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politicalbetting.com » Blog Archive » 13 days to go until the Brecon and Radnorshire by election and

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  • Options
    ydoethurydoethur Posts: 67,334
    Pulpstar said:

    ydoethur said:

    First time this has gone to the 2nd round. Lab vote down over 17%.
    Adjusted for turnout, the Labour vote appears to have been cut to pieces. Tories steady, Lib Dems up, but the Indie candidate appears to have been the joker.

    Labour struggling in their strongholds. Yet another piece of evidence...
    Lib Dem & non transfers should see Labour over the line I think. Is this AV or SV ?
    AV: https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-20257548
  • Options
    PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 75,986
    edited July 2019
    ydoethur said:

    Pulpstar said:

    ydoethur said:

    First time this has gone to the 2nd round. Lab vote down over 17%.
    Adjusted for turnout, the Labour vote appears to have been cut to pieces. Tories steady, Lib Dems up, but the Indie candidate appears to have been the joker.

    Labour struggling in their strongholds. Yet another piece of evidence...
    Lib Dem & non transfers should see Labour over the line I think. Is this AV or SV ?
    AV: https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-20257548
    Gives the Independent a slightly better chance than SV I think, but would still expect Labour to win as we don't have the same attention (Or law !) to listing out all our prefs in this country like they do in Oz I think.

    EDIT - The system is SV you've linked to there @ydoethur so should be Labour as there'll be plenty of Con-LD and LD-Con ballots I expect...
  • Options
    FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 76,291
    BritBox: ITV and BBC set out plans for new streaming service

    She added: "It is bad news for TV fans in that we're going to have to pay for loads of individual subscriptions. Now, most people have their TV, maybe they have Sky and Netflix - whereas if you have to pay for Netflix, Amazon, Disney, BritBox… it's going to get quite expensive."

    https://www.bbc.com/news/entertainment-arts-49037855

    The media companies just aren't learning from what happened with music! Make it a pain in the arse, make it expensive, people just stream it on the internet for nought.
  • Options

    eek said:

    Shall we look at what Merkel says via Reuters

    “But the moment that a solution for the management of the border is found in (the declaration on) the future relationship — so for the European Union’s future ties to Britain — which basically squares the circle — on the one hand I have no physical border but on the other hand the EU Single Market ends — that satisfies both questions, then the backstop will be overwritten, so to speak.”

    Merkel added: “This means the task is to draft future relations that way and perhaps to draft them more specifically and better and more precisely than so far.”

    So nothing has changed - the backstop is required until a non backstop solution is found...

    Key words "Backstop" "will" "be" "overwritten"
    In the sense of superseded.
    or negotiated out of existence.

    Remoaners can play word games for Britain. Without seeming to understand that Brexit is the sideshow and Britain itself is at stake.
    Indeed, the dissolution of the UK would be one way to remove the relevance of the backstop.
    The dissolution of the UK is not going to happen. Scotland leaving it (thus creating even more backstop style issues) and splitting the island in half might happen.

    Or to put it another way-

    BREXIT IS A SIDESHOW
  • Options
    FF43FF43 Posts: 15,777

    eek said:

    Shall we look at what Merkel says via Reuters

    “But the moment that a solution for the management of the border is found in (the declaration on) the future relationship — so for the European Union’s future ties to Britain — which basically squares the circle — on the one hand I have no physical border but on the other hand the EU Single Market ends — that satisfies both questions, then the backstop will be overwritten, so to speak.”

    Merkel added: “This means the task is to draft future relations that way and perhaps to draft them more specifically and better and more precisely than so far.”

    So nothing has changed - the backstop is required until a non backstop solution is found...

    Key words "Backstop" "will" "be" "overwritten"
    The Backstop has always meant what it says. It's there in the absence of an alternative that makes it redundant. The problem is that the ruling Conservative Party, including people like Rory Stewart, have rejected the alternative that makes the backstop redundant. If they change their minds we're in business.
  • Options
    justin124justin124 Posts: 11,527
    stodge said:

    Morning all :)

    Disappointing to read the nonsense that Brecon & Radnor has been a Conservative seat for ever.

    No it hasn't.

    Labour won the seat in the 1939 by election and held it until 1979 when the Conservatives won it for the first time since gaining it from Labour in 1931.

    In 1979 the Conservatives took the seat and held it until Richard Livsey won the 1985 by-election beating Labour by 559 votes with the Conservatives back in third. Livsey held by 56 in 1987 and lost to the Conservatives in 1992 by 130.

    In 1997 the anti-Conservative tide saw Livsey back by 5000 but that was the largest LD majority as Livsey's successor, Roger Williams, scraped home by 751 in 2001 and built up a majority of just under 4000 in 2010.

    The 2015 anti-Lib Dem tide saw Chris Davies win by 5000 and he stretched that to 8000 in 2017. The majority is comparable to the one overturned by Livsey in 1985.

    The Conservatives have always enjoyed a strong presence in B&R - the main change was the move of the anti-Conservative vote from Labour to Lib Dem after 1997 (with some return since 2015).

    Very significant Boundary changes post-1979 which had the effect of reducing Labour's vote here.
  • Options
    williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 48,127
    edited July 2019

    eek said:

    Shall we look at what Merkel says via Reuters

    “But the moment that a solution for the management of the border is found in (the declaration on) the future relationship — so for the European Union’s future ties to Britain — which basically squares the circle — on the one hand I have no physical border but on the other hand the EU Single Market ends — that satisfies both questions, then the backstop will be overwritten, so to speak.”

    Merkel added: “This means the task is to draft future relations that way and perhaps to draft them more specifically and better and more precisely than so far.”

    So nothing has changed - the backstop is required until a non backstop solution is found...

    Key words "Backstop" "will" "be" "overwritten"
    In the sense of superseded.
    or negotiated out of existence.

    Remoaners can play word games for Britain. Without seeming to understand that Brexit is the sideshow and Britain itself is at stake.
    Indeed, the dissolution of the UK would be one way to remove the relevance of the backstop.
    The dissolution of the UK is not going to happen. Scotland leaving it (thus creating even more backstop style issues) and splitting the island in half might happen.

    Or to put it another way-

    BREXIT IS A SIDESHOW
    Scotland leaving does not create any backstop-style issues. There's no political reason why there cannot be a customs border between England and Scotland, and plenty of political and economic reasons why one would never come about.
  • Options
    Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 13,791

    ydoethur said:

    ydoethur said:

    JackW said:

    ydoethur said:

    Zephyr said:

    ydoethur said:

    Zephyr said:

    ydoethur said:

    Zephyr said:

    On topic, wrecking the hard work of your opponents activists cannot be within the spirit of the game. It’s wrong to do it.

    But even in a constituency like that, I would question if here in 21st century posters and poster boards really make much difference? Surely carefully targeted social media messages telling that particular voter exactly what they want to hear will have much greater impact and is far better use of time and money these days?

    What both sides need is a catchy chant like “send him back, send him back” or “send him down, send him down.”

    Surely real Vandalism is brexit?

    There will be very large numbers in that constituency not on social media, or even possessed of decent internet.
    No email. No smart phone? When you say large numbers, do you have evidence to back those claims up?

    In fact you Are selling it as Arcadian paradise. Can I buy second home there without someone burning it down?
    Rural connectivity in mid-Wales is epically shit. Broadband in places is closer to dial-up speeds. A friend of mine near Llandeglau used to send emails three times in the hope one of them would get through.

    And in places people are too poor to have Internet (Ystradgynlais again).

    The FWA stopped burning down second homes some time ago. Help yourself, but be warned it takes ages to get there.
    There’s a TV advert where sheep farmers in Mongolian hills have a smart phone and using it to run their business...
    Wales isn't in Mongolia.
    Bah bah humbug ..... the sheep don't know that .. :smile:

    Without wishing to allama you, sheep are quite intelligent.
    You are pulling the wool over our eyes!
    Fine, alpacat in.
    not sure I can tup that one
    Lamb-asting, I see.
    There I was, thinking that when it came to puns, you were pasture best!
  • Options
    eekeek Posts: 25,020
    FF43 said:

    eek said:

    Shall we look at what Merkel says via Reuters

    “But the moment that a solution for the management of the border is found in (the declaration on) the future relationship — so for the European Union’s future ties to Britain — which basically squares the circle — on the one hand I have no physical border but on the other hand the EU Single Market ends — that satisfies both questions, then the backstop will be overwritten, so to speak.”

    Merkel added: “This means the task is to draft future relations that way and perhaps to draft them more specifically and better and more precisely than so far.”

    So nothing has changed - the backstop is required until a non backstop solution is found...

    Key words "Backstop" "will" "be" "overwritten"
    The Backstop has always meant what it says. It's there in the absence of an alternative that makes it redundant. The problem is that the ruling Conservative Party, including people like Rory Stewart, have rejected the alternative that makes the backstop redundant. If they change their minds we're in business.
    What alternative makes the backstop redundant?
  • Options

    eek said:

    Shall we look at what Merkel says via Reuters

    “But the moment that a solution for the management of the border is found in (the declaration on) the future relationship — so for the European Union’s future ties to Britain — which basically squares the circle — on the one hand I have no physical border but on the other hand the EU Single Market ends — that satisfies both questions, then the backstop will be overwritten, so to speak.”

    Merkel added: “This means the task is to draft future relations that way and perhaps to draft them more specifically and better and more precisely than so far.”

    So nothing has changed - the backstop is required until a non backstop solution is found...

    Key words "Backstop" "will" "be" "overwritten"
    In the sense of superseded.
    or negotiated out of existence.

    Remoaners can play word games for Britain. Without seeming to understand that Brexit is the sideshow and Britain itself is at stake.
    Indeed, the dissolution of the UK would be one way to remove the relevance of the backstop.
    The dissolution of the UK is not going to happen. Scotland leaving it (thus creating even more backstop style issues) and splitting the island in half might happen.

    Or to put it another way-

    BREXIT IS A SIDESHOW
    Scotland leaving does not create any backstop-style issues. There's no political reason why there cannot be a customs border between England and Scotland, and plenty of political and economic reasons why one would never come about.
    What crap. It will be just the NI/I border all over again (especially given the Scotnat's love of the EU).
  • Options
    ydoethurydoethur Posts: 67,334
    edited July 2019
    Pulpstar said:

    ydoethur said:

    Pulpstar said:

    ydoethur said:

    First time this has gone to the 2nd round. Lab vote down over 17%.
    Adjusted for turnout, the Labour vote appears to have been cut to pieces. Tories steady, Lib Dems up, but the Indie candidate appears to have been the joker.

    Labour struggling in their strongholds. Yet another piece of evidence...
    Lib Dem & non transfers should see Labour over the line I think. Is this AV or SV ?
    AV: https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-20257548
    Gives the Independent a slightly better chance than SV I think, but would still expect Labour to win as we don't have the same attention (Or law !) to listing out all our prefs in this country like they do in Oz I think.

