politicalbetting.com » Blog Archive » YouGov’s latest Brexit tracker – the monthly average trend chart and latest party splits
The final 2017 poll was for YouGov which included it’s regular Brexit tracker which PB has been reporting on ever since it was introduced shortly after the 2016 Brexit referendum.
I didn't really want to bring Brexit up but the Court of Session has allowed what I presume is a judicial review past the sift which seeks a determination as to whether or not the UK can unilaterally suspend the Article 50 notice. The petition is brought in the name of MPs, MEPs, and MSPs of 4 parties (no tories). The Advocate General has been ordered to lodge answers in 21 days.
I think the intention is to seek a reference to the CJEU on the question. Whether that would be capable of (a) being achieved and (b) being answered before the UK has left must be uncertain.
I'm surprised at this because the relevant clauses seem pretty clear, and give the straightforward answer 'no'.
However, in the real world I am fairly sure that if we changed our minds and shamefacedly asked to recant A50 a means would be found for us to do so by a delighted EU. Most countries would be happy to have us back and any that wished to be awkward (e.g. Luxembourg, Spain) would probably find their 'no' vote mysteriously changed to 'yes' on the way to the count. This is for two simple reasons. Not only would that kill any thought of anyone else trying to leave, but it would also bring us back in with all that lovely trade and money and intelligence data but also severely weakened and having lost much of our prestige and a number of European agencies, leaving the Francophile vision of big state federalism truly triumphant.
Which is why, no matter how badly Barnier and Davis bugger up talks between them, Theresa May is about as likely to do it as John Macdonnell is to endorse the sale of Network Rail to a group of hedge funds.
I didn't really want to bring Brexit up but the Court of Session has allowed what I presume is a judicial review past the sift which seeks a determination as to whether or not the UK can unilaterally suspend the Article 50 notice. The petition is brought in the name of MPs, MEPs, and MSPs of 4 parties (no tories). The Advocate General has been ordered to lodge answers in 21 days.
I think the intention is to seek a reference to the CJEU on the question. Whether that would be capable of (a) being achieved and (b) being answered before the UK has left must be uncertain.
I'm surprised at this because the relevant clauses seem pretty clear, and give the straightforward answer 'no'.
However, in the real world I am fairly sure that if we changed our minds and shamefacedly asked to recant A50 a means would be found for us to do so by a delighted EU. Most countries would be happy to have us back and any that wished to be awkward (e.g. Luxembourg, Spain) would probably find their 'no' vote mysteriously changed to 'yes' on the way to the count. This is for two simple reasons. Not only would that kill any thought of anyone else trying to leave, but it would also bring us back in with all that lovely trade and money and intelligence data but also severely weakened and having lost much of our prestige and a number of European agencies, leaving the Francophile vision of big state federalism truly triumphant.
Which is why, no matter how badly Barnier and Davis bugger up talks between them, Theresa May is about as likely to do it as John Macdonnell is to endorse the sale of Network Rail to a group of hedge funds.
I didn't really want to bring Brexit up but the Court of Session has allowed what I presume is a judicial review past the sift which seeks a determination as to whether or not the UK can unilaterally suspend the Article 50 notice. The petition is brought in the name of MPs, MEPs, and MSPs of 4 parties (no tories). The Advocate General has been ordered to lodge answers in 21 days.
I think the intention is to seek a reference to the CJEU on the question. Whether that would be capable of (a) being achieved and (b) being answered before the UK has left must be uncertain.
I'm surprised at this because the relevant clauses seem pretty clear, and give the straightforward answer 'no'.
However, in the real world I am fairly sure that if we changed our minds and shamefacedly asked to recant A50 a means would be found for us to do so by a delighted EU. Most countries would be happy to have us back and any that wished to be awkward (e.g. Luxembourg, Spain) would probably find their 'no' vote mysteriously changed to 'yes' on the way to the count. This is for two simple reasons. Not only would that kill any thought of anyone else trying to leave, but it would also bring us back in with all that lovely trade and money and intelligence data but also severely weakened and having lost much of our prestige and a number of European agencies, leaving the Francophile vision of big state federalism truly triumphant.
Which is why, no matter how badly Barnier and Davis bugger up talks between them, Theresa May is about as likely to do it as John Macdonnell is to endorse the sale of Network Rail to a group of hedge funds.
(I wonder if that will be third time lucky.)
Riding two horses at once you old welsh wizard.
Actually it's three at once, and I think even old Lloyd George himself would have struggled with that! (Anyway I understand he preferred whores to horses.)
On topic, what this surely does show is that there is no good widely accepted outcome to the situation we are now in. If the government tries to do a reverse ferret and stay in, there will be the same groundswell of opposition to the EU there always has been, while if they continue to pull us out those who voted Remain will still be unreconciled to that decision.
I will confess that does surprise me a bit because even as a Remainer my impression was the EU was always barely tolerated and certainly not widely liked - indeed that was one of the rationales for the referendum was it not, to ensure that there was a clear and unambiguous mandate for continued EU membership after years of sniping and division? But on this evidence it seems it was considerably more popular in and of itself than I had realised.
I'm surprised at this because the relevant clauses seem pretty clear, and give the straightforward answer 'no'.
However, in the real world I am fairly sure that if we changed our minds and shamefacedly asked to recant A50 a means would be found for us to do so by a delighted EU. Most countries would be happy to have us back and any that wished to be awkward (e.g. Luxembourg, Spain) would probably find their 'no' vote mysteriously changed to 'yes' on the way to the count. This is for two simple reasons. Not only would that kill any thought of anyone else trying to leave, but it would also bring us back in with all that lovely trade and money and intelligence data but also severely weakened and having lost much of our prestige and a number of European agencies, leaving the Francophile vision of big state federalism truly triumphant.
Which is why, no matter how badly Barnier and Davis bugger up talks between them, Theresa May is about as likely to do it as John Macdonnell is to endorse the sale of Network Rail to a group of hedge funds.
(I wonder if that will be third time lucky.)
Riding two horses at once you old welsh wizard.
Actually it's three at once, and I think even old Lloyd George himself would have struggled with that! (Anyway I understand he preferred whores to horses.)
On topic, what this surely does show is that there is no good widely accepted outcome to the situation we are now in. If the government tries to do a reverse ferret and stay in, there will be the same groundswell of opposition to the EU there always has been, while if they continue to pull us out those who voted Remain will still be unreconciled to that decision.
I will confess that does surprise me a bit because even as a Remainer my impression was the EU was always barely tolerated and certainly not widely liked - indeed that was one of the rationales for the referendum was it not, to ensure that there was a clear and unambiguous mandate for continued EU membership after years of sniping and division? But on this evidence it seems it was considerably more popular in and of itself than I had realised.
I'd argue that's an anti-Brexit sentiment rather than a pro-EU one you're picking up on there.
Thanks for sharing @DavidL . Does that mean that the AG has to come to a conclusion within 21 days? Who appointed the incumbent? Can the Court of Session refer to CJEU or could that be appealed?
Apologies for my near total ignorance of Scots law.
I said:
No he has to lodge answers, that is a written response to the Court. There will then be a procedural hearing at which the scope of the substantive hearing will be sorted out along with any questions of further pleadings, evidence, documents etc.
The Advocate General is appointed by the UK government to represent their legal interests in Scotland. Richard Keen QC is a former Dean of Faculty and one of the outstanding Court lawyers of his generation.
For a referral there has to be shown to be a legal controversy based on EU law of some substance. In my limited experience of such a thing it is quite tricky and takes a long time even when the Court is minded to make the reference in principle. A decision by a Judge at first instance to make the referral can be appealed to the Inner House of the Court of Session and, with leave, to the Supreme Court.
I didn't really want to bring Brexit up but the Court of Session has allowed what I presume is a judicial review past the sift which seeks a determination as to whether or not the UK can unilaterally suspend the Article 50 notice. The petition is brought in the name of MPs, MEPs, and MSPs of 4 parties (no tories). The Advocate General has been ordered to lodge answers in 21 days.
I think the intention is to seek a reference to the CJEU on the question. Whether that would be capable of (a) being achieved and (b) being answered before the UK has left must be uncertain.
I'm surprised at this because the relevant clauses seem pretty clear, and give the straightforward answer 'no'.
However, in the real world I am fairly sure that if we changed our minds and shamefacedly asked to recant A50 a means would be found for us to do so by a delighted EU. Most countries would be happy to have us back and any that wished to be awkward (e.g. Luxembourg, Spain) would probably find their 'no' vote mysteriously changed to 'yes' on the way to the count. This is for two simple reasons. Not only would that kill any thought of anyone else trying to leave, but it would also bring us back in with all that lovely trade and money and intelligence data but also severely weakened and having lost much of our prestige and a number of European agencies, leaving the Francophile vision of big state federalism truly triumphant.
Snip
(I wonder if that will be third time lucky.)
Riding two horses at once you old welsh wizard.
Actually it's three at once, and I think even old Lloyd George himself would have struggled with that! (Anyway I understand he preferred whores to horses.)
On topic, what this surely does show is that there is no good widely accepted outcome to the situation we are now in. If the government tries to do a reverse ferret and stay in, there will be the same groundswell of opposition to the EU there always has been, while if they continue to pull us out those who voted Remain will still be unreconciled to that decision.
I will confess that does surprise me a bit because even as a Remainer my impression was the EU was always barely tolerated and certainly not widely liked - indeed that was one of the rationales for the referendum was it not, to ensure that there was a clear and unambiguous mandate for continued EU membership after years of sniping and division? But on this evidence it seems it was considerably more popular in and of itself than I had realised.
Some anti-Brexit sentiment isn’t about Britain’s membership of the EU per se, but the opinion of a sizeable number of Remainers on their fellow electors who voted the other way.
I didn't really want to bring Brexit up but the Court of Session has allowed what I presume is a judicial review past the sift which seeks a determination as to whether or not the UK can unilaterally suspend the Article 50 notice. The petition is brought in the name of MPs, MEPs, and MSPs of 4 parties (no tories). The Advocate General has been ordered to lodge answers in 21 days.
