politicalbetting.com » Blog Archive » The betting markets now make it a 61% chance that Brexit won’t happen on March 29th as planned
This morning’s ruling by the ECJ that Article 50 can be revoked unilaterally changes the Brexit Debate at a critical time with MPs due to vote on the deal tomorrow evening.
COME AND HAVE A GO IF YOU THINK YOU'RE HARD ENOUGH.
Physician heal thyself!
YOU WANT SOME? YOU FOOKIN WANT SOME?
This isn't Guido Fawke's site...please.
It's ridiculous, prima facie, to think that anyone is going to be cowed by threats of violence from Yaxley-Lennon and his band of merry fuckwits.
Thats true. I doubt people will be marching in the streets in their millions. If there is a 'backlash' it will be increased disillusionment, and risk of low turnouts, making a breakthrough by a far-right, or far left extremists higher.
The EU elections will be the perfect place to make a protest vote.
For sure, People will be looking for the biggest loons to elect. And, it seems many European voters want some of that too.
As Alanbrooke rightly said in his excellent article yesterday, the cosy 2/3-party consensus within the EP may be about to break down in a big way. The UK's withdrawal helps the Europhile centre a little, removing the sizable UKIP and Con blocks, but that's likely to be more than offset by gains by the Eurosceptics, radicals, populists and extremists elsewhere.
For example, the 2014 EP elections in Italy returned (party-group / % / MEPs)
Dem - S&D / 41% / 31 M5S - EFDD / 21% / 17 FI - EPP / 17% / 13 Lega - NI / 6% / 5 NCR - EPP / 4% / 3
By contrast, current polling puts Lega on 34% or so with M5S on around 25%. Neither of these now sits in one of the centrist/traditional three blocs - which probably means that Italy will return around two-thirds of its MEPs to awkward squads.
Italy is, to some extent, exceptional but Germany and France could easily each return around half their MEPs outside of the centre-right / centre-left / liberal groupings. Even including the Greens as part of that consensus (which is a bit dubious), doesn't lift the numbers that high.
Europe has changed a lot in five years, and is still changing.
Only moving in one direction now. Can no dealers obstruct enough to ensure the default? I don't think they can but it may take a few months, right up to the wire.
This here oral statement at 3.30pm is going to be quite something. How would you like your crow served, Prime Minister?
Strong and stable remember. She absolutely continues to enjotthe support of her cabinet, her party and indeed the Commons having successfully toured the UK persuading people thtther deal is all they ever wanted. So pulling the meaningful vote is of course perfectly sensible as her Chief Whip informs her the government would win by 200.
Surely anything other than her reaigbresig will unleash the twin hells of 480 letters to Graham Brady and a VONC?
I suspect that the vote is being delayed to give time for the PM to ask for something at this week's summit.
It has long been thought that she would be seeking "concessions" at this summit, the only difference now is there will be no vote before it. Mrs May lives to fight another day.
The consenus down the pub last week ( anecdote alert ) wasnt so much about whether Mrs Mays deal was good or bad, but rather that all our politicans didnt give a damn about the electorate. Maybe nobody is going to come out of this well,
I've given May credit where due but she has totally lost my respect and sympathy if the MV does not happen. It was lost big anyway if losing it is such a problem what the flying heck was the point of debating it for days?
I've given May credit where due but she has totally lost my respect and sympathy if the MV does not happen. It was lost big anyway if losing it is such a problem what the flying heck was the point of debating it for days?
She was dithering hoping something would turn up. She really does seem clueless.
At least if the vote was lost she could go back to the EU and say we need to renegotiate or no deal it is.
I've given May credit where due but she has totally lost my respect and sympathy if the MV does not happen. It was lost big anyway if losing it is such a problem what the flying heck was the point of debating it for days?
She was dithering hoping something would turn up. She really does seem clueless.
At least if the vote was lost she could go back to the EU and say we need to renegotiate or no deal it is.
Why can't she do that before the vote, if it can be done at all? The EU is not completely stupid, it knows that the vote can't be won as things stand.
I don't think she's going to do anything other than fight on - she will say she had "listened" and commit to gaining concessions on the backstop at the upcoming summit. Vote in January. May enters the NY still PM and I claim my £5. Quite a survivalist.
I've given May credit where due but she has totally lost my respect and sympathy if the MV does not happen. It was lost big anyway if losing it is such a problem what the flying heck was the point of debating it for days?
