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  • RobDRobD Posts: 59,936
    SeanT said:

    RobD said:

    Just catching up the thread and not much harmony around, sadly

    The debate is as polarised and heated as ever with no compromise in sight

    But compromise there has to be and we need a whole load of mps to grow up

    Saying that is easy, but I do wish the anger and unnecessary attacks could be dialled down even a little as no one wins

    Makes you wonder what on Earth we will all be discussing once it’s done and dusted.
    "done and dusted"????? You think this will ever be *done and dusted*? It's Scottish indyref times 1000. It is going to dominate politics for a decade, maybe two, especially if it is No Deal Brexit.
    Yeah, I did smirk a bit when I typed that. Hah!
  • Mr. Observer, that's what May wanted. Not the UK.
  • NickPalmerNickPalmer Posts: 21,537
    RobD said:



    Makes you wonder what on Earth we will all be discussing once it’s done and dusted.

    The right way for potential PMs to eat a bacon roll, perhaps? Remember those innocent days?

    Are there Conservatives who admit they'd actually feel better if EdM and EdB were running things, rather than TM and PH (not to forget Andrea Jenkyn, of course), even if EdM was a sloppy eater and EdB was a bit fat?
  • Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826
    edited February 2019

    Just catching up the thread and not much harmony around, sadly

    The debate is as polarised and heated as ever with no compromise in sight

    But compromise there has to be and we need a whole load of mps to grow up

    Saying that is easy, but I do wish the anger and unnecessary attacks could be dialled down even a little as no one wins in such a confrontational situation

    MPs have reached a compromise. Its the EU that aren't willing to compromise an inch. If there's no deal, we can quite reasonably blame them.

    The EU wanted a Northern Ireland backstop. The UK wanted a UK-wide one. The EU compromised. Obviously, we will blame the foreigners for a mess entirely of our making and that will make a few xenophobes feel good for a while. But it will not solve a thing. A move designed to keep the Tories together whatever the cost to the country is unlikely to be forgotten or forgiven.

    Who said the UK wanted a UK-wide one? This is a terrible interpretation of statehood that makes Theresa May out to be some kind of Louis XIV figure. L'etat c'est moi

    Theresa May was open to a UK wide backstop, the UK never voted for a UK-wide backstop. Parliament never endorsed it. MPs from across Parliament expressed opposition to it long before it was agreed.
  • StereotomyStereotomy Posts: 4,092

    Just catching up the thread and not much harmony around, sadly

    The debate is as polarised and heated as ever with no compromise in sight

    But compromise there has to be and we need a whole load of mps to grow up

    Saying that is easy, but I do wish the anger and unnecessary attacks could be dialled down even a little as no one wins in such a confrontational situation

    MPs have reached a compromise. Its the EU that aren't willing to compromise an inch. If there's no deal, we can quite reasonably blame them.

    The EU wanted a Northern Ireland backstop. The UK wanted a UK-wide one. The EU compromised. Obviously, we will blame the foreigners for a mess entirely of our making and that will make a few xenophobes feel good for a while. But it will not solve a thing. A move designed to keep the Tories together whatever the cost to the country is unlikely to be forgotten or forgiven.

    No no, he means the kind of compromise where the EU break their red lines and give us everything want, and we don't budge an inch
  • TOPPING said:

    Scott_P said:
    FT anti brexit stance showing. Of course brexit is a negative to the economy but we are doing better than Italy and Germany and on a par with France
    I did wonder why it was a blow to the data?
    proabaly because they were rooting for a huge depression post the vote and it hasnt happened
    I mean, we haven't left the EU yet. The chaos has barely started. We're still several weeks away from when the ironic contempt starts giving away to first serious concern and then blind panic.
    Except the Remain tossers were predicting all those terrible catastrophes just for voting for Brexit before we even actually enacted it. And then when none of their terrible predictions turned out to be true they pretended they were talking about something else - like the lying scum they are.
    None? Not the exchange rate or anything like that?

    Another Leaver dickhead trying to rewrite history.
    The exchange rate drops were beneficial not a catastrophe. They were something we would have wanted even without any mention of Brexit.
    Don't forget that the exchange rate drops are beneficial for those who want to create wealth and have a country which lives within its means.

    People who want cheaper imported tat and cheaper foreign holidays and who are willing to shut down UK exporting businesses to get them take the opposite view.
    Well indeed. That kind of common sense seems to be lost on some of our Remainer colleagues.
  • rcs1000 said:

    I came,

    I saw the discussion,

    I left...

    I thought I’d stumbled into Guido by mistake :)

  • Just catching up the thread and not much harmony around, sadly

    The debate is as polarised and heated as ever with no compromise in sight

    But compromise there has to be and we need a whole load of mps to grow up

    Saying that is easy, but I do wish the anger and unnecessary attacks could be dialled down even a little as no one wins in such a confrontational situation

    MPs have reached a compromise. Its the EU that aren't willing to compromise an inch. If there's no deal, we can quite reasonably blame them.

    The EU wanted a Northern Ireland backstop. The UK wanted a UK-wide one. The EU compromised. Obviously, we will blame the foreigners for a mess entirely of our making and that will make a few xenophobes feel good for a while. But it will not solve a thing. A move designed to keep the Tories together whatever the cost to the country is unlikely to be forgotten or forgiven.

    Who said the UK wanted a UK-wide one? This is a terrible interpretation of statehood that makes Theresa May out to be some kind of Louis XIV figure. L'etat c'est moi

    Theresa May was open to a UK wide backstop, the UK never voted for a UK-wide backstop. Parliament never endorsed it. MPs from across Parliament expressed opposition to it long before it was agreed.

    The UK government got what it asked for. The EU compromised. No-one has voted for a No Deal Brexit. It is clear Parliament doesn’t want one. The only reason it will happen is because the Theresa May is putting her party before her country.

  • SeanT said:

    SeanT said:

    What amazes me is the number of people who are blithely unaware of what is facing us, potentially, in less than seven weeks. Or if they are aware, they are presuming Oh someone will sort it out.

    No one is there to sort it out. I don't think planes will fall out of the sky, but there could be a chain reaction of very very nasty shocking political/economic crises, one on top of the other, as consequences multiply into catastrophes. It could be Lehmans but worse.

    OK, time for the gym and some soothing endorphins. Then maybe a gallon of gin.

    Or it could be like the dot-com-bubble bursting. Lots of hype and then life goes on.
    It really isn't like the dot com bubble. Trust me. It is the unravelling overnight - the brutal severing, even - of 45 years of economic, political, social, cultural, educational, and governmental integration. Of course we should never have let this integration get so deep, and we should have asked the people when to stop, and we would have stopped some time ago, and Brexit would never have been a word, let alone a thing.

    But thanks to two generations of lying europhiles we are now DEEPLY enmeshed in the EU system, and chopping us out of it, in one fell swoop, is going to HURT. We just have to hope the hurt is relatively temporary.
    But if we're going to do it, then we may as well do it swiftly and in full, like ripping off a bandage. And I don't think it will hurt that much (and hope I'm right). There's no point dragging this out for decades and still being enmeshed and going through all this upset for nothing. Either stay, or go, but let us make up our bloody mind and do one!
  • Just catching up the thread and not much harmony around, sadly

    The debate is as polarised and heated as ever with no compromise in sight

    But compromise there has to be and we need a whole load of mps to grow up

    Saying that is easy, but I do wish the anger and unnecessary attacks could be dialled down even a little as no one wins in such a confrontational situation

    MPs have reached a compromise. Its the EU that aren't willing to compromise an inch. If there's no deal, we can quite reasonably blame them.

    The EU wanted a Northern Ireland backstop. The UK wanted a UK-wide one. The EU compromised. Obviously, we will blame the foreigners for a mess entirely of our making and that will make a few xenophobes feel good for a while. But it will not solve a thing. A move designed to keep the Tories together whatever the cost to the country is unlikely to be forgotten or forgiven.

    Who said the UK wanted a UK-wide one? This is a terrible interpretation of statehood that makes Theresa May out to be some kind of Louis XIV figure. L'etat c'est moi

    Theresa May was open to a UK wide backstop, the UK never voted for a UK-wide backstop. Parliament never endorsed it. MPs from across Parliament expressed opposition to it long before it was agreed.

    The UK government got what it asked for. The EU compromised. No-one has voted for a No Deal Brexit. It is clear Parliament doesn’t want one. The only reason it will happen is because the Theresa May is putting her party before her country.

    No it didn't. The UK government set a red line that we would be able to have our own trade policy and the backstop drives a coach and horses through that. The fact that May folded on this out of fear of no deal doesn't make it what the UK wanted.

    Parliament may not have voted for no deal, but that is immaterial. It voted to Leave on 29 March and has subsequently not voted for a deal. No deal is a consequence of that, not a choice.

    If MPs really want to prevent no deal they can do so easily. All these remainer opposition MPs who pretend that no deal is the end of days could avoid that by ratifying May's deal.

    The fact that Labour, Lib Dem and SNP MPs would rather try and get one over the Tories than avoid no deal demonstrates to me that even they don't believe no deal is as bad as they make out.
  • Mr. Thompson, I suspect the pain will be significant. A dislocated shoulder being rammed back into the socket hurts a lot too.

    Mr. T is right about pro-EU politicians integrating us ever more, without any consideration of what the electorate might want.

    A vote to stop the Lisbon Treaty would have likely satisfied most people on both sides.

