Howdy, Stranger!

It looks like you're new here. Sign in or register to get started.

politicalbetting.com » Blog Archive » The weekend polling suggest that Trump is losing voter support

1246

Comments

  • TOPPING said:

    TOPPING said:

    From Tezza's letter the two stand out points for me:

    First, this seems to limit the ability of the EU to head off into the sunset with NI in its jetstream following ever more and esoteric EU rules: "The Agreement is also clear that any new act that the Union proposes should be added to the Protocol will require the agreement of the United Kingdom in the Joint Committee."

    But the most important part of the letter, a point often and idiotically ignored or misunderstood by most No Dealers is as follows:

    "...The Belfast (Good Friday) Agreement and is successor agreements are an achievement the UK Government is deeply committed to sustaining and that is the majority view in UK politics by an overwhelming margin. No UK Government would risk that progress, including by willingly allowing a hard border to re-emerge."
    The trouble is that it is two reasonable parties confirming to each other their reasonable agreement, but the obstacle is unreasonable MPs refusing to accept that it is a reasonable agreement. It's hard to see this changing things significantly, but equally most of the so-called alternatives being banded about by MPs and opposition parties wouldn't change anything either.
    No it is one unreasonable party and one craven coward trying to foist an unacceptable backstop that Parliament is reasonably blocking.

    The PM herself said that no PM could agree to a border in the Irish Sea but her own Attorney General has already confirmed in his frank legal advice she tried to hide that this backstop creates one.
    "...No UK Government would risk that progress, including by willingly allowing a hard border to re-emerge."
    Quite right.
  • AlastairMeeksAlastairMeeks Posts: 30,340
    I am sat quietly at my desk working, listening now to the third separate conversation that has sprung up this morning about the meaningful vote. My mum, who doesn't raise politics much, was talking about it at the weekend.

    This seems to have really engaged the public, or at least the part of it I mix with.
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 53,876

    May said that the month delay on the MV was to obtain a legally-binding guarantee of an end date to the backstop and a way for the UK to derogate from it.

    What she's achieved is a statement from Juncker and Tusk that the EU is in no position to offer either of those things, and a recapitulation of the existing withdrawal agreement.

    That's not quite true, they do say this:

    In this context, it can be stated that European Council conclusions have a legal value in the Union commensurate to the authority of the European Council under the Treaties to define directions and priorities for the European Union at the highest level and, in the specific context of withdrawal, to establish, in the form of guidelines, its framework. They may commit the European Union in the most solemn manner. European Council conclusions therefore constitute part of the context in which an international agreement, such as the Withdrawal Agreement, will be interpreted.

    As for the link between the Withdrawal Agreement and the Political Declaration, to which you make reference in your letter, it can be made clear that these two documents, while being of a different nature, are part of the same negotiated package. In order to underline the close relationship between the two texts, they can be published side by side in the Official Journal in a manner reflecting the link between the two as provided for in Article 50 of the Treaty on European Union (TEU).


    So it's sort-of legally binding.
    Let's put it this way, if they subsequently tried to say it wasn't we could quite happily tell them to do one.
  • grabcocquegrabcocque Posts: 4,234



    So it's sort-of legally binding.

    If you squint a bit. EUCO decisions establish a policy direction for the Union, and draws its authority from the sovereignty of the national leaders. But the EUCO decision once again simply recommitted the EU to the exisiting withdrawal agreement, and some vague aspirations.

    May is a long, long way from what she set out to achieve.
  • Murray up to 2-2

    But Bautista Agut breaks Murray's serve in the fifth set.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 42,992
    edited January 2019

    TOPPING said:

    TOPPING said:

    From Tezza's letter the two stand out points for me:

    First, this seems to limit the ability of the EU to head off into the sunset with NI in its jetstream following ever more and esoteric EU rules: "The Agreement is also clear that any new act that the Union proposes should be added to the Protocol will require the agreement of the United Kingdom in the Joint Committee."

    But the most important part of the letter, a point often and idiotically ignored or misunderstood by most No Dealers is as follows:

    "...The Belfast (Good Friday) Agreement and is successor agreements are an achievement the UK Government is deeply committed to sustaining and that is the majority view in UK politics by an overwhelming margin. No UK Government would risk that progress, including by willingly allowing a hard border to re-emerge."
    The trouble is that it is two reasonable parties confirming to each other their reasonable agreement, but the obstacle is unreasonable MPs refusing to accept that it is a reasonable agreement. It's hard to see this changing things significantly, but equally most of the so-called alternatives being banded about by MPs and opposition parties wouldn't change anything either.
    No it is one unreasonable party and one craven coward trying to foist an unacceptable backstop that Parliament is reasonably blocking.

    The PM herself said that no PM could agree to a border in the Irish Sea but her own Attorney General has already confirmed in his frank legal advice she tried to hide that this backstop creates one.
    "...No UK Government would risk that progress, including by willingly allowing a hard border to re-emerge."
    Quite right.
    Phew thank goodness. So you are a WA fan! There will be more joy in heaven over one sinner...
  • DavidL said:

    I don't know if I am just worn down by this chaos but I seriously wonder if we are in the last week of May's Premiership in anything other than a caretaker capacity. She has run out of road and if her deal is rejected by 150+ tomorrow, which seems all too likely, she surely has to go.

    What a shame a month has been wasted. The writing was on the wall in December and NOTHING HAS CHANGED. We could have had a leadership contest over the Christmas/New Year break giving someone fresh some impetus to change something and solve this logjam.
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 43,362

    May said that the month delay on the MV was to obtain a legally-binding guarantee of an end date to the backstop and a way for the UK to derogate from it.

    What she's achieved is a statement from Juncker and Tusk that the EU is in no position to offer either of those things, and a recapitulation of the existing withdrawal agreement.

    That's not quite true, they do say this:

    In this context, it can be stated that European Council conclusions have a legal value in the Union commensurate to the authority of the European Council under the Treaties to define directions and priorities for the European Union at the highest level and, in the specific context of withdrawal, to establish, in the form of guidelines, its framework. They may commit the European Union in the most solemn manner. European Council conclusions therefore constitute part of the context in which an international agreement, such as the Withdrawal Agreement, will be interpreted.

    As for the link between the Withdrawal Agreement and the Political Declaration, to which you make reference in your letter, it can be made clear that these two documents, while being of a different nature, are part of the same negotiated package. In order to underline the close relationship between the two texts, they can be published side by side in the Official Journal in a manner reflecting the link between the two as provided for in Article 50 of the Treaty on European Union (TEU).


    So it's sort-of legally binding.
    LOL, is that kind of sort-of or maybe not really sort-of?
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 33,501

    Murray up to 2-2

    But Bautista Agut breaks Murray's serve in the fifth set.
    And holds his serve to love in the next. Murray 1-3 down now.
  • DanSmithDanSmith Posts: 1,215
    Alistair said:

    I'm seeing chat that May voted for a Conservative ammendment to the Government of Wales bill that would have withdrawn the bill during its passage through the House.

    Anyone got a link to proposed ammemdments and voting records thereof so that I can check this huge if true claim?

    I can see from the hansard record that the ammendment was proposed but I do not know if it went anywhere.

    https://twitter.com/joe_oliver/status/1084599583555178496

    https://twitter.com/joe_oliver/status/1084603135639867394
  • TOPPING said:

    .