    EDIT - The system is SV you've linked to there @ydoethur so should be Labour as there'll be plenty of Con-LD and LD-Con ballots I expect...
    I'll take your word for it. It matches AV as I understand it.

    If only there was somebody on these boards who could do a thread header explaining it all...
  • Options
    Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 13,791
    Sean_F said:

    The Conservatives' entire message for this by-election is "better a convict than a Remainer". It will be instructive how effective that message is.

    Hmm, their message at the GE is going to be "better an economy wrecking right wing clown than an economy wrecking far left clown". God help us!
    At least Boris is actually funny on occasion. Corbyn is not.
    Maybe that will be what swings it. Our clown is amusing and theirs is a sanctimonious bore that makes children cry when they look at him, particularly if he is wearing a long mac
    Never mind children, he makes me cry when I look at him.
    Well indeed. Boris has a similar effect on me when I think that he might be PM
    I actually woke in a cold sweat yesterday with that thought. Not sure I ever been actually a little bit scared about any other individual becoming PM in my lifetime.

    I am coming round to the idea, and accept that, like Italians, we now have to accept our political class is a global laughing stock. I have always been a moderate Conservative because I believe Conservative's normally create the best conditions for business. Well they have fucked that USP up good and proper now! However I think business is now adjusting to the new certainty that everything is uncertain. Britain is certainly in decline now, and that is sad, but we will all just have to get on with it. I will never vote Conservative while they have that idiot in charge, so the LDs can have my vote for a while.
    Our political class is very mediocre. But, very mediocre is still better than most.

    There are very very few places where the political class is actually impressive - perhaps Singapore, Taiwan, and the Baltic states.
    I think it has become mediocre in the last decade. I mean, excuse my French, but where is the fucking leadership? Boris Johnson and Jeremy Corbyn will say anything to appeal to their increasingly braindead members. It isn't leadership, it is followership masquerading as leadership.
  • Options
    ydoethurydoethur Posts: 67,334

    ydoethur said:

    ydoethur said:

    JackW said:

    ydoethur said:

    Zephyr said:

    ydoethur said:

    Zephyr said:

    ydoethur said:

    Zephyr said:

    On topic, wrecking the hard work of your opponents activists cannot be within the spirit of the game. It’s wrong to do it.

    But even in a constituency like that, I would question if here in 21st century posters and poster boards really make much difference? Surely carefully targeted social media messages telling that particular voter exactly what they want to hear will have much greater impact and is far better use of time and money these days?

    What both sides need is a catchy chant like “send him back, send him back” or “send him down, send him down.”

    Surely real Vandalism is brexit?

    There will be very large numbers in that constituency not on social media, or even possessed of decent internet.
    No email. No smart phone? When you say large numbers, do you have evidence to back those claims up?

    In fact you Are selling it as Arcadian paradise. Can I buy second home there without someone burning it down?
    Rural connectivity in mid-Wales is epically shit. Broadband in places is closer to dial-up speeds. A friend of mine near Llandeglau used to send emails three times in the hope one of them would get through.

    And in places people are too poor to have Internet (Ystradgynlais again).

    The FWA stopped burning down second homes some time ago. Help yourself, but be warned it takes ages to get there.
    There’s a TV advert where sheep farmers in Mongolian hills have a smart phone and using it to run their business...
    Wales isn't in Mongolia.
    Bah bah humbug ..... the sheep don't know that .. :smile:

    Without wishing to allama you, sheep are quite intelligent.
    You are pulling the wool over our eyes!
    Fine, alpacat in.
    not sure I can tup that one
    Lamb-asting, I see.
    There I was, thinking that when it came to puns, you were pasture best!
    If I were you, I'd hedge.
  • Options
    FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 76,291
    edited July 2019
    Scott_P said:

    twitter.com/YouGov/status/1152176073758715904

    twitter.com/YouGov/status/1152176080670908417

    Good job they didn't organize another Jezfest !!!
  • Options
    Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 60,357

    eek said:

    Shall we look at what Merkel says via Reuters

    “But the moment that a solution for the management of the border is found in (the declaration on) the future relationship — so for the European Union’s future ties to Britain — which basically squares the circle — on the one hand I have no physical border but on the other hand the EU Single Market ends — that satisfies both questions, then the backstop will be overwritten, so to speak.”

    Merkel added: “This means the task is to draft future relations that way and perhaps to draft them more specifically and better and more precisely than so far.”

    So nothing has changed - the backstop is required until a non backstop solution is found...

    Key words "Backstop" "will" "be" "overwritten"
    In the sense of superseded.
    or negotiated out of existence.

    Remoaners can play word games for Britain. Without seeming to understand that Brexit is the sideshow and Britain itself is at stake.
    Indeed, the dissolution of the UK would be one way to remove the relevance of the backstop.
    The dissolution of the UK is not going to happen. Scotland leaving it (thus creating even more backstop style issues) and splitting the island in half might happen.

    Or to put it another way-

    BREXIT IS A SIDESHOW
    Scotland leaving does not create any backstop-style issues. There's no political reason why there cannot be a customs border between England and Scotland, and plenty of political and economic reasons why one would never come about.
    You really think a border from Carlisle to Berwick affecting 45 billion of goods and services (2016) v 12 billion to the EU is not going to create an economic earthquake for Scotland you are very misguided
  • Options
    Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 13,791
    ydoethur said:

    ydoethur said:

    ydoethur said:

    JackW said:

    ydoethur said:

    Zephyr said:

    ydoethur said:

    Zephyr said:

    ydoethur said:

    Zephyr said:

    On topic, wrecking the hard work of your opponents activists cannot be within the spirit of the game. It’s wrong to do it.

    But even in a constituency like that, I would question if here in 21st century posters and poster boards really make much difference? Surely carefully targeted social media messages telling that particular voter exactly what they want to hear will have much greater impact and is far better use of time and money these days?

    What both sides need is a catchy chant like “send him back, send him back” or “send him down, send him down.”

    Surely real Vandalism is brexit?

    There will be very large numbers in that constituency not on social media, or even possessed of decent internet.
    No email. No smart phone? When you say large numbers, do you have evidence to back those claims up?

    In fact you Are selling it as Arcadian paradise. Can I buy second home there without someone burning it down?
    Rural connectivity in mid-Wales is epically shit. Broadband in places is closer to dial-up speeds. A friend of mine near Llandeglau used to send emails three times in the hope one of them would get through.

    And in places people are too poor to have Internet (Ystradgynlais again).

    The FWA stopped burning down second homes some time ago. Help yourself, but be warned it takes ages to get there.
    There’s a TV advert where sheep farmers in Mongolian hills have a smart phone and using it to run their business...
    Wales isn't in Mongolia.
    Bah bah humbug ..... the sheep don't know that .. :smile:

    Without wishing to allama you, sheep are quite intelligent.
    You are pulling the wool over our eyes!
    Fine, alpacat in.
    not sure I can tup that one
    Lamb-asting, I see.
    There I was, thinking that when it came to puns, you were pasture best!
    If I were you, I'd hedge.
    It's just another hurdle to overcome
  • Options
    williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 48,127

    eek said:

    Shall we look at what Merkel says via Reuters

    “But the moment that a solution for the management of the border is found in (the declaration on) the future relationship — so for the European Union’s future ties to Britain — which basically squares the circle — on the one hand I have no physical border but on the other hand the EU Single Market ends — that satisfies both questions, then the backstop will be overwritten, so to speak.”

    Merkel added: “This means the task is to draft future relations that way and perhaps to draft them more specifically and better and more precisely than so far.”

    So nothing has changed - the backstop is required until a non backstop solution is found...

    Key words "Backstop" "will" "be" "overwritten"
    In the sense of superseded.
    or negotiated out of existence.

    Remoaners can play word games for Britain. Without seeming to understand that Brexit is the sideshow and Britain itself is at stake.
    Indeed, the dissolution of the UK would be one way to remove the relevance of the backstop.
    The dissolution of the UK is not going to happen. Scotland leaving it (thus creating even more backstop style issues) and splitting the island in half might happen.

    Or to put it another way-

    BREXIT IS A SIDESHOW
    Scotland leaving does not create any backstop-style issues. There's no political reason why there cannot be a customs border between England and Scotland, and plenty of political and economic reasons why one would never come about.
    What crap. It will be just the NI/I border all over again (especially given the Scotnat's love of the EU).
    You didn't read what I said. If Scotland were in the single market and customs union and England were not, there is no political reason why there cannot be a normal customs border there. There is no Good Friday Agreement to protect.

    However, in practice it is highly unlikely that England/rUK would be outside the single market and customs union anyway. It would either still be in the EU, or in a transition state that meant there would be no need for economic borders.
  • Options
    justin124justin124 Posts: 11,527
    nichomar said:

    Pulpstar said:

    From the Politico article linked in the last thread, I note that it defines the East Midlands as "the marginals of Mansfield, Bolsover, Broxtowe, Amber Valley, Ashfield, North East Derbyshire and Chesterfield".

    As an exiled Rutlander, I'm getting a bit exasperated with people redefining the East Midlands - which are delightful in so many places - to be purely the fairly grim belt from Castle Donington up to Chesterfield. (Sorry @NickPalmer.)

    Are there any marginals in the southern area of the east midlands though ?
    Chesterfield is safish Labour (Though could be vulnerable to the Lib Dems in extremis)
    Didn't Chesterfield use to be LibDem in the Blair years?
    Won in a by election I think
    No - it was won in 2001 when Tony Benn stood down.
  • Options
    TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 40,249

    eek said:

    Shall we look at what Merkel says via Reuters

    “But the moment that a solution for the management of the border is found in (the declaration on) the future relationship — so for the European Union’s future ties to Britain — which basically squares the circle — on the one hand I have no physical border but on the other hand the EU Single Market ends — that satisfies both questions, then the backstop will be overwritten, so to speak.”

    Merkel added: “This means the task is to draft future relations that way and perhaps to draft them more specifically and better and more precisely than so far.”

    So nothing has changed - the backstop is required until a non backstop solution is found...

    Key words "Backstop" "will" "be" "overwritten"
    In the sense of superseded.
    or negotiated out of existence.

    Remoaners can play word games for Britain. Without seeming to understand that Brexit is the sideshow and Britain itself is at stake.
    Indeed, the dissolution of the UK would be one way to remove the relevance of the backstop.
    The dissolution of the UK is not going to happen. Scotland leaving it (thus creating even more backstop style issues) and splitting the island in half might happen.