    Anyway, I must be off. Play nicely, everyone.
  • StreeterStreeter Posts: 684

    Just catching up the thread and not much harmony around, sadly

    The debate is as polarised and heated as ever with no compromise in sight

    But compromise there has to be and we need a whole load of mps to grow up

    Saying that is easy, but I do wish the anger and unnecessary attacks could be dialled down even a little as no one wins in such a confrontational situation

    MPs have reached a compromise. Its the EU that aren't willing to compromise an inch. If there's no deal, we can quite reasonably blame them.
    They will have stuck to their word when we thought they wouldn’t. It is absolutely, categorically, most definitely our fault.
  • StreeterStreeter Posts: 684
    SeanT said:

    Philip_Thompson:

    "I agree with all of that. Or course if the EU (and the Irish in particular) want to avoid anything "tragic" then they can compromise. They won't unless May is prepared to take us over the cliff but if she is prepared to we can get a good deal potentially. Its our only shot"


    ****

    I think there are now too many in the EU who are resigned to, or even relishing, a No Deal, as they think it will hurt us waaaaaay more than them. It will be painful for all, but it will bind the EU tighter. See the polls in Ireland where they say they will accept a No Deal rather than accede on the backstop.

    Yes, German car-makers etc are finally squealing, likewise French farmers etc, but it is too late. The political energy and willingness does not exist, on the continent, to overrule the Brussels ideologues and get a compromise.

    They are playing with fire, but they think they can handle it. We are playing with multiple potential fires, I've no idea if we can handle it.

    When the history is written, it will be a history of mutual misunderstanding: we did not comprehend how much Brussels would take control of the negotiations, and how wedded Brussels is to defending the EU as proto-superstate rather than individual nations or interests within. They did not understand how the UK values its democratic system and would refuse to allow a 2nd vote, even when confronted with calamity.

    And so, here we are. Over the top we go. It's like the end of Blackadder.

    Bring on diamond-hard Brexit, you said.

    Looks like you’ll get your wish - get over it.
  • Streeter said:

    Just catching up the thread and not much harmony around, sadly

    The debate is as polarised and heated as ever with no compromise in sight

    But compromise there has to be and we need a whole load of mps to grow up

    Saying that is easy, but I do wish the anger and unnecessary attacks could be dialled down even a little as no one wins in such a confrontational situation

    MPs have reached a compromise. Its the EU that aren't willing to compromise an inch. If there's no deal, we can quite reasonably blame them.
    They will have stuck to their word when we thought they wouldn’t. It is absolutely, categorically, most definitely our fault.
    And we will have stuck to our word when they thought we wouldn't.

    And life will go on. And we won't put up a hard border in NI and lets see if Varadkar does. My money is on no, this whole backstop nonsense was a bluff.
  • AnneJGPAnneJGP Posts: 3,081
    rcs1000 said:

    I came,

    I saw the discussion,

    I left...

    As would I have done, but what caught my eye was the claim that whatever a democratically-elected government does is therefore democratic by definition.

    That makes me wonder why governments with sufficient majorities don't simply declare their political flavour to be government in perpetuity. Democratic by definition, that would be.

    Good evening, everyone. Happy hours arguing.
  • ChrisChris Posts: 11,752

    SeanT said:

    SeanT said:

    What amazes me is the number of people who are blithely unaware of what is facing us, potentially, in less than seven weeks. Or if they are aware, they are presuming Oh someone will sort it out.

    No one is there to sort it out. I don't think planes will fall out of the sky, but there could be a chain reaction of very very nasty shocking political/economic crises, one on top of the other, as consequences multiply into catastrophes. It could be Lehmans but worse.

    OK, time for the gym and some soothing endorphins. Then maybe a gallon of gin.

    Or it could be like the dot-com-bubble bursting. Lots of hype and then life goes on.
    It really isn't like the dot com bubble. Trust me. It is the unravelling overnight - the brutal severing, even - of 45 years of economic, political, social, cultural, educational, and governmental integration. Of course we should never have let this integration get so deep, and we should have asked the people when to stop, and we would have stopped some time ago, and Brexit would never have been a word, let alone a thing.

    But thanks to two generations of lying europhiles we are now DEEPLY enmeshed in the EU system, and chopping us out of it, in one fell swoop, is going to HURT. We just have to hope the hurt is relatively temporary.
    But if we're going to do it, then we may as well do it swiftly and in full, like ripping off a bandage. And I don't think it will hurt that much ...
    You're beyond parody.
  • If this is what pb.com is like now, what’s it going to be like in the small hours of 30th March a few hours after there’s No Deal?
  • Streeter said:

    Bring on diamond-hard Brexit, you said.

    Looks like you’ll get your wish - get over it.

    A hard Brexit could be stopped today if Remain supporting MPs swung behind May's very soft deal.

    Other than trying to get one over the Tories, or for Grieves et al trying to reverse democracy, I see no reason why those genuinely opposed to no deal should reject the only deal on offer to stop it.

    Don't cry crocodile tears about Leavers being OK with Leaving.
  • Richard_NabaviRichard_Nabavi Posts: 30,821
    edited February 2019

    The right way for potential PMs to eat a bacon roll, perhaps? Remember those innocent days?

    Are there Conservatives who admit they'd actually feel better if EdM and EdB were running things, rather than TM and PH (not to forget Andrea Jenkyn, of course), even if EdM was a sloppy eater and EdB was a bit fat?

    That's a slightly odd question, because it's hard to see any world in which EdM and EdB would be attempting to implement Brexit in a hung parliament dependent on the ERG and DUP for support.

    But if you mean 'would a normal, sane government under any of the leading pre-Corbyn Labour politicians be preferable to a no-deal crash-out followed very probably by a Corbyn government?', then, yes, of course it would be massively preferable.
  • RecidivistRecidivist Posts: 4,679

    "Labour’s massive problem is that the leadership is out of step with the vast majority of those who vote for the party."

    The Tory's massive problem is that the Remainer leader is out of step with the vast majority of those who vote for the party.

    The LibDem's massive problem is the leader.

    Good summary.
  • Chris said:

    SeanT said:

    SeanT said:

    What amazes me is the number of people who are blithely unaware of what is facing us, potentially, in less than seven weeks. Or if they are aware, they are presuming Oh someone will sort it out.

    No one is there to sort it out. I don't think planes will fall out of the sky, but there could be a chain reaction of very very nasty shocking political/economic crises, one on top of the other, as consequences multiply into catastrophes. It could be Lehmans but worse.

    OK, time for the gym and some soothing endorphins. Then maybe a gallon of gin.

    Or it could be like the dot-com-bubble bursting. Lots of hype and then life goes on.
    It really isn't like the dot com bubble. Trust me. It is the unravelling overnight - the brutal severing, even - of 45 years of economic, political, social, cultural, educational, and governmental integration. Of course we should never have let this integration get so deep, and we should have asked the people when to stop, and we would have stopped some time ago, and Brexit would never have been a word, let alone a thing.

    But thanks to two generations of lying europhiles we are now DEEPLY enmeshed in the EU system, and chopping us out of it, in one fell swoop, is going to HURT. We just have to hope the hurt is relatively temporary.
    But if we're going to do it, then we may as well do it swiftly and in full, like ripping off a bandage. And I don't think it will hurt that much ...
    You're beyond parody.
    Because I disagree with you? Very mature.

    We debated this years ago. If I was afraid of leaving, I would have voted Remain. To me the possibility of the EU not playing too nicely with us after a Leave vote was something I'd considered before the referendum. I'm confused if this has come to a shock for everyone else.
  • TOPPING said:

    Scott_P said:
    FT anti brexit stance showing. Of course brexit is a negative to the economy but we are doing better than Italy and Germany and on a par with France
    I did wonder why it was a blow to the data?
    proabaly because they were rooting for a huge depression post the vote and it hasnt happened
    I mean, we haven't left the EU yet. The chaos has barely started. We're still several weeks away from when the ironic contempt starts giving away to first serious concern and then blind panic.
    Except the Remain tossers were predicting all those terrible catastrophes just for voting for Brexit before we even actually enacted it. And then when none of their terrible predictions turned out to be true they pretended they were talking about something else - like the lying scum they are.
    None? Not the exchange rate or anything like that?

    Another Leaver dickhead trying to rewrite history.
    The exchange rate drops were beneficial not a catastrophe. They were something we would have wanted even without any mention of Brexit.
    Don't forget that the exchange rate drops are beneficial for those who want to create wealth and have a country which lives within its means.

    People who want cheaper imported tat and cheaper foreign holidays and who are willing to shut down UK exporting businesses to get them take the opposite view.
    Well indeed. That kind of common sense seems to be lost on some of our Remainer colleagues.
    Though the problem does go much deeper than the extremist Toppo.

    Because the UK economy is so unbalanced there is a far greater number of people who would lose out from the UK living within its means than those who would benefit from it so doing.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 51,729

    Streeter said:

    Just catching up the thread and not much harmony around, sadly

    The debate is as polarised and heated as ever with no compromise in sight

    But compromise there has to be and we need a whole load of mps to grow up

    Saying that is easy, but I do wish the anger and unnecessary attacks could be dialled down even a little as no one wins in such a confrontational situation

    MPs have reached a compromise. Its the EU that aren't willing to compromise an inch. If there's no deal, we can quite reasonably blame them.
    They will have stuck to their word when we thought they wouldn’t. It is absolutely, categorically, most definitely our fault.
    And we will have stuck to our word when they thought we wouldn't.

