politicalbetting.com » Blog Archive » 2019 becomes favourite for year of next general election as punters ponder the EU deal
After all the waiting this is a massive day for Theresa May and for the country’s relationship with Europe.
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Ils ont partagé le monde, plus rien ne m'étonne. As the song says...
I don’t expect a 2019 election. A referendum is more likely and that’s not likely.
The problem with the German economy IS that it is overeliant on export markets.
I didn’t vote leave as I didn’t think it was wotrth the risk econimically and I am sure it will hurt my finances, but if the backstop is permanent it is not a deal worth signing. The EU have already shown themselves to be untrustworthy in these negotiations using the Good Friday Agrement and the spectre of terrorism against the U.K. All the things that made me consider voting to leave - sovereignty, democratic accountability, and uneven playing fields have proven to be true, and the economic projections of Project Fear have not been realised. A sad day.
I cannot fathom Theresa May. She spends ages instilling the mantra, "no deal is better than a bad deal" into the national consciousness and then sets up a situation where her main argument for her deal is that, "any deal is better than no deal and this deal is the only deal."
Perhaps she is simply a better chess player than I because I rather think she has set herself up to fail with that.
I can't see a good result for them on this. They have been able to avoid this for 2 years.
No deal = a deal = the worst deal = worse than the current deal.
Which is of course also a deal.
https://twitter.com/lesinrocks/status/1062636924714704897
The devil is in the detail of course...
Trump appears to be pissed off with everyone (apart form Putin).
https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/five-days-of-fury-inside-trumps-paris-temper-election-woes-and-staff-upheaval/2018/11/13/e90b7cba-e69e-11e8-a939-9469f1166f9d_story.html
As he jetted to Paris last Friday, President Trump received a congratulatory phone call aboard Air Force One. British Prime Minister Theresa May was calling to celebrate the Republican Party’s wins in the midterm elections — never mind that Democrats seized control of the House — but her appeal to the American president’s vanity was met with an ornery outburst.
Trump berated May for Britain not doing enough, in his assessment, to contain Iran. He questioned her over Brexit and complained about the trade deals he sees as unfair with European countries. May has endured Trump’s churlish temper before, but still her aides were shaken by his especially foul mood, according to U.S. and European officials briefed on the conversation....
https://twitter.com/lawdavf/status/1062643220109242368?s=21
However, whilst they cannot support it, the notion of it failing entirely and throwing us into No Deal Brexit is just too disastrous. The notion of a second referendum is way too uncertain in its potential outcome - and could result in the Tories having delivered a mandate for No Deal Brexit. Therefore, to do its duty by Britain, the Labour Party will not get in the way of May's Deal for Brexit. It will Whip its MPs to abstain on the deal.
The Conservative Party will then be free to tear itself apart over Europe again. If it chooses to go with No Deal Brexit, they will own it. And its consequences.
Let the ultras on both sides and the mediaevalists of the DUP vent their spleen in the first cycle - with only the occasional moderate voice like Hague to ensure the initial narrative doesn't kill off the deal before it breathes life (the ultras key objective atm).
This allows the 2/3rd of parliament and the country that is reasonably sane to see exactly who they would be trooping through the lobbies with if they oppose this deal (as if they didn't already know what nutters Soubry and Moggy are).
It leaves the Moggites with little new to say in the next news cycle... they opposed it before they even saw the detail. Hardly considered action in the national interest.
Then with all/almost all of the cabinet on side, the real push from govt begins, choregraphed with the EU. It will be powerful, and much of it aimed at the long-suffering/bored/reasonable public.
I think Labour will be hard pressed to argue in that scenario that voting the deal down is in the national interest and not narrow party interest - particularly when May is seen to be calling the bluff of the ultras.
I could be wrong. But it's going to be great to watch the next couple of weeks. If Mrs May fails, she will go down as a failure regardless of the merits. If the pulls this off, she will (quite rightly) be seen in a much more positive light and receive credit for bridging the seemingly impossible in the face on unceasing unpleasantness.
https://www.newsweek.com/us-military-could-invade-mexico-stop-migrant-caravan-ann-coulter-says-1190365
onservative political commentator Ann Coulter has suggested that the U.S. military should invade Mexico to stop Central American migrants seeking asylum in the U.S. from reaching the U.S. border.
Just as they have for the last three decades. Their sickness will infect British politics even with this deal.
God help us.
The failure of May's Deal will be that it did not put the matter to rest.
Johnson would then stand a good chance of being in the last two with May and the membership would be more likely to vote for Johnson in the run off.
Much better than No Deal
A people's vote leave would win by a bigger margin IMO.
Not worth the risk.
Brexit is a process not an event
Once the froth has died down and the main actors have retired we will drift away should we wish to. Likewise if the deal is too onesided it cannot rest and there will come a time when the EU has different priorities or needs UK support when a quid pro quo will change it.
Nothing in human affairs is permanent bar death and taxes
Schrodinger's Customs Union:
https://twitter.com/DavidDavisMP/status/1062439219447107584
Blackford (BBC)
"It is about the government’s desire to fundamentally take us out of the Single Market and the Customs Union."
But he had important first hand insight as to how his beloved hard Brexit would benefit him and us...
And how can it be put to rest when you have the likes of JRM harking back to some glory days that never happened, and the likes of Boris incompetently coveting the top job?
There's no deal that will not lead to problems; including no deal. It's time for everyone to compromise and stop being Neanderthal fuckwits.
They should just p*ss off to UKIP to swim with their fellow pond scum.