She was dithering hoping something would turn up. She really does seem clueless.
At least if the vote was lost she could go back to the EU and say we need to renegotiate or no deal it is.
Why can't she do that before the vote, if it can be done at all? The EU is not completely stupid, it knows that the vote can't be won as things stand.
It honestly wouldn't surprise me if she told the EU she could win the vote.
The consenus down the pub last week ( anecdote alert ) wasnt so much about whether Mrs Mays deal was good or bad, but rather that all our politicans didnt give a damn about the electorate. Maybe nobody is going to come out of this well,
It is an absolute clusterfuck!! Our political class is beyond redemption.
I suppose one ought to be sorry for the Queen. Can't settle down to an afternoons TV since she'll be worrying that Theresa May might turn up at any moment.
The consenus down the pub last week ( anecdote alert ) wasnt so much about whether Mrs Mays deal was good or bad, but rather that all our politicans didnt give a damn about the electorate. Maybe nobody is going to come out of this well,
It is an absolute clusterfuck!! Our political class is beyond redemption.
this cohort yes, but things will change as they always do. More important is do the policies change ? I sincerely hope so.
I suspect that the vote is being delayed to give time for the PM to ask for something at this week's summit.
It has long been thought that she would be seeking "concessions" at this summit, the only difference now is there will be no vote before it. Mrs May lives to fight another day.
But what is the point of the EU offering her concessions when they know she cannot deliver?
Maybe she got some encouraging signals from her conversations with EU leaders over the weekend?
Like the ones we were told were occurring over the summer before they announced Chequers was a pile of nonsense?
They want us to remain. Holding firm increases that chance.
It increases the chance of Revoke, but it also increases the chance of a No Deal disaster. My guess is that the EU27 leaders will want to help Mrs May, but only within very limited parameters, and I don't expect it to make much difference.
I don't think she's going to do anything other than fight on - she will say she had "listened" and commit to gaining concessions on the backstop at the upcoming summit. Vote in January. May enters the NY still PM and I claim my £5. Quite a survivalist.
If the ERG had any political nous at all, some of them would have cultivated some relationships with discontented Remain-leaning Tories and would be coordinating with them to announce that they've put letters in this evening or (more likely) tomorrow.
From what we've seen so far though, they don't seem capable of anything beyond bluster.
To be fair to the Brexiteer rebels, if (and it's a big if) the EU make some meaningful concessions over the backstop then their strategy will have been vindicated.
Personally I think it's more likely, in light of the court judgement, that the EU are shaping up to make a big "Remain on these better terms" offer.
I've given May credit where due but she has totally lost my respect and sympathy if the MV does not happen. It was lost big anyway if losing it is such a problem what the flying heck was the point of debating it for days?
She was dithering hoping something would turn up. She really does seem clueless.
At least if the vote was lost she could go back to the EU and say we need to renegotiate or no deal it is.
Why can't she do that before the vote, if it can be done at all? The EU is not completely stupid, it knows that the vote can't be won as things stand.
But why should they even consider talking again until parliament formally considers their offer? Given they and parliament are both seeking the same aim - remain - they've no incentive to make leaving easier.
To be fair to the Brexiteer rebels, if (and it's a big if) the EU make some meaningful concessions over the backstop then their strategy will have been vindicated.
Personally I think it's more likely, in light of the court judgement, that the EU are shaping up to make a big "Remain on these better terms" offer.
I hope the rebels are right. But given how petrified so many mps are of no deal, and how many want to remain, I cannot see it.
I suspect that the vote is being delayed to give time for the PM to ask for something at this week's summit.
It has long been thought that she would be seeking "concessions" at this summit, the only difference now is there will be no vote before it. Mrs May lives to fight another day.
But what is the point of the EU offering her concessions when they know she cannot deliver?
This is the end of the road for her I think.
There is no concession they can offer her. The deal is falling apart because of the backstop and EU will not allow an escape clause in the backstop because then it is not a backstop.
To be fair to the Brexiteer rebels, if (and it's a big if) the EU make some meaningful concessions over the backstop then their strategy will have been vindicated.
Personally I think it's more likely, in light of the court judgement, that the EU are shaping up to make a big "Remain on these better terms" offer.