    TOPPING said:

    TOPPING said:

    From Tezza's letter the two stand out points for me:

    First, this seems to limit the ability of the EU to head off into the sunset with NI in its jetstream following ever more and esoteric EU rules: "The Agreement is also clear that any new act that the Union proposes should be added to the Protocol will require the agreement of the United Kingdom in the Joint Committee."

    But the most important part of the letter, a point often and idiotically ignored or misunderstood by most No Dealers is as follows:

    "...The Belfast (Good Friday) Agreement and is successor agreements are an achievement the UK Government is deeply committed to sustaining and that is the majority view in UK politics by an overwhelming margin. No UK Government would risk that progress, including by willingly allowing a hard border to re-emerge."
    The trouble is that it is two reasonable parties confirming to each other their reasonable agreement, but the obstacle is unreasonable MPs refusing to accept that it is a reasonable agreement. It's hard to see this changing things significantly, but equally most of the so-called alternatives being banded about by MPs and opposition parties wouldn't change anything either.
    No it is one unreasonable party and one craven coward trying to foist an unacceptable backstop that Parliament is reasonably blocking.

    The PM herself said that no PM could agree to a border in the Irish Sea but her own Attorney General has already confirmed in his frank legal advice she tried to hide that this backstop creates one.
    "...No UK Government would risk that progress, including by willingly allowing a hard border to re-emerge."
    Quite right.
    Phew thank goodness. So you are a WA fan! There will be more joy in heaven over one sinner...
    No of course not. The backstop is awful and establishes a hard border in the Irish Sea.

    The solution is as it always has been a trade deal.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 52,626
    Pulpstar said:

    The PM seems to have put on about 8 stone and grown a moustache.

    Yeah, she's been looking awful in those weekend photos.....
  • DavidL said:

    May said that the month delay on the MV was to obtain a legally-binding guarantee of an end date to the backstop and a way for the UK to derogate from it.

    What she's achieved is a statement from Juncker and Tusk that the EU is in no position to offer either of those things, and a recapitulation of the existing withdrawal agreement.

    That's not quite true, they do say this:

    In this context, it can be stated that European Council conclusions have a legal value in the Union commensurate to the authority of the European Council under the Treaties to define directions and priorities for the European Union at the highest level and, in the specific context of withdrawal, to establish, in the form of guidelines, its framework. They may commit the European Union in the most solemn manner. European Council conclusions therefore constitute part of the context in which an international agreement, such as the Withdrawal Agreement, will be interpreted.

    As for the link between the Withdrawal Agreement and the Political Declaration, to which you make reference in your letter, it can be made clear that these two documents, while being of a different nature, are part of the same negotiated package. In order to underline the close relationship between the two texts, they can be published side by side in the Official Journal in a manner reflecting the link between the two as provided for in Article 50 of the Treaty on European Union (TEU).


    So it's sort-of legally binding.
    Let's put it this way, if they subsequently tried to say it wasn't we could quite happily tell them to do one.
    Yes, it would give us complete cover to renege on our side of the deal without losing international credibility.

    In practice it's not an issue anyway - it's blindingly obvious to anyone who has actually looked at the backstop that the EU certainly wouldn't want it to endure, and would much prefer it never to be triggered.
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 43,362
    DanSmith said:

    Alistair said:

    I'm seeing chat that May voted for a Conservative ammendment to the Government of Wales bill that would have withdrawn the bill during its passage through the House.

    Anyone got a link to proposed ammemdments and voting records thereof so that I can check this huge if true claim?

    I can see from the hansard record that the ammendment was proposed but I do not know if it went anywhere.

    https://twitter.com/joe_oliver/status/1084599583555178496

    https://twitter.com/joe_oliver/status/1084603135639867394
    Tories have always been lying cheating rats.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 52,626

    Murray up to 2-2

    But Bautista Agut breaks Murray's serve in the fifth set.
    And holds his serve to love in the next. Murray 1-3 down now.
    Last thing Murry needed was a five-setter.......
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 43,362

    Pulpstar said:

    The PM seems to have put on about 8 stone and grown a moustache.

    Yeah, she's been looking awful in those weekend photos.....
    Would have thought that would have improved her
  • DavidL said:

    May said that the month delay on the MV was to obtain a legally-binding guarantee of an end date to the backstop and a way for the UK to derogate from it.

    What she's achieved is a statement from Juncker and Tusk that the EU is in no position to offer either of those things, and a recapitulation of the existing withdrawal agreement.

    That's not quite true, they do say this:

    In this context, it can be stated that European Council conclusions have a legal value in the Union commensurate to the authority of the European Council under the Treaties to define directions and priorities for the European Union at the highest level and, in the specific context of withdrawal, to establish, in the form of guidelines, its framework. They may commit the European Union in the most solemn manner. European Council conclusions therefore constitute part of the context in which an international agreement, such as the Withdrawal Agreement, will be interpreted.

    As for the link between the Withdrawal Agreement and the Political Declaration, to which you make reference in your letter, it can be made clear that these two documents, while being of a different nature, are part of the same negotiated package. In order to underline the close relationship between the two texts, they can be published side by side in the Official Journal in a manner reflecting the link between the two as provided for in Article 50 of the Treaty on European Union (TEU).


    So it's sort-of legally binding.
    Let's put it this way, if they subsequently tried to say it wasn't we could quite happily tell them to do one.
    Yes, it would give us complete cover to renege on our side of the deal without losing international credibility.

    In practice it's not an issue anyway - it's blindingly obvious to anyone who has actually looked at the backstop that the EU certainly wouldn't want it to endure, and would much prefer it never to be triggered.
    Yeah right. If that was the case they could resolve a lot of upset by removing it.
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 53,876

    DavidL said:

    May said that the month delay on the MV was to obtain a legally-binding guarantee of an end date to the backstop and a way for the UK to derogate from it.

    What she's achieved is a statement from Juncker and Tusk that the EU is in no position to offer either of those things, and a recapitulation of the existing withdrawal agreement.

    That's not quite true, they do say this:

    In this context, it can be stated that European Council conclusions have a legal value in the Union commensurate to the authority of the European Council under the Treaties to define directions and priorities for the European Union at the highest level and, in the specific context of withdrawal, to establish, in the form of guidelines, its framework. They may commit the European Union in the most solemn manner. European Council conclusions therefore constitute part of the context in which an international agreement, such as the Withdrawal Agreement, will be interpreted.

    As for the link between the Withdrawal Agreement and the Political Declaration, to which you make reference in your letter, it can be made clear that these two documents, while being of a different nature, are part of the same negotiated package. In order to underline the close relationship between the two texts, they can be published side by side in the Official Journal in a manner reflecting the link between the two as provided for in Article 50 of the Treaty on European Union (TEU).


    So it's sort-of legally binding.
    Let's put it this way, if they subsequently tried to say it wasn't we could quite happily tell them to do one.
    Yes, it would give us complete cover to renege on our side of the deal without losing international credibility.