    And life will go on. And we won't put up a hard border in NI and lets see if Varadkar does. My money is on no, this whole backstop nonsense was a bluff.
    That's such an infantile way of thinking about it. If Varadkar doesn't send in the building contractors on day one to put up some new customs posts, it doesn't mean we've successfully called his bluff. The government would have to implement as much of the backstop unilaterally as they could and there would need to be a border poll.
  • SeanT said:

    SeanT said:

    What amazes me is the number of people who are blithely unaware of what is facing us, potentially, in less than seven weeks. Or if they are aware, they are presuming Oh someone will sort it out.

    No one is there to sort it out. I don't think planes will fall out of the sky, but there could be a chain reaction of very very nasty shocking political/economic crises, one on top of the other, as consequences multiply into catastrophes. It could be Lehmans but worse.

    OK, time for the gym and some soothing endorphins. Then maybe a gallon of gin.

    Or it could be like the dot-com-bubble bursting. Lots of hype and then life goes on.
    It really isn't like the dot com bubble. Trust me. It is the unravelling overnight - the brutal severing, even - of 45 years of economic, political, social, cultural, educational, and governmental integration. Of course we should never have let this integration get so deep, and we should have asked the people when to stop, and we would have stopped some time ago, and Brexit would never have been a word, let alone a thing.

    But thanks to two generations of lying europhiles we are now DEEPLY enmeshed in the EU system, and chopping us out of it, in one fell swoop, is going to HURT. We just have to hope the hurt is relatively temporary.
    The EU has no desire to make our exit easy or painless - the exact opposite approach to their soft softly salami slicing approach to integration over many decades - and, indeed, continues to try and interfere in our domestic politics, which it seems to see as its right.

    Both sides have hugely miscalculated here and put ideology over pragmatism.
  • SeanT said:

    If MPs really want to prevent no deal they can do so easily. All these remainer opposition MPs who pretend that no deal is the end of days could avoid that by ratifying May's deal.

    The fact that Labour, Lib Dem and SNP MPs would rather try and get one over the Tories than avoid no deal demonstrates to me that even they don't believe no deal is as bad as they make out.


    Er this is bollocks. Of the three parties you mention only the Lib Dems MIGHT have the country's larger interests at heart. For the leadership of Labour, a chaotic, apocalyptic Crash Brexit is ideal, if owned by the Tories, as it is possibly the only way an appalled, betrayed electorate would angrily vote Corbyn into power.

    Likewise, for the SNP, a chaotic hard Brexit could be their last best chance to announce a 2nd indyref, and win it. A busted Britain is easier to leave.

    Plus you ignore the Guns of August angle. Very very few people wanted World War One. But as positions became polarised and troops were made ready and artillery was loaded onto trains the momentum towards an undesired war became unstoppable, even though most of the individual actors did not want this outcome.
    I said MPs not leaders.

    If the likes of Keir Starmer etc really believe No Deal will be a disaster then they should ratify the deal. Unless they actively want to have a disaster. If Corbyn is OK with a disaster then so be it but his MPs should do what Corbyn has a lifetime habit of and break the three line whip.

    Its hard to take seriously people moaning that No Deal is a disaster then with a straight face rejecting a Deal to seek partisan advantage.
  • Just catching up the thread and not much harmony around, sadly

    The debate is as polarised and heated as ever with no compromise in sight

    But compromise there has to be and we need a whole load of mps to grow up

    Saying that is easy, but I do wish the anger and unnecessary attacks could be dialled down even a little as no one wins in such a confrontational situation

    MPs have reached a compromise. Its the EU that aren't willing to compromise an inch. If there's no deal, we can quite reasonably blame them.

    The EU wanted a Northern Ireland backstop. The UK wanted a UK-wide one. The EU compromised. Obviously, we will blame the foreigners for a mess entirely of our making and that will make a few xenophobes feel good for a while. But it will not solve a thing. A move designed to keep the Tories together whatever the cost to the country is unlikely to be forgotten or forgiven.

    Who said the UK wanted a UK-wide one? This is a terrible interpretation of statehood that makes Theresa May out to be some kind of Louis XIV figure. L'etat c'est moi

    Theresa May was open to a UK wide backstop, the UK never voted for a UK-wide backstop. Parliament never endorsed it. MPs from across Parliament expressed opposition to it long before it was agreed.

    The UK government got what it asked for. The EU compromised. No-one has voted for a No Deal Brexit. It is clear Parliament doesn’t want one. The only reason it will happen is because the Theresa May is putting her party before her country.

    No it didn't. The UK government set a red line that we would be able to have our own trade policy and the backstop drives a coach and horses through that. The fact that May folded on this out of fear of no deal doesn't make it what the UK wanted.

    Parliament may not have voted for no deal, but that is immaterial. It voted to Leave on 29 March and has subsequently not voted for a deal. No deal is a consequence of that, not a choice.

    If MPs really want to prevent no deal they can do so easily. All these remainer opposition MPs who pretend that no deal is the end of days could avoid that by ratifying May's deal.

    The fact that Labour, Lib Dem and SNP MPs would rather try and get one over the Tories than avoid no deal demonstrates to me that even they don't believe no deal is as bad as they make out.

    In which case can you DM me about some magic beans I have going cheap.

  • StreeterStreeter Posts: 684

    Streeter said:

    Bring on diamond-hard Brexit, you said.

    Looks like you’ll get your wish - get over it.

    A hard Brexit could be stopped today if Remain supporting MPs swung behind May's very soft deal.

    Other than trying to get one over the Tories, or for Grieves et al trying to reverse democracy, I see no reason why those genuinely opposed to no deal should reject the only deal on offer to stop it.

    Don't cry crocodile tears about Leavers being OK with Leaving.
    We have to cut out the Bluekip cancer. I’m beginning to look forward to no deal.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 51,729

    If this is what pb.com is like now, what’s it going to be like in the small hours of 30th March a few hours after there’s No Deal?

    It will be quite surreal because initially nothing will happen, and then there'll be a media scrum about the first tangible effect of Brexit.

    Breaking News: "A consignment of carrots has been stopped for inspection in Calais"
  • The right way for potential PMs to eat a bacon roll, perhaps? Remember those innocent days?

    Are there Conservatives who admit they'd actually feel better if EdM and EdB were running things, rather than TM and PH (not to forget Andrea Jenkyn, of course), even if EdM was a sloppy eater and EdB was a bit fat?

    That's a slightly odd question, because it's hard to see any world in which EdM and EdB would be attempting to implement Brexit in a hung parliament dependent on the ERG and DUP for support.

    But if you mean 'would a normal, sane government under any of the leading pre-Corbyn Labour politicians be preferable to a no-deal crash-out followed very probably by a Corbyn government?', then, yes, of course it would be massively preferable.

    A Tory No Deal Brexit is the one scenario under which Jeremy Corbyn has a realistic chance of becoming PM. Which, of course, is why he wants one.

  • SeanT said:

    If this is what pb.com is like now, what’s it going to be like in the small hours of 30th March a few hours after there’s No Deal?

    There will be blood.
    Jasper Carrot once joked that CND members would be unbearable after a nuclear war, constantly saying “I told you so”.
  • Streeter said:

    Just catching up the thread and not much harmony around, sadly

    The debate is as polarised and heated as ever with no compromise in sight

    But compromise there has to be and we need a whole load of mps to grow up

    Saying that is easy, but I do wish the anger and unnecessary attacks could be dialled down even a little as no one wins in such a confrontational situation

    MPs have reached a compromise. Its the EU that aren't willing to compromise an inch. If there's no deal, we can quite reasonably blame them.
    They will have stuck to their word when we thought they wouldn’t. It is absolutely, categorically, most definitely our fault.
    And we will have stuck to our word when they thought we wouldn't.

    And life will go on. And we won't put up a hard border in NI and lets see if Varadkar does. My money is on no, this whole backstop nonsense was a bluff.
    That's such an infantile way of thinking about it. If Varadkar doesn't send in the building contractors on day one to put up some new customs posts, it doesn't mean we've successfully called his bluff. The government would have to implement as much of the backstop unilaterally as they could and there would need to be a border poll.
    No there wouldn't be a need for one. The only time there needs to be a border poll is if there is sufficient demand to show there needs to be one. Which bullshit hypothetical polls don't show. A reasonable way to show it would be the voters voting for representatives who back one and that has not happened.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 71,426

    If the likes of Keir Starmer etc really believe No Deal will be a disaster then they should ratify the deal. Unless they actively want to have a disaster.

    They actively voted for Corbyn to be PM, what more evidence do you need that they want a disaster?
  • SeanT said:

    If this is what pb.com is like now, what’s it going to be like in the small hours of 30th March a few hours after there’s No Deal?

    There will be blood.
    What does that look like online?

    Or are we all going to meet up outside Dirty Dicks for a massive punch up?
  • GIN1138GIN1138 Posts: 22,293
    SeanT said:

    The right way for potential PMs to eat a bacon roll, perhaps? Remember those innocent days?

    Are there Conservatives who admit they'd actually feel better if EdM and EdB were running things, rather than TM and PH (not to forget Andrea Jenkyn, of course), even if EdM was a sloppy eater and EdB was a bit fat?

    That's a slightly odd question, because it's hard to see any world in which EdM and EdB would be attempting to implement Brexit in a hung parliament dependent on the ERG and DUP for support.

    But if you mean 'would a normal, sane government under any of the leading pre-Corbyn Labour politicians be preferable to a no-deal crash-out followed very probably by a Corbyn government?', then, yes, of course it would be massively preferable.
    Then put it this way: all else being equal, would you rather Ed Balls had been in charge of Brexit from the start, rather than TMay? I think the answer has to be Yes. He's smarter, more flexible, better informed, and is probably a superior negotiator.