    Or to put it another way-

    BREXIT IS A SIDESHOW
    Scotland leaving does not create any backstop-style issues. There's no political reason why there cannot be a customs border between England and Scotland, and plenty of political and economic reasons why one would never come about.
    What crap. It will be just the NI/I border all over again (especially given the Scotnat's love of the EU).
    What would be the equivalent security issues to those that are bedevilling the NI border clusterfuck?
  • Options
    FensterFenster Posts: 2,115

    After the discussion claims the other day over people switching from drink to drugs due to minimum pricing....

    £2.5bn investor: 'Americans have stopped drinking beer and have switched to cannabis'

    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/investing/funds/25bn-investor-americans-have-stopped-drinking-beer-have-switched/

    Anybody who has been forced to drink "domestic" american beer for years, it isn't a hard sell to get them to switch!

    I live on the sharp edge of this because I've been involved in development of rugby players for years.

    I'm 41 and when I was in youth rugby the culture was hard drinking. Hardly anyone took drugs. Booze was cheap (£1.40 a pint), drugs were expensive and not easy to access.

    Now, hardly any youngsters drink excessively (£3.20 a pint) but nearly all of them take drugs (ecstasy: £5 per pill; cocaine: everywhere).

    It is much harder for a 17 year old to get served in bars than it is to get drugs delivered to you.

    One of the ironies is that youngsters nowadays - certainly the ones I see - are fitter, more body-conscious (muscular) and much more sensible/scientific in terms of diet and training than they've ever been.

    The culture has completely changed, politicians, as ever, are way behind the curve.
  • Options
    PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 75,986
    ydoethur said:

    Pulpstar said:

    ydoethur said:

    Pulpstar said:

    ydoethur said:

    First time this has gone to the 2nd round. Lab vote down over 17%.
    Adjusted for turnout, the Labour vote appears to have been cut to pieces. Tories steady, Lib Dems up, but the Indie candidate appears to have been the joker.

    Labour struggling in their strongholds. Yet another piece of evidence...
    Lib Dem & non transfers should see Labour over the line I think. Is this AV or SV ?
    AV: https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-20257548
    Gives the Independent a slightly better chance than SV I think, but would still expect Labour to win as we don't have the same attention (Or law !) to listing out all our prefs in this country like they do in Oz I think.

    EDIT - The system is SV you've linked to there @ydoethur so should be Labour as there'll be plenty of Con-LD and LD-Con ballots I expect...
    I'll take your word for it. It matches AV as I understand it.

    If only there was somebody on these boards who could do a thread header explaining it all...
    SV takes 2nd prefs only, AV you can have as many prefs as candidates.
  • Options
    williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 48,127

    eek said:

    Shall we look at what Merkel says via Reuters

    “But the moment that a solution for the management of the border is found in (the declaration on) the future relationship — so for the European Union’s future ties to Britain — which basically squares the circle — on the one hand I have no physical border but on the other hand the EU Single Market ends — that satisfies both questions, then the backstop will be overwritten, so to speak.”

    Merkel added: “This means the task is to draft future relations that way and perhaps to draft them more specifically and better and more precisely than so far.”

    So nothing has changed - the backstop is required until a non backstop solution is found...

    Key words "Backstop" "will" "be" "overwritten"
    In the sense of superseded.
    or negotiated out of existence.

    Remoaners can play word games for Britain. Without seeming to understand that Brexit is the sideshow and Britain itself is at stake.
    Indeed, the dissolution of the UK would be one way to remove the relevance of the backstop.
    The dissolution of the UK is not going to happen. Scotland leaving it (thus creating even more backstop style issues) and splitting the island in half might happen.

    Or to put it another way-

    BREXIT IS A SIDESHOW
    Scotland leaving does not create any backstop-style issues. There's no political reason why there cannot be a customs border between England and Scotland, and plenty of political and economic reasons why one would never come about.
    You really think a border from Carlisle to Berwick affecting 45 billion of goods and services (2016) v 12 billion to the EU is not going to create an economic earthquake for Scotland you are very misguided
    Look at it from England's perspective. It becomes even harder than it already was to contemplate leaving the single market and customs union. Scottish independence in the EU would keep rUK/England in the EU system.
  • Options
    FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 76,291
    Surely not....A PR stunt from the most publicity shy company in the world.
  • Options
    Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 13,791
    Fenster said:

    After the discussion claims the other day over people switching from drink to drugs due to minimum pricing....

    £2.5bn investor: 'Americans have stopped drinking beer and have switched to cannabis'

    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/investing/funds/25bn-investor-americans-have-stopped-drinking-beer-have-switched/

    Anybody who has been forced to drink "domestic" american beer for years, it isn't a hard sell to get them to switch!

    I live on the sharp edge of this because I've been involved in development of rugby players for years.

    I'm 41 and when I was in youth rugby the culture was hard drinking. Hardly anyone took drugs. Booze was cheap (£1.40 a pint), drugs were expensive and not easy to access.

    Now, hardly any youngsters drink excessively (£3.20 a pint) but nearly all of them take drugs (ecstasy: £5 per pill; cocaine: everywhere).

    It is much harder for a 17 year old to get served in bars than it is to get drugs delivered to you.

    One of the ironies is that youngsters nowadays - certainly the ones I see - are fitter, more body-conscious (muscular) and much more sensible/scientific in terms of diet and training than they've ever been.

    The culture has completely changed, politicians, as ever, are way behind the curve.
    I have been involved in youth rugby too (though a decade older) and sadly have to concur.
  • Options
    ***** Betting Post *****

    Tommy Fleetwood, currently joint leader in The Open Championship, looks cracking value to back at 100/1 with Laddies/Corals to win SPOTY '19. The E.W. option is also available for thim to finish top 3 at one-fifth of these odds, i.e. 20/1.
  • Options

    eek said:

    Shall we look at what Merkel says via Reuters

    “But the moment that a solution for the management of the border is found in (the declaration on) the future relationship — so for the European Union’s future ties to Britain — which basically squares the circle — on the one hand I have no physical border but on the other hand the EU Single Market ends — that satisfies both questions, then the backstop will be overwritten, so to speak.”

    Merkel added: “This means the task is to draft future relations that way and perhaps to draft them more specifically and better and more precisely than so far.”

    So nothing has changed - the backstop is required until a non backstop solution is found...

    Key words "Backstop" "will" "be" "overwritten"
    In the sense of superseded.
    or negotiated out of existence.

    Remoaners can play word games for Britain. Without seeming to understand that Brexit is the sideshow and Britain itself is at stake.
    Indeed, the dissolution of the UK would be one way to remove the relevance of the backstop.
    The dissolution of the UK is not going to happen. Scotland leaving it (thus creating even more backstop style issues) and splitting the island in half might happen.

    Or to put it another way-

    BREXIT IS A SIDESHOW
    Scotland leaving does not create any backstop-style issues. There's no political reason why there cannot be a customs border between England and Scotland, and plenty of political and economic reasons why one would never come about.
    What crap. It will be just the NI/I border all over again (especially given the Scotnat's love of the EU).
    What would be the equivalent security issues to those that are bedevilling the NI border clusterfuck?
    Security issues?? Get with the programme it's milk and honey on that island since the GFA - it's all about trade.

    I presume iScot will want to trade with England/rUK ?
  • Options
    ydoethurydoethur Posts: 67,334

    eek said:

    Shall we look at what Merkel says via Reuters

    “But the moment that a solution for the management of the border is found in (the declaration on) the future relationship — so for the European Union’s future ties to Britain — which basically squares the circle — on the one hand I have no physical border but on the other hand the EU Single Market ends — that satisfies both questions, then the backstop will be overwritten, so to speak.”

    Merkel added: “This means the task is to draft future relations that way and perhaps to draft them more specifically and better and more precisely than so far.”

    So nothing has changed - the backstop is required until a non backstop solution is found...

    Key words "Backstop" "will" "be" "overwritten"
    In the sense of superseded.
    or negotiated out of existence.

    Remoaners can play word games for Britain. Without seeming to understand that Brexit is the sideshow and Britain itself is at stake.
    Indeed, the dissolution of the UK would be one way to remove the relevance of the backstop.
    The dissolution of the UK is not going to happen. Scotland leaving it (thus creating even more backstop style issues) and splitting the island in half might happen.

    Or to put it another way-

    BREXIT IS A SIDESHOW
    Scotland leaving does not create any backstop-style issues. There's no political reason why there cannot be a customs border between England and Scotland, and plenty of political and economic reasons why one would never come about.
    You really think a border from Carlisle to Berwick affecting 45 billion of goods and services (2016) v 12 billion to the EU is not going to create an economic earthquake for Scotland you are very misguided
    Look at it from England's perspective. It becomes even harder than it already was to contemplate leaving the single market and customs union. Scottish independence in the EU would keep rUK/England in the EU system.
    You've got that backwards. A hypothetical England and Wales outside the EU makes it nearly impossible for Scotland to remain in it.

    Scotland would in any case have to wait five years for EU membership even if it became independent.
  • Options
    Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 60,357

    eek said:

    Shall we look at what Merkel says via Reuters

    “But the moment that a solution for the management of the border is found in (the declaration on) the future relationship — so for the European Union’s future ties to Britain — which basically squares the circle — on the one hand I have no physical border but on the other hand the EU Single Market ends — that satisfies both questions, then the backstop will be overwritten, so to speak.”

    Merkel added: “This means the task is to draft future relations that way and perhaps to draft them more specifically and better and more precisely than so far.”

    So nothing has changed - the backstop is required until a non backstop solution is found...

    Key words "Backstop" "will" "be" "overwritten"
    In the sense of superseded.
    or negotiated out of existence.

    Remoaners can play word games for Britain. Without seeming to understand that Brexit is the sideshow and Britain itself is at stake.
    Indeed, the dissolution of the UK would be one way to remove the relevance of the backstop.
    The dissolution of the UK is not going to happen. Scotland leaving it (thus creating even more backstop style issues) and splitting the island in half might happen.

    Or to put it another way-

    BREXIT IS A SIDESHOW
    Scotland leaving does not create any backstop-style issues. There's no political reason why there cannot be a customs border between England and Scotland, and plenty of political and economic reasons why one would never come about.
    What crap. It will be just the NI/I border all over again (especially given the Scotnat's love of the EU).
    You didn't read what I said. If Scotland were in the single market and customs union and England were not, there is no political reason why there cannot be a normal customs border there. There is no Good Friday Agreement to protect.

    However, in practice it is highly unlikely that England/rUK would be outside the single market and customs union anyway. It would either still be in the EU, or in a transition state that meant there would be no need for economic borders.
    Just think what you are saying. A border from Carlisle to Berwick would be an economic disaster for Scotland and have you any idea the volume of traffic criss crossing between Scotland and England every hour of every day.