I think the intention is to seek a reference to the CJEU on the question. Whether that would be capable of (a) being achieved and (b) being answered before the UK has left must be uncertain.
Thanks for sharing @DavidL . Does that mean that the AG has to come to a conclusion within 21 days? Who appointed the incumbent? Can the Court of Session refer to CJEU or could that be appealed?
Apologies for my near total ignorance of Scots law.
No he has to lodge answers, that is a written response to the Court. There will then be a procedural hearing at which the scope of the substantive hearing will be sorted out along with any questions of further pleadings, evidence, documents etc.
The Advocate General is appointed by the UK government to represent their legal interests in Scotland. Richard Keen QC is a former Dean of Faculty and one of the outstanding Court lawyers of his generation.
For a referral there has to be shown to be a legal controversy based on EU law of some substance. In my limited experience of such a thing it is quite tricky and takes a long time even when the Court is minded to make the reference in principle. A decision by a Judge at first instance to make the referral can be appealed to the Inner House of the Court of Session and, with leave, to the Supreme Court.
On topic I suspect the government will be mildly disappointed that they did not get a bigger boost from the first stage deal with the EU which should have allayed some of the hysteria. But I think Mike's assessment of very little movement is right.
I'd argue that's an anti-Brexit sentiment rather than a pro-EU one you're picking up on there.
You're starting to understand why Brexit will be the death of British Euroscepticism.
Well, that's where it gets murky because I always thought if we left, that the decision would be irrevocable because (a) the EU would promptly go careering off on a different path and (b) because it was never very popular anyway hardly anybody would want to go back in. In which case, it would be the death of British euroscepticism because it would have ceased to be a concept. But clearly item (b) was wrong.
Item A still seems quite likely though especially given recent developments over Poland, Hungary and Austria where the EU itch to meddle seems to be irresistible. If the EU does head towards full federalism it's difficult to see how we can rejoin it - for example, I would be very surprised indeed if there is a majority to join a federal EU in Scotland.
I didn't really want to bring Brexit up but the Court of Session has allowed what I presume is a judicial review past the sift which seeks a determination as to whether or not the UK can unilaterally suspend the Article 50 notice. The petition is brought in the name of MPs, MEPs, and MSPs of 4 parties (no tories). The Advocate General has been ordered to lodge answers in 21 days.
I think the intention is to seek a reference to the CJEU on the question. Whether that would be capable of (a) being achieved and (b) being answered before the UK has left must be uncertain.
I'm surprised at this because the relevant clauses seem pretty clear, and give the straightforward answer 'no'.
Snip
(I wonder if that will be third time lucky.)
Riding two horses at once you old welsh wizard.
Actually it's three at once, and I think even old Lloyd George himself would have struggled with that! (Anyway I understand he preferred whores to horses.)
On topic, what this surely does show is that there is no good widely accepted outcome to the situation we are now in. If the government tries to do a reverse ferret and stay in, there will be the same groundswell of opposition to the EU there always has been, while if they continue to pull us out those who voted Remain will still be unreconciled to that decision.
I will confess that does surprise me a bit because even as a Remainer my impression was the EU was always barely tolerated and certainly not widely liked - indeed that was one of the rationales for the referendum was it not, to ensure that there was a clear and unambiguous mandate for continued EU membership after years of sniping and division? But on this evidence it seems it was considerably more popular in and of itself than I had realised.
Some anti-Brexit sentiment isn’t about Britain’s membership of the EU per se, but the opinion of a sizeable number of Remainers on their fellow electors who voted the other way.
The facts that Leave voters tend to be working class, middle aged and elderly, right wing, and live in unfashionable parts of the country, are perceived as morally reprehensible characteristics.
Both sides have been dumping manure on each other for being stupid/traitors since the referendum. People are not likely to change their minds in these circumstances.
Both sides have been dumping manure on each other for being stupid/traitors since the referendum. People are not likely to change their minds in these circumstances.
+1 Not helpful in the long term either. Let alone the short.
I'd argue that's an anti-Brexit sentiment rather than a pro-EU one you're picking up on there.
You're starting to understand why Brexit will be the death of British Euroscepticism.
Well, that's where it gets murky because I always thought if we left, that the decision would be irrevocable because (a) the EU would promptly go careering off on a different path and (b) because it was never very popular anyway hardly anybody would want to go back in. In which case, it would be the death of British euroscepticism because it would have ceased to be a concept. But clearly item (b) was wrong.
Item A still seems quite likely though especially given recent developments over Poland, Hungary and Austria where the EU itch to meddle seems to be irresistible. If the EU does head towards full federalism it's difficult to see how we can rejoin it - for example, I would be very surprised indeed if there is a majority to join a federal EU in Scotland.
Unless we experience catastrophe, I expect that b) holds good as well.
"The fact that they tend to be working class, middle aged and elderly, and right wing are perceived as morally reprehensible characteristics."
Don't forget northern, don't have degrees (when they were young having a degree actually meant something!), racist, xenophobic, only voted leave cos of an advert on a bus and didn't know what they were voting for!
I'd argue that's an anti-Brexit sentiment rather than a pro-EU one you're picking up on there.
You're starting to understand why Brexit will be the death of British Euroscepticism.
Well, that's where it gets murky because I always thought if we left, that the decision would be irrevocable because (a) the EU would promptly go careering off on a different path and (b) because it was never very popular anyway hardly anybody would want to go back in. In which case, it would be the death of British euroscepticism because it would have ceased to be a concept. But clearly item (b) was wrong.
Item A still seems quite likely though especially given recent developments over Poland, Hungary and Austria where the EU itch to meddle seems to be irresistible. If the EU does head towards full federalism it's difficult to see how we can rejoin it - for example, I would be very surprised indeed if there is a majority to join a federal EU in Scotland.
The idea that Euroscepticism would cease to be a concept is also wrong for the reason that a clean break is simply not possible, so if Brexit continues on its path, we'll still be dealing with the consequences for decades.
Talking about 'full' federalism is also problematic because how do you define it? The Schulz plan is pure fantasy that is a legal impossibility.
Both sides have been dumping manure on each other for being stupid/traitors since the referendum. People are not likely to change their minds in these circumstances.
+1 Not helpful in the long term either. Let alone the short.
Absolutely. I personally will try to be less virulent in 2018, and stick to the facts and issues. This year will be exciting enough without indulging in unnecessary personal attacks.
I'd argue that's an anti-Brexit sentiment rather than a pro-EU one you're picking up on there.
You're starting to understand why Brexit will be the death of British Euroscepticism.
Well, that's where it gets murky because I always thought if we left, that the decision would be irrevocable because (a) the EU would promptly go careering off on a different path and (b) because it was never very popular anyway hardly anybody would want to go back in. In which case, it would be the death of British euroscepticism because it would have ceased to be a concept. But clearly item (b) was wrong.
Item A still seems quite likely though especially given recent developments over Poland, Hungary and Austria where the EU itch to meddle seems to be irresistible. If the EU does head towards full federalism it's difficult to see how we can rejoin it - for example, I would be very surprised indeed if there is a majority to join a federal EU in Scotland.
The idea that Euroscepticism would cease to be a concept is also wrong for the reason that a clean break is simply not possible, so if Brexit continues on its path, we'll still be dealing with the consequences for decades.
Talking about 'full' federalism is also problematic because how do you define it? The Schulz plan is pure fantasy that is a legal impossibility.
So is their plan for Brexit - so is ours. But we appear to be taking both of them seriously!
Over Christmas I met up with an old friend - the most right-wing person I know - and to my surprise he was spitting blood about Brexit and the Leavers (Rees-Mogg, Boris, the bloke who owns Wetherspoons all met with his ire). I tried to assuage him ('I'm sure they meant well', 'Perhaps it will turn out okay') but he wasn't having any of it. Not a happy man.
Over Christmas I met up with an old friend - the most right-wing person I know - and to my surprise he was spitting blood about Brexit and the Leavers (Rees-Mogg, Boris, the bloke who owns Wetherspoons all met with his ire). I tried to assuage him ('I'm sure they meant well', 'Perhaps it will turn out okay') but he wasn't having any of it. Not a happy man.
Interesting. Has he actually changed his mind about Brexit, or is he enraged by the actions of the people you mention, or both?
I didn't really want to bring Brexit up but the Court of Session has allowed what I presume is a judicial review past the sift which seeks a determination as to whether or not the UK can unilaterally suspend the Article 50 notice. The petition is brought in the name of MPs, MEPs, and MSPs of 4 parties (no tories). The Advocate General has been ordered to lodge answers in 21 days.
I think the intention is to seek a reference to the CJEU on the question. Whether that would be capable of (a) being achieved and (b) being answered before the UK has left must be uncertain.
I'm surprised at this because the relevant clauses seem pretty clear, and give the straightforward answer 'no'.
Snip
(I wonder if that will be third time lucky.)
Riding two horses at once you old welsh wizard.
Actually it's three at once, and I think even old Lloyd George himself would have struggled with that! (Anyway I understand he preferred whores to horses.)
On topic, what this surely does show is that there is no good widely accepted outcome to the situation we are now in. If the government tries to do a reverse ferret and stay in, there will be the same groundswell of opposition to the EU there always has been, while if they continue to pull us out those who voted Remain will still be unreconciled to that decision.
I will confess that does surprise me a bit because even as a Remainer my impression was the EU was always barely tolerated and certainly not widely liked - indeed that was one of the rationales for the referendum was it not, to ensure that there was a clear and unambiguous mandate for continued EU membership after years of sniping and division? But on this evidence it seems it was considerably more popular in and of itself than I had realised.
Some anti-Brexit sentiment isn’t about Britain’s membership of the EU per se, but the opinion of a sizeable number of Remainers on their fellow electors who voted the other way.
The facts that Leave voters tend to be working class, middle aged and elderly, right wing, and live in unfashionable parts of the country, are perceived as morally reprehensible characteristics.