    Who would win a dance off between Ed Balls and Theresa though?
  • RecidivistRecidivist Posts: 4,679

    TOPPING said:

    Scott_P said:
    FT anti brexit stance showing. Of course brexit is a negative to the economy but we are doing better than Italy and Germany and on a par with France
    I did wonder why it was a blow to the data?
    proabaly because they were rooting for a huge depression post the vote and it hasnt happened
    I mean, we haven't left the EU yet. The chaos has barely started. We're still several weeks away from when the ironic contempt starts giving away to first serious concern and then blind panic.
    Except the Remain tossers were predicting all those terrible catastrophes just for voting for Brexit before we even actually enacted it. And then when none of their terrible predictions turned out to be true they pretended they were talking about something else - like the lying scum they are.
    None? Not the exchange rate or anything like that?

    Another Leaver dickhead trying to rewrite history.
    The exchange rate drops were beneficial not a catastrophe. They were something we would have wanted even without any mention of Brexit.
    Don't forget that the exchange rate drops are beneficial for those who want to create wealth and have a country which lives within its means.

    People who want cheaper imported tat and cheaper foreign holidays and who are willing to shut down UK exporting businesses to get them take the opposite view.
    Well indeed. That kind of common sense seems to be lost on some of our Remainer colleagues.
    Except it isn't common sense. If you could devalue your way to prosperity how come the pre-Euro German economy was so successful? Devaluation gives you a short term boost. We've had one over the last couple of years as it happens, and it hasn't done my bank balance any harm. But once the extra import costs catch up with your cash flow you realise that the benefits weren't just fleeting but weren't even as good as they looked.

    I love reading your posts. You really know how to put a good case and be sharp without being abusive. Just think how good they would be if you were actually right as well.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 51,729

    Streeter said:

    Just catching up the thread and not much harmony around, sadly

    The debate is as polarised and heated as ever with no compromise in sight

    But compromise there has to be and we need a whole load of mps to grow up

    Saying that is easy, but I do wish the anger and unnecessary attacks could be dialled down even a little as no one wins in such a confrontational situation

    MPs have reached a compromise. Its the EU that aren't willing to compromise an inch. If there's no deal, we can quite reasonably blame them.
    They will have stuck to their word when we thought they wouldn’t. It is absolutely, categorically, most definitely our fault.
    And we will have stuck to our word when they thought we wouldn't.

    And life will go on. And we won't put up a hard border in NI and lets see if Varadkar does. My money is on no, this whole backstop nonsense was a bluff.
    That's such an infantile way of thinking about it. If Varadkar doesn't send in the building contractors on day one to put up some new customs posts, it doesn't mean we've successfully called his bluff. The government would have to implement as much of the backstop unilaterally as they could and there would need to be a border poll.
    No there wouldn't be a need for one. The only time there needs to be a border poll is if there is sufficient demand to show there needs to be one. Which bullshit hypothetical polls don't show. A reasonable way to show it would be the voters voting for representatives who back one and that has not happened.
    Unionism lost its Stormont majority in 2017.

    https://www.newsletter.co.uk/news/unionism-loses-its-stormont-majority-1-7850528
  • The right way for potential PMs to eat a bacon roll, perhaps? Remember those innocent days?

    Are there Conservatives who admit they'd actually feel better if EdM and EdB were running things, rather than TM and PH (not to forget Andrea Jenkyn, of course), even if EdM was a sloppy eater and EdB was a bit fat?

    That's a slightly odd question, because it's hard to see any world in which EdM and EdB would be attempting to implement Brexit in a hung parliament dependent on the ERG and DUP for support.

    But if you mean 'would a normal, sane government under any of the leading pre-Corbyn Labour politicians be preferable to a no-deal crash-out followed very probably by a Corbyn government?', then, yes, of course it would be massively preferable.

    A Tory No Deal Brexit is the one scenario under which Jeremy Corbyn has a realistic chance of becoming PM. Which, of course, is why he wants one.

    Yep.
  • In which case can you DM me about some magic beans I have going cheap.

    You bemoan May supposedly putting party ahead of country in seeking to get her deal through but being OK with no deal.

    How are opposition MPs bemoaning no deal while rejecting the only deal in front of them doing anything other than putting party ahead of country?
  • FF43FF43 Posts: 17,208
    edited February 2019

    Just catching up the thread and not much harmony around, sadly

    The debate is as polarised and heated as ever with no compromise in sight

    But compromise there has to be and we need a whole load of mps to grow up

    Saying that is easy, but I do wish the anger and unnecessary attacks could be dialled down even a little as no one wins in such a confrontational situation

    MPs have reached a compromise. Its the EU that aren't willing to compromise an inch. If there's no deal, we can quite reasonably blame them.

    The EU wanted a Northern Ireland backstop. The UK wanted a UK-wide one. The EU compromised. Obviously, we will blame the foreigners for a mess entirely of our making and that will make a few xenophobes feel good for a while. But it will not solve a thing. A move designed to keep the Tories together whatever the cost to the country is unlikely to be forgotten or forgiven.

    Who said the UK wanted a UK-wide one? This is a terrible interpretation of statehood that makes Theresa May out to be some kind of Louis XIV figure. L'etat c'est moi

    Theresa May was open to a UK wide backstop, the UK never voted for a UK-wide backstop. Parliament never endorsed it. MPs from across Parliament expressed opposition to it long before it was agreed.
    Because if you are a rule taker those rules protect you too. The UK gains more with 27 countries, plus a host of third countries, being bound to the UK on the rules against having to follow the rules itself. Those rules protect the UK even if it has no say over drafting them and they didn't take UK interests into account when drafting them. With a high probability we are heading eventually to the Vassal State. Problem is, this means less democratic accountability, not more. Mrs May's issues, the fact three Leaver Brexit have resigned in frustration and MPs can't decide what to do, all stem from this contradiction.
  • Streeter said:

    Just catching up the thread and not much harmony around, sadly

    The debate is as polarised and heated as ever with no compromise in sight

    But compromise there has to be and we need a whole load of mps to grow up

    Saying that is easy, but I do wish the anger and unnecessary attacks could be dialled down even a little as no one wins in such a confrontational situation

    MPs have reached a compromise. Its the EU that aren't willing to compromise an inch. If there's no deal, we can quite reasonably blame them.
    They will have stuck to their word when we thought they wouldn’t. It is absolutely, categorically, most definitely our fault.
    And we will have stuck to our word when they thought we wouldn't.

    And life will go on. And we won't put up a hard border in NI and lets see if Varadkar does. My money is on no, this whole backstop nonsense was a bluff.
    That's such an infantile way of thinking about it. If Varadkar doesn't send in the building contractors on day one to put up some new customs posts, it doesn't mean we've successfully called his bluff. The government would have to implement as much of the backstop unilaterally as they could and there would need to be a border poll.
    No there wouldn't be a need for one. The only time there needs to be a border poll is if there is sufficient demand to show there needs to be one. Which bullshit hypothetical polls don't show. A reasonable way to show it would be the voters voting for representatives who back one and that has not happened.
    Unionism lost its Stormont majority in 2017.

    https://www.newsletter.co.uk/news/unionism-loses-its-stormont-majority-1-7850528
    Nationalism has no majority though.

    And if it gets one, so be it. That's democracy.
  • SeanT said:

    If this is what pb.com is like now, what’s it going to be like in the small hours of 30th March a few hours after there’s No Deal?

    There will be blood.
    What does that look like online?

    Or are we all going to meet up outside Dirty Dicks for a massive punch up?
    Of course not.

    Bishopsgate police station is only a couple of doors down.
  • SeanT said:

    The right way for potential PMs to eat a bacon roll, perhaps? Remember those innocent days?

    Are there Conservatives who admit they'd actually feel better if EdM and EdB were running things, rather than TM and PH (not to forget Andrea Jenkyn, of course), even if EdM was a sloppy eater and EdB was a bit fat?

    That's a slightly odd question, because it's hard to see any world in which EdM and EdB would be attempting to implement Brexit in a hung parliament dependent on the ERG and DUP for support.

    But if you mean 'would a normal, sane government under any of the leading pre-Corbyn Labour politicians be preferable to a no-deal crash-out followed very probably by a Corbyn government?', then, yes, of course it would be massively preferable.
    Then put it this way: all else being equal, would you rather Ed Balls had been in charge of Brexit from the start, rather than TMay? I think the answer has to be Yes. He's smarter, more flexible, better informed, and is probably a superior negotiator.

    I’ve said for some time that Ed Balls is Labour’s answer. He learnt a lot from his defeat in GE2015 and also recognised the need for a reform of the free movement rules.

    This is in no way connected to the bet I have on him at 100/1 as next Labour leader.
  • "Labour’s massive problem is that the leadership is out of step with the vast majority of those who vote for the party."

    The Tory's massive problem is that the Remainer leader is out of step with the vast majority of those who vote for the party.

    The LibDem's massive problem is the leader.

    Good summary.
    If MM believes (and he is a Conservative activist) that ERG fanaticism is the majority view of Conservative voters then I find that worrying.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 71,426

    SeanT said:

    If this is what pb.com is like now, what’s it going to be like in the small hours of 30th March a few hours after there’s No Deal?

    There will be blood.
    Jasper Carrot once joked that CND members would be unbearable after a nuclear war, constantly saying “I told you so”.
    https://youtu.be/gcXM6tfe9YM
    Start at 3.18.