Would a parliamentary lock from transition to backstop/FTA be OK ? THey keep getting our money during transition.
I don't think she's going to do anything other than fight on - she will say she had "listened" and commit to gaining concessions on the backstop at the upcoming summit. Vote in January. May enters the NY still PM and I claim my £5. Quite a survivalist.
If the ERG had any political nous at all, some of them would have cultivated some relationships with discontented Remain-leaning Tories and would be coordinating with them to announce that they've put letters in this evening or (more likely) tomorrow.
From what we've seen so far though, they don't seem capable of anything beyond bluster.
The one issue that requires caution is there is a good chance TM could win and then cannot be moved for 12 months
I detect (drunken anecdote alert) three groupings. Brexit voters who will go ballistic, Remain voters who have gone quiet (I think they feel a little guilty that the referendum will be ignored) and Remain voters who don't give a monkeys for democracy and never did anyway,
The consenus down the pub last week ( anecdote alert ) wasnt so much about whether Mrs Mays deal was good or bad, but rather that all our politicans didnt give a damn about the electorate. Maybe nobody is going to come out of this well,
I've always held a low opinion of politicians, but it has never been lower. The "national interest" doesn't seem to get a look in. Our politicians are either eyeing up general elections and leadership elections, or they are looking for cover/events to absolve them of responsibility for something they overwhelmingly voted for. There's maybe 10-20% of our MPs I don't find contemptible, and I don't think all that highly of that tranche either.
To be fair to the Brexiteer rebels, if (and it's a big if) the EU make some meaningful concessions over the backstop then their strategy will have been vindicated.
But only if they then accept the concessions, and the deal goes through. Given how much they've been shouting the deal is an abomination, that's going to be a difficult U-turn, and meanwhile they've stirred up the 2nd referendum hornet's nest.
I suspect that the vote is being delayed to give time for the PM to ask for something at this week's summit.
It has long been thought that she would be seeking "concessions" at this summit, the only difference now is there will be no vote before it. Mrs May lives to fight another day.
But what is the point of the EU offering her concessions when they know she cannot deliver?
This is the end of the road for her I think.
Hence why a vote and resignation was the way to go. Allowed for a new attempt however unrealistic. But no, avoid a humiliating defeat...by acknowledging you were to be humiatingly defeated. Right.
To be fair to the Brexiteer rebels, if (and it's a big if) the EU make some meaningful concessions over the backstop then their strategy will have been vindicated.
Personally I think it's more likely, in light of the court judgement, that the EU are shaping up to make a big "Remain on these better terms" offer.
Would a parliamentary lock from transition to backstop/FTA be OK ? THey keep getting our money during transition.
Well that equates, in practical terms, to endless transition.
I don't think she's going to do anything other than fight on - she will say she had "listened" and commit to gaining concessions on the backstop at the upcoming summit. Vote in January. May enters the NY still PM and I claim my £5. Quite a survivalist.
If the ERG had any political nous at all, some of them would have cultivated some relationships with discontented Remain-leaning Tories and would be coordinating with them to announce that they've put letters in this evening or (more likely) tomorrow.
From what we've seen so far though, they don't seem capable of anything beyond bluster.
The one issue that requires caution is there is a good chance TM could win and then cannot be moved for 12 months
Well, it depends what she says at 3.30, but if it's generally agreed to be crap, that will probably be the best shot they'll have had so far. Then again, if she's only delaying for a week, they may be better off waiting.
To be fair to the Brexiteer rebels, if (and it's a big if) the EU make some meaningful concessions over the backstop then their strategy will have been vindicated.
But only if they then accept the concessions, and the deal goes through. Given how much they've been shouting the deal is an abomination, that's going to be a difficult U-turn, and meanwhile they've stirred up the 2nd referendum hornet's nest.
Yes, having had their strategy vindicated, many of them still wouldn't vote for it. The deal would still need some cross-party support (or abstention).
To be fair to the Brexiteer rebels, if (and it's a big if) the EU make some meaningful concessions over the backstop then their strategy will have been vindicated.
But only if they then accept the concessions, and the deal goes through. Given how much they've been shouting the deal is an abomination, that's going to be a difficult U-turn, and meanwhile they've stirred up the 2nd referendum hornet's nest.
It wouldn't be a U-turn if the concessions were significant. Though as others have said, I don't see why the EU would make that offer.