Brexit may elicit the odd snarky comment at work or a bit of piss-taking by clients in foreign lands, but apart from that the only time I ever talk about it is on PB. It's really not a big issue for voters. The consequences are and will be, of course, but that is different. The debate now should not be on stopping Brexit - which is a waste of time and energy - but on ensuring the softest, bounciest version possible. It'll be worse than what we have, but is a lot better than the alternative We are on the road to leaving in name only essentially - with some fluff to cover the government's embarrassments on free movement, the ECJ and regulatory equivalence - but Mrs May struggles to ignore the siren sound of the right wing press so we must all remain on our guards.
""The fact that they tend to be working class, middle aged and elderly, and right wing are perceived as morally reprehensible characteristics."
Don't forget northern, don't have degrees (when they were young having a degree actually meant something!), racist, xenophobic, only voted leave cos of an advert on a bus and didn't know what they were voting for!"
Happy that believing Remainers are patronising gits gives succour to Leavers who are coming to realise that "taking back control" and the reclamation of sovereignty* are simple fantasies.
I didn't really want to bring Brexit up but the Court of Session has allowed what I presume is a judicial review past the sift which seeks a determination as to whether or not the UK can unilaterally suspend the Article 50 notice. The petition is brought in the name of MPs, MEPs, and MSPs of 4 parties (no tories). The Advocate General has been ordered to lodge answers in 21 days.
I think the intention is to seek a reference to the CJEU on the question. Whether that would be capable of (a) being achieved and (b) being answered before the UK has left must be uncertain.
I'm surprised at this because the relevant clauses seem pretty clear, and give the straightforward answer 'no'.
Snip
(I wonder if that will be third time lucky.)
Riding two horses at once you old welsh wizard.
Actually it's three at once, and I think even old Lloyd George himself would have struggled with that! (Anyway I understand he preferred whores to horses.)
On topic, what this surely does show is that there is no good widely accepted outcome to the situation we are now in. If the government tries to do a reverse ferret and stay in, there will be the same groundswell of opposition to the EU there always has been, while if they continue to pull us out those who voted Remain will still be unreconciled to that decision.
I will confess that does surprise me a bit because even as a Remainer my impression was the EU was always barely tolerated and certainly not widely liked - indeed that was one of the rationales for the referendum was it not, to ensure that there was a clear and unambiguous mandate for continued EU membership after years of sniping and division? But on this evidence it seems it was considerably more popular in and of itself than I had realised.
Some anti-Brexit sentiment isn’t about Britain’s membership of the EU per se, but the opinion of a sizeable number of Remainers on their fellow electors who voted the other way.
The facts that Leave voters tend to be working class, middle aged and elderly, right wing, and live in unfashionable parts of the country, are perceived as morally reprehensible characteristics.
What is your profile?
Middle class, middle aged, right wing, and living in an unfashionable part of the country.
Brexit may elicit the odd snarky comment at work or a bit of piss-taking by clients in foreign lands, but apart from that the only time I ever talk about it is on PB. It's really not a big issue for voters. The consequences are and will be, of course, but that is different. The debate now should not be on stopping Brexit - which is a waste of time and energy - but on ensuring the softest, bounciest version possible. It'll be worse than what we have, but is a lot better than the alternative We are on the road to leaving in name only essentially - with some fluff to cover the government's embarrassments on free movement, the ECJ and regulatory equivalence - but Mrs May struggles to ignore the siren sound of the right wing press so we must all remain on our guards.
The ECJ is where I think potential problems may arise. I have two key objections to it - (1) I happen to believe as a point of principle that everybody in the same country should be answerable to the same law and (2) more pertinently, the ECJ is both toothless and very prone to siding with whoever shouts the loudest. It is a weak and ineffectual court and certainly not something I would be willing to depend on. British courts by contrast are certainly not without their faults but have real teeth (witness the time they forced the government to bring back somebody who had been illegally deported - the ECJ for all their bluster could never have done that).
So if there is any sign of caving in and allowing it permanent oversight separately from our own legal system, that's a serious matter, especially for EU citizens who would effectively lose the right to have the more robust protection of the British courts. I'm pretty unhappy about its being allowed to have jurisdiction beyond next year as it is (it's one of the less edifying features of the EU) - any further extension is a big no-no.
Brexit may elicit the odd snarky comment at work or a bit of piss-taking by clients in foreign lands, but apart from that the only time I ever talk about it is on PB. It's really not a big issue for voters. The consequences are and will be, of course, but that is different. The debate now should not be on stopping Brexit - which is a waste of time and energy - but on ensuring the softest, bounciest version possible. It'll be worse than what we have, but is a lot better than the alternative We are on the road to leaving in name only essentially - with some fluff to cover the government's embarrassments on free movement, the ECJ and regulatory equivalence - but Mrs May struggles to ignore the siren sound of the right wing press so we must all remain on our guards.
I think what's genuinely surprising is how muted the reaction to the various concessions has been, and how easily the pro-Brexit press has fallen in behind them. Will the MPs who think a full clean break is the only Brexit worth having really support a deal where the only realistic long-term outcome is a soft-Brexit or reversal?
I didn't really want to bring Brexit up but the Court of Session has allowed what I presume is a judicial review past the sift which seeks a determination as to whether or not the UK can unilaterally suspend the Article 50 notice. The petition is brought in the name of MPs, MEPs, and MSPs of 4 parties (no tories). The Advocate General has been ordered to lodge answers in 21 days.
I think the intention is to seek a reference to the CJEU on the question. Whether that would be capable of (a) being achieved and (b) being answered before the UK has left must be uncertain.
I'm surprised at this because the relevant clauses seem pretty clear, and give the straightforward answer 'no'.
Snip
(I wonder if that will be third time lucky.)
Riding two horses at once you old welsh wizard.
Actually it's three at once, and I think even old Lloyd George himself would have struggled with that! (Anyway I understand he preferred whores to horses.)
On topic, what this surely does show is that there is no good widely accepted outcome to the situation we are now in. If the government tries to do a reverse ferret and stay in, there will be the same groundswell of opposition to the EU there always has been, while if they continue to pull us out those who voted Remain will still be unreconciled to that decision.
I will confess that does surprise me a bit because even as a Remainer my impression was the EU was always barely tolerated and certainly not widely liked - indeed that was one of the rationales for the referendum was it not, to ensure that there was a clear and unambiguous mandate for continued EU membership after years of sniping and division? But on this evidence it seems it was considerably more popular in and of itself than I had realised.
Some anti-Brexit sentiment isn’t about Britain’s membership of the EU per se, but the opinion of a sizeable number of Remainers on their fellow electors who voted the other way.
The facts that Leave voters tend to be working class, middle aged and elderly, right wing, and live in unfashionable parts of the country, are perceived as morally reprehensible characteristics.
What is your profile?
Middle class, middle aged, right wing, and living in an unfashionable part of the country.
so not the typical Leaver profile you described. Just as with @brendan16 you are trying to create a narrative whereby Remainers are patronising which allows you to deflect from the implications of your vote.
Over Christmas I met up with an old friend - the most right-wing person I know - and to my surprise he was spitting blood about Brexit and the Leavers (Rees-Mogg, Boris, the bloke who owns Wetherspoons all met with his ire). I tried to assuage him ('I'm sure they meant well', 'Perhaps it will turn out okay') but he wasn't having any of it. Not a happy man.
Interesting. Has he actually changed his mind about Brexit, or is he enraged by the actions of the people you mention, or both?
I always had him down as an arch euro-sceptic. Perhaps he still is but sees the consequences of Brexit as being far worse - the EU's WWII to Brexit's Hitler so to speak.
Brexit may elicit the odd snarky comment at work or a bit of piss-taking by clients in foreign lands, but apart from that the only time I ever talk about it is on PB. It's really not a big issue for voters. The consequences are and will be, of course, but that is different. The debate now should not be on stopping Brexit - which is a waste of time and energy - but on ensuring the softest, bounciest version possible. It'll be worse than what we have, but is a lot better than the alternative We are on the road to leaving in name only essentially - with some fluff to cover the government's embarrassments on free movement, the ECJ and regulatory equivalence - but Mrs May struggles to ignore the siren sound of the right wing press so we must all remain on our guards.
I think what's genuinely surprising is how muted the reaction to the various concessions has been, and how easily the pro-Brexit press has fallen in behind them. Will the MPs who think a full clean break is the only Brexit worth having really support a deal where the only realistic long-term outcome is a soft-Brexit or reversal?
I suspect that if there were be a change and JC were to ‘mastermind’ negotiations, even if exactly the same deals were struck, then said Press would be up in arms. In other words if it’s the Tories doing it, it must be, more or less OK!
What is interesting is that it is now Labour voters who are most split on Brexit, before the EU referendum when Cameron was still Tory leader and UKIP were still a force it was the Tories who were most split with 58% of Tories voting Leave and 63% of Labour voters voting Remain
Now 69% of Labour voters back Remain compared to 81% of LD voters while 72% of Tory voters back Leave. Those numbers explain the Labour leaderships current lack of a clear position on the Brexit process and long-term outcome.
Brexit may elicit the odd snarky comment at work or a bit of piss-taking by clients in foreign lands, but apart from that the only time I ever talk about it is on PB. It's really not a big issue for voters. The consequences are and will be, of course, but that is different. The debate now should not be on stopping Brexit - which is a waste of time and energy - but on ensuring the softest, bounciest version possible. It'll be worse than what we have, but is a lot better than the alternative We are on the road to leaving in name only essentially - with some fluff to cover the government's embarrassments on free movement, the ECJ and regulatory equivalence - but Mrs May struggles to ignore the siren sound of the right wing press so we must all remain on our guards.