    His second funniest sketch.
  • In which case can you DM me about some magic beans I have going cheap.

    You bemoan May supposedly putting party ahead of country in seeking to get her deal through but being OK with no deal.

    How are opposition MPs bemoaning no deal while rejecting the only deal in front of them doing anything other than putting party ahead of country?
    To be fair SO has been just as critical of the opposition MPs as he has of the Government. He has shown no favouritism in his disdain for MPs of every colour.
  • If this is what pb.com is like now, what’s it going to be like in the small hours of 30th March a few hours after there’s No Deal?

    It will be quite surreal because initially nothing will happen, and then there'll be a media scrum about the first tangible effect of Brexit.

    Breaking News: "A consignment of carrots has been stopped for inspection in Calais"
    I’ve been told on here there will be riots in the streets within 48 hours and a massive demands nationwide for an instant reversal of course.
  • Richard_NabaviRichard_Nabavi Posts: 30,821
    edited February 2019
    SeanT said:

    Then put it this way: all else being equal, would you rather Ed Balls had been in charge of Brexit from the start, rather than TMay? I think the answer has to be Yes. He's smarter, more flexible, better informed, and is probably a superior negotiator.

    Yes, I think you are right on that. I've always thought he was the best of the generation of Labour politicians following on from Blair and Brown.
  • FF43 said:

    Just catching up the thread and not much harmony around, sadly

    The debate is as polarised and heated as ever with no compromise in sight

    But compromise there has to be and we need a whole load of mps to grow up

    Saying that is easy, but I do wish the anger and unnecessary attacks could be dialled down even a little as no one wins in such a confrontational situation

    MPs have reached a compromise. Its the EU that aren't willing to compromise an inch. If there's no deal, we can quite reasonably blame them.

    The EU wanted a Northern Ireland backstop. The UK wanted a UK-wide one. The EU compromised. Obviously, we will blame the foreigners for a mess entirely of our making and that will make a few xenophobes feel good for a while. But it will not solve a thing. A move designed to keep the Tories together whatever the cost to the country is unlikely to be forgotten or forgiven.

    Who said the UK wanted a UK-wide one? This is a terrible interpretation of statehood that makes Theresa May out to be some kind of Louis XIV figure. L'etat c'est moi

    Theresa May was open to a UK wide backstop, the UK never voted for a UK-wide backstop. Parliament never endorsed it. MPs from across Parliament expressed opposition to it long before it was agreed.
    Because if you are a rule taker those rules protect you too. The UK gains more with 27 countries being bound to the UK on the rules against having to follow the rules itself. Those rules protect the UK even if it has no say over drafting them and they didn't take UK interests into account when drafting them. With a high probability we are heading eventually to the Vassal State. Problem is, this means less democratic accountability, not more. Mrs May's issues, the fact three Leaver Brexit have resigned in frustration and MPs can't decide what to do, all stem from this contradiction.
    Mrs May's issues do, because she's not reconciled herself to Leaving properly.

    You're right that a vassal state leaves us worse off. That's why I oppose the backstop so vehemently.

    I'm OK with Remaining.
    I'm OK with Leaving.
    I am not OK with Leaving but being a vassal.
  • SeanT said:

    If this is what pb.com is like now, what’s it going to be like in the small hours of 30th March a few hours after there’s No Deal?

    There will be blood.
    What does that look like online?

    Or are we all going to meet up outside Dirty Dicks for a massive punch up?
    Of course not.

    Bishopsgate police station is only a couple of doors down.
    Ha!
  • GIN1138GIN1138 Posts: 22,293
    rcs1000 said:

    I came,

    I saw the discussion,

    I left...

    That bad eh? :D
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 51,729

    If this is what pb.com is like now, what’s it going to be like in the small hours of 30th March a few hours after there’s No Deal?

    It will be quite surreal because initially nothing will happen, and then there'll be a media scrum about the first tangible effect of Brexit.

    Breaking News: "A consignment of carrots has been stopped for inspection in Calais"
    I’ve been told on here there will be riots in the streets within 48 hours and a massive demands nationwide for an instant reversal of course.
    When I say initially I mean in the hours after the clock ticks 11pm.
  • The right way for potential PMs to eat a bacon roll, perhaps? Remember those innocent days?

    Are there Conservatives who admit they'd actually feel better if EdM and EdB were running things, rather than TM and PH (not to forget Andrea Jenkyn, of course), even if EdM was a sloppy eater and EdB was a bit fat?

    That's a slightly odd question, because it's hard to see any world in which EdM and EdB would be attempting to implement Brexit in a hung parliament dependent on the ERG and DUP for support.

    But if you mean 'would a normal, sane government under any of the leading pre-Corbyn Labour politicians be preferable to a no-deal crash-out followed very probably by a Corbyn government?', then, yes, of course it would be massively preferable.

    A Tory No Deal Brexit is the one scenario under which Jeremy Corbyn has a realistic chance of becoming PM. Which, of course, is why he wants one.

    Yep.
    If he stays as Labour leader I’m resigned to him becoming PM at the next election whatever the outcome of Brexit.

    I think all roads lead there, at present.
  • TOPPING said:



    proabaly because they were rooting for a huge depression post the vote and it hasnt happened

    I mean, we haven't left the EU yet. The chaos has barely started. We're still several weeks away from when the ironic contempt starts giving away to first serious concern and then blind panic.
    Except the Remain tossers were predicting all those terrible catastrophes just for voting for Brexit before we even actually enacted it. And then when none of their terrible predictions turned out to be true they pretended they were talking about something else - like the lying scum they are.
    None? Not the exchange rate or anything like that?

    Another Leaver dickhead trying to rewrite history.
    The exchange rate drops were beneficial not a catastrophe. They were something we would have wanted even without any mention of Brexit.
    Don't forget that the exchange rate drops are beneficial for those who want to create wealth and have a country which lives within its means.

    People who want cheaper imported tat and cheaper foreign holidays and who are willing to shut down UK exporting businesses to get them take the opposite view.
    Well indeed. That kind of common sense seems to be lost on some of our Remainer colleagues.
    Except it isn't common sense. If you could devalue your way to prosperity how come the pre-Euro German economy was so successful? Devaluation gives you a short term boost. We've had one over the last couple of years as it happens, and it hasn't done my bank balance any harm. But once the extra import costs catch up with your cash flow you realise that the benefits weren't just fleeting but weren't even as good as they looked.

    I love reading your posts. You really know how to put a good case and be sharp without being abusive. Just think how good they would be if you were actually right as well.
    You can live within yours means and increase your productivity.

    Or you can devalue.

    Most of the UK's people and all of its politicians have no intention of living within its means and also having increasingly little intention or ability to improve their productivity.
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 53,875
    The Windies are looking so ordinary atm. Really, really missing Holder. Turning into a very dull game.
  • SeanT said:

    If this is what pb.com is like now, what’s it going to be like in the small hours of 30th March a few hours after there’s No Deal?

    There will be blood.
    Jasper Carrot once joked that CND members would be unbearable after a nuclear war, constantly saying “I told you so”.
    The Greenham Common women wouldn't have been able to.

  • Except it isn't common sense. If you could devalue your way to prosperity how come the pre-Euro German economy was so successful? Devaluation gives you a short term boost. We've had one over the last couple of years as it happens, and it hasn't done my bank balance any harm. But once the extra import costs catch up with your cash flow you realise that the benefits weren't just fleeting but weren't even as good as they looked.

    I love reading your posts. You really know how to put a good case and be sharp without being abusive. Just think how good they would be if you were actually right as well.

    But no one has said you can devalue your way to prosperity. What they have said is that, as you yourself say, a strong currency is not always a good thing and the temporary weakness we saw in the aftermath of the Brexit vote was a good thing not a bad one. All the more when imported materials only make up a small proportion of the overall cost of your product relative to its value.
  • The right way for potential PMs to eat a bacon roll, perhaps? Remember those innocent days?

    Are there Conservatives who admit they'd actually feel better if EdM and EdB were running things, rather than TM and PH (not to forget Andrea Jenkyn, of course), even if EdM was a sloppy eater and EdB was a bit fat?

    That's a slightly odd question, because it's hard to see any world in which EdM and EdB would be attempting to implement Brexit in a hung parliament dependent on the ERG and DUP for support.

    But if you mean 'would a normal, sane government under any of the leading pre-Corbyn Labour politicians be preferable to a no-deal crash-out followed very probably by a Corbyn government?', then, yes, of course it would be massively preferable.

    A Tory No Deal Brexit is the one scenario under which Jeremy Corbyn has a realistic chance of becoming PM. Which, of course, is why he wants one.

    Yep.
    If he stays as Labour leader I’m resigned to him becoming PM at the next election whatever the outcome of Brexit.

    I think all roads lead there, at present.
    The God help us one and all!
  • FF43FF43 Posts: 17,208
    edited February 2019

    FF43 said:

    Just catching up the thread and not much harmony around, sadly

    The debate is as polarised and heated as ever with no compromise in sight

    But compromise there has to be and we need a whole load of mps to grow up

    Saying that is easy, but I do wish the anger and unnecessary attacks could be dialled down even a little as no one wins in such a confrontational situation

    MPs have reached a compromise. Its the EU that aren't willing to compromise an inch. If there's no deal, we can quite reasonably blame them.

