I do find this map very interesting; some constituencies have upto 5% signing the petition, which isn't too bad.
University towns. Snowflakes, Woke Remoaners. Actually "The correlation between the percentage of voters who voted Remain and the proportion of the electorate who have signed the petition is extremely high (r=0.93). There’s little to cut against the idea that this petition comes from people who lost and are unhappy about the result." https://medium.com/@chrishanretty/are-we-bremorseful-yet-e0506c826ad2
Keep referencing an old survey about a different petition if it makes you feel happier...
Since you must have missed the first time it was posted...
My interest in the petition is that it we have 3 options that need to be reduced to 2 yesterday (and should have been reduced to 2 back in December).
I don't care which of the options is removed this petition allows a vote on revoke which when made will either win or leave 2 options left on the table.
All most people want is an actual decision - most MPs still seem to think the fact they have ruled out No Deal doesn't stop No Deal occuring in just over 8 days times.
16.4 million to go - and it would still be just a petition even then.
Yes "just a petition", but I think it would be incredibly stupid not to recognize that opinion has shifted and may well shift still further against Brexit. A second referendum would probably crush leave.
So Leavers should be very careful. At the current rate, and despite the site collapsing under the weight of demand there are millions of people who are very, very angry and concerned. I suspect that the demonstration on Saturday could be one of the biggest ever seen in London, maybe even THE biggest... sure "its only a demonstration", but if so many people feel that they were simply ignored by the Conservatives, then the hatred dished out to May will make the loathing of Tony Blair look like a storm in a tea cup.
There is a backlash coming against the Party that has taken us to the brink of the precipice. If Tories are seeing what I'm seeing on the doorsteps then they must be white with fear. I'm getting lifetime Tories who can barely speak their name without rage.
The mapping looks to correspond decently to lower uptake in urban Labour voting leave areas, but more support across most of the south, Inc places like Cornwall, and the rural north, e.g N. Yorks. May be something or may just reflect lower Leave majorities originally in this areas.
Also Scotland looks far less of an outlier from England than in 2016.
Parliament's problem is that it wants to revoke or get another referendum without leaving its fingerprints on the deed. Mrs May's insistence on her/the EU's deal is thwarting them, and her criticism is highlighting that fact.
I do find this map very interesting; some constituencies have upto 5% signing the petition, which isn't too bad.
University towns. Snowflakes, Woke Remoaners. Actually "The correlation between the percentage of voters who voted Remain and the proportion of the electorate who have signed the petition is extremely high (r=0.93). There’s little to cut against the idea that this petition comes from people who lost and are unhappy about the result." https://medium.com/@chrishanretty/are-we-bremorseful-yet-e0506c826ad2
Chris Hanretty, Professor of Politics, Royal Holloway.
"Unfortunately for bremainers, the constituencies which have been most supportive of this petition are also the places that voted most strongly for Remain. I’ve been able to remap the results of last Thursday’s referendum onto Westminster constituencies (currently for England and Wales only). Using that, I can work out the association between the percentage voting to leave, and the percentage of the electorate who have signed the petition.
The correlation between the percentage of voters who voted Remain and the proportion of the electorate who have signed the petition is extremely high (r=0.93). There’s little to cut against the idea that this petition comes from people who lost and are unhappy about the result."
But that is a 3 year old article that you are pretending is about today's petition. Good try but zero bananas.
In other news buy bananas now - future supplies are unknown...
There's a 0.96 r correlation between the 2nd ref and revoke petitions. The idea there is a whole heap of leavers for revoke out there is for the birds.
So just me and Wor Lass then? Both signed the Revoke petition.
Mr. JS, I remember reading something similar some years ago. I think it was called the Women Are Wonderful effect.
It's a combination of prejudice, statistical innumeracy, and fashionable idiocy.
Another facet is that woe that disproportionately affects women gets gendered (even with stuff like "Climate change affects women more") whereas woe that affects mostly men does not (homelessness [90%] and suicide [75%] being prime examples, although the latter has had some attention lately).
Men are often estimated to be 35-45% of domestic abuse victims but the funding for refuges for them is far lower, relatively, than for women.
Society today, despite its flaws, is perhaps the most equal and fair it's ever been, yet some bleat about the patriarchy as if it's the 12th century. That not only ignores anti-male bigotry and mostly male problems (I was amused when numpty Clegg whined about the number of women in prison when there are more than 20 men incarcerated for every 1 woman), it also fetishises victimhood, as if women are subject to far more sexism than they are (it still exists but to a much lesser degree than in the past and with significant legal safeguards).