The ECJ is where I think potential problems may arise. I have two key objections to it - (1) I happen to believe as a point of principle that everybody in the same country should be answerable to the same law and (2) more pertinently, the ECJ is both toothless and very prone to siding with whoever shouts the loudest. It is a weak and ineffectual court and certainly not something I would be willing to depend on. British courts by contrast are certainly not without their faults but have real teeth (witness the time they forced the government to bring back somebody who had been illegally deported - the ECJ for all their bluster could never have done that).
So if there is any sign of caving in and allowing it permanent oversight separately from our own legal system, that's a serious matter, especially for EU citizens who would effectively lose the right to have the more robust protection of the British courts. I'm pretty unhappy about its being allowed to have jurisdiction beyond next year as it is (it's one of the less edifying features of the EU) - any further extension is a big no-no.
The ECJ generally deals in areas that are of almost no concern to voters. That's where its role is likely to continue. It'll be along the lines of the UK courts seeking non-binding guidance on issues pertaining to regulatory equivalence. There'll be some kind of joint body to deal with more contentious issues like citizens' rights.
Brexit may elicit the odd snarky comment at work or a bit of piss-taking by clients in foreign lands, but apart from that the only time I ever talk about it is on PB. It's really not a big issue for voters. The consequences are and will be, of course, but that is different. The debate now should not be on stopping Brexit - which is a waste of time and energy - but on ensuring the softest, bounciest version possible. It'll be worse than what we have, but is a lot better than the alternative We are on the road to leaving in name only essentially - with some fluff to cover the government's embarrassments on free movement, the ECJ and regulatory equivalence - but Mrs May struggles to ignore the siren sound of the right wing press so we must all remain on our guards.
I think what's genuinely surprising is how muted the reaction to the various concessions has been, and how easily the pro-Brexit press has fallen in behind them. Will the MPs who think a full clean break is the only Brexit worth having really support a deal where the only realistic long-term outcome is a soft-Brexit or reversal?
I would say you're thinking of that the wrong way. Their approach would appear to be the Michael Collins one - that it gives us 'the freedom to win freedom.' That is to say, allows us to diverge, but more gradually and less damagingly than a hard instant break, which they probably understand now isn't possible and isn't likely to happen anyway.
Whether they're right about the outcome or not is a very different question.
What is interesting is that it is now Labour voters who are most split on Brexit, before the EU referendum when Cameron was still Tory leader and UKIP were still a force it was the Tories who were most split.
Now just 69% of Labour voters back Remain compared to 81% of LD voters while 72% of Tory voters back Leave. Those numbers explain the Labour leaderships current lack of a clear position on the Brexit process and long-term outcome.
There's been a shake out, as Labour Leave voters shift rightward, and Conservative Remain voters shift leftward.
Brexit may elicit the odd snarky comment at work or a bit of piss-taking by clients in foreign lands, but apart from that the only time I ever talk about it is on PB. It's really not a big issue for voters. The consequences are and will be, of course, but that is different. The debate now should not be on stopping Brexit - which is a waste of time and energy - but on ensuring the softest, bounciest version possible. It'll be worse than what we have, but is a lot better than the alternative We are on the road to leaving in name only essentially - with some fluff to cover the government's embarrassments on free movement, the ECJ and regulatory equivalence - but Mrs May struggles to ignore the siren sound of the right wing press so we must all remain on our guards.
I think what's genuinely surprising is how muted the reaction to the various concessions has been, and how easily the pro-Brexit press has fallen in behind them. Will the MPs who think a full clean break is the only Brexit worth having really support a deal where the only realistic long-term outcome is a soft-Brexit or reversal?
At some point the right wing press will realise what is going on and will start to give serious space to the Tory right that does want a clean break. That will present May's resolve with its toughest test. The choice remains a simple, binary one: we do as the EU requires to get the deal we need, or we jump off the cliff. It seems pretty clear that the choice has already been made. Everything else is just posing.
The ECJ generally deals in areas that are of almost no concern to voters. That's where its role is likely to continue. It'll be along the lines of the UK courts seeking non-binding guidance on issues pertaining to regulatory equivalence. There'll be some kind of joint body to deal with more contentious issues like citizens' rights.
In any case, a joint body would be inappropriate. One country, one law, one legal system. Examples to the contrary are, shall we say, less than stellar.
The reason why that there is a blip towards Brexit was wrong in the polls is that the Remain case has been dominating the media for months on end, Project fear has been in full swing, and the Leave arguments have not been made.
But we do not have government by opinion poll. The decision was taken in June 2016 at the referendum.
Remoaners should stop trying to frustrate that referendum result. Respect the Brexit vote, give it a chance to succeed, and if it is the disaster you predict, then campaign to rejoin the EU at a later date.
The reason why that there is a blip towards Brexit was wrong in the polls is that the Remain case has been dominating the media for months on end, Project fear has been in full swing, and the Leave arguments have not been made.
But we do not have government by opinion poll. The decision was taken in June 2016 at the referendum.
Remoaners should stop trying to frustrate that referendum result. Respect the Brexit vote, give it a chance to succeed, and if it is the disaster you predict, then campaign to rejoin the EU at a later date.
Right, so where do we put the customs border with Ireland?
The reason why that there is a blip towards Brexit was wrong in the polls is that the Remain case has been dominating the media for months on end, Project fear has been in full swing, and the Leave arguments have not been made.
But we do not have government by opinion poll. The decision was taken in June 2016 at the referendum.
Remoaners should stop trying to frustrate that referendum result. Respect the Brexit vote, give it a chance to succeed, and if it is the disaster you predict, then campaign to rejoin the EU at a later date.
1. Very few remainers are trying to frustrate the referendum result 2. We do respect the Brexit vote and have no option but to give it a chance to succeed - please explain what that means, that said. 3. Very few remainers thought or think it would be a disaster, just that it would diminish the wealth and prosperity of the UK, in particular of those who can least afford it; and 4. We may, we may not. But I personally can't see us going back and am far from sure it would be the right thing to do as it would destroy yet more value for the country.
I didn't really want to bring Brexit up but the Court I think the intention is to seek a reference to the CJEU on the question. Whether that would be capable of (a) being achieved and (b) being answered before the UK has left must be uncertain.
I'm surprised at this because the relevant clauses seem pretty clear, and give the straightforward answer 'no'.
Snip
(I wonder if that will be third time lucky.)
Riding two horses at once you old welsh wizard.
Actually it's three at once, and I think even old Lloyd George himself would have struggled with that! (Anyway I understand he preferred whores to horses.)
On topic, what this surely does show is that there is no good widely accepted outcome to the situation we are now in. If the government tries to do a reverse ferret and stay in, there will be the same groundswell of opposition to the EU there always has been, while if they continue to pull us out those who voted Remain will still be unreconciled to that decision.
I will confess that does surprise me a bit because even as a Remainer my impression was the EU was always barely tolerated and certainly not widely liked - indeed that was one of the rationales for the referendum was it not, to ensure that there was a clear and unambiguous mandate for continued EU membership after years of sniping and division? But on this evidence it seems it was considerably more popular in and of itself than I had realised.
Some anti-Brexit sentiment isn’t about Britain’s membership of the EU per se, but the opinion of a sizeable number of Remainers on their fellow electors who voted the other way.
The facts that Leave voters tend to be working class, middle aged and elderly, right wing, and live in unfashionable parts of the country, are perceived as morally reprehensible characteristics.
What is your profile?
Middle class, middle aged, right wing, and living in an unfashionable part of the country.
so not the typical Leaver profile you described. Just as with @brendan16 you are trying to create a narrative whereby Remainers are patronising which allows you to deflect from the implications of your vote.
Garbage. Anyone who thinks Adonis et al are anything other than entitled and partisan is living in the clouds themselves.
I didn't really want to bring Brexit up but the Court I think the intention is to seek a reference to the CJEU on the question. Whether that would be capable of (a) being achieved and (b) being answered before the UK has left must be uncertain.
I'm surprised at this because the relevant clauses seem pretty clear, and give the straightforward answer 'no'.
Snip
(I wonder if that will be third time lucky.)
Riding two horses at once you old welsh wizard.
Actually it's three at once, and I think even old Lloyd George himself would have struggled with that! (Anyway I understand he preferred whores to horses.)
On topic, what this surely does show is that there is no good widely accepted outcome to the situation we are now in. If the government tries to do a reverse ferret and stay in, there will be the same groundswell of opposition to the EU there always has been, while if they continue to pull us out those who voted Remain will still be unreconciled to that decision.
I will confess that does surprise me a bit because even as a Remainer my impression was the EU was always barely tolerated and certainly not widely liked - indeed that was one of the rationales for the referendum was it not, to ensure that there was a clear and unambiguous mandate for continued EU membership after years of sniping and division? But on this evidence it seems it was considerably more popular in and of itself than I had realised.
Some anti-Brexit sentiment isn’t about Britain’s membership of the EU per se, but the opinion of a sizeable number of Remainers on their fellow electors who voted the other way.
The facts that Leave voters tend to be working class, middle aged and elderly, right wing, and live in unfashionable parts of the country, are perceived as morally reprehensible characteristics.
What is your profile?
Middle class, middle aged, right wing, and living in an unfashionable part of the country.
so not the typical Leaver profile you described. Just as with @brendan16 you are trying to create a narrative whereby Remainers are patronising which allows you to deflect from the implications of your vote.
Garbage. Anyone who thinks Adonis et al are anything other than entitled and partisan is living in the clouds themselves.
What is interesting is that it is now Labour voters who are most split on Brexit, before the EU referendum when Cameron was still Tory leader and UKIP were still a force it was the Tories who were most split.
Now just 69% of Labour voters back Remain compared to 81% of LD voters while 72% of Tory voters back Leave. Those numbers explain the Labour leaderships current lack of a clear position on the Brexit process and long-term outcome.
There's been a shake out, as Labour Leave voters shift rightward, and Conservative Remain voters shift leftward.
Rest assured, this Labour Leaver is not shifting rightward!
The ECJ generally deals in areas that are of almost no concern to voters. That's where its role is likely to continue. It'll be along the lines of the UK courts seeking non-binding guidance on issues pertaining to regulatory equivalence. There'll be some kind of joint body to deal with more contentious issues like citizens' rights.