    The EU wanted a Northern Ireland backstop. The UK wanted a UK-wide one. The EU compromised. Obviously, we will blame the foreigners for a mess entirely of our making and that will make a few xenophobes feel good for a while. But it will not solve a thing. A move designed to keep the Tories together whatever the cost to the country is unlikely to be forgotten or forgiven.

    Who said the UK wanted a UK-wide one? This is a terrible interpretation of statehood that makes Theresa May out to be some kind of Louis XIV figure. L'etat c'est moi

    Theresa May was open to a UK wide backstop, the UK never voted for a UK-wide backstop. Parliament never endorsed it. MPs from across Parliament expressed opposition to it long before it was agreed.
    Because if you are a rule taker those rules protect you too. The UK gains more with 27 countries being bound to the UK on the rules against having to follow the rules itself. Those rules protect the UK even if it has no say over drafting them and they didn't take UK interests into account when drafting them. With a high probability we are heading eventually to the Vassal State. Problem is, this means less democratic accountability, not more. Mrs May's issues, the fact three Leaver Brexit have resigned in frustration and MPs can't decide what to do, all stem from this contradiction.
    Mrs May's issues do, because she's not reconciled herself to Leaving properly.

    You're right that a vassal state leaves us worse off. That's why I oppose the backstop so vehemently.

    I'm OK with Remaining.
    I'm OK with Leaving.
    I am not OK with Leaving but being a vassal.
    "Leaving properly" is a slogan, not a policy. I agree we're not ready yet to face up honestly to the implications of Brexit. But if we benefit from the rules, and we do for the reasons I have just given, we are highly likely to go Vassal State eventually. You can only hunt unicorns for so long, because actually they don't exist. We are still hunting the unicorns.
  • If this is what pb.com is like now, what’s it going to be like in the small hours of 30th March a few hours after there’s No Deal?

    It will be quite surreal because initially nothing will happen, and then there'll be a media scrum about the first tangible effect of Brexit.

    Breaking News: "A consignment of carrots has been stopped for inspection in Calais"
    I’ve been told on here there will be riots in the streets within 48 hours and a massive demands nationwide for an instant reversal of course.
    When I say initially I mean in the hours after the clock ticks 11pm.
    The story there will be about Sterling and the market reaction.

    I would also expect Mark Carney and the BoE, and Hammond, to take to the air.

    One interesting question is how easily the Govenment will be able to get emergency legislation through in its aftermath.
  • TOPPING said:

    Scott_P said:
    FT anti brexit stance showing. Of course brexit is a negative to the economy but we are doing better than Italy and Germany and on a par with France
    I did wonder why it was a blow to the data?
    proabaly because they were rooting for a huge depression post the vote and it hasnt happened
    I mean, we haven't left the EU yet. The chaos has barely started. We're still several weeks away from when the ironic contempt starts giving away to first serious concern and then blind panic.
    Except the Remain tossers were predicting all those terrible catastrophes just for voting for Brexit before we even actually enacted it. And then when none of their terrible predictions turned out to be true they pretended they were talking about something else - like the lying scum they are.
    None? Not the exchange rate or anything like that?

    Another Leaver dickhead trying to rewrite history.
    The exchange rate drops were beneficial not a catastrophe. They were something we would have wanted even without any mention of Brexit.
    Don't forget that the exchange rate drops are beneficial for those who want to create wealth and have a country which lives within its means.

    People who want cheaper imported tat and cheaper foreign holidays and who are willing to shut down UK exporting businesses to get them take the opposite view.
    Well indeed. That kind of common sense seems to be lost on some of our Remainer colleagues.
    Though the problem does go much deeper than the extremist Toppo.

    Because the UK economy is so unbalanced there is a far greater number of people who would lose out from the UK living within its means than those who would benefit from it so doing.
    Yet another reason why, in an ideal world, Brexit would be only the first step in a complete rebalancing of both our economy and our political systems. I doubt either will happen unfortunately but they have more chance now than they have had in decades.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 60,503
    edited February 2019
    I don’t know if this is just me but all the major supermarkets I regularly use - Sainsbury’s, Waitrose and M&S - seem to have noteably diversified their supply chains recently.

    I don’t think this is one off. I regularly buy fresh fruit and veg there and, for example, in Waitrose on Saturday got a whole shop (peppers, sweetcorn, strawberries, bananas, apples, lettuce, cucumber, broccoli, mange tout and beans) without anything being from the EU, except mandarins from Spain.

    The rest was UK, India, Morocco, Guatemala, Peru, Chile, Mexico and South Africa.
  • murali_smurali_s Posts: 3,067
    edited February 2019
    If you guys think it's bad here with Brexit, need to venture into Netweather.co.uk and see the toys being thrown out of the pram with the realisation that this will be yet another *largely* snowless and mild winter.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 71,426

    I don’t know if this is just me but all the major supermarkets I regularly use - Sainsbury’s, Waitrose and M&S - seem to have noteably diversified their supply chains recently.

    I don’t think this is one off. I regularly buy fresh fruit and veg there and, for example, in Waitrose on Saturday got a whole shop (beans, sweetcorn, strawberries, bananas, apples, lettuce, cucumber, broccoli, mange tout and beans) without anything being from the EU, except mandarins from Spain.

    The rest was UK, India, Morocco, Guatemala, Peru, Chile, Mexico and South Africa.

    They can't possibly be as bad as indigenous Whitehall mandarins.
  • RobDRobD Posts: 59,936
    murali_s said:

    If you guys think it's bad here with Brexit, need to venture into Netweather.co.uk and see the toys are being thrown out of the pram with the realisation that this will yet another *largely* snowless and mild winter.

    Didn’t it literally just snow? :D
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 96,163

    The right way for potential PMs to eat a bacon roll, perhaps? Remember those innocent days?

    Are there Conservatives who admit they'd actually feel better if EdM and EdB were running things, rather than TM and PH (not to forget Andrea Jenkyn, of course), even if EdM was a sloppy eater and EdB was a bit fat?

    That's a slightly odd question, because it's hard to see any world in which EdM and EdB would be attempting to implement Brexit in a hung parliament dependent on the ERG and DUP for support.

    But if you mean 'would a normal, sane government under any of the leading pre-Corbyn Labour politicians be preferable to a no-deal crash-out followed very probably by a Corbyn government?', then, yes, of course it would be massively preferable.

    A Tory No Deal Brexit is the one scenario under which Jeremy Corbyn has a realistic chance of becoming PM. Which, of course, is why he wants one.

    Yep.
    If he stays as Labour leader I’m resigned to him becoming PM at the next election whatever the outcome of Brexit.

    I think all roads lead there, at present.
    I mostly agree. The longer till the next GE the more chance the Tories have of recovery, but there's no way they last until 2022, and even then it is not certain, given other factors (recession possibility, length of time in office and so on)
  • SeanT said:

    If this is what pb.com is like now, what’s it going to be like in the small hours of 30th March a few hours after there’s No Deal?

    There will be blood.
    Jasper Carrot once joked that CND members would be unbearable after a nuclear war, constantly saying “I told you so”.

    My guess is that it will be a lot like the lorry fuel protests back in 2000 or whenever it was, but on a deeper, wider, longer timescale.

  • FF43 said:



    "Leaving properly" is a slogan, not a policy. I agree we're not ready yet to face up honestly to the implications of Brexit. But if we benefit from the rules, and we do for the reasons I have just given, we are highly likely to go Vassal State eventually. You can only hunt unicorns for so long, because actually they don't exist. We are still hunting the unicorns.

    No it's not a slogan it has a meaning I thought was clear. Let's rephrase.

    I'm ok with Remaining where we get a say in our rules.
    I'm ok with Leaving and determining out own rules.
    I'm not ok with being a vassal.

    Leaving and setting our own rules (giving up the rights, benefits and obligations of their rules) is not unicorn hunting.
  • SeanT said:

    Then put it this way: all else being equal, would you rather Ed Balls had been in charge of Brexit from the start, rather than TMay? I think the answer has to be Yes. He's smarter, more flexible, better informed, and is probably a superior negotiator.

    Yes, I think you are right on that. I've always thought he was the best of the generation of Labour politicians following on from Blair and Brown.
    The general view about Ed Balls was rather different before 2015 and even more so before 2010.
  • SeanT said:

    If this is what pb.com is like now, what’s it going to be like in the small hours of 30th March a few hours after there’s No Deal?

    It will be quite surreal because initially nothing will happen, and then there'll be a media scrum about the first tangible effect of Brexit.

    Breaking News: "A consignment of carrots has been stopped for inspection in Calais"
    I’ve been told on here there will be riots in the streets within 48 hours and a massive demands nationwide for an instant reversal of course.
    There could be riots, but I doubt it. More likely is a nasty run on the pound, another crash in property, a huge fall in foreign investment, and therefore a deep and wide recession, just as the rest of Europe is already tumbling. Ugh.

    Politically we could see turmoil in Belfast and Edinburgh and potential referendums in both.

    So the worst case scenario is that the UK breaks up, GDP drops by 5-10%, manufacturing goes into long term decline, and property goes into a Japanese style slump from which it never recovers. Would the UK (or what's left of it) survive and prosper long term? I think probably yes, we aren't Argentina. We might even, one day, thrive in our independence.

    But I'd far rather not take this horrible dangerous route to that independence.
    Shouldn't you have considered that before the referendum?
  • I don’t know if this is just me but all the major supermarkets I regularly use - Sainsbury’s, Waitrose and M&S - seem to have noteably diversified their supply chains recently.