    In practice it's not an issue anyway - it's blindingly obvious to anyone who has actually looked at the backstop that the EU certainly wouldn't want it to endure, and would much prefer it never to be triggered.
    By far the best part of the WA is that we are getting unrestricted access to the SM, with control of borders for immigration without paying into the pot as other countries do. There are downsides as well but that part of the agreement is not what the EU is going to want long term.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 42,992
    Just listening to the commentary. Sounds like Murray is battling and all credit to him for that. Amazing that a half (if that) fit Murray can still take an Open opponent to five sets.
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 33,501
    1-4 now. Surely we're approaching the end. However, we've been here before with Murray.
  • Yeah right. If that was the case they could resolve a lot of upset by removing it.

    A wonderful example of the 'anything the EU does must by definition be evil' mindset.
  • Sean_F said:

    I am shocked, SHOCKED I tell you, that Theresa May wasted a month of everyone's time and all she has to show for it are these letters that simply restate what the Withdrawal Agreement already says.

    NOTHING, as somebody wise once said, HAS CHANGED.

    Well, it's fair enough to restate it, given that no-one seems to have actually read the Withdrawal Agreement.
    You're right, of course. The withdrawal agreement is a totem. It doesn't need to be read, it just needs to exist.

    Of course, the fact that May still believes that all she had to do was help Parliament understand how to read the document properly with suitable clarifications and assurances and everyone would fall in line, suggests that she does not realise at all at how the WA has become totemic.
    I think that for some people, the very fact that an agreement was reached makes it unacceptable.

    Nothing is agreed until everything is agreed.

    The future arrangement is yet to be agreed so nothing is agreed - or shouldn't be.
  • grabcocquegrabcocque Posts: 4,234
    It's complicated. EUCO decisions are not laws, they're not even really EU documents, they're actually diplomatic communiques issued on behalf of member states. The Council is explicitly intergovernmental, and its decisions derive their authority from being the expressed will of the governments of the member states.

    Lisbon says EUCO decisions set a policy direction for the Union and provide the impetus for its development. But the Council is not part of the EU's lawmaking machinery, and its decisions do not force the Union to act in any particular way.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 42,257

    Agree with last para. Also I suspect that May would take a majority of one as enough!

    Yes, I bet. If May really is done for, and if Brexit really is screwed, one thing is by far and away the biggest reason for that - her calling of and then botching the 2017 GE.

    I don't buy any of the shtick that she could have got a better or more popular deal by being tougher with the EU (a Brexiteer unicorn) or by reaching out earlier across the House and building a consensus for a softer Brexit (a Remainer unicorn).
  • PolruanPolruan Posts: 2,083
    tlg86 said:

    Polruan said:

    tlg86 said:

    Presumably, May being a bare-faced liar has been done on here already:
    https://twitter.com/stephenkb/status/1084602078419476482?s=21

    Not really analogous, is it? By the time of the 2001 GE (let alone 2005), the Welsh Assembly was up and running. No one has ever said that a political party should be prevented from pledging to rejoin the EU (with or without a referendum) after Brexit.
    AIUI she also voted against establishing the Assembly, despite the referendum result. Also, her ‘nobody seriously questioned’ comment is pretty broad.
    I agree that doesn't look good for her. But my point was the one around the Tories having a referendum on Welsh Devolution in their 2005 manifesto.
    Yes, but saying ‘the legitimacy of the institution has never been seriously questioned’ when your own party fought an election trying to get rid of it is a strange statement: is she saying that Tory manifesto aspirations aren’t serious?
  • DavidL said:

    DavidL said:

    May said that the month delay on the MV was to obtain a legally-binding guarantee of an end date to the backstop and a way for the UK to derogate from it.

    What she's achieved is a statement from Juncker and Tusk that the EU is in no position to offer either of those things, and a recapitulation of the existing withdrawal agreement.

    That's not quite true, they do say this:

    In this context, it can be stated that European Council conclusions have a legal value in the Union commensurate to the authority of the European Council under the Treaties to define directions and priorities for the European Union at the highest level and, in the specific context of withdrawal, to establish, in the form of guidelines, its framework. They may commit the European Union in the most solemn manner. European Council conclusions therefore constitute part of the context in which an international agreement, such as the Withdrawal Agreement, will be interpreted.

    As for the link between the Withdrawal Agreement and the Political Declaration, to which you make reference in your letter, it can be made clear that these two documents, while being of a different nature, are part of the same negotiated package. In order to underline the close relationship between the two texts, they can be published side by side in the Official Journal in a manner reflecting the link between the two as provided for in Article 50 of the Treaty on European Union (TEU).


    So it's sort-of legally binding.
    Let's put it this way, if they subsequently tried to say it wasn't we could quite happily tell them to do one.
    Yes, it would give us complete cover to renege on our side of the deal without losing international credibility.

    In practice it's not an issue anyway - it's blindingly obvious to anyone who has actually looked at the backstop that the EU certainly wouldn't want it to endure, and would much prefer it never to be triggered.
    By far the best part of the WA is that we are getting unrestricted access to the SM, with control of borders for immigration without paying into the pot as other countries do. There are downsides as well but that part of the agreement is not what the EU is going to want long term.
    Yes, the irony is that the backstop would be a fantastic deal for the UK.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 42,992

    DavidL said:

    DavidL said:

    May said that the month delay on the MV was to obtain a legally-binding guarantee of an end date to the backstop and a way for the UK to derogate from it.

    What she's achieved is a statement from Juncker and Tusk that the EU is in no position to offer either of those things, and a recapitulation of the existing withdrawal agreement.

    That's not quite true, they do say this:

    In this context, it can be stated that European Council conclusions have a legal value in the Union commensurate to the authority of the European Council under the Treaties to define directions and priorities for the European Union at the highest level and, in the specific context of withdrawal, to establish, in the form of guidelines, its framework. They may commit the European Union in the most solemn manner. European Council conclusions therefore constitute part of the context in which an international agreement, such as the Withdrawal Agreement, will be interpreted.

    As for the link between the Withdrawal Agreement and the Political Declaration, to which you make reference in your letter, it can be made clear that these two documents, while being of a different nature, are part of the same negotiated package. In order to underline the close relationship between the two texts, they can be published side by side in the Official Journal in a manner reflecting the link between the two as provided for in Article 50 of the Treaty on European Union (TEU).


    So it's sort-of legally binding.
    Let's put it this way, if they subsequently tried to say it wasn't we could quite happily tell them to do one.
    Yes, it would give us complete cover to renege on our side of the deal without losing international credibility.

    In practice it's not an issue anyway - it's blindingly obvious to anyone who has actually looked at the backstop that the EU certainly wouldn't want it to endure, and would much prefer it never to be triggered.
    By far the best part of the WA is that we are getting unrestricted access to the SM, with control of borders for immigration without paying into the pot as other countries do. There are downsides as well but that part of the agreement is not what the EU is going to want long term.
    Yes, the irony is that the backstop would be a fantastic deal for the UK.
    It is and always has been cherry-picking which is why the EU dislikes it so much. Idiots Leavers have almost universally failed to understand this
  • TOPPING said:

    .

    TOPPING said:

    TOPPING said:

    From Tezza's letter the two stand out points for me:

    First, this seems to limit the ability of the EU to head off into the sunset with NI in its jetstream following ever more and esoteric EU rules: "The Agreement is also clear that any new act that the Union proposes should be added to the Protocol will require the agreement of the United Kingdom in the Joint Committee."