In any case, a joint body would be inappropriate. One country, one law, one legal system. Examples to the contrary are, shall we say, less than stellar.
Specifically on citizens' rights. But that'll be part of a wider final agreement, which is a few years off yet (and until we get to that point the ECJ will have a direct role, no doubt, as the transition time is extended). The EU's aim with citizens' rights is not to ensure a role for the ECJ but to protect the status of EU citizens.
so not the typical Leaver profile you described. Just as with @brendan16 you are trying to create a narrative whereby Remainers are patronising which allows you to deflect from the implications of your vote.
The reason why that there is a blip towards Brexit was wrong in the polls is that the Remain case has been dominating the media for months on end, Project fear has been in full swing, and the Leave arguments have not been made.
But we do not have government by opinion poll. The decision was taken in June 2016 at the referendum.
Remoaners should stop trying to frustrate that referendum result. Respect the Brexit vote, give it a chance to succeed, and if it is the disaster you predict, then campaign to rejoin the EU at a later date.
Right, so where do we put the customs border with Ireland?
It's the EU who want a customs border, not the UK. It will be on their side of the line if it exists at all.
The reason why that there is a blip towards Brexit was wrong in the polls is that the Remain case has been dominating the media for months on end, Project fear has been in full swing, and the Leave arguments have not been made.
But we do not have government by opinion poll. The decision was taken in June 2016 at the referendum.
Remoaners should stop trying to frustrate that referendum result. Respect the Brexit vote, give it a chance to succeed, and if it is the disaster you predict, then campaign to rejoin the EU at a later date.
Right, so where do we put the customs border with Ireland?
What is interesting is that it is now Labour voters who are most split on Brexit, before the EU referendum when Cameron was still Tory leader and UKIP were still a force it was the Tories who were most split.
Now just 69% of Labour voters back Remain compared to 81% of LD voters while 72% of Tory voters back Leave. Those numbers explain the Labour leaderships current lack of a clear position on the Brexit process and long-term outcome.
There's been a shake out, as Labour Leave voters shift rightward, and Conservative Remain voters shift leftward.
Rest assured, this Labour Leaver is not shifting rightward!
so not the typical Leaver profile you described. Just as with @brendan16 you are trying to create a narrative whereby Remainers are patronising which allows you to deflect from the implications of your vote.
Be fair, he scores three out of four!
Yes that is true; but for an Old Gower, perhaps he thinks an unfashionable part of the country means Swiss Cottage which isn't all that bad.
so not the typical Leaver profile you described. Just as with @brendan16 you are trying to create a narrative whereby Remainers are patronising which allows you to deflect from the implications of your vote.
Be fair, he scores three out of four!
Yes that is true; but for an Old Gower, perhaps he thinks an unfashionable part of the country means Swiss Cottage which isn't all that bad.
The reason why that there is a blip towards Brexit was wrong in the polls is that the Remain case has been dominating the media for months on end, Project fear has been in full swing, and the Leave arguments have not been made.
But we do not have government by opinion poll. The decision was taken in June 2016 at the referendum.
Remoaners should stop trying to frustrate that referendum result. Respect the Brexit vote, give it a chance to succeed, and if it is the disaster you predict, then campaign to rejoin the EU at a later date.
Right, so where do we put the customs border with Ireland?
We opt for free trade, so it's up to the EU to erect a customs border to protect their precious industries.
so not the typical Leaver profile you described. Just as with @brendan16 you are trying to create a narrative whereby Remainers are patronising which allows you to deflect from the implications of your vote.
Be fair, he scores three out of four!
Yes that is true; but for an Old Gower, perhaps he thinks an unfashionable part of the country means Swiss Cottage which isn't all that bad.
so not the typical Leaver profile you described. Just as with @brendan16 you are trying to create a narrative whereby Remainers are patronising which allows you to deflect from the implications of your vote.
Be fair, he scores three out of four!
Yes that is true; but for an Old Gower, perhaps he thinks an unfashionable part of the country means Swiss Cottage which isn't all that bad.
I live in Luton.
My dear, the noise and the people.
Edit: plus it shows how upside down and chippy you Brexiters are. Who on earth determines that Luton is unfashionable, and who gives a flying ****?
Specifically on citizens' rights. But that'll be part of a wider final agreement, which is a few years off yet (and until we get to that point the ECJ will have a direct role, no doubt, as the transition time is extended). The EU's aim with citizens' rights is not to ensure a role for the ECJ but to protect the status of EU citizens.
Sorry, I'm not willing to buy that. The ECJ offers as much practical protection to any EU citizen in this country or elsewhere as a paper wall in a hurricane. The only reason its ineptitude is not more problematic at the moment is because national courts can enforce its rulings. Where they fail to do so, as in France over BSE, it is simply ignored.
Therefore, not only should it not be used but I suspect an ulterior motive in bringing it forward. Neither is really an acceptable outcome.
The reason why that there is a blip towards Brexit was wrong in the polls is that the Remain case has been dominating the media for months on end, Project fear has been in full swing, and the Leave arguments have not been made.
But we do not have government by opinion poll. The decision was taken in June 2016 at the referendum.
Remoaners should stop trying to frustrate that referendum result. Respect the Brexit vote, give it a chance to succeed, and if it is the disaster you predict, then campaign to rejoin the EU at a later date.
Right, so where do we put the customs border with Ireland?
We opt for free trade, so it's up to the EU to erect a customs border to protect their precious industries.
We can't opt for free trade. We can opt not to impose any tariffs or regulatory barriers for people who import goods and services, but that is completely different; and is, of course, something that the government has already ruled out.
The ECJ is where I think potential problems may arise. I have two key objections to it - (1) I happen to believe as a point of principle that everybody in the same country should be answerable to the same law and (2) more pertinently, the ECJ is both toothless and very prone to siding with whoever shouts the loudest. It is a weak and ineffectual court and certainly not something I would be willing to depend on. British courts by contrast are certainly not without their faults but have real teeth (witness the time they forced the government to bring back somebody who had been illegally deported - the ECJ for all their bluster could never have done that).
So if there is any sign of caving in and allowing it permanent oversight separately from our own legal system, that's a serious matter, especially for EU citizens who would effectively lose the right to have the more robust protection of the British courts. I'm pretty unhappy about its being allowed to have jurisdiction beyond next year as it is (it's one of the less edifying features of the EU) - any further extension is a big no-no.
Most people misunderstand the role of the ECJ. It isn't a court that issues judgments on individual cases, nor is it a stage in the appeals process (eg Appeal Court then Supreme Court then ECJ). In fact it provides advice to national courts on the interpretation of EU law. It is then up to national courts to actually interpret the law as it affects the case in front of them, to make their judgments and apply the appropriate sanctions. In an ideal world the intervention of the ECJ makes no difference to any outcomes because national courts are interpreting the law correctly and consistently, as they are anyway required to do. In practice the ECJ advice is given to ensure that legal consistency everywhere the law applies.
A couple of comments on this. Firstly the ECJ system places a lot of trust on the independence and competence of national courts. The undermining of the rule of law in Poland in particular also undermines the functioning of the EU in one of its member states.
Secondly, you could argue that the ECJ is not the extra-territorial monster it is made out to be as judgments are all made by national courts. For that argument to have value people need to understand how the ECJ actually works rather than how they imagine it works.
so not the typical Leaver profile you described. Just as with @brendan16 you are trying to create a narrative whereby Remainers are patronising which allows you to deflect from the implications of your vote.
Be fair, he scores three out of four!
Yes that is true; but for an Old Gower, perhaps he thinks an unfashionable part of the country means Swiss Cottage which isn't all that bad.
I live in Luton.
My dear, the noise and the people.
Edit: plus it shows how upside down and chippy you Brexiters are. Who on earth determines that Luton is unfashionable, and who gives a flying ****?
It's chief attractions are that it's very close to the North Hertfordshire countryside, which is beautiful, and that house prices are much cheaper than in London.
The reason why that there is a blip towards Brexit was wrong in the polls is that the Remain case has been dominating the media for months on end, Project fear has been in full swing, and the Leave arguments have not been made.
But we do not have government by opinion poll. The decision was taken in June 2016 at the referendum.
Remoaners should stop trying to frustrate that referendum result. Respect the Brexit vote, give it a chance to succeed, and if it is the disaster you predict, then campaign to rejoin the EU at a later date.
Right, so where do we put the customs border with Ireland?
We opt for free trade, so it's up to the EU to erect a customs border to protect their precious industries.
Even if we created free ports or free trade zones, we would still need to enforce regular customs checks for goods crossing the UK border for compliance with WTO rules of origin and so on.
This flow chart explains quite well how it works in Singapore:
The reason why that there is a blip towards Brexit was wrong in the polls is that the Remain case has been dominating the media for months on end, Project fear has been in full swing, and the Leave arguments have not been made.
But we do not have government by opinion poll. The decision was taken in June 2016 at the referendum.
Remoaners should stop trying to frustrate that referendum result. Respect the Brexit vote, give it a chance to succeed, and if it is the disaster you predict, then campaign to rejoin the EU at a later date.
Right, so where do we put the customs border with Ireland?
We opt for free trade, so it's up to the EU to erect a customs border to protect their precious industries.
We can't opt for free trade. We can opt not to impose any tariffs or regulatory barriers for people who import goods and services, but that is completely different; and is, of course, something that the government has already ruled out.
Of course we can, with a unilateral declaration that customs barriers will be abolished. That's what a sovereign nation can do.
so not the typical Leaver profile you described. Just as with @brendan16 you are trying to create a narrative whereby Remainers are patronising which allows you to deflect from the implications of your vote.
Be fair, he scores three out of four!
Yes that is true; but for an Old Gower, perhaps he thinks an unfashionable part of the country means Swiss Cottage which isn't all that bad.
I live in Luton.
My dear, the noise and the people.