    I don’t think this is one off. I regularly buy fresh fruit and veg there and, for example, in Waitrose on Saturday got a whole shop (peppers, sweetcorn, strawberries, bananas, apples, lettuce, cucumber, broccoli, mange tout and beans) without anything being from the EU, except mandarins from Spain.

    The rest was UK, India, Morocco, Guatemala, Peru, Chile, Mexico and South Africa.

    That tends to happen in the European winter.

    :wink:
  • Beverley_CBeverley_C Posts: 6,256

    SeanT said:

    If this is what pb.com is like now, what’s it going to be like in the small hours of 30th March a few hours after there’s No Deal?

    It will be quite surreal because initially nothing will happen, and then there'll be a media scrum about the first tangible effect of Brexit.

    Breaking News: "A consignment of carrots has been stopped for inspection in Calais"
    I’ve been told on here there will be riots in the streets within 48 hours and a massive demands nationwide for an instant reversal of course.
    There could be riots, but I doubt it. More likely is a nasty run on the pound, another crash in property, a huge fall in foreign investment, and therefore a deep and wide recession, just as the rest of Europe is already tumbling. Ugh.

    Politically we could see turmoil in Belfast and Edinburgh and potential referendums in both.

    So the worst case scenario is that the UK breaks up, GDP drops by 5-10%, manufacturing goes into long term decline, and property goes into a Japanese style slump from which it never recovers. Would the UK (or what's left of it) survive and prosper long term? I think probably yes, we aren't Argentina. We might even, one day, thrive in our independence.

    But I'd far rather not take this horrible dangerous route to that independence.
    Shouldn't you have considered that before the referendum?
    It is only short term pain. The long term gain will be worth it.....
    .
    .
    .
    .
    .
    .

    :D:D:D:D:D:D:D:D:D:D:D:D:D:D:D:D:D:D:D
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 21,298
    I see the only debate tonight is how fucking dreadful Brexit will be.

    We really have come along way from the Empire 2.0 wankbank of 2016.
  • FF43FF43 Posts: 17,208
    FF43 said:

    FF43 said:

    <

    Who said the UK wanted a UK-wide one? This is a terrible interpretation of statehood that makes Theresa May out to be some kind of Louis XIV figure. L'etat c'est moi

    Theresa May was open to a UK wide backstop, the UK never voted for a UK-wide backstop. Parliament never endorsed it. MPs from across Parliament expressed opposition to it long before it was agreed.

    Because if you are a rule taker those rules protect you too. The UK gains more with 27 countries being bound to the UK on the rules against having to follow the rules itself. Those rules protect the UK even if it has no say over drafting them and they didn't take UK interests into account when drafting them. With a high probability we are heading eventually to the Vassal State. Problem is, this means less democratic accountability, not more. Mrs May's issues, the fact three Leaver Brexit have resigned in frustration and MPs can't decide what to do, all stem from this contradiction.
    Mrs May's issues do, because she's not reconciled herself to Leaving properly.

    You're right that a vassal state leaves us worse off. That's why I oppose the backstop so vehemently.

    I'm OK with Remaining.
    I'm OK with Leaving.
    I am not OK with Leaving but being a vassal.
    "Leaving properly" is a slogan, not a policy. I agree we're not ready yet to face up honestly to the implications of Brexit. But if we benefit from the rules, and we do for the reasons I have just given, we are highly likely to go Vassal State eventually. You can only hunt unicorns for so long, because actually they don't exist. We are still hunting the unicorns.
    And edit, my interest in Brexit is whether Leavers will ultimately accept the Vassal State, as being better than not leaving at all. I suspect they will because they don't in general seem interested in the exercise of sovereignty and making the necessary trade offs, which is what sovereignty means. That's more a Remainer thing. Leavers seem in general to view sovereignty in symbolic terms. If so, Philip, you would be an exception to this generalisation.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 96,163

    SeanT said:

    If this is what pb.com is like now, what’s it going to be like in the small hours of 30th March a few hours after there’s No Deal?

    It will be quite surreal because initially nothing will happen, and then there'll be a media scrum about the first tangible effect of Brexit.

    Breaking News: "A consignment of carrots has been stopped for inspection in Calais"
    I’ve been told on here there will be riots in the streets within 48 hours and a massive demands nationwide for an instant reversal of course.
    There could be riots, but I doubt it. More likely is a nasty run on the pound, another crash in property, a huge fall in foreign investment, and therefore a deep and wide recession, just as the rest of Europe is already tumbling. Ugh.

    Politically we could see turmoil in Belfast and Edinburgh and potential referendums in both.

    So the worst case scenario is that the UK breaks up, GDP drops by 5-10%, manufacturing goes into long term decline, and property goes into a Japanese style slump from which it never recovers. Would the UK (or what's left of it) survive and prosper long term? I think probably yes, we aren't Argentina. We might even, one day, thrive in our independence.

    But I'd far rather not take this horrible dangerous route to that independence.
    Shouldn't you have considered that before the referendum?
    It is only short term pain. The long term gain will be worth it.....
    Well that was the idea. If ever that was true, it isn't now.
  • DavidL said:

    The Windies are looking so ordinary atm. Really, really missing Holder. Turning into a very dull game.

    Makes you wonder what would have been the outcome if England had properly prepared before the Tests.
  • RobDRobD Posts: 59,936

    I see the only debate tonight is how fucking dreadful Brexit will be.

    We really have come along way from the Empire 2.0 wankbank of 2016.

    I seem to recall that it was only Remainers that were banging on about that.
  • Scott_PScott_P Posts: 51,453

    I see the only debate tonight is how fucking dreadful Brexit will be.

    We really have come along way from the Empire 2.0 wankbank of 2016.

    they knew...

    https://twitter.com/brianspanner1/status/746488316510482433?lang=en
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 96,163
    SeanT said:

    SeanT said:

    If this is what pb.com is like now, what’s it going to be like in the small hours of 30th March a few hours after there’s No Deal?

    It will be quite surreal because initially nothing will happen, and then there'll be a media scrum about the first tangible effect of Brexit.

    Breaking News: "A consignment of carrots has been stopped for inspection in Calais"
    I’ve been told on here there will be riots in the streets within 48 hours and a massive demands nationwide for an instant reversal of course.
    There could be riots, but I doubt it. More likely is a nasty run on the pound, another crash in property, a huge fall in foreign investment, and therefore a deep and wide recession, just as the rest of Europe is already tumbling. Ugh.

    Politically we could see turmoil in Belfast and Edinburgh and potential referendums in both.

    So the worst case scenario is that the UK breaks up, GDP drops by 5-10%, manufacturing goes into long term decline, and property goes into a Japanese style slump from which it never recovers. Would the UK (or what's left of it) survive and prosper long term? I think probably yes, we aren't Argentina. We might even, one day, thrive in our independence.

    But I'd far rather not take this horrible dangerous route to that independence.
    Shouldn't you have considered that before the referendum?
    In the end I decided that the chances of No Deal Brexit were utterly minimal. and sanity would prevail and we'd get a kind of Dan Hannan EFTA-ish Brexit.

    I confess I had NOT properly considered the difficulties of the Irish border. But then, who had?
    I'm with you on that one. Boy, do I feel like a fool.

    I shall just have to lie and tell people I voted remain from now on.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 51,729

    I see the only debate tonight is how fucking dreadful Brexit will be.

    We really have come along way from the Empire 2.0 wankbank of 2016.

    The job description of the Australian High Commissioner seems to include telling Brexiteers what they want to hear.

    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/politics/2019/02/10/britain-global-trading-power-brexit-can/

    When confronted by change, it can be comforting to seek to shield oneself from the outside world. This was the sentiment Australia fell victim to in the 1970s, and what shaped the attitude of those who resisted repeal of the Corn Laws in the 19th century. They were wrong then, and they are wrong now.

    For the first time in almost half a century, Britain can once again be the master of its own trading destiny. It is an exciting opportunity – but only if it is bold enough to seize the day.
  • RobDRobD Posts: 59,936
    Scott_P said:

    I see the only debate tonight is how fucking dreadful Brexit will be.

    We really have come along way from the Empire 2.0 wankbank of 2016.

    they knew...

    /twitter.com/brianspanner1/status/746488316510482433?lang=en
    For the nth time, weren’t they like that because Cameron had just resigned?
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 21,298
    RobD said:

    I see the only debate tonight is how fucking dreadful Brexit will be.

    We really have come along way from the Empire 2.0 wankbank of 2016.

    I seem to recall that it was only Remainers that were banging on about that.
    Indeed, we have *always* been at war with Eastasia.
  • Scott_PScott_P Posts: 51,453
    RobD said:

    For the nth time, weren’t they like that because Cameron had just resigned?

    No

    They were like that because they were shitting themselves. With good reason.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 96,163
    Scott_P said:
    I like that tweet 1000%. I genuinely despair of the people who are pushing an election as a solution to this problem.
  • RobDRobD Posts: 59,936
    Scott_P said:

    RobD said:

    For the nth time, weren’t they like that because Cameron had just resigned?

    No

    They were like that because they were shitting themselves. With good reason.
    Really? I thought there was a rather celebratory party after this.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 51,729
    RobD said:

    Scott_P said:

    I see the only debate tonight is how fucking dreadful Brexit will be.

    We really have come along way from the Empire 2.0 wankbank of 2016.

    they knew...