    The whole idea of a Scottish customs border is barmy and is one of the many reasons Scottish Independence will fail
  • Options
    FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 76,291
    edited July 2019

    twitter.com/RBReich/status/1151986268428881920

    Trump has managed to turn a person with some really extreme and antisemitic views into a hero...genius...shakes head.
  • Options
    JBriskinindyref2JBriskinindyref2 Posts: 1,775
    edited July 2019

    eek said:

    Shall we look at what Merkel says via Reuters

    “But the moment that a solution for the management of the border is found in (the declaration on) the future relationship — so for the European Union’s future ties to Britain — which basically squares the circle — on the one hand I have no physical border but on the other hand the EU Single Market ends — that satisfies both questions, then the backstop will be overwritten, so to speak.”

    Merkel added: “This means the task is to draft future relations that way and perhaps to draft them more specifically and better and more precisely than so far.”

    So nothing has changed - the backstop is required until a non backstop solution is found...

    Key words "Backstop" "will" "be" "overwritten"
    In the sense of superseded.
    or negotiated out of existence.

    Remoaners can play word games for Britain. Without seeming to understand that Brexit is the sideshow and Britain itself is at stake.
    Indeed, the dissolution of the UK would be one way to remove the relevance of the backstop.
    The dissolution of the UK is not going to happen. Scotland leaving it (thus creating even more backstop style issues) and splitting the island in half might happen.

    Or to put it another way-

    BREXIT IS A SIDESHOW
    Scotland leaving does not create any backstop-style issues. There's no political reason why there cannot be a customs border between England and Scotland, and plenty of political and economic reasons why one would never come about.
    What crap. It will be just the NI/I border all over again (especially given the Scotnat's love of the EU).
    You didn't read what I said. If Scotland were in the single market and customs union and England were not, there is no political reason why there cannot be a normal customs border there. There is no Good Friday Agreement to protect.

    However, in practice it is highly unlikely that England/rUK would be outside the single market and customs union anyway. It would either still be in the EU, or in a transition state that meant there would be no need for economic borders.
    Oh I read what you said.

    Soft - Seperatist
    Hard - Remainer
  • Options
    Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 60,357

    eek said:

    Shall we look at what Merkel says via Reuters

    “But the moment that a solution for the management of the border is found in (the declaration on) the future relationship — so for the European Union’s future ties to Britain — which basically squares the circle — on the one hand I have no physical border but on the other hand the EU Single Market ends — that satisfies both questions, then the backstop will be overwritten, so to speak.”

    Merkel added: “This means the task is to draft future relations that way and perhaps to draft them more specifically and better and more precisely than so far.”

    So nothing has changed - the backstop is required until a non backstop solution is found...

    Key words "Backstop" "will" "be" "overwritten"
    In the sense of superseded.
    or negotiated out of existence.

    Remoaners can play word games for Britain. Without seeming to understand that Brexit is the sideshow and Britain itself is at stake.
    Indeed, the dissolution of the UK would be one way to remove the relevance of the backstop.
    The dissolution of the UK is not going to happen. Scotland leaving it (thus creating even more backstop style issues) and splitting the island in half might happen.

    Or to put it another way-

    BREXIT IS A SIDESHOW
    Scotland leaving does not create any backstop-style issues. There's no political reason why there cannot be a customs border between England and Scotland, and plenty of political and economic reasons why one would never come about.
    What crap. It will be just the NI/I border all over again (especially given the Scotnat's love of the EU).
    What would be the equivalent security issues to those that are bedevilling the NI border clusterfuck?
    It is not a security risk but it would be an economic armageddon for Scotland
  • Options
    williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 48,127
    ydoethur said:

    eek said:

    Shall we look at what Merkel says via Reuters

    “But the moment that a solution for the management of the border is found in (the declaration on) the future relationship — so for the European Union’s future ties to Britain — which basically squares the circle — on the one hand I have no physical border but on the other hand the EU Single Market ends — that satisfies both questions, then the backstop will be overwritten, so to speak.”

    Merkel added: “This means the task is to draft future relations that way and perhaps to draft them more specifically and better and more precisely than so far.”

    So nothing has changed - the backstop is required until a non backstop solution is found...

    Key words "Backstop" "will" "be" "overwritten"
    In the sense of superseded.
    or negotiated out of existence.

    Remoaners can play word games for Britain. Without seeming to understand that Brexit is the sideshow and Britain itself is at stake.
    Indeed, the dissolution of the UK would be one way to remove the relevance of the backstop.
    The dissolution of the UK is not going to happen. Scotland leaving it (thus creating even more backstop style issues) and splitting the island in half might happen.

    Or to put it another way-

    BREXIT IS A SIDESHOW
    Scotland leaving does not create any backstop-style issues. There's no political reason why there cannot be a customs border between England and Scotland, and plenty of political and economic reasons why one would never come about.
    You really think a border from Carlisle to Berwick affecting 45 billion of goods and services (2016) v 12 billion to the EU is not going to create an economic earthquake for Scotland you are very misguided
    Look at it from England's perspective. It becomes even harder than it already was to contemplate leaving the single market and customs union. Scottish independence in the EU would keep rUK/England in the EU system.
    You've got that backwards. A hypothetical England and Wales outside the EU makes it nearly impossible for Scotland to remain in it.

    Scotland would in any case have to wait five years for EU membership even if it became independent.
    When do you think England will be outside the single market and customs union? There's no sign of it ever happening that I can see.
  • Options
    FF43FF43 Posts: 15,777
    eek said:

    FF43 said:

    eek said:

    Shall we look at what Merkel says via Reuters

    “But the moment that a solution for the management of the border is found in (the declaration on) the future relationship — so for the European Union’s future ties to Britain — which basically squares the circle — on the one hand I have no physical border but on the other hand the EU Single Market ends — that satisfies both questions, then the backstop will be overwritten, so to speak.”

    Merkel added: “This means the task is to draft future relations that way and perhaps to draft them more specifically and better and more precisely than so far.”

    So nothing has changed - the backstop is required until a non backstop solution is found...

    Key words "Backstop" "will" "be" "overwritten"
    The Backstop has always meant what it says. It's there in the absence of an alternative that makes it redundant. The problem is that the ruling Conservative Party, including people like Rory Stewart, have rejected the alternative that makes the backstop redundant. If they change their minds we're in business.
    What alternative makes the backstop redundant?
    Most of the Customs Union and some of the Single Market applying to the whole EU/UK border, rather than just Northern Ireland.
  • Options
    williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 48,127

    Scotland leaving does not create any backstop-style issues. There's no political reason why there cannot be a customs border between England and Scotland, and plenty of political and economic reasons why one would never come about.

    What crap. It will be just the NI/I border all over again (especially given the Scotnat's love of the EU).
    You didn't read what I said. If Scotland were in the single market and customs union and England were not, there is no political reason why there cannot be a normal customs border there. There is no Good Friday Agreement to protect.

    However, in practice it is highly unlikely that England/rUK would be outside the single market and customs union anyway. It would either still be in the EU, or in a transition state that meant there would be no need for economic borders.
    Just think what you are saying. A border from Carlisle to Berwick would be an economic disaster for Scotland and have you any idea the volume of traffic criss crossing between Scotland and England every hour of every day.

    The whole idea of a Scottish customs border is barmy and is one of the many reasons Scottish Independence will fail
    You clearly didn't read the second paragraph. I said it will not need to happen, because England will not successfully leave the single market and customs union. The economic hegemon on these islands is not London but Brussels.
  • Options
    Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 60,357

    eek said:

    Shall we look at what Merkel says via Reuters

    “But the moment that a solution for the management of the border is found in (the declaration on) the future relationship — so for the European Union’s future ties to Britain — which basically squares the circle — on the one hand I have no physical border but on the other hand the EU Single Market ends — that satisfies both questions, then the backstop will be overwritten, so to speak.”

    Merkel added: “This means the task is to draft future relations that way and perhaps to draft them more specifically and better and more precisely than so far.”

    So nothing has changed - the backstop is required until a non backstop solution is found...

    Key words "Backstop" "will" "be" "overwritten"
    In the sense of superseded.
    or negotiated out of existence.

    Remoaners can play word games for Britain. Without seeming to understand that Brexit is the sideshow and Britain itself is at stake.
    Indeed, the dissolution of the UK would be one way to remove the relevance of the backstop.
    The dissolution of the UK is not going to happen. Scotland leaving it (thus creating even more backstop style issues) and splitting the island in half might happen.

    Or to put it another way-

    BREXIT IS A SIDESHOW
    Scotland leaving does not create any backstop-style issues. There's no political reason why there cannot be a customs border between England and Scotland, and plenty of political and economic reasons why one would never come about.
    You really think a border from Carlisle to Berwick affecting 45 billion of goods and services (2016) v 12 billion to the EU is not going to create an economic earthquake for Scotland you are very misguided
    Look at it from England's perspective. It becomes even harder than it already was to contemplate leaving the single market and customs union. Scottish independence in the EU would keep rUK/England in the EU system.
    I have no interest in England's interest but I have in Scotland's and a customs border between Scotland and England is unthinkable
  • Options
    Richard_NabaviRichard_Nabavi Posts: 30,820
    edited July 2019
    Morning all. I was very amused to see the reports that the ERGers are trying to get IDS into the role of Deputy PM. Surely it can't be the case that they don't entirely trust Boris, can it? Also interesting to see the suggestion that the rules should be changed so that Boris can't be challenged for a year. Have they learnt nothing from the Theresa May experience of having a leader who has lost the confidence of MPs but who is stuck in office?

    More importantly, I think the big development is the passing of the Benn-Burt amendment yesterday. That means that the sane group of Tory MPs now don't need to go for the nuclear option of immediately supporting a VONC, since there will be time in September and October to prevent a No Deal crash out. That surely guarantees that Boris will indeed by PM and won't immediately face VONC. That in turn also means that there won't be a pre-October 31st GE.
  • Options
    StereotomyStereotomy Posts: 4,092
    Yeah, remember before Trump when the GOP used all the correct dog-whistles and therefore there wasn't any racism and everything was great?
  • Options
    williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 48,127

    eek said:

    Shall we look at what Merkel says via Reuters

    “But the moment that a solution for the management of the border is found in (the declaration on) the future relationship — so for the European Union’s future ties to Britain — which basically squares the circle — on the one hand I have no physical border but on the other hand the EU Single Market ends — that satisfies both questions, then the backstop will be overwritten, so to speak.”

    Merkel added: “This means the task is to draft future relations that way and perhaps to draft them more specifically and better and more precisely than so far.”

    So nothing has changed - the backstop is required until a non backstop solution is found...

    Key words "Backstop" "will" "be" "overwritten"
    In the sense of superseded.
    or negotiated out of existence.

    Remoaners can play word games for Britain. Without seeming to understand that Brexit is the sideshow and Britain itself is at stake.
    Indeed, the dissolution of the UK would be one way to remove the relevance of the backstop.
    The dissolution of the UK is not going to happen. Scotland leaving it (thus creating even more backstop style issues) and splitting the island in half might happen.