Edit: plus it shows how upside down and chippy you Brexiters are. Who on earth determines that Luton is unfashionable, and who gives a flying ****?
It's chief attractions are that it's very close to the North Hertfordshire countryside, which is beautiful, and that house prices are much cheaper than in London.
What is interesting is that it is now Labour voters who are most split on Brexit, before the EU referendum when Cameron was still Tory leader and UKIP were still a force it was the Tories who were most split.
Now just 69% of Labour voters back Remain compared to 81% of LD voters while 72% of Tory voters back Leave. Those numbers explain the Labour leaderships current lack of a clear position on the Brexit process and long-term outcome.
There's been a shake out, as Labour Leave voters shift rightward, and Conservative Remain voters shift leftward.
Rest assured, this Labour Leaver is not shifting rightward!
Give it time.
I agreed with sandy twice last week and I ain 't a lefty - it's already happening.
What is interesting is that it is now Labour voters who are most split on Brexit, before the EU referendum when Cameron was still Tory leader and UKIP were still a force it was the Tories who were most split.
Now just 69% of Labour voters back Remain compared to 81% of LD voters while 72% of Tory voters back Leave. Those numbers explain the Labour leaderships current lack of a clear position on the Brexit process and long-term outcome.
There's been a shake out, as Labour Leave voters shift rightward, and Conservative Remain voters shift leftward.
Since 2015 some Tory Remainers have moved to Labour or the LDs and some Labour Leavers and over half of UKIP voters to the Tories and 20% of UKIP voters to Labour
I didn't really want to bring Brexit up but the Court of Session has allowed what I presume is a judicial review past the sift which seeks a determination as to whether or not the UK can unilaterally suspend the Article 50 notice. The petition is brought in the name of MPs, MEPs, and MSPs of 4 parties (no tories). The Advocate General has been ordered to lodge answers in 21 days.
I think the intention is to seek a reference to the CJEU on the question. Whether that would be capable of (a) being achieved and (b) being answered before the UK has left must be uncertain.
I'm surprised at this because the relevant clauses seem pretty clear, and give the straightforward answer 'no'.
Snip
(I wonder if that will be third time lucky.)
Riding two horses at once you old welsh wizard.
Actually it's three at once, and I think even old Lloyd George himself would have struggled with that! (Anyway I understand he preferred whores to horses.)
On topic, what this surely does show is that there is no good widely accepted outcome to the situation we are now in. If the government tries to do a reverse ferret and stay in, there will be the same groundswell of opposition to the EU there always has been, while if they continue to pull us out those who voted Remain will still be unreconciled to that decision.
I will confess that does surprise me a bit because even as a Remainer my impression was the EU was always barely tolerated and certainly not widely liked - indeed that was one of the rationales for the referendum was it not, to ensure that there was a clear and unambiguous mandate for continued EU membership after years of sniping and division? But on this evidence it seems it was considerably more popular in and of itself than I had realised.
Some anti-Brexit sentiment isn’t about Britain’s membership of the EU per se, but the opinion of a sizeable number of Remainers on their fellow electors who voted the other way.
The facts that Leave voters tend to be working class, middle aged and elderly, right wing, and live in unfashionable parts of the country, are perceived as morally reprehensible characteristics.
I fulfill 3 of those 4 criteria and voted Remain. Am I morally reprehensible, self-loathing or merely confused?
The reason why that there is a blip towards Brexit was wrong in the polls is that the Remain case has been dominating the media for months on end, Project fear has been in full swing, and the Leave arguments have not been made.
But we do not have government by opinion poll. The decision was taken in June 2016 at the referendum.
Remoaners should stop trying to frustrate that referendum result. Respect the Brexit vote, give it a chance to succeed, and if it is the disaster you predict, then campaign to rejoin the EU at a later date.
Right, so where do we put the customs border with Ireland?
We opt for free trade, so it's up to the EU to erect a customs border to protect their precious industries.
We can opt not to impose any tariffs or regulatory barriers for people who import goods and services, but that is completely different; and is, of course, something that the government has already ruled out.
A couple of comments on this. Firstly the ECJ system places a lot of trust on the independence and competence of national courts. The undermining of the rule of law in Poland in particular also undermines the functioning of the EU in one of its member states.
Secondly, you could argue that the ECJ is not the extra-territorial monster it is made out to be as judgments are all made by national courts. For that argument to have value people need to understand how the ECJ actually works rather than how they imagine it works.
So again we come back to the point that what is proposed is a role for which the ECJ is wholly unsuited and where it has demonstrated its feebleness.
So even leaving aside principled objections - why is this being put forward, apparently in all seriousness, by the EU? Have they taken leave of what passes for their senses, are they trolling or did they actually not expect this to be taken seriously?
Specifically on citizens' rights. But that'll be part of a wider final agreement, which is a few years off yet (and until we get to that point the ECJ will have a direct role, no doubt, as the transition time is extended). The EU's aim with citizens' rights is not to ensure a role for the ECJ but to protect the status of EU citizens.
Sorry, I'm not willing to buy that. The ECJ offers as much practical protection to any EU citizen in this country or elsewhere as a paper wall in a hurricane. The only reason its ineptitude is not more problematic at the moment is because national courts can enforce its rulings. Where they fail to do so, as in France over BSE, it is simply ignored.
Therefore, not only should it not be used but I suspect an ulterior motive in bringing it forward. Neither is really an acceptable outcome.
I am not sure I get that. The ECJ's role will remain unchanged for as long as the UK is part of the EU and, beyond that, transitioning to its new relationship with the EU. As the UK recognises and respects the rule of law, enforcement of ECJ rulings will not be an issue during this time. The interesting bit will be where we go to post-Brexit under the new relationship. My guess is that as we will need to agree a high degree of regulatory convergence in order to retain the level of access to the single market we require, some kind of ostensibly non-binding referral system will be adopted; while for issues like citizens' rights - which affect UK citizens living in the EU, of course, just as much as EU citizens living in the UK - there will be some kind of joint body set up to handle the relatively few disputes that are so contentious they cannot be dealt with at a national level.
The reason why that there is a blip towards Brexit was wrong in the polls is that the Remain case has been dominating the media for months on end, Project fear has been in full swing, and the Leave arguments have not been made.
But we do not have government by opinion poll. The decision was taken in June 2016 at the referendum.
Remoaners should stop trying to frustrate that referendum result. Respect the Brexit vote, give it a chance to succeed, and if it is the disaster you predict, then campaign to rejoin the EU at a later date.
Right, so where do we put the customs border with Ireland?
We opt for free trade, so it's up to the EU to erect a customs border to protect their precious industries.
This is the taking back control by having no customs borders Leave argument again, isn't it.
The reason why that there is a blip towards Brexit was wrong in the polls is that the Remain case has been dominating the media for months on end, Project fear has been in full swing, and the Leave arguments have not been made.
But we do not have government by opinion poll. The decision was taken in June 2016 at the referendum.
Remoaners should stop trying to frustrate that referendum result. Respect the Brexit vote, give it a chance to succeed, and if it is the disaster you predict, then campaign to rejoin the EU at a later date.
Right, so where do we put the customs border with Ireland?
We opt for free trade, so it's up to the EU to erect a customs border to protect their precious industries.
We can opt not to impose any tariffs or regulatory barriers for people who import goods and services, but that is completely different; and is, of course, something that the government has already ruled out.
Have they ? When ? Link ?
See Michael Gove and the regulation of the way in which animals are treated. That will need to be policed. Thus, there will be a regulatory barrier for the import of animals and animal products.
A couple of comments on this. Firstly the ECJ system places a lot of trust on the independence and competence of national courts. The undermining of the rule of law in Poland in particular also undermines the functioning of the EU in one of its member states.
Secondly, you could argue that the ECJ is not the extra-territorial monster it is made out to be as judgments are all made by national courts. For that argument to have value people need to understand how the ECJ actually works rather than how they imagine it works.
So again we come back to the point that what is proposed is a role for which the ECJ is wholly unsuited and where it has demonstrated its feebleness.
So even leaving aside principled objections - why is this being put forward, apparently in all seriousness, by the EU? Have they taken leave of what passes for their senses, are they trolling or did they actually not expect this to be taken seriously?
The ECJ has always been a service that issues advice to national courts. You could argue it is feeble because it trusts the national courts to do their jobs, but you can't at the same time accuse it of being overbearing.
Edit. I come back to the point. The function of the ECJ is to establish a consistency of judicial interpretation. A consistency that in an ideal world would be happening anyway because all courts are interpreting the same law.
Brexit may elicit the odd snarky comment at work or a bit of piss-taking by clients in foreign lands, but apart from that the only time I ever talk about it is on PB. It's really not a big issue for voters. The consequences are and will be, of course, but that is different. The debate now should not be on stopping Brexit - which is a waste of time and energy - but on ensuring the softest, bounciest version possible. It'll be worse than what we have, but is a lot better than the alternative We are on the road to leaving in name only essentially - with some fluff to cover the government's embarrassments on free movement, the ECJ and regulatory equivalence - but Mrs May struggles to ignore the siren sound of the right wing press so we must all remain on our guards.
I think what's genuinely surprising is how muted the reaction to the various concessions has been, and how easily the pro-Brexit press has fallen in behind them. Will the MPs who think a full clean break is the only Brexit worth having really support a deal where the only realistic long-term outcome is a soft-Brexit or reversal?
At some point the right wing press will realise what is going on and will start to give serious space to the Tory right that does want a clean break. That will present May's resolve with its toughest test. The choice remains a simple, binary one: we do as the EU requires to get the deal we need, or we jump off the cliff. It seems pretty clear that the choice has already been made. Everything else is just posing.
Yes. I suspect that was why Boris was leaking that he'd been 'hung out to dry' by the rest of the Cabinet the other day. When the cliff-edgers realize what's happening and throw the inevitably wobbly, he can step forward as their champion and saviour.
