatever you lot call people who disagree with you
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 120,348

    NEW THREAD

  • DadgeDadge Posts: 2,052
    Dadge said:

    IanB2 said:

    Labour manifesto made it clear we would be leaving the EU and the single market. The tories' position is the same

    There is no mandate for changing this, and ironically for a "Brexit election" Brexit was really not an issue for most voters. Lab and Con inclined Leavers could vote for their preferred red or blue for all the other usual reasons sure in the knowledge that Leave was a done deal.

    This is surely why the UKIP vote went to the Con and Lab columns in much more equal numbers than predicted.

    For MPs of all sides to now float the idea of not leaving the EU after all will see Farage and UKIP back (literally) with a vengeance. Leavers would to put it mildly not be happy.

    They will have their chance to vote against it in the second referendum.
    As far as the EU are concerned, Brexit is happening. As far as the Tories are concerned, Brexit is happening. Which begs the question: what on earth is going on? The simple, and perhaps correct, answer is the referendum has turned everything to sh*t.

    Things will get much worse if we have another election and Labour win. Most remainers voted Labour and they'll make things extremely difficult for Corbyn. The issue will eff up his administration. He sounds very blase about this, but I hope that in reality behind the scenes they're prioritising finding some way of minimising the damage it would do to the party.

    Meanwhile, the mood of the country re Brexit has subtly changed. Yes, most people are content to respect the will of the referendum and see Brexit through, but people's understanding of the consequences of Brexit is much better than it was when they were asked to make the decision. Although in theory "Brexit means Brexit" there are clearly things that people don't want to lose when EU membership ends; lots of different things depending on the group of people: businesses, researchers, students, tourists, shoppers, immigrants, expats, etc. Fulfilling all those requirements is nigh-on impossible and makes being the government of Brexit a fool's errand.

    Therefore from a self-interest point of view, staying in power and seeing any kind of Brexit through will alienate many Tory voters - we just don't know which ones yet - so they're bound to lose the following election. Maybe giving the poisoned chalice to Corbyn would be the clever move.
    Oh, and a second referendum is a ludicrous idea. A lot of people voted Leave simply because they wanted to vote against the government. It must be odds-on that whatever proposal is put forward in a 2nd referendum, people will vote it down. It'll be an unholy alliance of Brexit pedants, Remainers and the awkward squad.
  • DecrepitJohnLDecrepitJohnL Posts: 13,300
    MaxPB said:

    This administration has a chance of lasting until 2019, up until A50 has expired, and passing a couple of budgets, possibly under a new Conservative PM. It should focus purely upon that. .

    I'd suggest David Davis would be the best choice.

    I would expect 2-4 by-election defeats in that time. It would be able to do very little from 2019-2022. I think an election held in 2019 for a post-Brexit "mandate" would probably see a Conservative defeat, but not a Labour landslide, and perhaps that'd be the least worst option for the Tories.

    The Tories can pull back from 250-260 seats in a single parliament if Corbyn screws up, and if they stay United.

    I think if we presented David Davis to the public then we'd take an even bigger loss.

    No, the time of Davis, Hammond, Boris etc... is over. We need new talent to deliver for the next generation of voters just as Dave did in 2005. Kwasi Kwarteng is who I'd love to see get to the top, I think he could win over a lot of the 24-45 year olds that have abandoned us if he is strong on housing and does something over university fees.

    The party needs to move on from the current front bench and look at the abundance of talent on the back benches.
    Cameron's non-reshuffles made it harder to develop talent (as well as giving rise to misleading stats about Theresa May having lasted six years at the Home Office).
  • midwintermidwinter Posts: 1,112
    HYUFD said:

    midwinter said:

    midwinter said:

    jonny83 said:

    A close friend wants Dave back, I think his view was fully cemented when he read that Cameron contacted those MP's that lost when May didn't.

    Quite a few of the youngish lads I employ (all non graduates) voted Labour on Thursday in Chichester. Obviously made no difference to the result. Because of May. They'd all voted for Cameron and would have done so again had it been an option. She became voter repellent as the campaign went on.
    The Tories have to get rid of her as soon as possible.
    I would have voted for the Con/LD coalition in both 2015 and 2017 had it been an option
    Yep. Corbyn would have been destroyed.
    Would he? Cameron may have held a few more centrists bit he would not have won the UKIP voters May won
    He would when the alternative was Corbyn. It's not impossible that TM won most of the Ukip vote but lost all of Daves floating voters and a few others sat on their hands.
    Who do you think Corbyn would've preferred to be against out of the pair.
    The answer is obvious and tells you all you need to know.
  • RobC said:

    Incidentally on the boundary thing given that the UK's population has increased noticeably since 2010 is retaining 650 MPs unreasonable? And as we're brexiting they will actually have far more to do.

    Oh there's all sorts of reasons to fudge it. And MPs as turkeys WILL vote for Christmas.
  • MyBurningEarsMyBurningEars Posts: 3,651
    Patrick said:

    Blimey. Over £8m bet on the next PM market on Betfair.