    But the most important part of the letter, a point often and idiotically ignored or misunderstood by most No Dealers is as follows:

    "...The Belfast (Good Friday) Agreement and is successor agreements are an achievement the UK Government is deeply committed to sustaining and that is the majority view in UK politics by an overwhelming margin. No UK Government would risk that progress, including by willingly allowing a hard border to re-emerge."
    The trouble is that it is two reasonable parties confirming to each other their reasonable agreement, but the obstacle is unreasonable MPs refusing to accept that it is a reasonable agreement. It's hard to see this changing things significantly, but equally most of the so-called alternatives being banded about by MPs and opposition parties wouldn't change anything either.
    No it is one unreasonable party and one craven coward trying to foist an unacceptable backstop that Parliament is reasonably blocking.

    The PM herself said that no PM could agree to a border in the Irish Sea but her own Attorney General has already confirmed in his frank legal advice she tried to hide that this backstop creates one.
    "...No UK Government would risk that progress, including by willingly allowing a hard border to re-emerge."
    Quite right.
    Phew thank goodness. So you are a WA fan! There will be more joy in heaven over one sinner...
    No of course not. The backstop is awful and establishes a hard border in the Irish Sea.

    The solution is as it always has been a trade deal.
    Which should have been negotiated in parallel with the Withdrawal agreement.

    And still can be after a No Deal Bexit first.
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 78,220
    Pulpstar said:

    TOPPING said:

    Paralysis in parliament risks no Brexit "most likely."

    Wowee!

    I don't understand this line, paralysis would imply no primary legislation being able to be moved. If no primary legislation can be moved then we leave without a deal on 29th March.
    Can someone explain the mechanisms to me of how parliament can force that off the table without the acquiescence of the Gov't ?
    Anyone :) ?
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 33,501
    Murray 1-5 down now, and it's Bautista Agut's service
  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 37,389
    kinabalu said:

    Agree with last para. Also I suspect that May would take a majority of one as enough!

    Yes, I bet. If May really is done for, and if Brexit really is screwed, one thing is by far and away the biggest reason for that - her calling of and then botching the 2017 GE.

    I don't buy any of the shtick that she could have got a better or more popular deal by being tougher with the EU (a Brexiteer unicorn) or by reaching out earlier across the House and building a consensus for a softer Brexit (a Remainer unicorn).
    I think she could have peeled off a handful of Labour MPs had she reached out, but there was no chance that Corbyn would ever agree to anything she came up with (why should he?) let alone the Lib Dems or SNP.
  • Yeah right. If that was the case they could resolve a lot of upset by removing it.

    A wonderful example of the 'anything the EU does must by definition be evil' mindset.
    Not at all.

    I'm saying what the EU does here is what they want to do.

    You wish away the backstop by pretending it is unimportant and not what the EU wants.

    I see how the EU have fought vigorously for this, jeopardised the entire deal to ensure they get it and spent the last 18 months dominated on this.

    Reality unlike your pretence is the EU have shown they want the backstop by their deeds.
  • AlistairAlistair Posts: 23,670
    DanSmith said:

    Alistair said:

    I'm seeing chat that May voted for a Conservative ammendment to the Government of Wales bill that would have withdrawn the bill during its passage through the House.

    Anyone got a link to proposed ammemdments and voting records thereof so that I can check this huge if true claim?

    I can see from the hansard record that the ammendment was proposed but I do not know if it went anywhere.

    https://twitter.com/joe_oliver/status/1084599583555178496

    https://twitter.com/joe_oliver/status/1084603135639867394
    And there we go. The press should crucify May for this, and every hard Bexiter who voted Aye like the hypocrites they are.
  • CD13CD13 Posts: 6,366
    The EU will offer nothing, not as long as a re-run of the referendum is an option. It's always their default position.
  • AnazinaAnazina Posts: 3,487
    DanSmith said:

    Alistair said:

    I'm seeing chat that May voted for a Conservative ammendment to the Government of Wales bill that would have withdrawn the bill during its passage through the House.

    Anyone got a link to proposed ammemdments and voting records thereof so that I can check this huge if true claim?

    I can see from the hansard record that the ammendment was proposed but I do not know if it went anywhere.

    https://twitter.com/joe_oliver/status/1084599583555178496

    https://twitter.com/joe_oliver/status/1084603135639867394
    LOL.
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 53,876
    edited January 2019

    Well not this one and rather more importantly not the likes of Gove or even Fox (so it really can't be that complicated). But if the deal is rejected by a substantial majority tomorrow I fear that will be it.
  • Richard_NabaviRichard_Nabavi Posts: 30,821
    edited January 2019

    Yeah right. If that was the case they could resolve a lot of upset by removing it.

    A wonderful example of the 'anything the EU does must by definition be evil' mindset.
    Not at all.

    I'm saying what the EU does here is what they want to do.

    You wish away the backstop by pretending it is unimportant and not what the EU wants.

    I see how the EU have fought vigorously for this, jeopardised the entire deal to ensure they get it and spent the last 18 months dominated on this.

    Reality unlike your pretence is the EU have shown they want the backstop by their deeds.
    They think it's an insurance policy, or (more to the point) Ireland does, and the other 26 states are taking the side of their own fellow member state. I happen to think they have misjudged this, but that doesn't alter the fact that the backstop is most definitely something that they don't want to happen, as it drives a coach and horses through their four freedoms and their principle that full access to the SM requires payment into the budget.
  • Yeah right. If that was the case they could resolve a lot of upset by removing it.

    A wonderful example of the 'anything the EU does must by definition be evil' mindset.
    Not at all.

    I'm saying what the EU does here is what they want to do.

    You wish away the backstop by pretending it is unimportant and not what the EU wants.

    I see how the EU have fought vigorously for this, jeopardised the entire deal to ensure they get it and spent the last 18 months dominated on this.

    Reality unlike your pretence is the EU have shown they want the backstop by their deeds.
    They think it's an insurance policy, or (more to the point) Ireland does, and the other 26 states are taking the side of their own member. I happen to think they have misjudged this, but that doesn't alter to fact that the backstop is most definitely something that they don't want to happen, as it drives a coach and horses through their four freedoms and their principle that full access to the SM requires payment into the budget.
    Except we won't have full access to the SM in the backstop will we?

    Will our financial firms in London have a financial passport while in the backstop because of the backstop?
  • PolruanPolruan Posts: 2,083
    Pulpstar said:

    Pulpstar said:

    TOPPING said:

    Paralysis in parliament risks no Brexit "most likely."

    Wowee!

    I don't understand this line, paralysis would imply no primary legislation being able to be moved. If no primary legislation can be moved then we leave without a deal on 29th March.
    Can someone explain the mechanisms to me of how parliament can force that off the table without the acquiescence of the Gov't ?
    Anyone :) ?
    I think it’s easiest to understand if you assume that there might not be an overlap between ‘May says it’ and ‘it’s true’.

    Parliamentary paralysis would indeed mean we hit no deal, with massive gaps in our legislative preparedness to boot. A parliamentary majority overriding the government, and the government not having the decency to resign *could* mean Parliament finding ways to pass legislation but the exact route isn’t yet clear. In the end a majority can amend the standing orders of the House, so most things can flow from there.
  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 37,389
    edited January 2019
    It looks like Andrew Selous will vote for the WA (which doesn't surprise me, but he was on Con Home's list of possibles).