How pleased will the revokers be if their petition reaches 100 million signatures?
They will be delighted at the solidarity from North Korea and Western Sahara......
The petitions are a little bit cleverer than that - you can see the results broken down into constituencies on a map of the UK.
It also lists, in the .json file linked on the petition page, all of the locations outside of the UK where it has been 'signed' and the numbers of signatories in each country. France had a greater total (c9000) than any UK constituency the last time I looked.
I do find this map very interesting; some constituencies have upto 5% signing the petition, which isn't too bad.
University towns. Snowflakes, Woke Remoaners. Actually "The correlation between the percentage of voters who voted Remain and the proportion of the electorate who have signed the petition is extremely high (r=0.93). There’s little to cut against the idea that this petition comes from people who lost and are unhappy about the result." https://medium.com/@chrishanretty/are-we-bremorseful-yet-e0506c826ad2
Keep referencing an old survey about a different petition if it makes you feel happier...
Apologies - I thought it was relevant. I accept that the current petition is gaining signatures fast. I wonder whether the geographic split will be similar?
How pleased will the revokers be if their petition reaches 100 million signatures?
They will be delighted at the solidarity from North Korea and Western Sahara......
The petitions are a little bit cleverer than that - you can see the results broken down into constituencies on a map of the UK.
It also lists, in the .json file linked on the petition page, all of the locations outside of the UK where it has been 'signed' and the numbers of signatories in each country. France had a greater total (c9000) than any UK constituency the last time I looked.
That's logical given that more British people live in France than in any single constituency and they have a direct stake in the outcome of Brexit.
How pleased will the revokers be if their petition reaches 100 million signatures?
They will be delighted at the solidarity from North Korea and Western Sahara......
The petitions are a little bit cleverer than that - you can see the results broken down into constituencies on a map of the UK.
It also lists, in the .json file linked on the petition page, all of the locations outside of the UK where it has been 'signed' and the numbers of signatories in each country. France had a greater total (c9000) than any UK constituency the last time I looked.
That's logical given that more British people live in France than in any single constituency and they have a more direct stake in the outcome of Brexit.
Indeed. But it doesn't make the total number of signatories recorded "a little bit cleverer" than anything, as claimed by Mr L.Song
Especially as many they weren't allowed to vote in the original referendum. Perhaps they could make it past 17.4 million with a bit more encouragement?
I do find this map very interesting; some constituencies have upto 5% signing the petition, which isn't too bad.
University towns. Snowflakes, Woke Remoaners. Actually "The correlation between the percentage of voters who voted Remain and the proportion of the electorate who have signed the petition is extremely high (r=0.93). There’s little to cut against the idea that this petition comes from people who lost and are unhappy about the result." https://medium.com/@chrishanretty/are-we-bremorseful-yet-e0506c826ad2
Keep referencing an old survey about a different petition if it makes you feel happier...
Apologies - I thought it was relevant. I accept that the current petition is gaining signatures fast. I wonder whether the geographic split will be similar?
Yes, my eye of the beholder did not fool. The Labour seat trend line sits below the Tory seat trend line (lower participation in politics) and at the top end, as the graph scatters, a lot of SNP seats well below the trend line (ex-Labour seatss plus, stuff it, independence it is then?)
How pleased will the revokers be if their petition reaches 100 million signatures?
They will be delighted at the solidarity from North Korea and Western Sahara......
The petitions are a little bit cleverer than that - you can see the results broken down into constituencies on a map of the UK.
It also lists, in the .json file linked on the petition page, all of the locations outside of the UK where it has been 'signed' and the numbers of signatories in each country. France had a greater total (c9000) than any UK constituency the last time I looked.
That's logical given that more British people live in France than in any single constituency and they have a direct stake in the outcome of Brexit.
The total number of UK citizens living in France is about 150k. What's the population of Islington South and Finsbury, where the signatory count is 4,500?
How pleased will the revokers be if their petition reaches 100 million signatures?
They will be delighted at the solidarity from North Korea and Western Sahara......
The petitions are a little bit cleverer than that - you can see the results broken down into constituencies on a map of the UK.
It also lists, in the .json file linked on the petition page, all of the locations outside of the UK where it has been 'signed' and the numbers of signatories in each country. France had a greater total (c9000) than any UK constituency the last time I looked.
That's logical given that more British people live in France than in any single constituency and they have a direct stake in the outcome of Brexit.