    £3 of that is mine, backing the awesome Priti
    Interesting choice. The replacement for May needs to be :
    1. Young enough
    2. Engaging and articulate
    3. Sensible
    4. Likeable
    5. A Tory not a TINO or Miliband channeler
    6. Reasonable looking in this TV age
    7. Different, interesting, new.
    I think they could do alot worse than Priti Patel.
    Priti would be electoral suicide. She's a very divisive figure and if anything doubles up on many of the negatives of May! If you were going on these criteria someone like Kwasi Kwarteng would be a far superior choice but I do not think he is in the running. (At this stage he really looks like a future PM contender, and is absolutely wasted on the back benches. In terms of talent management, he and a couple of others are really overdue a promotion so we can see just whether they can step up to the plate, while there are some people in cabinet - Liz Truss springs to mind - whose backers once saw them as future stars but who no longer look like genuine mustard-cutters.)
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 50,289
    Dadge said:

    IanB2 said:

    Labour manifesto made it clear we would be leaving the EU and the single market. The tories' position is the same

    This is surely why the UKIP vote went to the Con and Lab columns in much more equal numbers than predicted.

    For MPs of all sides to now float the idea of not leaving the EU after all will see Farage and UKIP back (literally) with a vengeance. Leavers would to put it mildly not be happy.

    They will have their chance to vote against it in the second referendum.
    As far as the EU are concerned, Brexit is happening. As far as the Tories are concerned, Brexit is happening. Which begs the question: what on earth is going on? The simple, and perhaps correct, answer is the referendum has turned everything to sh*t.

    Things will get much worse if we have another election and Labour win. Most remainers voted Labour and they'll make things extremely difficult for Corbyn. The issue will eff up his administration. He sounds very blase about this, but I hope that in reality behind the scenes they're prioritising finding some way of minimising the damage it would do to the party.

    Meanwhile, the mood of the country re Brexit has subtly changed. Yes, most people are content to respect the will of the referendum and see Brexit through, but people's understanding of the consequences of Brexit is much better than it was when they were asked to make the decision. Although in theory "Brexit means Brexit" there are clearly things that people don't want to lose when EU membership ends; lots of different things depending on the group of people: businesses, researchers, students, tourists, shoppers, immigrants, expats, etc. Fulfilling all those requirements is nigh-on impossible and makes being the government of Brexit a fool's errand.

    Therefore from a self-interest point of view, staying in power and seeing any kind of Brexit through will alienate many Tory voters - we just don't know which ones yet - so they're bound to lose the following election. Maybe giving the poisoned chalice to Corbyn would be the clever move.
    Labour was willing to let the Tories get on with it, give that until last week it looked inevitable, and let them carry the can for the consequences.

    Labour won't want to be anywhere near assuming responsibility for actually implementing it, or for the immediate aftermath. The biggest change of all is that Labour is starting to see itself as a potential alternative government, which neither the moderates nor the Corbynites have done previously.

    Everything points towards a second referendum, once the shape of the actual Brexit plan becomes clearer. Opposition from both remainers and Brexiteer-ultras should see it fall; the game is simply for the remainder majority in Parliament to ensure that the status quo becomes the alternative option.
  • isamisam Posts: 41,118
    Patrick said:

    Blimey. Over £8m bet on the next PM market on Betfair.

    £3 of that is mine, backing the awesome Priti
    Interesting choice. The replacement for May needs to be :
    1. Young enough
    2. Engaging and articulate
    3. Sensible
    4. Likeable
    5. A Tory not a TINO or Miliband channeler
    6. Reasonable looking in this TV age
    7. Different, interesting, new.
    I think they could do alot worse than Priti Patel.
    Sounds sensible. Kwasi Kwarteng should be a runner too. A non white Conservative leader would stop a lot of ammo being thrown from the left.

    I didn't want Theresa May to be the leader, but could accept she might be a safe and steady pair of hands. But in this day and age, she is not media friendly enough to win an election
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 124,683
    edited June 2017
    midwinter said:

    HYUFD said:

    midwinter said:

    midwinter said:

    jonny83 said:

    A close friend wants Dave back, I think his view was fully cemented when he read that Cameron contacted those MP's that lost when May didn't.

    Quite a few of the youngish lads I employ (all non graduates) voted Labour on Thursday in Chichester. Obviously made no difference to the result. Because of May. They'd all voted for Cameron and would have done so again had it been an option. She became voter repellent as the campaign went on.
    The Tories have to get rid of her as soon as possible.
    I would have voted for the Con/LD coalition in both 2015 and 2017 had it been an option
    Yep. Corbyn would have been destroyed.
    Would he? Cameron may have held a few more centrists bit he would not have won the UKIP voters May won
    He would when the alternative was Corbyn. It's not impossible that TM won most of the Ukip vote but lost all of Daves floating voters and a few others sat on their hands.
    Who do you think Corbyn would've preferred to be against out of the pair.
    The answer is obvious and tells you all you need to know.
    No they would not as the only reason they went for May was because she was implementing the Brexit which Cameron opposed, in the final months of Cameron's premiership Corbyn actually led him in a few polls. Boris is the only leader who may have done better than May
This discussion has been closed.