    Or to put it another way-

    BREXIT IS A SIDESHOW
    Scotland leaving does not create any backstop-style issues. There's no political reason why there cannot be a customs border between England and Scotland, and plenty of political and economic reasons why one would never come about.
    You really think a border from Carlisle to Berwick affecting 45 billion of goods and services (2016) v 12 billion to the EU is not going to create an economic earthquake for Scotland you are very misguided
    Look at it from England's perspective. It becomes even harder than it already was to contemplate leaving the single market and customs union. Scottish independence in the EU would keep rUK/England in the EU system.
    I have no interest in England's interest but I have in Scotland's and a customs border between Scotland and England is unthinkable
    And a customs border between England and France is unthinkable. No less an authority than Chris Grayling said it was "utterly unrealistic". Therefore the question of a border between England and Scotland does not arise.

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/av/uk-politics-43425055/chris-grayling-no-post-brexit-lorry-checks-at-dover
  • Options
    IanB2IanB2 Posts: 47,407
    justin124 said:

    nichomar said:

    Pulpstar said:

    From the Politico article linked in the last thread, I note that it defines the East Midlands as "the marginals of Mansfield, Bolsover, Broxtowe, Amber Valley, Ashfield, North East Derbyshire and Chesterfield".

    As an exiled Rutlander, I'm getting a bit exasperated with people redefining the East Midlands - which are delightful in so many places - to be purely the fairly grim belt from Castle Donington up to Chesterfield. (Sorry @NickPalmer.)

    Are there any marginals in the southern area of the east midlands though ?
    Chesterfield is safish Labour (Though could be vulnerable to the Lib Dems in extremis)
    Didn't Chesterfield use to be LibDem in the Blair years?
    Won in a by election I think
    No - it was won in 2001 when Tony Benn stood down.
    It was an example of where a spirited LibDem by-election campaign created the organisation and momentum that didn’t win but subsequently carried through to winning the seat
  • Options
    GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 19,085
    Pulpstar said:

    ydoethur said:

    First time this has gone to the 2nd round. Lab vote down over 17%.
    Adjusted for turnout, the Labour vote appears to have been cut to pieces. Tories steady, Lib Dems up, but the Indie candidate appears to have been the joker.

    Labour struggling in their strongholds. Yet another piece of evidence...
    Lib Dem & non transfers should see Labour over the line I think. Is this AV or SV ?
    My girlfriend and I’s 2nd preference was the Indy with Lib Dem 1st.
  • Options
    AndreaParma_82AndreaParma_82 Posts: 4,714
    Nothumbria PCC first preferences by council authority

    Newcastle: Lab 43.7% LD 21.3% Ind 19% Con 16%
    Gateshead: Lab 40.6% LD 27% Ind 17.9% Con 14.5%
    North Tyneside: Lab 41.6% Con 25.5% Ind 18.5% LD 14.5%
    Northumberland: Con 31.7% Lab 26.8% Ind 24% LD 17.5%
    South Tyneside: Lab 41.6% Ind 28.5% Con 17% LD 12.8%
    Sunderland: Lab 37.4% Ind 24.8% Con 21.1% LD 16.8%

    Lab and Ind go to second round
  • Options
    IanB2IanB2 Posts: 47,407
    Scott_P said:

    Less than half of TORY VOTERS want Boris both managing Brexit and running the country afterwards??
  • Options
    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 117,127
    Chris Davies to be fair to him won the biggest Tory voteshare in Brecon since the 1960s and has local roots and links with the farming community as a vet and auctioneer. Do not count him out.

    While on current polls the LDs would win the seat if Boris gets the bounce Comres are predicting then it would be tied 39% Tory and 39% LD
  • Options
    Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 60,357

    Scotland leaving does not create any backstop-style issues. There's no political reason why there cannot be a customs border between England and Scotland, and plenty of political and economic reasons why one would never come about.

    What crap. It will be just the NI/I border all over again (especially given the Scotnat's love of the EU).
    You didn't read what I said. If Scotland were in the single market and customs union and England were not, there is no political reason why there cannot be a normal customs border there. There is no Good Friday Agreement to protect.

    However, in practice it is highly unlikely that England/rUK would be outside the single market and customs union anyway. It would either still be in the EU, or in a transition state that meant there would be no need for economic borders.
    Just think what you are saying. A border from Carlisle to Berwick would be an economic disaster for Scotland and have you any idea the volume of traffic criss crossing between Scotland and England every hour of every day.

    The whole idea of a Scottish customs border is barmy and is one of the many reasons Scottish Independence will fail
    You clearly didn't read the second paragraph. I said it will not need to happen, because England will not successfully leave the single market and customs union. The economic hegemon on these islands is not London but Brussels.
    You have no idea where this goes but I can tell you there will not be a Scottish border as Scotland will not vote for independence
  • Options
    justin124justin124 Posts: 11,527
    IanB2 said:

    justin124 said:

    nichomar said:

    Pulpstar said:

    From the Politico article linked in the last thread, I note that it defines the East Midlands as "the marginals of Mansfield, Bolsover, Broxtowe, Amber Valley, Ashfield, North East Derbyshire and Chesterfield".

    As an exiled Rutlander, I'm getting a bit exasperated with people redefining the East Midlands - which are delightful in so many places - to be purely the fairly grim belt from Castle Donington up to Chesterfield. (Sorry @NickPalmer.)

    Are there any marginals in the southern area of the east midlands though ?
    Chesterfield is safish Labour (Though could be vulnerable to the Lib Dems in extremis)
    Didn't Chesterfield use to be LibDem in the Blair years?
    Won in a by election I think
    No - it was won in 2001 when Tony Benn stood down.
    It was an example of where a spirited LibDem by-election campaign created the organisation and momentum that didn’t win but subsequently carried through to winning the seat
    Indeed - though the by election was in 1984. I believe it was also one of the few Labour gains in 2010!
  • Options
    AlastairMeeksAlastairMeeks Posts: 30,340

    eek said:

    Shall we look at what Merkel says via Reuters

    “But the moment that a solution for the management of the border is found in (the declaration on) the future relationship — so for the European Union’s future ties to Britain — which basically squares the circle — on the one hand I have no physical border but on the other hand the EU Single Market ends — that satisfies both questions, then the backstop will be overwritten, so to speak.”

    Merkel added: “This means the task is to draft future relations that way and perhaps to draft them more specifically and better and more precisely than so far.”

    So nothing has changed - the backstop is required until a non backstop solution is found...

    Key words "Backstop" "will" "be" "overwritten"
    In the sense of superseded.
    or negotiated out of existence.

    Remoaners can play word games for Britain. Without seeming to understand that Brexit is the sideshow and Britain itself is at stake.
    Indeed, the dissolution of the UK would be one way to remove the relevance of the backstop.
    The dissolution of the UK is not going to happen. Scotland leaving it (thus creating even more backstop style issues) and splitting the island in half might happen.

    Or to put it another way-

    BREXIT IS A SIDESHOW
    Scotland leaving does not create any backstop-style issues. There's no political reason why there cannot be a customs border between England and Scotland, and plenty of political and economic reasons why one would never come about.
    You really think a border from Carlisle to Berwick affecting 45 billion of goods and services (2016) v 12 billion to the EU is not going to create an economic earthquake for Scotland you are very misguided
    Look at it from England's perspective. It becomes even harder than it already was to contemplate leaving the single market and customs union. Scottish independence in the EU would keep rUK/England in the EU system.
    I have no interest in England's interest but I have in Scotland's and a customs border between Scotland and England is unthinkable
    A customs border between England and Scotland would be a lot easier to set up than one between Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland. It's a lot shorter border, far fewer roads cross it and border habits are much more clearly regulated.
  • Options
    GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 19,085
    HYUFD said:

    Chris Davies to be fair to him won the biggest Tory voteshare in Brecon since the 1960s and has local roots and links with the farming community as a vet and auctioneer. Do not count him out.

    While on current polls the LDs would win the seat if Boris gets the bounce Comres are predicting then it would be tied 39% Tory and 39% LD

    Uniform swing again...
  • Options
    prh47bridgeprh47bridge Posts: 441

    Reselecting Chris Davies is going to look utterly idiotic a couple of Friday mornings from now.

    Whatever feelings there were among local members of loyalty and that he'd been hard done by will absolutely not get across in a campaign where everyone else just has to prefix his name with "convicted fraudster".

    The evidence of his recall ballot (and Onasanya's) is that enough voters are willing to give "criminal MPs" a good hard kicking, whatever the mitigation.

    He is not, of course, a convicted fraudster. As the judge who sentenced him said, he did not benefit financially in any way from his actions. As the law stands that means it was stupid but it was not fraud.
  • Options
    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 117,127

    Morning all. I was very amused to see the reports that the ERGers are trying to get IDS into the role of Deputy PM. Surely it can't be the case that they don't entirely trust Boris, can it? Also interesting to see the suggestion that the rules should be changed so that Boris can't be challenged for a year. Have they learnt nothing from the Theresa May experience of having a leader who has lost the confidence of MPs but who is stuck in office?

    More importantly, I think the big development is the passing of the Benn-Burt amendment yesterday. That means that the sane group of Tory MPs now don't need to go for the nuclear option of immediately supporting a VONC, since there will be time in September and October to prevent a No Deal crash out. That surely guarantees that Boris will indeed by PM and won't immediately face VONC. That in turn also means that there won't be a pre-October 31st GE.

    Given Boris will refuse any further extension in October and will call a general election rather thsn accept Parliament trying to force him to extend of Parliament also blocks proroguing Parliament in late October then an autumn GE is inevitable, maybe earlier if Boris loses a VONC
  • Options
    Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 60,357

    eek said:

    Shall we look at what Merkel says via Reuters

    “But the moment that a solution for the management of the border is found in (the declaration on) the future relationship — so for the European Union’s future ties to Britain — which basically squares the circle — on the one hand I have no physical border but on the other hand the EU Single Market ends — that satisfies both questions, then the backstop will be overwritten, so to speak.”

    Merkel added: “This means the task is to draft future relations that way and perhaps to draft them more specifically and better and more precisely than so far.”

    So nothing has changed - the backstop is required until a non backstop solution is found...

    Key words "Backstop" "will" "be" "overwritten"
    In the sense of superseded.
    or negotiated out of existence.

    Remoaners can play word games for Britain. Without seeming to understand that Brexit is the sideshow and Britain itself is at stake.
    Indeed, the dissolution of the UK would be one way to remove the relevance of the backstop.
    The dissolution of the UK is not going to happen. Scotland leaving it (thus creating even more backstop style issues) and splitting the island in half might happen.