The total number of UK citizens living in France is about 150k. What's the population of Islington South and Finsbury, where the signatory count is 4,500?
The electorate of Islington South and Finsbury is 67,613.
Depends what you mean by clean. Can you tell me what my carnet requirements are in April or do I just stop working? Academic actually as I have stopped working anyway, but the Govt doesn't know that and nobody has told me what to do. I guess the info is out there and it may be my lack of current need, but the comments by Govt that they have contacted businesses is tosh. As far as the Govt is concerned my company is still active with up to date Companies house, Corporation tax and Vat returns. I have received zippo info.
OT. TIL, between 1908 and 1938 we halved the number of prisoners in this country. Not sure what this proves, but was surprising. No one set out any kind of plan to do so.
Mr. Dean, what happened to the general demography of the nation over that period? I imagine WWI and the Spanish flu had a statistically significant impact upon the number of young men (the main demographic that ends up in prison).
How pleased will the revokers be if their petition reaches 100 million signatures?
They will be delighted at the solidarity from North Korea and Western Sahara......
The petitions are a little bit cleverer than that - you can see the results broken down into constituencies on a map of the UK.
It also lists, in the .json file linked on the petition page, all of the locations outside of the UK where it has been 'signed' and the numbers of signatories in each country. France had a greater total (c9000) than any UK constituency the last time I looked.
That's logical given that more British people live in France than in any single constituency and they have a direct stake in the outcome of Brexit.
The total number of UK citizens living in France is about 150k. What's the population of Islington South and Finsbury, where the signatory count is 4,500?
The electorate of Islington South and Finsbury is 67,613.
The 150,000 includes under 18s, and the electorate of IS&F does not include residents of the UK unable to vote in elections though entitled to sign. So that figure isn't helpful.
You had sixteen pints and a curry, hit your girlfriend, she left you, you repeatedly shat the bed, but hey, you had a shower, closed the bedroom door after some air freshener, and are sitting in the peace watching the footy.
How pleased will the revokers be if their petition reaches 100 million signatures?
They will be delighted at the solidarity from North Korea and Western Sahara......
The petitions are a little bit cleverer than that - you can see the results broken down into constituencies on a map of the UK.
It also lists, in the .json file linked on the petition page, all of the locations outside of the UK where it has been 'signed' and the numbers of signatories in each country. France had a greater total (c9000) than any UK constituency the last time I looked.
That's logical given that more British people live in France than in any single constituency and they have a direct stake in the outcome of Brexit.
The total number of UK citizens living in France is about 150k. What's the population of Islington South and Finsbury, where the signatory count is 4,500?
I think the British residents in France might just be a little more concerned about Brexit don't you?
If you’re a Labour MP in a leave area worried about no deal but you don’t want to vote for the deal then doesn’t the current impasse give you the chance to support the Kyle/Wilson amendment .
You stop no deal and ask for the public to ratify the deal .
Depends what you mean by clean. Can you tell me what my carnet requirements are in April or do I just stop working? Academic actually as I have stopped working anyway, but the Govt doesn't know that and nobody has told me what to do. I guess the info is out there and it may be my lack of current need, but the comments by Govt that they have contacted businesses is tosh. As far as the Govt is concerned my company is still active with up to date Companies house, Corporation tax and Vat returns. I have received zippo info.
I would hope active companies would be a little more proactive tbh.
How pleased will the revokers be if their petition reaches 100 million signatures?
They will be delighted at the solidarity from North Korea and Western Sahara......
The petitions are a little bit cleverer than that - you can see the results broken down into constituencies on a map of the UK.
It also lists, in the .json file linked on the petition page, all of the locations outside of the UK where it has been 'signed' and the numbers of signatories in each country. France had a greater total (c9000) than any UK constituency the last time I looked.
That's logical given that more British people live in France than in any single constituency and they have a direct stake in the outcome of Brexit.
The total number of UK citizens living in France is about 150k. What's the population of Islington South and Finsbury, where the signatory count is 4,500?
I think the British residents in France might just be a little more concerned about Brexit don't you?
How many of them have lived outside the UK for 15 years plus? They don't get a vote
How pleased will the revokers be if their petition reaches 100 million signatures?
They will be delighted at the solidarity from North Korea and Western Sahara......
The petitions are a little bit cleverer than that - you can see the results broken down into constituencies on a map of the UK.
It also lists, in the .json file linked on the petition page, all of the locations outside of the UK where it has been 'signed' and the numbers of signatories in each country. France had a greater total (c9000) than any UK constituency the last time I looked.