The reason why that there is a blip towards Brexit was wrong in the polls is that the Remain case has been dominating the media for months on end, Project fear has been in full swing, and the Leave arguments have not been made.
But we do not have government by opinion poll. The decision was taken in June 2016 at the referendum.
Remoaners should stop trying to frustrate that referendum result. Respect the Brexit vote, give it a chance to succeed, and if it is the disaster you predict, then campaign to rejoin the EU at a later date.
Right, so where do we put the customs border with Ireland?
We opt for free trade, so it's up to the EU to erect a customs border to protect their precious industries.
We can opt not to impose any tariffs or regulatory barriers for people who import goods and services, but that is completely different; and is, of course, something that the government has already ruled out.
Have they ? When ? Link ?
See Michael Gove and the regulation of the way in which animals are treated. That will need to be policed. Thus, there will be a regulatory barrier for the import of animals and animal products.
But you said tarriffs...
And it isn't a hard border - just a restriction on selling goats that have been beaten.
The reason why that there is a blip towards Brexit was wrong in the polls is that the Remain case has been dominating the media for months on end, Project fear has been in full swing, and the Leave arguments have not been made.
But we do not have government by opinion poll. The decision was taken in June 2016 at the referendum.
Remoaners should stop trying to frustrate that referendum result. Respect the Brexit vote, give it a chance to succeed, and if it is the disaster you predict, then campaign to rejoin the EU at a later date.
Right, so where do we put the customs border with Ireland?
We opt for free trade, so it's up to the EU to erect a customs border to protect their precious industries.
We can't opt for free trade. We can opt not to impose any tariffs or regulatory barriers for people who import goods and services, but that is completely different; and is, of course, something that the government has already ruled out.
Of course we can, with a unilateral declaration that customs barriers will be abolished. That's what a sovereign nation can do.
That is not opting for free trade. Trade is a two way thing involving imports and exports. If we do not impose tariffs or regulatory obstacles but others do there is no free trade. There is just us making the unilateral decision to give no country anywhere in the world any incentive to agree any kind of trade deal with us.
The reason why that there is a blip towards Brexit was wrong in the polls is that the Remain case has been dominating the media for months on end, Project fear has been in full swing, and the Leave arguments have not been made.
But we do not have government by opinion poll. The decision was taken in June 2016 at the referendum.
Remoaners should stop trying to frustrate that referendum result. Respect the Brexit vote, give it a chance to succeed, and if it is the disaster you predict, then campaign to rejoin the EU at a later date.
Right, so where do we put the customs border with Ireland?
We opt for free trade, so it's up to the EU to erect a customs border to protect their precious industries.
This is the taking back control by having no customs borders Leave argument again, isn't it.
Choosing to have no border is a choice which isn't available now.
The reason why that there is a blip towards Brexit was wrong in the polls is that the Remain case has been dominating the media for months on end, Project fear has been in full swing, and the Leave arguments have not been made.
But we do not have government by opinion poll. The decision was taken in June 2016 at the referendum.
Remoaners should stop trying to frustrate that referendum result. Respect the Brexit vote, give it a chance to succeed, and if it is the disaster you predict, then campaign to rejoin the EU at a later date.
Right, so where do we put the customs border with Ireland?
We opt for free trade, so it's up to the EU to erect a customs border to protect their precious industries.
This is the taking back control by having no customs borders Leave argument again, isn't it.
There's a strong overlap between certain Brexiteer positions and the 'freemen on the land' movement.
The reason why that there is a blip towards Brexit was wrong in the polls is that the Remain case has been dominating the media for months on end, Project fear has been in full swing, and the Leave arguments have not been made.
But we do not have government by opinion poll. The decision was taken in June 2016 at the referendum.
Remoaners should stop trying to frustrate that referendum result. Respect the Brexit vote, give it a chance to succeed, and if it is the disaster you predict, then campaign to rejoin the EU at a later date.
Right, so where do we put the customs border with Ireland?
We opt for free trade, so it's up to the EU to erect a customs border to protect their precious industries.
We can opt not to impose any tariffs or regulatory barriers for people who import goods and services, but that is completely different; and is, of course, something that the government has already ruled out.
Have they ? When ? Link ?
See Michael Gove and the regulation of the way in which animals are treated. That will need to be policed. Thus, there will be a regulatory barrier for the import of animals and animal products.
But you said tarriffs...
And it isn't a hard border - just a restriction on selling goats that have been beaten.
No, I said: "We can opt not to impose any tariffs or regulatory barriers ..."
The reason why that there is a blip towards Brexit was wrong in the polls is that the Remain case has been dominating the media for months on end, Project fear has been in full swing, and the Leave arguments have not been made.
But we do not have government by opinion poll. The decision was taken in June 2016 at the referendum.
Remoaners should stop trying to frustrate that referendum result. Respect the Brexit vote, give it a chance to succeed, and if it is the disaster you predict, then campaign to rejoin the EU at a later date.
Right, so where do we put the customs border with Ireland?
We opt for free trade, so it's up to the EU to erect a customs border to protect their precious industries.
We can't opt for free trade. We can opt not to impose any tariffs or regulatory barriers for people who import goods and services, but that is completely different; and is, of course, something that the government has already ruled out.
Of course we can, with a unilateral declaration that customs barriers will be abolished. That's what a sovereign nation can do.
That is not opting for free trade. Trade is a two way thing involving imports and exports. If we do not impose tariffs or regulatory obstacles but others do there is no free trade. There is just us making the unilateral decision to give no country anywhere in the world any incentive to agree any kind of trade deal with us.
It maximises the welfare of consumers in our country. If other countries want to penalise their consumers that's their business.
The reason why that there is a blip towards Brexit was wrong in the polls is that the Remain case has been dominating the media for months on end, Project fear has been in full swing, and the Leave arguments have not been made.
But we do not have government by opinion poll. The decision was taken in June 2016 at the referendum.
Remoaners should stop trying to frustrate that referendum result. Respect the Brexit vote, give it a chance to succeed, and if it is the disaster you predict, then campaign to rejoin the EU at a later date.
Right, so where do we put the customs border with Ireland?
We opt for free trade, so it's up to the EU to erect a customs border to protect their precious industries.
We can opt not to impose any tariffs or regulatory barriers for people who import goods and services, but that is completely different; and is, of course, something that the government has already ruled out.
Have they ? When ? Link ?
See Michael Gove and the regulation of the way in which animals are treated. That will need to be policed. Thus, there will be a regulatory barrier for the import of animals and animal products.
But you said tarriffs...
And it isn't a hard border - just a restriction on selling goats that have been beaten.
No, I said: "We can opt not to impose any tariffs or regulatory barriers ..."
Do you think the EU will be keen to unilaterally add a new layer of tariffs on Uk goods ?
In any case, a joint body would be inappropriate. One country, one law, one legal system. Examples to the contrary are, shall we say, less than stellar.
So that would be UK...one country...three legal systems...and four laws (recognising that while Wales is part of E&W jurisdiction and legal system it nevertheless has different laws)
The reason why that there is a blip towards Brexit was wrong in the polls is that the Remain case has been dominating the media for months on end, Project fear has been in full swing, and the Leave arguments have not been made.
But we do not have government by opinion poll. The decision was taken in June 2016 at the referendum.
Remoaners should stop trying to frustrate that referendum result. Respect the Brexit vote, give it a chance to succeed, and if it is the disaster you predict, then campaign to rejoin the EU at a later date.
Right, so where do we put the customs border with Ireland?
We opt for free trade, so it's up to the EU to erect a customs border to protect their precious industries.
This is the taking back control by having no customs borders Leave argument again, isn't it.
Choosing to have no border is a choice which isn't available now.
We are in a trade arrangement now whereby we have helped to formulate an agreement on a mutual external border. And you are saying that we would be more in control by not having a border, thereby letting anyone who fancies come into our country. Bizarre.
The reason why that there is a blip towards Brexit was wrong in the polls is that the Remain case has been dominating the media for months on end, Project fear has been in full swing, and the Leave arguments have not been made.
But we do not have government by opinion poll. The decision was taken in June 2016 at the referendum.
Remoaners should stop trying to frustrate that referendum result. Respect the Brexit vote, give it a chance to succeed, and if it is the disaster you predict, then campaign to rejoin the EU at a later date.
Right, so where do we put the customs border with Ireland?
We opt for free trade, so it's up to the EU to erect a customs border to protect their precious industries.
This is the taking back control by having no customs borders Leave argument again, isn't it.
Choosing to have no border is a choice which isn't available now.
We are in a trade arrangement now whereby we have helped to formulate an agreement on a mutual external border. And you are saying that we would be more in control by not having a border, thereby letting anyone who fancies come into our country. Bizarre.
The reason why that there is a blip towards Brexit was wrong in the polls is that the Remain case has been dominating the media for months on end, Project fear has been in full swing, and the Leave arguments have not been made.
But we do not have government by opinion poll. The decision was taken in June 2016 at the referendum.
Remoaners should stop trying to frustrate that referendum result. Respect the Brexit vote, give it a chance to succeed, and if it is the disaster you predict, then campaign to rejoin the EU at a later date.
Right, so where do we put the customs border with Ireland?
We opt for free trade, so it's up to the EU to erect a customs border to protect their precious industries.
We can't opt for free trade. We can opt not to impose any tariffs or regulatory barriers for people who import goods and services, but that is completely different; and is, of course, something that the government has already ruled out.
Of course we can, with a unilateral declaration that customs barriers will be abolished. That's what a sovereign nation can do.
That is not opting for free trade. Trade is a two way thing involving imports and exports. If we do not impose tariffs or regulatory obstacles but others do there is no free trade. There is just us making the unilateral decision to give no country anywhere in the world any incentive to agree any kind of trade deal with us.
It maximises the welfare of consumers in our country. If other countries want to penalise their consumers that's their business.
In the age of both tabloids and social media - it would be a brave country with a positive trade balance that wanted to add unilateral tarrifs.