    Or to put it another way-

    BREXIT IS A SIDESHOW
    Scotland leaving does not create any backstop-style issues. There's no political reason why there cannot be a customs border between England and Scotland, and plenty of political and economic reasons why one would never come about.
    You really think a border from Carlisle to Berwick affecting 45 billion of goods and services (2016) v 12 billion to the EU is not going to create an economic earthquake for Scotland you are very misguided
    Look at it from England's perspective. It becomes even harder than it already was to contemplate leaving the single market and customs union. Scottish independence in the EU would keep rUK/England in the EU system.
    I have no interest in England's interest but I have in Scotland's and a customs border between Scotland and England is unthinkable
    A customs border between England and Scotland would be a lot easier to set up than one between Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland. It's a lot shorter border, far fewer roads cross it and border habits are much more clearly regulated.
    It is not going to happen
  • Options
    StereotomyStereotomy Posts: 4,092
    Scott_P said:
    Argh. Why are the circles all on different scales?
  • Options
    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 117,127

    ydoethur said:

    eek said:

    Shall we look at what Merkel says via Reuters

    “But the moment that a solution for the management of the border is found in (the declaration on) the future relationship — so for the European Union’s future ties to Britain — which basically squares the circle — on the one hand I have no physical border but on the other hand the EU Single Market ends — that satisfies both questions, then the backstop will be overwritten, so to speak.”

    Merkel added: “This means the task is to draft future relations that way and perhaps to draft them more specifically and better and more precisely than so far.”

    So nothing has changed - the backstop is required until a non backstop solution is found...

    Key words "Backstop" "will" "be" "overwritten"
    In the sense of superseded.
    or negotiated out of existence.

    Remoaners can play word games for Britain. Without seeming to understand that Brexit is the sideshow and Britain itself is at stake.
    Indeed, the dissolution of the UK would be one way to remove the relevance of the backstop.
    The dissolution of the UK is not going to happen. Scotland leaving it (thus creating even more backstop style issues) and splitting the island in half might happen.

    Or to put it another way-

    BREXIT IS A SIDESHOW
    Scotland leaving does not create any backstop-style issues. There's no political reason why there cannot be a customs border between England and Scotland, and plenty of political and economic reasons why one would never come about.
    You really think a border from Carlisle to Berwick affecting 45 billion of goods and services (2016) v 12 billion to the EU is not going to create an economic earthquake for Scotland you are very misguided
    Look at it from England's perspective. It becomes even five years for EU membership even if it became independent.
    When do you think England will be outside the single market and customs union? There's no sign of it ever happening that I can see.
    As long as Boris remains PM we will leave the single market and Customs Union
  • Options
    Sunil_PrasannanSunil_Prasannan Posts: 49,399

    eek said:

    Shall we look at what Merkel says via Reuters
    So nothing has changed - the backstop is required until a non backstop solution is found...

    Key words "Backstop" "will" "be" "overwritten"
    In the sense of superseded.
    or negotiated out of existence.

    Remoaners can play word games for Britain. Without seeming to understand that Brexit is the sideshow and Britain itself is at stake.
    Indeed, the dissolution of the UK would be one way to remove the relevance of the backstop.
    The dissolution of the UK is not going to happen. Scotland leaving it (thus creating even more backstop style issues) and splitting the island in half might happen.

    Or to put it another way-

    BREXIT IS A SIDESHOW
    Scotland leaving does not create any backstop-style issues. There's no political reason why there cannot be a customs border between England and Scotland, and plenty of political and economic reasons why one would never come about.
    You really think a border from Carlisle to Berwick affecting 45 billion of goods and services (2016) v 12 billion to the EU is not going to create an economic earthquake for Scotland you are very misguided
    Look at it from England's perspective. It becomes even harder than it already was to contemplate leaving the single market and customs union. Scottish independence in the EU would keep rUK/England in the EU system.
    I have no interest in England's interest but I have in Scotland's and a customs border between Scotland and England is unthinkable
    A customs border between England and Scotland would be a lot easier to set up than one between Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland. It's a lot shorter border, far fewer roads cross it and border habits are much more clearly regulated.
    Hold on, I still haven't done the railway from Ayr to Stanraer or everything north of the Central Belt!
  • Options
    Richard_NabaviRichard_Nabavi Posts: 30,820
    edited July 2019
    HYUFD said:


    Given Boris will refuse any further extension in October and will call a general election rather thsn accept Parliament trying to force him to extend of Parliament also blocks proroguing Parliament in late October then an autumn GE is inevitable, maybe earlier if Boris loses a VONC

    He can't 'call an election'. And he won't lose a VONC through the actions of Tory MPs if there is a non-nuclear option for loyal Conservatives like Hammond and Gauke to prevent chaos after October 31st. That is why the probabilities have suddenly changed.
  • Options
    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 117,127
    Scott_P said:
    Boris is favoured PM of 2017 Tories and Leave voters, Corbyn is not favoured PM of 2017 Labour voters and Remain voters
  • Options
    TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 40,249

    eek said:

    Shall we look at what Merkel says via Reuters

    “But the moment that a solution for the management of the border is found in (the declaration on) the future relationship — so for the European Union’s future ties to Britain — which basically squares the circle — on the one hand I have no physical border but on the other hand the EU Single Market ends — that satisfies both questions, then the backstop will be overwritten, so to speak.”

    Merkel added: “This means the task is to draft future relations that way and perhaps to draft them more specifically and better and more precisely than so far.”

    So nothing has changed - the backstop is required until a non backstop solution is found...

    Key words "Backstop" "will" "be" "overwritten"
    In the sense of superseded.
    or negotiated out of existence.

    Remoaners can play word games for Britain. Without seeming to understand that Brexit is the sideshow and Britain itself is at stake.
    Indeed, the dissolution of the UK would be one way to remove the relevance of the backstop.
    The dissolution of the UK is not going to happen. Scotland leaving it (thus creating even more backstop style issues) and splitting the island in half might happen.

    Or to put it another way-

    BREXIT IS A SIDESHOW
    Scotland leaving does not create any backstop-style issues. There's no political reason why there cannot be a customs border between England and Scotland, and plenty of political and economic reasons why one would never come about.
    What crap. It will be just the NI/I border all over again (especially given the Scotnat's love of the EU).
    What would be the equivalent security issues to those that are bedevilling the NI border clusterfuck?
    Security issues?? Get with the programme it's milk and honey on that island since the GFA - it's all about trade.

    I presume iScot will want to trade with England/rUK ?
    I'd imagine that the family of Lyra McKee may disagree with you, but I daresay you're of the 'Jo Cox, move on, nothing to see here' mindset.

    It does seem to occupy the thoughts of those of a less blithe outlook though.

    Fears of return to Troubles

    About 16,600,000 results (0.40 seconds)
  • Options
    Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 60,357
    edited July 2019
    HYUFD said:

    Morning all. I was very amused to see the reports that the ERGers are trying to get IDS into the role of Deputy PM. Surely it can't be the case that they don't entirely trust Boris, can it? Also interesting to see the suggestion that the rules should be changed so that Boris can't be challenged for a year. Have they learnt nothing from the Theresa May experience of having a leader who has lost the confidence of MPs but who is stuck in office?

    More importantly, I think the big development is the passing of the Benn-Burt amendment yesterday. That means that the sane group of Tory MPs now don't need to go for the nuclear option of immediately supporting a VONC, since there will be time in September and October to prevent a No Deal crash out. That surely guarantees that Boris will indeed by PM and won't immediately face VONC. That in turn also means that there won't be a pre-October 31st GE.

    Given Boris will refuse any further extension in October and will call a general election rather thsn accept Parliament trying to force him to extend of Parliament also blocks proroguing Parliament in late October then an autumn GE is inevitable, maybe earlier if Boris loses a VONC
    Boris cannot call a GE due to the FTPA and even if that was overcome the Lib Dems would slaughter the party
  • Options
    Sunil_PrasannanSunil_Prasannan Posts: 49,399

    Reselecting Chris Davies is going to look utterly idiotic a couple of Friday mornings from now.

    Whatever feelings there were among local members of loyalty and that he'd been hard done by will absolutely not get across in a campaign where everyone else just has to prefix his name with "convicted fraudster".

    The evidence of his recall ballot (and Onasanya's) is that enough voters are willing to give "criminal MPs" a good hard kicking, whatever the mitigation.

    He is not, of course, a convicted fraudster. As the judge who sentenced him said, he did not benefit financially in any way from his actions. As the law stands that means it was stupid but it was not fraud.
    OK, how about just "convict"?
  • Options
    eekeek Posts: 25,020
    edited July 2019
    HYUFD said:

    Morning all. I was very amused to see the reports that the ERGers are trying to get IDS into the role of Deputy PM. Surely it can't be the case that they don't entirely trust Boris, can it? Also interesting to see the suggestion that the rules should be changed so that Boris can't be challenged for a year. Have they learnt nothing from the Theresa May experience of having a leader who has lost the confidence of MPs but who is stuck in office?

    More importantly, I think the big development is the passing of the Benn-Burt amendment yesterday. That means that the sane group of Tory MPs now don't need to go for the nuclear option of immediately supporting a VONC, since there will be time in September and October to prevent a No Deal crash out. That surely guarantees that Boris will indeed by PM and won't immediately face VONC. That in turn also means that there won't be a pre-October 31st GE.

    Given Boris will refuse any further extension in October and will call a general election rather thsn accept Parliament trying to force him to extend of Parliament also blocks proroguing Parliament in late October then an autumn GE is inevitable, maybe earlier if Boris loses a VONC
    A general election being held as small No Deal issues occur day after day really wouldn't be the best plan.. The cascade of disasters would peak in early December just as the polls opened...

    or Boris could avoid the small No Deal disasters by extending - and Farage will be in full on attack mode...
  • Options
    williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 48,127
    HYUFD said:

    When do you think England will be outside the single market and customs union? There's no sign of it ever happening that I can see.

    As long as Boris remains PM we will leave the single market and Customs Union
    When? Isn't the latest brainwave of the Boris camp to have an indefinite transition?
  • Options
    stodgestodge Posts: 12,887
    justin124 said:


    Very significant Boundary changes post-1979 which had the effect of reducing Labour's vote here.

    The big fall in the Labour share has been since 1997 when the party still got more than a quarter of the vote.


  • Options
    StereotomyStereotomy Posts: 4,092
    HYUFD said:

    Morning all. I was very amused to see the reports that the ERGers are trying to get IDS into the role of Deputy PM. Surely it can't be the case that they don't entirely trust Boris, can it? Also interesting to see the suggestion that the rules should be changed so that Boris can't be challenged for a year. Have they learnt nothing from the Theresa May experience of having a leader who has lost the confidence of MPs but who is stuck in office?