    /twitter.com/brianspanner1/status/746488316510482433?lang=en
    For the nth time, weren’t they like that because Cameron had just resigned?
    People always say that as if he died. Politicians who dream of being Prime Minister their whole careers don't normally become sombre the moment the opportunity presents itself, unless they realise it's a poisoned chalice.
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 21,298
    SeanT said:

    SeanT said:

    If this is what pb.com is like now, what’s it going to be like in the small hours of 30th March a few hours after there’s No Deal?

    It will be quite surreal because initially nothing will happen, and then there'll be a media scrum about the first tangible effect of Brexit.

    Breaking News: "A consignment of carrots has been stopped for inspection in Calais"
    I’ve been told on here there will be riots in the streets within 48 hours and a massive demands nationwide for an instant reversal of course.
    There could be riots, but I doubt it. More likely is a nasty run on the pound, another crash in property, a huge fall in foreign investment, and therefore a deep and wide recession, just as the rest of Europe is already tumbling. Ugh.

    Politically we could see turmoil in Belfast and Edinburgh and potential referendums in both.

    So the worst case scenario is that the UK breaks up, GDP drops by 5-10%, manufacturing goes into long term decline, and property goes into a Japanese style slump from which it never recovers. Would the UK (or what's left of it) survive and prosper long term? I think probably yes, we aren't Argentina. We might even, one day, thrive in our independence.

    But I'd far rather not take this horrible dangerous route to that independence.
    Shouldn't you have considered that before the referendum?
    I did. I thought long and hard about all this (I was especially sensitive to the risk of another Scots indyref, and one the Nats would win - that issue was the one thing that nearly tipped me to Remain).

    In the end I decided that the chances of No Deal Brexit were utterly minimal. and sanity would prevail and we'd get a kind of Dan Hannan EFTA-ish Brexit.

    I confess I had NOT properly considered the difficulties of the Irish border. But then, who had?
    Not me, it’s true.

    I was more worried about the idea of the U.K. imposing sanctions upon itself, the loss of continental and global clout, and fueling Scottish independence. It’s only post 2016 that I’ve added destabilising Northern Ireland to the mix.
  • murali_smurali_s Posts: 3,067
    RobD said:

    Scott_P said:

    I see the only debate tonight is how fucking dreadful Brexit will be.

    We really have come along way from the Empire 2.0 wankbank of 2016.

    they knew...

    /twitter.com/brianspanner1/status/746488316510482433?lang=en
    For the nth time, weren’t they like that because Cameron had just resigned?
    Don't be silly. They were in a state of shock - they didn't think they would win.

    Disingenuous lying politicians like those two c*nts in that photo allying with a not too bright electorate has brought us to the precipice. We are a laughing stock - the butt of many of joke. We *should* feel very small.
  • Scott_PScott_P Posts: 51,453
    RobD said:

    Really? I thought there was a rather celebratory party after this.

    This was shortly before BoZo announced his lack of testicular fortitude to a weeping Nadine on National TV.

    That was a party for some.
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 78,219
    May's deal passing probably leads to a GE, the ERG will grumble; the DUP will probably bring down the government.
  • rpjsrpjs Posts: 3,787
    SeanT said:

    Philip_Thompson:

    "I agree with all of that. Or course if the EU (and the Irish in particular) want to avoid anything "tragic" then they can compromise. They won't unless May is prepared to take us over the cliff but if she is prepared to we can get a good deal potentially. Its our only shot"


    ****

    I think there are now too many in the EU who are resigned to, or even relishing, a No Deal, as they think it will hurt us waaaaaay more than them. It will be painful for all, but it will bind the EU tighter. See the polls in Ireland where they say they will accept a No Deal rather than accede on the backstop.

    Yes, German car-makers etc are finally squealing, likewise French farmers etc, but it is too late. The political energy and willingness does not exist, on the continent, to overrule the Brussels ideologues and get a compromise.

    They are playing with fire, but they think they can handle it. We are playing with multiple potential fires, I've no idea if we can handle it.

    When the history is written, it will be a history of mutual misunderstanding: we did not comprehend how much Brussels would take control of the negotiations, and how wedded Brussels is to defending the EU as proto-superstate rather than individual nations or interests within. They did not understand how the UK values its democratic system and would refuse to allow a 2nd vote, even when confronted with calamity.

    And so, here we are. Over the top we go. It's like the end of Blackadder.

    Yeah. And they all died.
  • RobDRobD Posts: 59,936
    murali_s said:

    RobD said:

    Scott_P said:

    I see the only debate tonight is how fucking dreadful Brexit will be.

    We really have come along way from the Empire 2.0 wankbank of 2016.

    they knew...

    /twitter.com/brianspanner1/status/746488316510482433?lang=en
    For the nth time, weren’t they like that because Cameron had just resigned?
    Don't be silly. They were in a state of shock - they didn't think they would win.

    Disingenuous lying politicians like those two c*nts in that photo allying with a not too bright electorate has brought us to the precipice. We are a laughing stock - the butt of many of joke. We *should* feel very small.
    Charming as ever.
  • AndyJSAndyJS Posts: 29,395
    After the 1983 general election Corbyn was probably one of the top 10 most Eurosceptic MPs in Parliament out of 650. There weren't many Tories in that category at the time.
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 21,298
    Can anyone believe that we’re now just weeks from a self imposed, major economic shock - “slow motion Lehmans” as Peston describes it.

    Whatever the economic version is of a war criminal - May is it. And Corbyn. And the Tory party.

    Bring on the Nuremberg trials. But, of course, post-Brexit, they must be in Northampton. Or Nuneaton.
  • FF43 said:

    FF43 said:

    FF43 said:

    <

    Who said the UK wanted a UK-wide one? This is a terrible interpretation of statehood that makes Theresa May out to be some kind of Louis XIV figure. L'etat c'est moi

    Theresa May was open to a UK wide backstop, the UK never voted for a UK-wide backstop. Parliament never endorsed it. MPs from across Parliament expressed opposition to it long before it was agreed.

    Because if you are a rule taker those rules protect you too. The UK gains more with 27 countries being bound to the UK on the rules against having to follow the rules itself. Those rules protect the UK even if it has no say over drafting them and they didn't take UK interests into account when drafting them. With a high probability we are heading eventually to the Vassal State. Problem is, this means less democratic accountability, not more. Mrs May's issues, the fact three Leaver Brexit have resigned in frustration and MPs can't decide what to do, all stem from this contradiction.
    Mrs May's issues do, because she's not reconciled herself to Leaving properly.

    You're right that a vassal state leaves us worse off. That's why I oppose the backstop so vehemently.

    I'm OK with Remaining.
    I'm OK with Leaving.
    I am not OK with Leaving but being a vassal.
    "Leaving properly" is a slogan, not a policy. I agree we're not ready yet to face up honestly to the implications of Brexit. But if we benefit from the rules, and we do for the reasons I have just given, we are highly likely to go Vassal State eventually. You can only hunt unicorns for so long, because actually they don't exist. We are still hunting the unicorns.
    And edit, my interest in Brexit is whether Leavers will ultimately accept the Vassal State, as being better than not leaving at all. I suspect they will because they don't in general seem interested in the exercise of sovereignty and making the necessary trade offs, which is what sovereignty means. That's more a Remainer thing. Leavers seem in general to view sovereignty in symbolic terms. If so, Philip, you would be an exception to this generalisation.
    Maybe.

    To me take back control was not a slogan. It is what I voted for.

    If we give up control to gain Brexit then I don't want it. May's deal is worse than remaining.

    But I'm unusual in not being afraid of either remaining or leaving. I was torn in the referendum and think we will be fine either way.
  • RobDRobD Posts: 59,936
    Scott_P said:

    RobD said:

    Really? I thought there was a rather celebratory party after this.

    This was shortly before BoZo announced his lack of testicular fortitude to a weeping Nadine on National TV.

    That was a party for some.
    Huh? Wasn’t that a week later?
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 123,190

    The right way for potential PMs to eat a bacon roll, perhaps? Remember those innocent days?

    Are there Conservatives who admit they'd actually feel better if EdM and EdB were running things, rather than TM and PH (not to forget Andrea Jenkyn, of course), even if EdM was a sloppy eater and EdB was a bit fat?

    That's a slightly odd question, because it's hard to see any world in which EdM and EdB would be attempting to implement Brexit in a hung parliament dependent on the ERG and DUP for support.

    But if you mean 'would a normal, sane government under any of the leading pre-Corbyn Labour politicians be preferable to a no-deal crash-out followed very probably by a Corbyn government?', then, yes, of course it would be massively preferable.

    A Tory No Deal Brexit is the one scenario under which Jeremy Corbyn has a realistic chance of becoming PM. Which, of course, is why he wants one.

    Actually Corbyn's best chance of becoming PM is if the Tories revoke Brexit given most polls show a majority of Tory voters prefer No Deal to Remain and it would see mass defections of Tory Leave voters to UKIP or Farage's new party enabling Corbyn to pick up scores of seats on a split right-wing vote.

    No Deal is worse for the Tories longer term than a Deal given the greater threat to the economy and the Union but revoking Brexit could see not only Corbyn become PM but the Tories fall to third place and cease to be even the main opposition party
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 123,190
    edited February 2019

    Can anyone believe that we’re now just weeks from a self imposed, major economic shock - “slow motion Lehmans” as Peston describes it.

    Whatever the economic version is of a war criminal - May is it. And Corbyn. And the Tory party.

    Bring on the Nuremberg trials. But, of course, post-Brexit, they must be in Northampton. Or Nuneaton.

    Having been to Yad Vashem this afternoon whatever Brexit turns out to be it will not be the Holocaust and the comparison is absurd
This discussion has been closed.