The consenus down the pub last week ( anecdote alert ) wasnt so much about whether Mrs Mays deal was good or bad, but rather that all our politicans didnt give a damn about the electorate. Maybe nobody is going to come out of this well,
I've always held a low opinion of politicians, but it has never been lower. The "national interest" doesn't seem to get a look in. Our politicians are either eyeing up general elections and leadership elections, or they are looking for cover/events to absolve them of responsibility for something they overwhelmingly voted for. There's maybe 10-20% of our MPs I don't find contemptible, and I don't think all that highly of that tranche either.
It's not even the manoeuvering for advantage that annoys me so much, as the evasion of responsibility.
I detect (drunken anecdote alert) three groupings. Brexit voters who will go ballistic, Remain voters who have gone quiet (I think they feel a little guilty that the referendum will be ignored) and Remain voters who don't give a monkeys for democracy and never did anyway,
Not far off that myself except I would say we are probably 40% leave, 40% stay and 20% wibble.
The problem for the political parties is that the wobbly centre can turn on a 50 cent piece and what was a winner last week will be a millstobe next. This basically comes down to a lack of clear leadership and not enough people having any real enthusiasm for the European project.
This ECJ ruling and the fact May is delaying the Meaningful Vote to see if she can get any concession from Brussels (very unlikely) means EUref2 looks increasingly likely as neither Deal or No Deal has a majority in the Commons unlike EUref2, maybe with an extension of Article 50 for a few months to allow it to take place as the EU is reportedly open to.
Based on civil servants reported preparations yesterday the question would be either Deal v Remain or Leave v Remain and if Leave won a second Leave with Deal or No Deal question
To be fair to the Brexiteer rebels, if (and it's a big if) the EU make some meaningful concessions over the backstop then their strategy will have been vindicated.
Personally I think it's more likely, in light of the court judgement, that the EU are shaping up to make a big "Remain on these better terms" offer.
Would a parliamentary lock from transition to backstop/FTA be OK ? THey keep getting our money during transition.
Well that equates, in practical terms, to endless transition.
I don't think she's going to do anything other than fight on - she will say she had "listened" and commit to gaining concessions on the backstop at the upcoming summit. Vote in January. May enters the NY still PM and I claim my £5. Quite a survivalist.
If the ERG had any political nous at all, some of them would have cultivated some relationships with discontented Remain-leaning Tories and would be coordinating with them to announce that they've put letters in this evening or (more likely) tomorrow.
From what we've seen so far though, they don't seem capable of anything beyond bluster.
The one issue that requires caution is there is a good chance TM could win and then cannot be moved for 12 months
Well, it depends what she says at 3.30, but if it's generally agreed to be crap, that will probably be the best shot they'll have had so far. Then again, if she's only delaying for a week, they may be better off waiting.
It is a difficult judgement. Even I do not want TM locked into another 12 months
I want her to take this as far as the vote and we all need to be mindful the public do like her
The consenus down the pub last week ( anecdote alert ) wasnt so much about whether Mrs Mays deal was good or bad, but rather that all our politicans didnt give a damn about the electorate. Maybe nobody is going to come out of this well,
I suspect that the vote is being delayed to give time for the PM to ask for something at this week's summit.
It has long been thought that she would be seeking "concessions" at this summit, the only difference now is there will be no vote before it. Mrs May lives to fight another day.
But what is the point of the EU offering her concessions when they know she cannot deliver?
This is the end of the road for her I think.
She can deliver if they drop the backstop. Will they?
I think not to May. Not without a vote first. They'd sooner push us to revoke with May in charge.
I can't see what other option she had. There was no way she could countenance losing by 200 votes, and she would've been lucky to do that well.
On her right the Brexiteers will never compromise and on her left the Remainers will never compromise.
Only option is a GE and let the chips fall where they may. Likely outcome - Corbyn as PM.
GE also solves nothing as even if Corbyn became PM also clear no majority in the Commons for his Brexit but with permanent Customs Union but not Single Market either
I don't think she's going to do anything other than fight on - she will say she had "listened" and commit to gaining concessions on the backstop at the upcoming summit. Vote in January. May enters the NY still PM and I claim my £5. Quite a survivalist.
If the ERG had any political nous at all, some of them would have cultivated some relationships with discontented Remain-leaning Tories and would be coordinating with them to announce that they've put letters in this evening or (more likely) tomorrow.