That's logical given that more British people live in France than in any single constituency and they have a direct stake in the outcome of Brexit.
The total number of UK citizens living in France is about 150k. What's the population of Islington South and Finsbury, where the signatory count is 4,500?
I think the British residents in France might just be a little more concerned about Brexit don't you?
How many of them have lived outside the UK for 15 years plus? They don't get a vote
The franchise for any second referendum would be decided by legislation. Perhaps we should give them a vote.
Mr. Dean, what happened to the general demography of the nation over that period? I imagine WWI and the Spanish flu had a statistically significant impact upon the number of young men (the main demographic that ends up in prison).
I do not know. Fair point, but it would not have halved the number. On the other side, many would have come back traumatised, and there was also the worst depression in modern times, which logic would suggest may lead to more crimes. So, no idea.
How pleased will the revokers be if their petition reaches 100 million signatures?
They will be delighted at the solidarity from North Korea and Western Sahara......
The petitions are a little bit cleverer than that - you can see the results broken down into constituencies on a map of the UK.
It also lists, in the .json file linked on the petition page, all of the locations outside of the UK where it has been 'signed' and the numbers of signatories in each country. France had a greater total (c9000) than any UK constituency the last time I looked.
That's logical given that more British people live in France than in any single constituency and they have a direct stake in the outcome of Brexit.
The total number of UK citizens living in France is about 150k. What's the population of Islington South and Finsbury, where the signatory count is 4,500?
I think the British residents in France might just be a little more concerned about Brexit don't you?
How many of them have lived outside the UK for 15 years plus? They don't get a vote
The franchise for any second referendum would be decided by legislation. Perhaps we should give them a vote.
When we No Deal out of there, they're probably best off applying for French citizenship and forgetting about voting here.
Mr. Glenn, changing the franchise from the last referendum to the next would be a fantastic way to make the result even more contentious and politics more fractious.
Who gives a f what date they agree. The WA aint passing next week.
Well perhaps it should. I voted remain but I can't see the point of precipitating a no deal. More remainer MPs need to follow the lead of Tissue Price's adversary in 2017 in Don Valley Caroline Flint and back the Deal not out of love of the Tories or the Deal but because No Deal is a very bad idea that will cause significant and unnecessary disruption to their constituents lives.
Mr. Glenn, changing the franchise from the last referendum to the next would be a fantastic way to make the result even more contentious and politics more fractious.
If Brexit is not about blood and soil nationalism, why not give EU citizens resident in the UK a vote? Brexit campaigners could try to appeal to them with their visions of the Brexit sunlit uplands.
OT. TIL, between 1908 and 1938 we halved the number of prisoners in this country. Not sure what this proves, but was surprising. No one set out any kind of plan to do so.
How pleased will the revokers be if their petition reaches 100 million signatures?
They will be delighted at the solidarity from North Korea and Western Sahara......
The petitions are a little bit cleverer than that - you can see the results broken down into constituencies on a map of the UK.
It also lists, in the .json file linked on the petition page, all of the locations outside of the UK where it has been 'signed' and the numbers of signatories in each country. France had a greater total (c9000) than any UK constituency the last time I looked.
That's logical given that more British people live in France than in any single constituency and they have a direct stake in the outcome of Brexit.
The total number of UK citizens living in France is about 150k. What's the population of Islington South and Finsbury, where the signatory count is 4,500?
The electorate of Islington South and Finsbury is 67,613.
The 150,000 includes under 18s, and the electorate of IS&F does not include residents of the UK unable to vote in elections though entitled to sign. So that figure isn't helpful.
Latest estimate for Islington is 235 000. IS+F would be approximately half that.
Who gives a f what date they agree. The WA aint passing next week.
Well perhaps it should. I voted remain but I can't see the point of precipitating a no deal. More remainer MPs need to follow the lead of Tissue Price's adversary in 2017 in Don Valley Caroline Flint and back the Deal not out of love of the Tories or the Deal but because No Deal is a very bad idea that will cause significant and unnecessary disruption to their constituents lives.
Who gives a f what date they agree. The WA aint passing next week.
Well perhaps it should. I voted remain but I can't see the point of precipitating a no deal. More remainer MPs need to follow the lead of Tissue Price's adversary in 2017 in Don Valley Caroline Flint and back the Deal not out of love of the Tories or the Deal but because No Deal is a very bad idea that will cause significant and unnecessary disruption to their constituents lives.
Who gives a f what date they agree. The WA aint passing next week.