    More importantly, I think the big development is the passing of the Benn-Burt amendment yesterday. That means that the sane group of Tory MPs now don't need to go for the nuclear option of immediately supporting a VONC, since there will be time in September and October to prevent a No Deal crash out. That surely guarantees that Boris will indeed by PM and won't immediately face VONC. That in turn also means that there won't be a pre-October 31st GE.

    Given Boris will refuse any further extension in October and will call a general election rather thsn accept Parliament trying to force him to extend of Parliament also blocks proroguing Parliament in late October then an autumn GE is inevitable, maybe earlier if Boris loses a VONC
    I don't really understand the logic of people saying there'll be a GE shortly after October 31st. If Johnson's going to call an election, surely he'd rather do that before November, since any Brexit outcome either doesn't require an election (manages to get a deal through, no deal) or hurts the Tories electorally (extension)
  • Options
    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 117,127
    eek said:

    eek said:

    Shall we look at what Merkel says via Reuters

    “But the moment that a solution for the management of the border is found in (the declaration on) the future relationship — so for the European Union’s future ties to Britain — which basically squares the circle — on the one hand I have no physical border but on the other hand the EU Single Market ends — that satisfies both questions, then the backstop will be overwritten, so to speak.”

    Merkel added: “This means the task is to draft future relations that way and perhaps to draft them more specifically and better and more precisely than so far.”

    So nothing has changed - the backstop is required until a non backstop solution is found...

    Key words "Backstop" "will" "be" "overwritten"
    In the sense of superseded.
    or negotiated out of existence.

    Remoaners can play word games for Britain. Without seeming to understand that Brexit is the sideshow and Britain itself is at stake.
    Yes - if we leave with No Deal - Northern Ireland will join the republic and the SNP will win their fight for independence...
    No, if a technical solution is found to the Irish border NI will stay and in any case the DUP are still largest party not Sinn Fein.

    In Scotland while 51% of Remainers now back independence according to Curtice that is not enough for a Yes vote still given 64% of Scottish Leavers still back No and the Union
  • Options
    rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 58,303

    HYUFD said:

    Morning all. I was very amused to see the reports that the ERGers are trying to get IDS into the role of Deputy PM. Surely it can't be the case that they don't entirely trust Boris, can it? Also interesting to see the suggestion that the rules should be changed so that Boris can't be challenged for a year. Have they learnt nothing from the Theresa May experience of having a leader who has lost the confidence of MPs but who is stuck in office?

    More importantly, I think the big development is the passing of the Benn-Burt amendment yesterday. That means that the sane group of Tory MPs now don't need to go for the nuclear option of immediately supporting a VONC, since there will be time in September and October to prevent a No Deal crash out. That surely guarantees that Boris will indeed by PM and won't immediately face VONC. That in turn also means that there won't be a pre-October 31st GE.

    Given Boris will refuse any further extension in October and will call a general election rather thsn accept Parliament trying to force him to extend of Parliament also blocks proroguing Parliament in late October then an autumn GE is inevitable, maybe earlier if Boris loses a VONC
    Boris cannot call a GE due to the FTPA and the way things are going the Lib Dems will slaughter the party
    He can, by organizing a vote in favour by 2/3 of HoC. Can't see how on earth Labour would survive not voting for an early GE and then there is the payroll vote for the government, plus a Boris 3 line whip.
  • Options
    TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 40,249

    Scotland leaving does not create any backstop-style issues. There's no political reason why there cannot be a customs border between England and Scotland, and plenty of political and economic reasons why one would never come about.

    What crap. It will be just the NI/I border all over again (especially given the Scotnat's love of the EU).
    You didn't read what I said. If Scotland were in the single market and customs union and England were not, there is no political reason why there cannot be a normal customs border there. There is no Good Friday Agreement to protect.

    However, in practice it is highly unlikely that England/rUK would be outside the single market and customs union anyway. It would either still be in the EU, or in a transition state that meant there would be no need for economic borders.
    Just think what you are saying. A border from Carlisle to Berwick would be an economic disaster for Scotland and have you any idea the volume of traffic criss crossing between Scotland and England every hour of every day.

    The whole idea of a Scottish customs border is barmy and is one of the many reasons Scottish Independence will fail
    You clearly didn't read the second paragraph. I said it will not need to happen, because England will not successfully leave the single market and customs union. The economic hegemon on these islands is not London but Brussels.
    You have no idea where this goes but I can tell you there will not be a Scottish border as Scotland will not vote for independence
    Is that on the basis of Westminster and your party, the Tories, continually blocking a referendum, or Scots voting against it?
  • Options
    Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 60,357

    Scotland leaving does not create any backstop-style issues. There's no political reason why there cannot be a customs border between England and Scotland, and plenty of political and economic reasons why one would never come about.

    What crap. It will be just the NI/I border all over again (especially given the Scotnat's love of the EU).
    You didn't read what I said. If Scotland were in the single market and customs union and England were not, there is no political reason why there cannot be a normal customs border there. There is no Good Friday Agreement to protect.

    However, in practice it is highly unlikely that England/rUK would be outside the single market and customs union anyway. It would either still be in the EU, or in a transition state that meant there would be no need for economic borders.
    Just think what you are saying. A border from Carlisle to Berwick would be an economic disaster for Scotland and have you any idea the volume of traffic criss crossing between Scotland and England every hour of every day.

    The whole idea of a Scottish customs border is barmy and is one of the many reasons Scottish Independence will fail
    You clearly didn't read the second paragraph. I said it will not need to happen, because England will not successfully leave the single market and customs union. The economic hegemon on these islands is not London but Brussels.
    You have no idea where this goes but I can tell you there will not be a Scottish border as Scotland will not vote for independence
    Is that on the basis of Westminster and your party, the Tories, continually blocking a referendum, or Scots voting against it?
    Scots voting against it
  • Options
    Uniondivvie-

    It's you that wants an iScot and the subsequent security issues that would inevitable arise from it.

    I don't think me and you will ever be on the same page.
  • Options
    stodgestodge Posts: 12,887
    HYUFD said:

    Chris Davies to be fair to him won the biggest Tory voteshare in Brecon since the 1960s and has local roots and links with the farming community as a vet and auctioneer. Do not count him out.

    While on current polls the LDs would win the seat if Boris gets the bounce Comres are predicting then it would be tied 39% Tory and 39% LD

    Chris Davies's share is close to that won by Tom Hooson in the 1983 GE. Two years later, the Conservative share fell 20% and while the LDs moved up to win the seat, Labour came second and were only 559 votes behind.

    Yes, the circumstances now are different but only inasmuch as the Conservative vote could go to TBP.
  • Options
    Richard_NabaviRichard_Nabavi Posts: 30,820
    edited July 2019

    He can, by organizing a vote in favour by 2/3 of HoC. Can't see how on earth Labour would survive not voting for an early GE and then there is the payroll vote for the government, plus a Boris 3 line whip.

    Read Alastair's excellent article of a couple of days ago. Yes Labour would support a GE, but they'd impose conditions, the most important of which would be the very reasonable one of Boris getting an Article 50 extension first.
  • Options
    eekeek Posts: 25,020

    HYUFD said:

    Morning all. I was very amused to see the reports that the ERGers are trying to get IDS into the role of Deputy PM. Surely it can't be the case that they don't entirely trust Boris, can it? Also interesting to see the suggestion that the rules should be changed so that Boris can't be challenged for a year. Have they learnt nothing from the Theresa May experience of having a leader who has lost the confidence of MPs but who is stuck in office?

    More importantly, I think the big development is the passing of the Benn-Burt amendment yesterday. That means that the sane group of Tory MPs now don't need to go for the nuclear option of immediately supporting a VONC, since there will be time in September and October to prevent a No Deal crash out. That surely guarantees that Boris will indeed by PM and won't immediately face VONC. That in turn also means that there won't be a pre-October 31st GE.

    Given Boris will refuse any further extension in October and will call a general election rather thsn accept Parliament trying to force him to extend of Parliament also blocks proroguing Parliament in late October then an autumn GE is inevitable, maybe earlier if Boris loses a VONC
    Boris cannot call a GE due to the FTPA and the way things are going the Lib Dems will slaughter the party
    He can, by organizing a vote in favour by 2/3 of HoC. Can't see how on earth Labour would survive not voting for an early GE and then there is the payroll vote for the government, plus a Boris 3 line whip.
    That's simple - Labour state that there isn't enough time to sort things out after the election but would be happy for one to occur provided things are extend until the end of the year.

    Then you just play Boris's "we will leave on October 31st speech" on a loop until Farage kicks off..
  • Options
    eekeek Posts: 25,020
    HYUFD said:

    eek said:

    eek said:

    Shall we look at what Merkel says via Reuters

    “But the moment that a solution for the management of the border is found in (the declaration on) the future relationship — so for the European Union’s future ties to Britain — which basically squares the circle — on the one hand I have no physical border but on the other hand the EU Single Market ends — that satisfies both questions, then the backstop will be overwritten, so to speak.”

    Merkel added: “This means the task is to draft future relations that way and perhaps to draft them more specifically and better and more precisely than so far.”

    So nothing has changed - the backstop is required until a non backstop solution is found...

    Key words "Backstop" "will" "be" "overwritten"
    In the sense of superseded.
    or negotiated out of existence.

    Remoaners can play word games for Britain. Without seeming to understand that Brexit is the sideshow and Britain itself is at stake.
    Yes - if we leave with No Deal - Northern Ireland will join the republic and the SNP will win their fight for independence...
    No, if a technical solution is found to the Irish border NI will stay and in any case the DUP are still largest party not Sinn Fein.

    In Scotland while 51% of Remainers now back independence according to Curtice that is not enough for a Yes vote still given 64% of Scottish Leavers still back No and the Union
    Replace the word technical with magical and you will understand the issue.

    The technology doesn't exist and even if it did it won't be installed and ready to go on October 31st..
  • Options
    justin124justin124 Posts: 11,527
    stodge said:

    justin124 said:


    Very significant Boundary changes post-1979 which had the effect of reducing Labour's vote here.

    The big fall in the Labour share has been since 1997 when the party still got more than a quarter of the vote.


    The electoral dynamics changed there when Richard Livesey won the seat in 1985. He very narrowly held on in 1987 before losing to the Tories by 130 in 1992. Such results made it much easier to squeeze Labour's vote on a tactical basis - until the Coalition was formed.
  • Options
    TheWhiteRabbitTheWhiteRabbit Posts: 12,388
    edited July 2019
    Interesting leader in the Mirror suggesting that £1.6bn has been claimed by people who were eligible for Pension Credit but did not claim it. That must surely be a good thing, even if it costs the Exchequer. People should take the help available.