    Edit: Confirmed. https://www.facebook.com/AndrewSelousMP/?ref=settings
  • tlg86tlg86 Posts: 26,176
    Alistair said:

    DanSmith said:

    Alistair said:

    I'm seeing chat that May voted for a Conservative ammendment to the Government of Wales bill that would have withdrawn the bill during its passage through the House.

    Anyone got a link to proposed ammemdments and voting records thereof so that I can check this huge if true claim?

    I can see from the hansard record that the ammendment was proposed but I do not know if it went anywhere.

    https://twitter.com/joe_oliver/status/1084599583555178496

    https://twitter.com/joe_oliver/status/1084603135639867394
    And there we go. The press should crucify May for this, and every hard Bexiter who voted Aye like the hypocrites they are.
    I'm going to guess that they also voted against the legislation for the Welsh referendum in the first place so it's not quite as hypocritical as those MPs who voted for the EU referendum but don't want to implement the result.
  • AlastairMeeksAlastairMeeks Posts: 30,340
    Sean_F said:


    It looks like Andrew Selous will vote for the WA (which doesn't surprise me, but he was on Con Home's list of possibles).

    I don't think that's news. There are other MPs whose decisions are more in doubt, including some who have yet to give any indication at all.
  • anothernickanothernick Posts: 3,591
    DavidL said:

    I don't know if I am just worn down by this chaos but I seriously wonder if we are in the last week of May's Premiership in anything other than a caretaker capacity. She has run out of road and if her deal is rejected by 150+ tomorrow, which seems all too likely, she surely has to go.

    It is hard to see how she can carry on if the deal goes down by a big margin.
  • Richard_NabaviRichard_Nabavi Posts: 30,821
    edited January 2019

    Yeah right. If that was the case they could resolve a lot of upset by removing it.

    A wonderful example of the 'anything the EU does must by definition be evil' mindset.
    Not at all.

    I'm saying what the EU does here is what they want to do.

    You wish away the backstop by pretending it is unimportant and not what the EU wants.

    I see how the EU have fought vigorously for this, jeopardised the entire deal to ensure they get it and spent the last 18 months dominated on this.

    Reality unlike your pretence is the EU have shown they want the backstop by their deeds.
    They think it's an insurance policy, or (more to the point) Ireland does, and the other 26 states are taking the side of their own member. I happen to think they have misjudged this, but that doesn't alter to fact that the backstop is most definitely something that they don't want to happen, as it drives a coach and horses through their four freedoms and their principle that full access to the SM requires payment into the budget.
    Except we won't have full access to the SM in the backstop will we?

    Will our financial firms in London have a financial passport while in the backstop because of the backstop?
    You are right, it is for goods only, so Brexiteers in particular should be delighted by it as it means we can set our own regulations on financial services, just like in the 'Canada+' deal they claim they want.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 49,871

    Yeah right. If that was the case they could resolve a lot of upset by removing it.

    A wonderful example of the 'anything the EU does must by definition be evil' mindset.
    Not at all.

    I'm saying what the EU does here is what they want to do.

    You wish away the backstop by pretending it is unimportant and not what the EU wants.

    I see how the EU have fought vigorously for this, jeopardised the entire deal to ensure they get it and spent the last 18 months dominated on this.

    Reality unlike your pretence is the EU have shown they want the backstop by their deeds.
    They think it's an insurance policy, or (more to the point) Ireland does, and the other 26 states are taking the side of their own fellow member state. I happen to think they have misjudged this, but that doesn't alter the fact that the backstop is most definitely something that they don't want to happen, as it drives a coach and horses through their four freedoms and their principle that full access to the SM requires payment into the budget.
    That's the bizarre thing. In that last respect, May got a deal that was better than many were expecting. Yet it was instantly trashed by much of her own party.
  • AmpfieldAndyAmpfieldAndy Posts: 1,445

    Yeah right. If that was the case they could resolve a lot of upset by removing it.

    A wonderful example of the 'anything the EU does must by definition be evil' mindset.
    Not at all.

    I'm saying what the EU does here is what they want to do.

    You wish away the backstop by pretending it is unimportant and not what the EU wants.

    I see how the EU have fought vigorously for this, jeopardised the entire deal to ensure they get it and spent the last 18 months dominated on this.

    Reality unlike your pretence is the EU have shown they want the backstop by their deeds.
    They think it's an insurance policy, or (more to the point) Ireland does, and the other 26 states are taking the side of their own fellow member state. I happen to think they have misjudged this, but that doesn't alter to fact that the backstop is most definitely something that they don't want to happen, as it drives a coach and horses through their four freedoms and their principle that full access to the SM requires payment into the budget.
    I am sure that is the case but with no clear and certain way to exit the backstop,there is no good reason to enter the WA even if it otherwise had merit, which is debatable to say the least. The fact that the EU have sided with Eire in the negotiations is perfectly natural and understandable. It doesn’t however provide any reason for us to enter into it. It suits ROI not us.

    I think Philip’s point about how hard the EU have fought for the backstop, at the risk of jeopardising all else, means it would be foolish to rely on the assurance of a non binding letter.

  • DavidL said:

    I don't know if I am just worn down by this chaos but I seriously wonder if we are in the last week of May's Premiership in anything other than a caretaker capacity. She has run out of road and if her deal is rejected by 150+ tomorrow, which seems all too likely, she surely has to go.

    It is hard to see how she can carry on if the deal goes down by a big margin.
    And how does that help anything
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 49,871
    edited January 2019
    Alistair said:

    DanSmith said:

    Alistair said:

    I'm seeing chat that May voted for a Conservative ammendment to the Government of Wales bill that would have withdrawn the bill during its passage through the House.

    Anyone got a link to proposed ammemdments and voting records thereof so that I can check this huge if true claim?

    I can see from the hansard record that the ammendment was proposed but I do not know if it went anywhere.

    https://twitter.com/joe_oliver/status/1084599583555178496

    https://twitter.com/joe_oliver/status/1084603135639867394
    And there we go. The press should crucify May for this, and every hard Bexiter who voted Aye like the hypocrites they are.
    And further, we know they'd all be pushing for a further vote now, had it been 52-48 Remain, because they told us so in the days before the 2016 one.
  • Shameless, mendacious and hypocritical. God bless the Buccaneering Brexiteers and our Prime Minister ...
    https://twitter.com/stevepeers/status/1084607886095982592?s=21
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 33,501
    Murray out!
  • DavidL said:

    I don't know if I am just worn down by this chaos but I seriously wonder if we are in the last week of May's Premiership in anything other than a caretaker capacity. She has run out of road and if her deal is rejected by 150+ tomorrow, which seems all too likely, she surely has to go.

    It is hard to see how she can carry on if the deal goes down by a big margin.
    And how does that help anything
    So what should happen instead?
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 62,773

    DavidL said:

    I don't know if I am just worn down by this chaos but I seriously wonder if we are in the last week of May's Premiership in anything other than a caretaker capacity. She has run out of road and if her deal is rejected by 150+ tomorrow, which seems all too likely, she surely has to go.

    It is hard to see how she can carry on if the deal goes down by a big margin.
    :lol: Have you not being following how Mrs May works?

    She will announce a new trip to Brussels and a new vote in a week or two's time.