From what we've seen so far though, they don't seem capable of anything beyond bluster.
The one issue that requires caution is there is a good chance TM could win and then cannot be moved for 12 months
Well, it depends what she says at 3.30, but if it's generally agreed to be crap, that will probably be the best shot they'll have had so far. Then again, if she's only delaying for a week, they may be better off waiting.
It is a difficult judgement. Even I do not want TM locked into another 12 months
I want her to take this as far as the vote and we all need to be mindful the public do like her
They tolerate her. That's more than most politicians but I don't think they like her.
I can't see what other option she had. There was no way she could countenance losing by 200 votes, and she would've been lucky to do that well.
On her right the Brexiteers will never compromise and on her left the Remainers will never compromise.
Only option is a GE and let the chips fall where they may. Likely outcome - Corbyn as PM.
GE also solves nothing as even if Corbyn became PM also clear no majority in the Commons for his Brexit but with permanent Customs Union but not Single Market either
What? Haven't you been saying he'd get it through?
Comments
For example, the 2014 EP elections in Italy returned (party-group / % / MEPs)
Dem - S&D / 41% / 31
M5S - EFDD / 21% / 17
FI - EPP / 17% / 13
Lega - NI / 6% / 5
NCR - EPP / 4% / 3
By contrast, current polling puts Lega on 34% or so with M5S on around 25%. Neither of these now sits in one of the centrist/traditional three blocs - which probably means that Italy will return around two-thirds of its MEPs to awkward squads.
Italy is, to some extent, exceptional but Germany and France could easily each return around half their MEPs outside of the centre-right / centre-left / liberal groupings. Even including the Greens as part of that consensus (which is a bit dubious), doesn't lift the numbers that high.
Europe has changed a lot in five years, and is still changing.
Surely anything other than her reaigbresig will unleash the twin hells of 480 letters to Graham Brady and a VONC?
Genuine reason for resigning, 48 letter or HoC VoNC
To try and fail is one thing. To not even try...
A
JOKE.
Lucky I didn't take up PtP's generous 6/4 double !
Barclay is basically in charge of no deal planning isn't he?
Seriously, end this .
What has changed ?
1. Resign
2. Free vote on her deal (to avoid cabinet resignations)
3. Re-negotiate with EU (kick the can)
4. Let the people decide
Any other possibilities?
What is the most probable?
What a state of affairs.
She would also be great in the surrender negotiations .........
On her right the Brexiteers will never compromise and on her left the Remainers will never compromise.
Only option is a GE and let the chips fall where they may. Likely outcome - Corbyn as PM.
At least if the vote was lost she could go back to the EU and say we need to renegotiate or no deal it is.
They want us to remain. Holding firm increases that chance.
It's now dawning on her that she can't.
aka The Mardy-arses. Very appropriate.
https://twitter.com/jukka34/status/1072100948766539781
This is the end of the road for her I think.
You drive a hard bargain, young man.
From what we've seen so far though, they don't seem capable of anything beyond bluster.
Personally I think it's more likely, in light of the court judgement, that the EU are shaping up to make a big "Remain on these better terms" offer.
I detect (drunken anecdote alert) three groupings. Brexit voters who will go ballistic, Remain voters who have gone quiet (I think they feel a little guilty that the referendum will be ignored) and Remain voters who don't give a monkeys for democracy and never did anyway,
Calm and measured as always.
https://twitter.com/Steven_Swinford/status/1072107021057622016
The problem for the political parties is that the wobbly centre can turn on a 50 cent piece and what was a winner last week will be a millstobe next. This basically comes down to a lack of clear leadership and not enough people having any real enthusiasm for the European project.
Based on civil servants reported preparations yesterday the question would be either Deal v Remain or Leave v Remain and if Leave won a second Leave with Deal or No Deal question
I want her to take this as far as the vote and we all need to be mindful the public do like her
“It’s a mess”
“Changed your minds?”
(pretty please....)
I think not to May. Not without a vote first. They'd sooner push us to revoke with May in charge.
But I heard Mr Gove on the radio this morning saying it wouldn't be. Surely he wasn't fibbing?
Mr. Punter, to be fair to Gove, that was likely before May's decisive conference call to hold a vote on delaying the vote on making a decision.
I would however accept Ed Balls right now!!!
That's how bad it is.......