    However not sure of the maths because they say that is the result of just 1,700 claims (I assume they are extrapolating)
  • Options
    JohnOJohnO Posts: 4,215

    HYUFD said:


    Given Boris will refuse any further extension in October and will call a general election rather thsn accept Parliament trying to force him to extend of Parliament also blocks proroguing Parliament in late October then an autumn GE is inevitable, maybe earlier if Boris loses a VONC

    He can't 'call an election'. And he won't lose a VONC if there is a non- nuclear option for loyal Conservatives like Hammond and Gauke to prevent chaos after October 31st. That is why the probabilities have suddenly changed.
    True but I'm more with HYUFD on this. If (yes, I know) the Tories are leading in the polls by, say, over 5% in early September, then there must be every chance that Johnson will propose an election (calling the Commons back from Recess isn't really a problem) and (in my view at least) he will obtain the required 2/3 majority.

    What happens in the campaign itself is an entirely different matter, but I reckon the odds of an election are must be around 50%. Unless, of course, by then it's clear he's on course for a fig-leave change agreement with the EU!
  • Options
    williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 48,127

    Uniondivvie-

    It's you that wants an iScot and the subsequent security issues that would inevitable arise from it.

    I don't think me and you will ever be on the same page.

    What security issues would they be?
  • Options
    StereotomyStereotomy Posts: 4,092
    edited July 2019

    He can, by organizing a vote in favour by 2/3 of HoC. Can't see how on earth Labour would survive not voting for an early GE and then there is the payroll vote for the government, plus a Boris 3 line whip.

    Read Alastair's excellent article of a couple of days ago. Yes Labour would support a GE, but they'd impose conditions, the most important of which would be the very reasonable one of Boris getting an Article 50 extension first.
    Only if he attempted to call an election which wouldn't be resolved until after October 31st, surely?
  • Options

    Uniondivvie-

    It's you that wants an iScot and the subsequent security issues that would inevitable arise from it.

    I don't think me and you will ever be on the same page.

    What security issues would they be?
    Well there will be a border. Given the outflows likely in the case of an iScot it won't be long till it's along the lines of NI/I or Trump/Mexico
  • Options
    TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 40,249

    Scotland leaving does not create any backstop-style issues. There's no political reason why there cannot be a customs border between England and Scotland, and plenty of political and economic reasons why one would never come about.

    What crap. It will be just the NI/I border all over again (especially given the Scotnat's love of the EU).
    You didn't read what I said. If Scotland were in the single market and customs union and England were not, there is no political reason why there cannot be a normal customs border there. There is no Good Friday Agreement to protect.

    However, in practice it is highly unlikely that England/rUK would be outside the single market and customs union anyway. It would either still be in the EU, or in a transition state that meant there would be no need for economic borders.
    Just think what you are saying. A border from Carlisle to Berwick would be an economic disaster for Scotland and have you any idea the volume of traffic criss crossing between Scotland and England every hour of every day.

    The whole idea of a Scottish customs border is barmy and is one of the many reasons Scottish Independence will fail
    You clearly didn't read the second paragraph. I said it will not need to happen, because England will not successfully leave the single market and customs union. The economic hegemon on these islands is not London but Brussels.
    You have no idea where this goes but I can tell you there will not be a Scottish border as Scotland will not vote for independence
    Is that on the basis of Westminster and your party, the Tories, continually blocking a referendum, or Scots voting against it?
    Scots voting against it
    Cool.
    I hope, if you don't end your association with them, that you lobby your party to end it's obstructive policy of believing that they are the best people to decide on whether Scots should have a referendum.
  • Options
    Richard_NabaviRichard_Nabavi Posts: 30,820
    edited July 2019
    JohnO said:

    HYUFD said:


    Given Boris will refuse any further extension in October and will call a general election rather thsn accept Parliament trying to force him to extend of Parliament also blocks proroguing Parliament in late October then an autumn GE is inevitable, maybe earlier if Boris loses a VONC

    He can't 'call an election'. And he won't lose a VONC if there is a non- nuclear option for loyal Conservatives like Hammond and Gauke to prevent chaos after October 31st. That is why the probabilities have suddenly changed.
    True but I'm more with HYUFD on this. If (yes, I know) the Tories are leading in the polls by, say, over 5% in early September, then there must be every chance that Johnson will propose an election (calling the Commons back from Recess isn't really a problem) and (in my view at least) he will obtain the required 2/3 majority.

    What happens in the campaign itself is an entirely different matter, but I reckon the odds of an election are must be around 50%. Unless, of course, by then it's clear he's on course for a fig-leave change agreement with the EU!
    Oh, I agree there might well be an election. But it will now only happen with an Article 50 extension, which Boris will have been forced to ask for. His utterly brain-dead commitment to leave on October 31st will be in shreds. That in turn means he will have achieved the remarkable feats of alienating both wings of the party, and boosting both the LibDems and the Faragists. Genius, eh?
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    TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 40,249

    Uniondivvie-

    It's you that wants an iScot and the subsequent security issues that would inevitable arise from it.

    I don't think me and you will ever be on the same page.

    Not even the same book, sport.
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    Richard_NabaviRichard_Nabavi Posts: 30,820

    He can, by organizing a vote in favour by 2/3 of HoC. Can't see how on earth Labour would survive not voting for an early GE and then there is the payroll vote for the government, plus a Boris 3 line whip.

    Read Alastair's excellent article of a couple of days ago. Yes Labour would support a GE, but they'd impose conditions, the most important of which would be the very reasonable one of Boris getting an Article 50 extension first.
    Only if he attempted to call an election which wouldn't be resolved until after October 31st, surely?
    Yes, but I don't think he's mad enough to try to go to the country immediately, and then the clock runs out.
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    JBriskinindyref2JBriskinindyref2 Posts: 1,775
    edited July 2019

    Scotland leaving does not create any backstop-style issues. There's no political reason why there cannot be a customs border between England and Scotland, and plenty of political and economic reasons why one would never come about.

    What crap. It will be just the NI/I border all over again (especially given the Scotnat's love of the EU).
    You didn't read what I said. If Scotland were in the single market and customs union and England were not, there is no political reason why there cannot be a normal customs border there. There is no Good Friday Agreement to protect.

    However, in practice it is highly unlikely that England/rUK would be outside the single market and customs union anyway. It would either still be in the EU, or in a transition state that meant there would be no need for economic borders.
    Just think what you are saying. A border from Carlisle to Berwick would be an economic disaster for Scotland and have you any idea the volume of traffic criss crossing between Scotland and England every hour of every day.

    The whole idea of a Scottish customs border is barmy and is one of the many reasons Scottish Independence will fail
    You clearly didn't read the second paragraph. I said it will not need to happen, because England will not successfully leave the single market and customs union. The economic hegemon on these islands is not London but Brussels.
    You have no idea where this goes but I can tell you there will not be a Scottish border as Scotland will not vote for independence
    Is that on the basis of Westminster and your party, the Tories, continually blocking a referendum, or Scots voting against it?
    Scots voting against it
    Cool.
    I hope, if you don't end your association with them, that you lobby your party to end it's obstructive policy of believing that they are the best people to decide on whether Scots should have a referendum.
    Obviously Nicola should decide. We could have one every year on Burns day for example.

    Would be nice to know when you seperatists will give up though.
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    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 117,127
    Ben Stokes to be nominated as New Zealander of the year

    https://www.itv.com/news/2019-07-19/ben-stokes-new-zealander-of-the-year/
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    It went from the Sky ticker fairly quickly and there was only me fighting the pro-democracy battle.
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    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 117,127

    JohnO said:

    HYUFD said:


    Given Boris will refuse any further extension in October and will call a general election rather thsn accept Parliament trying to force him to extend of Parliament also blocks proroguing Parliament in late October then an autumn GE is inevitable, maybe earlier if Boris loses a VONC

    He can't 'call an election'. And he won't lose a VONC if there is a non- nuclear option for loyal Conservatives like Hammond and Gauke to prevent chaos after October 31st. That is why the probabilities have suddenly changed.
    True but I'm more with HYUFD on this. If (yes, I know) the Tories are leading in the polls by, say, over 5% in early September, then there must be every chance that Johnson will propose an election (calling the Commons back from Recess isn't really a problem) and (in my view at least) he will obtain the required 2/3 majority.

    What happens in the campaign itself is an entirely different matter, but I reckon the odds of an election are must be around 50%. Unless, of course, by then it's clear he's on course for a fig-leave change agreement with the EU!
    Oh, I agree there might well be an election. But it will now only happen with an Article 50 extension, which Boris will have been forced to ask for. His utterly brain-dead commitment to leave on October 31st will be in shreds. That in turn means he will have achieved the remarkable feats of alienating both wings of the party, and boosting both the LibDems and the Faragists. Genius, eh?
    Nope, Boris will refuse outright any extension and Leave on October 31st even during an election campaign
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    williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 48,127

    Would be nice to know when you seperatists will give up though.

    England voted for sovereignty, and it will get sovereignty.
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    StereotomyStereotomy Posts: 4,092

    He can, by organizing a vote in favour by 2/3 of HoC. Can't see how on earth Labour would survive not voting for an early GE and then there is the payroll vote for the government, plus a Boris 3 line whip.

    Read Alastair's excellent article of a couple of days ago. Yes Labour would support a GE, but they'd impose conditions, the most important of which would be the very reasonable one of Boris getting an Article 50 extension first.
    Only if he attempted to call an election which wouldn't be resolved until after October 31st, surely?
    Yes, but I don't think he's mad enough to try to go to the country immediately, and then the clock runs out.
    Is that mad? I'd have thought the best time to try would be before his plans have collided with reality.
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    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 117,127

    HYUFD said:

    Morning all. I was very amused to see the reports that the ERGers are trying to get IDS into the role of Deputy PM. Surely it can't be the case that they don't entirely trust Boris, can it? Also interesting to see the suggestion that the rules should be changed so that Boris can't be challenged for a year. Have they learnt nothing from the Theresa May experience of having a leader who has lost the confidence of MPs but who is stuck in office?

    More importantly, I think the big development is the passing of the Benn-Burt amendment yesterday. That means that the sane group of Tory MPs now don't need to go for the nuclear option of immediately supporting a VONC, since there will be time in September and October to prevent a No Deal crash out. That surely guarantees that Boris will indeed by PM and won't immediately face VONC. That in turn also means that there won't be a pre-October 31st GE.

    Given Boris will refuse any further extension in October and will call a general election rather thsn accept Parliament trying to force him to extend of Parliament also blocks proroguing Parliament in late October then an autumn GE is inevitable, maybe earlier if Boris loses a VONC
    Boris cannot call a GE due to the FTPA and even if that was overcome the Lib Dems would slaughter the party
    The LDs would slaughter Corbyn Labour less so the Tories, the Brexit Party would slaughter the Tories though if they extend again
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    Would be nice to know when you seperatists will give up though.

    England voted for sovereignty, and it will get sovereignty.
    And Scotland can be ruled by Brussels again eh?
This discussion has been closed.