    There'll be a row, because precedence says you can't put same vote again in same session, but she'll argue there has been some minor textual change imho.
  • Shameless, mendacious and hypocritical. God bless the Buccaneering Brexiteers and our Prime Minister ...
    https://twitter.com/stevepeers/status/1084607886095982592?s=21

    May's no buccaneer.
  • AmpfieldAndyAmpfieldAndy Posts: 1,445
    DavidL said:

    I don't know if I am just worn down by this chaos but I seriously wonder if we are in the last week of May's Premiership in anything other than a caretaker capacity. She has run out of road and if her deal is rejected by 150+ tomorrow, which seems all too likely, she surely has to go.

    Let’s hope so.
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 19,469

    DavidL said:

    I don't know if I am just worn down by this chaos but I seriously wonder if we are in the last week of May's Premiership in anything other than a caretaker capacity. She has run out of road and if her deal is rejected by 150+ tomorrow, which seems all too likely, she surely has to go.

    Let’s hope so.
    Bring on Remain!
  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 37,389

    Sean_F said:


    It looks like Andrew Selous will vote for the WA (which doesn't surprise me, but he was on Con Home's list of possibles).

    I don't think that's news. There are other MPs whose decisions are more in doubt, including some who have yet to give any indication at all.
    I was surprised that he was on the list of waverers.
  • IanB2 said:

    That's the bizarre thing. In that last respect, May got a deal that was better than many were expecting. Yet it was instantly trashed by much of her own party.

    In retrospect it should always have been obvious that that would be the case.
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 78,220
    edited January 2019
    Polruan said:

    In the end a majority can amend the standing orders of the House, so most things can flow from there.

    OK, this is the sort of stuff I'm looking for - there is a whole bunch of
    duty bound
    forced to
    (When it is not strictly speaking a forcing)
    hard to see
    can't
    (When the person putting forward the argument means 'I think they probably won't')

    And other stuff being put forward both here and on the twittersphere.

    I'm looking for actual concrete mechanisms.
  • AlanbrookeAlanbrooke Posts: 25,413

    DavidL said:

    I don't know if I am just worn down by this chaos but I seriously wonder if we are in the last week of May's Premiership in anything other than a caretaker capacity. She has run out of road and if her deal is rejected by 150+ tomorrow, which seems all too likely, she surely has to go.

    It is hard to see how she can carry on if the deal goes down by a big margin.
    :lol: Have you not being following how Mrs May works?

    She will announce a new trip to Brussels and a new vote in a week or two's time.

    There'll be a row, because precedence says you can't put same vote again in same session, but she'll argue there has been some minor textual change imho.
    precedence is now dead
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 52,626

    DavidL said:

    I don't know if I am just worn down by this chaos but I seriously wonder if we are in the last week of May's Premiership in anything other than a caretaker capacity. She has run out of road and if her deal is rejected by 150+ tomorrow, which seems all too likely, she surely has to go.

    It is hard to see how she can carry on if the deal goes down by a big margin.
    :lol: Have you not being following how Mrs May works?

    She will announce a new trip to Brussels and a new vote in a week or two's time.

    There'll be a row, because precedence says you can't put same vote again in same session, but she'll argue there has been some minor textual change imho.
    However, the Speaker has now holed "precedence" under the waterline. Sauce for the goose and all that.
  • IanB2 said:

    That's the bizarre thing. In that last respect, May got a deal that was better than many were expecting. Yet it was instantly trashed by much of her own party.

    In retrospect it should always have been obvious that that would be the case.
    Because she signed a backstop she spent 12 months insisting no PM could sign.

    Had she honoured her own word none of this would be a problem.
  • AnazinaAnazina Posts: 3,487

    Shameless, mendacious and hypocritical. God bless the Buccaneering Brexiteers and our Prime Minister ...
    https://twitter.com/stevepeers/status/1084607886095982592?s=21

    Yes, the Welsh referendum example completely blows a hole in the government's 'undemocratic to have a second referendum' argument. To be honest, I'm surprised we hadn't thought of this one before now!!
  • Shameless, mendacious and hypocritical. God bless the Buccaneering Brexiteers and our Prime Minister ...
    https://twitter.com/stevepeers/status/1084607886095982592?s=21

    May's no buccaneer.

    Hence the “and”.

  • DavidL said:

    I don't know if I am just worn down by this chaos but I seriously wonder if we are in the last week of May's Premiership in anything other than a caretaker capacity. She has run out of road and if her deal is rejected by 150+ tomorrow, which seems all too likely, she surely has to go.

    It is hard to see how she can carry on if the deal goes down by a big margin.
    And how does that help anything
    So what should happen instead?
    I expect that the amendments and the HOC will dictate the way forward and, as said, TM will act in a caretaker capacity until the way forward is agreed

  • I must say it does take a politician of unique talents to make an important day on Brexit into a massive own-goal over some long-forgotten votes on the Welsh Assembly two decades ago.
  • Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826
    edited January 2019

    Shameless, mendacious and hypocritical. God bless the Buccaneering Brexiteers and our Prime Minister ...
    https://twitter.com/stevepeers/status/1084607886095982592?s=21

    May's no buccaneer.

    Hence the “and”.

    What have the Buccaneers done wrong here? It is May being a hypocritical liar once again. The Buccaneers voted against her.
  • El_CapitanoEl_Capitano Posts: 4,239

    DavidL said:

    I don't know if I am just worn down by this chaos but I seriously wonder if we are in the last week of May's Premiership in anything other than a caretaker capacity. She has run out of road and if her deal is rejected by 150+ tomorrow, which seems all too likely, she surely has to go.

    It is hard to see how she can carry on if the deal goes down by a big margin.
    :lol: Have you not being following how Mrs May works?

    She will announce a new trip to Brussels and a new vote in a week or two's time.

    There'll be a row, because precedence says you can't put same vote again in same session, but she'll argue there has been some minor textual change imho.
    Don't forget the lectern appearance which will excite everyone greatly for three hours until she stands up and announces NOTHING HAS CHANGED yet again.
  • grabcocquegrabcocque Posts: 4,234


    However, the Speaker has now holed "precedence" under the waterline. Sauce for the goose and all that.

    Not really, because its Mr Speaker will get to rule if it's in order for the government to ask the House to vote again.

    But let's be realistic here, if May's about to get the historically notable galactic-scale shellacking most observers think, bringing it back in its current form is for the birbs.

  • Anazina said:

    Shameless, mendacious and hypocritical. God bless the Buccaneering Brexiteers and our Prime Minister ...
    https://twitter.com/stevepeers/status/1084607886095982592?s=21

    Yes, the Welsh referendum example completely blows a hole in the government's 'undemocratic to have a second referendum' argument. To be honest, I'm surprised we hadn't thought of this one before now!!
    Another referendum after we leave is entirely democratic and what the Tories proposed in 2005.
  • AnazinaAnazina Posts: 3,487

    IanB2 said:

    That's the bizarre thing. In that last respect, May got a deal that was better than many were expecting. Yet it was instantly trashed by much of her own party.

    In retrospect it should always have been obvious that that would be the case.
    Because she signed a backstop she spent 12 months insisting no PM could sign.

    Had she honoured her own word none of this would be a problem.
    Bollocks. The ERGers and your ultra-europhobic ilk would have found a problem somewhere.