The reason why that there is a blip towards Brexit was wrong in the polls is that the Remain case has been dominating the media for months on end, Project fear has been in full swing, and the Leave arguments have not been made.
But we do not have government by opinion poll. The decision was taken in June 2016 at the referendum.
Remoaners should stop trying to frustrate that referendum result. Respect the Brexit vote, give it a chance to succeed, and if it is the disaster you predict, then campaign to rejoin the EU at a later date.
Right, so where do we put the customs border with Ireland?
We opt for free trade, so it's up to the EU to erect a customs border to protect their precious industries.
We can opt not to impose any tariffs or regulatory barriers for people who import goods and services, but that is completely different; and is, of course, something that the government has already ruled out.
Have they ? When ? Link ?
See Michael Gove and the regulation of the way in which animals are treated. That will need to be policed. Thus, there will be a regulatory barrier for the import of animals and animal products.
But you said tarriffs...
And it isn't a hard border - just a restriction on selling goats that have been beaten.
No, I said: "We can opt not to impose any tariffs or regulatory barriers ..."
Do you think the EU will be keen to unilaterally add a new layer of tariffs on Uk goods ?
If we become a third country and have no specific trade agreement with the EU, the EU will follow WTO rules. That means tariffs and customs controls. The UK will then have to decide if it wishes to follow WTO rules and will have to accept the consequences if it decides not to.
The reason why that there is a blip towards Brexit was wrong in the polls is that the Remain case has been dominating the media for months on end, Project fear has been in full swing, and the Leave arguments have not been made.
But we do not have government by opinion poll. The decision was taken in June 2016 at the referendum.
Remoaners should stop trying to frustrate that referendum result. Respect the Brexit vote, give it a chance to succeed, and if it is the disaster you predict, then campaign to rejoin the EU at a later date.
Right, so where do we put the customs border with Ireland?
We opt for free trade, so it's up to the EU to erect a customs border to protect their precious industries.
This is the taking back control by having no customs borders Leave argument again, isn't it.
Choosing to have no border is a choice which isn't available now.
We are in a trade arrangement now whereby we have helped to formulate an agreement on a mutual external border. And you are saying that we would be more in control by not having a border, thereby letting anyone who fancies come into our country. Bizarre.
Who said anything about free movement of people ?
So let goods come in but not people. Policed how, exactly?
The reason why that there is a blip towards Brexit was wrong in the polls is that the Remain case has been dominating the media for months on end, Project fear has been in full swing, and the Leave arguments have not been made.
But we do not have government by opinion poll. The decision was taken in June 2016 at the referendum.
Remoaners should stop trying to frustrate that referendum result. Respect the Brexit vote, give it a chance to succeed, and if it is the disaster you predict, then campaign to rejoin the EU at a later date.
Right, so where do we put the customs border with Ireland?
We opt for free trade, so it's up to the EU to erect a customs border to protect their precious industries.
We can't opt for free trade. We can opt not to impose any tariffs or regulatory barriers for people who import goods and services, but that is completely different; and is, of course, something that the government has already ruled out.
Of course we can, with a unilateral declaration that customs barriers will be abolished. That's what a sovereign nation can do.
That is not opting for free trade. Trade is a two way thing involving imports and exports. If we do not impose tariffs or regulatory obstacles but others do there is no free trade. There is just us making the unilateral decision to give no country anywhere in the world any incentive to agree any kind of trade deal with us.
It maximises the welfare of consumers in our country. If other countries want to penalise their consumers that's their business.
It does not maximise the welfare of consumers who have jobs which may be affected by imports or exports.
Comments
However, in the real world I am fairly sure that if we changed our minds and shamefacedly asked to recant A50 a means would be found for us to do so by a delighted EU. Most countries would be happy to have us back and any that wished to be awkward (e.g. Luxembourg, Spain) would probably find their 'no' vote mysteriously changed to 'yes' on the way to the count. This is for two simple reasons. Not only would that kill any thought of anyone else trying to leave, but it would also bring us back in with all that lovely trade and money and intelligence data but also severely weakened and having lost much of our prestige and a number of European agencies, leaving the Francophile vision of big state federalism truly triumphant.
Which is why, no matter how badly Barnier and Davis bugger up talks between them, Theresa May is about as likely to do it as John Macdonnell is to endorse the sale of Network Rail to a group of hedge funds.
(I wonder if that will be third time lucky.)
On topic, what this surely does show is that there is no good widely accepted outcome to the situation we are now in. If the government tries to do a reverse ferret and stay in, there will be the same groundswell of opposition to the EU there always has been, while if they continue to pull us out those who voted Remain will still be unreconciled to that decision.
I will confess that does surprise me a bit because even as a Remainer my impression was the EU was always barely tolerated and certainly not widely liked - indeed that was one of the rationales for the referendum was it not, to ensure that there was a clear and unambiguous mandate for continued EU membership after years of sniping and division? But on this evidence it seems it was considerably more popular in and of itself than I had realised.
RoyalBlue said:
» show previous quotes
Thanks for sharing @DavidL . Does that mean that the AG has to come to a conclusion within 21 days? Who appointed the incumbent? Can the Court of Session refer to CJEU or could that be appealed?
Apologies for my near total ignorance of Scots law.
I said:
No he has to lodge answers, that is a written response to the Court. There will then be a procedural hearing at which the scope of the substantive hearing will be sorted out along with any questions of further pleadings, evidence, documents etc.
The Advocate General is appointed by the UK government to represent their legal interests in Scotland. Richard Keen QC is a former Dean of Faculty and one of the outstanding Court lawyers of his generation.
For a referral there has to be shown to be a legal controversy based on EU law of some substance. In my limited experience of such a thing it is quite tricky and takes a long time even when the Court is minded to make the reference in principle. A decision by a Judge at first instance to make the referral can be appealed to the Inner House of the Court of Session and, with leave, to the Supreme Court.
Item A still seems quite likely though especially given recent developments over Poland, Hungary and Austria where the EU itch to meddle seems to be irresistible. If the EU does head towards full federalism it's difficult to see how we can rejoin it - for example, I would be very surprised indeed if there is a majority to join a federal EU in Scotland.
"The fact that they tend to be working class, middle aged and elderly, and right wing are perceived as morally reprehensible characteristics."
Don't forget northern, don't have degrees (when they were young having a degree actually meant something!), racist, xenophobic, only voted leave cos of an advert on a bus and didn't know what they were voting for!
Talking about 'full' federalism is also problematic because how do you define it? The Schulz plan is pure fantasy that is a legal impossibility.
""The fact that they tend to be working class, middle aged and elderly, and right wing are perceived as morally reprehensible characteristics."
Don't forget northern, don't have degrees (when they were young having a degree actually meant something!), racist, xenophobic, only voted leave cos of an advert on a bus and didn't know what they were voting for!"
Happy that believing Remainers are patronising gits gives succour to Leavers who are coming to realise that "taking back control" and the reclamation of sovereignty* are simple fantasies.
*insert DD quote here.
So if there is any sign of caving in and allowing it permanent oversight separately from our own legal system, that's a serious matter, especially for EU citizens who would effectively lose the right to have the more robust protection of the British courts. I'm pretty unhappy about its being allowed to have jurisdiction beyond next year as it is (it's one of the less edifying features of the EU) - any further extension is a big no-no.
http://lordashcroftpolls.com/2016/06/how-the-united-kingdom-voted-and-why/
Now 69% of Labour voters back Remain compared to 81% of LD voters while 72% of Tory voters back Leave. Those numbers explain the Labour leaderships current lack of a clear position on the Brexit process and long-term outcome.
Whether they're right about the outcome or not is a very different question.
https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2017/dec/07/brexit-uk-fails-to-retain-voice-in-european-court-of-justice
In any case, a joint body would be inappropriate. One country, one law, one legal system. Examples to the contrary are, shall we say, less than stellar.
But we do not have government by opinion poll. The decision was taken in June 2016 at the referendum.
Remoaners should stop trying to frustrate that referendum result. Respect the Brexit vote, give it a chance to succeed, and if it is the disaster you predict, then campaign to rejoin the EU at a later date.
2. We do respect the Brexit vote and have no option but to give it a chance to succeed - please explain what that means, that said.
3. Very few remainers thought or think it would be a disaster, just that it would diminish the wealth and prosperity of the UK, in particular of those who can least afford it; and
4. We may, we may not. But I personally can't see us going back and am far from sure it would be the right thing to do as it would destroy yet more value for the country.
Other than that, great post.
http://thaddeusthesixth.blogspot.co.uk/2017/03/benevolent-dictators.html
Therefore, not only should it not be used but I suspect an ulterior motive in bringing it forward. Neither is really an acceptable outcome.
A couple of comments on this. Firstly the ECJ system places a lot of trust on the independence and competence of national courts. The undermining of the rule of law in Poland in particular also undermines the functioning of the EU in one of its member states.
Secondly, you could argue that the ECJ is not the extra-territorial monster it is made out to be as judgments are all made by national courts. For that argument to have value people need to understand how the ECJ actually works rather than how they imagine it works.
This flow chart explains quite well how it works in Singapore:
https://www.customs.gov.sg/businesses/importing-goods/quick-guide-for-importers
So even leaving aside principled objections - why is this being put forward, apparently in all seriousness, by the EU? Have they taken leave of what passes for their senses, are they trolling or did they actually not expect this to be taken seriously?
Edit. I come back to the point. The function of the ECJ is to establish a consistency of judicial interpretation. A consistency that in an ideal world would be happening anyway because all courts are interpreting the same law.
It's all fine until someone disagrees with your benevolence.
Then you have to shoot them.
And it isn't a hard border - just a restriction on selling goats that have been beaten.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Freemen_on_the_land
Suspect new world wines may see an uptick in sales.
So that would be UK...one country...three legal systems...and four laws (recognising that while Wales is part of E&W jurisdiction and legal system it nevertheless has different laws)
https://www.thetimes.co.uk/edition/news/brexit-civil-servants-average-age-is-31-thm7j5xwc