Well perhaps it should. I voted remain but I can't see the point of precipitating a no deal. More remainer MPs need to follow the lead of Tissue Price's adversary in 2017 in Don Valley Caroline Flint and back the Deal not out of love of the Tories or the Deal but because No Deal is a very bad idea that will cause significant and unnecessary disruption to their constituents lives.
Collective insanity in evidence. The stupidity of the crowd
I think it’s a case of some just being fed up and wanting it to end . The issue with the poll is just two choices . The Ipsos Mori shows more support a delay. Much depends on how you word these things .
Who gives a f what date they agree. The WA aint passing next week.
Well perhaps it should. I voted remain but I can't see the point of precipitating a no deal. More remainer MPs need to follow the lead of Tissue Price's adversary in 2017 in Don Valley Caroline Flint and back the Deal not out of love of the Tories or the Deal but because No Deal is a very bad idea that will cause significant and unnecessary disruption to their constituents lives.
Mr. Glenn, giving citizens of other EU countries a say on whether the UK can leave or not is nuts, and would only make a result more open to dispute. Rather suspecting you're being a tinker on purpose, you naughty sausage.
Who gives a f what date they agree. The WA aint passing next week.
Well perhaps it should. I voted remain but I can't see the point of precipitating a no deal. More remainer MPs need to follow the lead of Tissue Price's adversary in 2017 in Don Valley Caroline Flint and back the Deal not out of love of the Tories or the Deal but because No Deal is a very bad idea that will cause significant and unnecessary disruption to their constituents lives.
If you’re a Labour MP in a leave area worried about no deal but you don’t want to vote for the deal then doesn’t the current impasse give you the chance to support the Kyle/Wilson amendment .
You stop no deal and ask for the public to ratify the deal .
Collective insanity in evidence. The stupidity of the crowd
I think it’s a case of some just being fed up and wanting it to end . The issue with the poll is just two choices . The Ipsos Mori shows more support a delay. Much depends on how you word these things .
That's true. You can produce majorities for and against a second referendum, depending on the wording of the question.
OT. TIL, between 1908 and 1938 we halved the number of prisoners in this country. Not sure what this proves, but was surprising. No one set out any kind of plan to do so.
OT. TIL, between 1908 and 1938 we halved the number of prisoners in this country. Not sure what this proves, but was surprising. No one set out any kind of plan to do so.
Source?
A professor of criminology speaking on R5L this afternoon. He was governor of Wormwood Scrubs. No reason to doubt him.
Thinking aloud, is there anything that May can threaten to make the consequences of not passing MV3 totally unacceptable to All conservatives and the DUP? I. e. the neuclear option.
For the Tories: expel any MPs who vote against MV3, and then call a GE.
Just withdraw the whip of any who do not vote for the deal for 3 weeks or so.
Fanatics on both siders (ERG and Remain) will no longer be able to take part in the activities of the Tory party in Westminster.
At which point May no longer has a majority for anything and gets VONCed faster than you can say "Oh, Jeremy Corbyn".
Doesn't may remain primeminister for two weeks even if she is VoNCd?
I think it is "upto" two weeks. iirc if her Majesty is persuaded, through the usual channels, that someone else can command confidence, then the cars are heading to the palace.
If May refuses to resign how can Her Majesty be persuaded? That seems to be a bit of a legal grey area.
Presumably someone else can propose a vote of confidence in an alternative administration before then?
That's what seems to be confusing. The law says 'an early general election is held, unless the House of Commons subsequently resolves "That this House has confidence in Her Majesty's Government". '
So its not a vote of confidence in a potential alternative administration but in the Government. If May doesn't resign and suggest that Her Majesty calls Corbyn [for example] I don't see how the issue gets forced? The Act doesn't really address that point.
Yet more reasons why the FTPA is a disaster. Another fine mess from Cameron.
OT. TIL, between 1908 and 1938 we halved the number of prisoners in this country. Not sure what this proves, but was surprising. No one set out any kind of plan to do so.
OT. TIL, between 1908 and 1938 we halved the number of prisoners in this country. Not sure what this proves, but was surprising. No one set out any kind of plan to do so.
Source?
A professor of criminology speaking on R5L this afternoon. He was governor of Wormwood Scrubs. No reason to doubt him.
Who gives a f what date they agree. The WA aint passing next week.
Well perhaps it should. I voted remain but I can't see the point of precipitating a no deal. More remainer MPs need to follow the lead of Tissue Price's adversary in 2017 in Don Valley Caroline Flint and back the Deal not out of love of the Tories or the Deal but because No Deal is a very bad idea that will cause significant and unnecessary disruption to their constituents lives.