    As someone beautifully put it, if one turned the Tory Right's water into wine they'd complain about the vintage.
  • I must say it does take a politician of unique talents to make an important day on Brexit into a massive own-goal over some long-forgotten votes on the Welsh Assembly two decades ago.

    Well said. Sums May up well.
  • SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 22,042

    Murray out!

    Nicola Murray?

    You watching reruns of The Thick of It?
  • grabcocquegrabcocque Posts: 4,234

    I must say it does take a politician of unique talents to make an important day on Brexit into a massive own-goal over some long-forgotten votes on the Welsh Assembly two decades ago.

    Maybe a stupid row about the 2005 welsh assembly campaign is a Dead Cat?
  • AnazinaAnazina Posts: 3,487

    I must say it does take a politician of unique talents to make an important day on Brexit into a massive own-goal over some long-forgotten votes on the Welsh Assembly two decades ago.


    Indeed one can only wonder why someone didn't spot the flaw in the plan.
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 34,705

    DavidL said:

    I don't know if I am just worn down by this chaos but I seriously wonder if we are in the last week of May's Premiership in anything other than a caretaker capacity. She has run out of road and if her deal is rejected by 150+ tomorrow, which seems all too likely, she surely has to go.

    It is hard to see how she can carry on if the deal goes down by a big margin.
    And how does that help anything
    So what should happen instead?
    I expect that the amendments and the HOC will dictate the way forward and, as said, TM will act in a caretaker capacity until the way forward is agreed

    An alternative is she could come back and amend the MV by adding "subject to approval in a Referendum versus No Deal and Remain (with a consequent extension of A50)".

    That would pass in the HoC imo.

    In any event, we won't be exiting on March 29th.
  • AmpfieldAndyAmpfieldAndy Posts: 1,445

    DavidL said:

    I don't know if I am just worn down by this chaos but I seriously wonder if we are in the last week of May's Premiership in anything other than a caretaker capacity. She has run out of road and if her deal is rejected by 150+ tomorrow, which seems all too likely, she surely has to go.

    Let’s hope so.
    Bring on Remain!
    I can think of nothing worse
  • GIN1138GIN1138 Posts: 22,293

    DavidL said:

    I don't know if I am just worn down by this chaos but I seriously wonder if we are in the last week of May's Premiership in anything other than a caretaker capacity. She has run out of road and if her deal is rejected by 150+ tomorrow, which seems all too likely, she surely has to go.

    It is hard to see how she can carry on if the deal goes down by a big margin.
    :lol: Have you not being following how Mrs May works?

    She will announce a new trip to Brussels and a new vote in a week or two's time.

    There'll be a row, because precedence says you can't put same vote again in same session, but she'll argue there has been some minor textual change imho.
    Keep kicking that can. :D
  • Anazina said:

    IanB2 said:

    That's the bizarre thing. In that last respect, May got a deal that was better than many were expecting. Yet it was instantly trashed by much of her own party.

    In retrospect it should always have been obvious that that would be the case.
    Because she signed a backstop she spent 12 months insisting no PM could sign.

    Had she honoured her own word none of this would be a problem.
    Bollocks. The ERGers and your ultra-europhobic ilk would have found a problem somewhere.

    As someone beautifully put it, if one turned the Tory Right's water into wine they'd complain about the vintage.
    My only issue is the backstop same as May's was in the summer of last year.

    I'm not a Europhobe I nearly voted Remain but the backstop is an abomination.
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 34,705

    DavidL said:

    I don't know if I am just worn down by this chaos but I seriously wonder if we are in the last week of May's Premiership in anything other than a caretaker capacity. She has run out of road and if her deal is rejected by 150+ tomorrow, which seems all too likely, she surely has to go.

    Let’s hope so.
    Bring on Remain!
    I can think of nothing worse
    And I can think of nothing better!
  • OblitusSumMeOblitusSumMe Posts: 9,143
    IanB2 said:

    Yeah right. If that was the case they could resolve a lot of upset by removing it.

    A wonderful example of the 'anything the EU does must by definition be evil' mindset.
    Not at all.

    I'm saying what the EU does here is what they want to do.

    You wish away the backstop by pretending it is unimportant and not what the EU wants.

    I see how the EU have fought vigorously for this, jeopardised the entire deal to ensure they get it and spent the last 18 months dominated on this.

    Reality unlike your pretence is the EU have shown they want the backstop by their deeds.
    They think it's an insurance policy, or (more to the point) Ireland does, and the other 26 states are taking the side of their own fellow member state. I happen to think they have misjudged this, but that doesn't alter the fact that the backstop is most definitely something that they don't want to happen, as it drives a coach and horses through their four freedoms and their principle that full access to the SM requires payment into the budget.
    That's the bizarre thing. In that last respect, May got a deal that was better than many were expecting. Yet it was instantly trashed by much of her own party.
    It's also seriously pissing off our counter party in the negotiations. They feel like they've conceded a lot and that it was pointless because it's not being recognised as a concession in the UK.

    This gives them no incentive to concede anything to us in any future negotiations.
  • DavidL said:

    I don't know if I am just worn down by this chaos but I seriously wonder if we are in the last week of May's Premiership in anything other than a caretaker capacity. She has run out of road and if her deal is rejected by 150+ tomorrow, which seems all too likely, she surely has to go.

    It is hard to see how she can carry on if the deal goes down by a big margin.
    And how does that help anything
    So what should happen instead?
    I expect that the amendments and the HOC will dictate the way forward and, as said, TM will act in a caretaker capacity until the way forward is agreed

    An alternative is she could come back and amend the MV by adding "subject to approval in a Referendum versus No Deal and Remain (with a consequent extension of A50)".

    That would pass in the HoC imo.

    In any event, we won't be exiting on March 29th.
    No deal as an option won't get through the Commons or the Lords.
  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 37,389
    Anazina said:

    I must say it does take a politician of unique talents to make an important day on Brexit into a massive own-goal over some long-forgotten votes on the Welsh Assembly two decades ago.


    Indeed one can only wonder why someone didn't spot the flaw in the plan.
    Probably no one remembered.
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 78,220
    I never knew Salmond was such a champion for women's health issues.
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 53,876
    I was supposed to be having a meeting with the financial managers of our pension fund tomorrow. It has been delayed until 4th February. I wonder how much use the material prepared for tomorrow will be by then.

    The FTSE is down another 1% today but that is broadly in line with other European markets and Sterling is having a reasonable day. When will we see the markets react to the fiasco in the Commons, positively or negatively? It's almost as if this matters a little less economically than some people like to claim.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 49,871

    DavidL said:

    I don't know if I am just worn down by this chaos but I seriously wonder if we are in the last week of May's Premiership in anything other than a caretaker capacity. She has run out of road and if her deal is rejected by 150+ tomorrow, which seems all too likely, she surely has to go.

    Let’s hope so.
    Bring on Remain!
    I can think of nothing worse
    It's hardly our fault that you have such a limited imagination.
  • IanB2 said:

    Yeah right. If that was the case they could resolve a lot of upset by removing it.

    A wonderful example of the 'anything the EU does must by definition be evil' mindset.
    Not at all.

    I'm saying what the EU does here is what they want to do.

    You wish away the backstop by pretending it is unimportant and not what the EU wants.

    I see how the EU have fought vigorously for this, jeopardised the entire deal to ensure they get it and spent the last 18 months dominated on this.

    Reality unlike your pretence is the EU have shown they want the backstop by their deeds.
    They think it's an insurance policy, or (more to the point) Ireland does, and the other 26 states are taking the side of their own fellow member state. I happen to think they have misjudged this, but that doesn't alter the fact that the backstop is most definitely something that they don't want to happen, as it drives a coach and horses through their four freedoms and their principle that full access to the SM requires payment into the budget.
    That's the bizarre thing. In that last respect, May got a deal that was better than many were expecting. Yet it was instantly trashed by much of her own party.
    It's also seriously pissing off our counter party in the negotiations. They feel like they've conceded a lot and that it was pointless because it's not being recognised as a concession in the UK.

    This gives them no incentive to concede anything to us in any future negotiations.
    They've conceded nothing. If they want to concede something then drop the backstop. Some here pretend they don't even want it so it shouldn't be too difficult to do so.
  • AmpfieldAndyAmpfieldAndy Posts: 1,445

    DavidL said:

    I don't know if I am just worn down by this chaos but I seriously wonder if we are in the last week of May's Premiership in anything other than a caretaker capacity. She has run out of road and if her deal is rejected by 150+ tomorrow, which seems all too likely, she surely has to go.

    Let’s hope so.
    Bring on Remain!
    I can think of nothing worse
    And I can think of nothing better!
    Electoral mandates aren’t your thing though are they ?
  • Anazina said:

    Shameless, mendacious and hypocritical. God bless the Buccaneering Brexiteers and our Prime Minister ...
    https://twitter.com/stevepeers/status/1084607886095982592?s=21

    Yes, the Welsh referendum example completely blows a hole in the government's 'undemocratic to have a second referendum' argument. To be honest, I'm surprised we hadn't thought of this one before now!!
    Because it is not the same situation. In the case of the Welsh Assembly the original result of the referendum had been enacted and the assembly had been set up in 1999. What is now being proposed is to have a second referendum before the first has even been enacted.

    Now I am very happy for you to have another referendum on rejoining the EU in, say, 9 or 10 years which would be exactly the same as what the Tories campaigned for in 2005.
  • DavidL said:

    I don't know if I am just worn down by this chaos but I seriously wonder if we are in the last week of May's Premiership in anything other than a caretaker capacity. She has run out of road and if her deal is rejected by 150+ tomorrow, which seems all too likely, she surely has to go.

    Let’s hope so.
    Bring on Remain!
    I can think of nothing worse
    And I can think of nothing better!
    Apart from TM deal, I agree

    Just listened to Marie Caulfield of ERG, they are economic illiterates and a serious threat to all our futures

    They have to be stopped
  • grabcocquegrabcocque Posts: 4,234
    edited January 2019
    Anazina said:

    I must say it does take a politician of unique talents to make an important day on Brexit into a massive own-goal over some long-forgotten votes on the Welsh Assembly two decades ago.


    Indeed one can only wonder why someone didn't spot the flaw in the plan.
    These are, after all, the same people who told remainers that voting against her deal meant "no deal", and told leavers that voting against her deal meant "no brexit", and somehow overlooked that one side could hear what she was saying to the other side.

    Number 10's strong suit is not campaigning.
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 62,773
    Old friends, sat on the park bench like bookends.
  • AmpfieldAndyAmpfieldAndy Posts: 1,445
    edited January 2019
    IanB2 said:

    DavidL said:

    I don't know if I am just worn down by this chaos but I seriously wonder if we are in the last week of May's Premiership in anything other than a caretaker capacity. She has run out of road and if her deal is rejected by 150+ tomorrow, which seems all too likely, she surely has to go.

    Let’s hope so.
    Bring on Remain!
    I can think of nothing worse
    It's hardly our fault that you have such a limited imagination.
    Better than lacking all imagination which seems to be your problem
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 96,163
    How so? She'll still believe we shouldn't, she may just do it any way through lack of choice.
  • grabcocquegrabcocque Posts: 4,234

    DavidL said:

    I don't know if I am just worn down by this chaos but I seriously wonder if we are in the last week of May's Premiership in anything other than a caretaker capacity. She has run out of road and if her deal is rejected by 150+ tomorrow, which seems all too likely, she surely has to go.

    Let’s hope so.
    Bring on Remain!
    I can think of nothing worse
    And I can think of nothing better!
    Apart from TM deal, I agree

    Just listened to Marie Caulfield of ERG, they are economic illiterates and a serious threat to all our futures

    They have to be stopped
    It has been demonstrated the UK constitution is insufficiently resilient to thick Tories.
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 34,705
    edited January 2019

    DavidL said:

    I don't know if I am just worn down by this chaos but I seriously wonder if we are in the last week of May's Premiership in anything other than a caretaker capacity. She has run out of road and if her deal is rejected by 150+ tomorrow, which seems all too likely, she surely has to go.

    It is hard to see how she can carry on if the deal goes down by a big margin.
    And how does that help anything
    So what should happen instead?
    I expect that the amendments and the HOC will dictate the way forward and, as said, TM will act in a caretaker capacity until the way forward is agreed

    An alternative is she could come back and amend the MV by adding "subject to approval in a Referendum versus No Deal and Remain (with a consequent extension of A50)".

    That would pass in the HoC imo.

    In any event, we won't be exiting on March 29th.
    No deal as an option won't get through the Commons or the Lords.
    Yes, I think you are right on that point. She could offer it but it will be amended out.

    So her offer becomes My Deal versus Remain, which is an easier vote to run (no AV required).

    Result could be close but it would be an interesting campaign.

    Right now, I think this is what will happen, whether introduced by May, Corbyn, Grieve or whoever.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 96,163

    DavidL said:

    I don't know if I am just worn down by this chaos but I seriously wonder if we are in the last week of May's Premiership in anything other than a caretaker capacity. She has run out of road and if her deal is rejected by 150+ tomorrow, which seems all too likely, she surely has to go.

    It is hard to see how she can carry on if the deal goes down by a big margin.
    And how does that help anything
    So what should happen instead?
    I expect that the amendments and the HOC will dictate the way forward and, as said, TM will act in a caretaker capacity until the way forward is agreed

    An alternative is she could come back and amend the MV by adding "subject to approval in a Referendum versus No Deal and Remain (with a consequent extension of A50)".

    That would pass in the HoC imo.

    In any event, we won't be exiting on March 29th.
    Indeed. Pile on as much as one is comfortable with on that.
  • DavidL said:

    I don't know if I am just worn down by this chaos but I seriously wonder if we are in the last week of May's Premiership in anything other than a caretaker capacity. She has run out of road and if her deal is rejected by 150+ tomorrow, which seems all too likely, she surely has to go.

    It is hard to see how she can carry on if the deal goes down by a big margin.
    And how does that help anything
    So what should happen instead?
    I expect that the amendments and the HOC will dictate the way forward and, as said, TM will act in a caretaker capacity until the way forward is agreed

    An alternative is she could come back and amend the MV by adding "subject to approval in a Referendum versus No Deal and Remain (with a consequent extension of A50)".

    That would pass in the HoC imo.

    In any event, we won't be exiting on March 29th.
    That is a variation on my early suggestion that the HOC will amend the deal to subject to a deal/ remain referendum and TM will enact the legislation on a cross party basis and effectively head a GNU
This discussion has been closed.