I should have thought that this soft(ish) exit provides, depending on where one sits, either (a) a platform from which it’s relatively easy to rejoin the EU if (if!) Brexit is suboptimal; or (b) the first step on a straightforward journey to disentangle oneself from a sclerotic and undemocratic blob.
There’s disdain of Trump in the U.K. (and rightly so) but MPs seem to have adopted, without reservation, his simpleminded view of negotiating as a zero sum, binary game.
Gove is a tit but would be preferable to MayDay, The Ludicrous Cox, Quarterwit Truss, or most of the other selection of jokers, birdbrains and arch-twatfaces boosterised from time to time.
Comments
I misread this as "a gammon bias" the first time I saw it, but in fact it's the precise opposite.
https://twitter.com/DegenRolf/status/1107938899677057024
https://twitter.com/chrishanretty/status/1108703939350929408
My interest in the petition is that it we have 3 options that need to be reduced to 2 yesterday (and should have been reduced to 2 back in December).
I don't care which of the options is removed this petition allows a vote on revoke which when made will either win or leave 2 options left on the table.
All most people want is an actual decision - most MPs still seem to think the fact they have ruled out No Deal doesn't stop No Deal occuring in just over 8 days times.
Also Scotland looks far less of an outlier from England than in 2016.
Just impressions.
It's a combination of prejudice, statistical innumeracy, and fashionable idiocy.
Another facet is that woe that disproportionately affects women gets gendered (even with stuff like "Climate change affects women more") whereas woe that affects mostly men does not (homelessness [90%] and suicide [75%] being prime examples, although the latter has had some attention lately).
Men are often estimated to be 35-45% of domestic abuse victims but the funding for refuges for them is far lower, relatively, than for women.
Society today, despite its flaws, is perhaps the most equal and fair it's ever been, yet some bleat about the patriarchy as if it's the 12th century. That not only ignores anti-male bigotry and mostly male problems (I was amused when numpty Clegg whined about the number of women in prison when there are more than 20 men incarcerated for every 1 woman), it also fetishises victimhood, as if women are subject to far more sexism than they are (it still exists but to a much lesser degree than in the past and with significant legal safeguards).
/endramble
https://twitter.com/chrishanretty/status/1108701393836302336
"That's logical."
Especially as many they weren't allowed to vote in the original referendum. Perhaps they could make it past 17.4 million with a bit more encouragement?
The problem is the forced choice between two options only.
Leave with no deal or second EU vote . What if you want a different deal and a delay .
As a Remainer I’m not into a second vote but don’t want no deal .
'Why is French food so much better than any other in Europe?' Lmfao
Good evening, everybody. Still lurking in case something happens ....
.....oh, you said Clean Brexit.
Not sure what this proves, but was surprising. No one set out any kind of plan to do so.
We know about it and we're working on it.
Please try again later."
https://petition.parliament.uk
Mr. Dean, what happened to the general demography of the nation over that period? I imagine WWI and the Spanish flu had a statistically significant impact upon the number of young men (the main demographic that ends up in prison).
CLEEEEEAAN
You stop no deal and ask for the public to ratify the deal .
So, no idea.
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/business/2019/03/21/markets-latest-news-pound-euro-ftse-100-no-deal-worries-grip/
bit of a handbrake turn there......
Though she also voted for the Spelman amendment to take No Deal "off the table" forever.
Mr. Glenn, giving citizens of other EU countries a say on whether the UK can leave or not is nuts, and would only make a result more open to dispute. Rather suspecting you're being a tinker on purpose, you naughty sausage.
Get rid. VNOC or Cabinet and men in suits urgently needed. She has become deluded.
I'm aware that's quite a backhanded compliment. Excepting Corbyn and probably Boris, almost anyone else would be better.
Good to see you posting again. Hope family is coping with recent events.
Far worse atrocities take place around the world, but I do find this particularly depressing. Poison is just such a callous way to murder someone.
https://thehill.com/homenews/campaign/435119-poll-gillibrand-de-blasio-have-favorable-ratings-under-30-percent-among-new
(And rather good for Biden.)
Is...is this a metaphor?
"Has anyone heard from the People's Vote leadership about whether the time is right yet, or whether we should still be waiting a bit?"
There’s disdain of Trump in the U.K. (and rightly so) but MPs seem to have adopted, without reservation, his simpleminded view of negotiating as a zero sum, binary game.