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  • GIN1138 said:

    So after Nabaviexit we've had TheEaglesExit !!!!!!! :D
    I've been away - you've followed the herd(son) and RN?

    won't be long for me I fear BUT not just yet.
    Yup, the headlong rush in to No Deal confirmed it, I couldn't disagree with a word David wrote.

    What really depressed me was the realisation that if and when Boris Johnson crashes and burns later on this year the party will not return to sanity with someone like Hunt or Stewart, but the party will double down and go for someone like Patel, Baker, or our own Corbyn Andrew Bridgen.
    You missed Mark Francois! :trollface:
    Please don't do that.

    I still care about the Tory party.
  • The_TaxmanThe_Taxman Posts: 2,979
    edited August 2019

    GIN1138 said:

    So after Nabaviexit we've had TheEaglesExit !!!!!!! :D
    I've been away - you've followed the herd(son) and RN?

    won't be long for me I fear BUT not just yet.
    Yup, the headlong rush in to No Deal confirmed it, I couldn't disagree with a word David wrote.

    What really depressed me was the realisation that if and when Boris Johnson crashes and burns later on this year the party will not return to sanity with someone like Hunt or Stewart, but the party will double down and go for someone like Patel, Baker, or our own Corbyn Andrew Bridgen.
    You missed Mark Francois! :trollface:
    Why hasn’t Francois got a ministerial post?
    It says on wiki page that his chairmanship of the ERG makes him chief whip of that grouping. So, I doubt he could do a Government job and the ERG one. Given the purist and ideological fervour or ERG, he is not likely to give that up! :naughty:

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mark_Francois
  • algarkirkalgarkirk Posts: 12,573

    algarkirk said:

    dixiedean said:

    Foxy said:

    I would also say that I don’t think purdah rules prevent the government from taking the UK out of the EU in an election period. It is a passive occurrence and the legal default. The government has already pre-announced that it intends for the UK to leave on that date and assuming no alternative government is found, it would still be the government on exit day.

    Whether it SHOULD do that is another matter, but I don’t actually see anything constitutionally improper with it, unless someone can enlighten me?

    I think a No Deal Brexit mid election is the way to guarantee a crisis. Not wise.

    I think that HM and her advisors would recommend an October date, and it would be hard to refuse.
    The monarch can advise, but constitutionally I think would have to defer. In pretty much every situation where a monarch has advised a PM against a course of action, but they have been determined to do the contrary, the Crown has had to roll over.
    There has seldom been a matter of such import. All this talk of the Queen getting involved in politics. She's the Head of State. It is what we pay her for.
    It is extraordinary that one of the two party leaders is Jeremy Corbyn and he is not the one determined to cause a crisis for the monarchy.
    There isn't going to be a crisis for the monarchy. The monarchy is just fine thanks. the crisis is for our political party configuration, FPTP, the FTPA and the incompetence of our political class.

    You don’t think a momentous decision that will inevitably alienate one half or the other of the population will cause them problems?
    To be honest, no. I think the monarchy could easily end up more popular than ever. I can't imagine a time when sentiment is less in favour of a politicised Head of State. (And I don't think Mr Trump has helped the republican cause much.) But for the political realm, yes. Unless something like TMs deal goes through your fears are right. It will cause everyone else problems.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 123,156

    dixiedean said:

    I would also say that I don’t think purdah rules prevent the government from taking the UK out of the EU in an election period. It is a passive occurrence and the legal default. The government has already pre-announced that it intends for the UK to leave on that date and assuming no alternative government is found, it would still be the government on exit day.

    Whether it SHOULD do that is another matter, but I don’t actually see anything constitutionally improper with it, unless someone can enlighten me?

    I would tend to agree.
    However, were Boris to win a majority on November 1st on 32% of the vote, in such a circumstance, the idea that Brexit would have been "delivered" and everything would be just fine and dandy, is stretching optimism, I reckon.
    What’s more, I think it’s not a given that Boris would win a 1 November GE. 1945 anyone? “Oh they’ve done what we needed them to do, let’s vote for someone who will spend more on schools and hospitals.”
    Given the EU will likely extend until election day that is unlikely, though yes as 2017 showed the Tories need a clear Brexit division with Labour and the LDs to win and to be the party to get Brexit done, they can probably only win 1 more term given they have been in power for 3 terms already, if this is an austerity election rather than a Brexit election then the Tories are more likely to lose.

    However this is more a 1940 general election (taken 9 years into the Tories term just like an autumn general election) as Churchill prepared for war not a 1945 general election (taken 14 years into a Tory led government) when Churchill had won the war
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 123,156
    eek said:

    HYUFD said:

    rcs1000 said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    Yougov today has the Tories back up to 23% in Scotland with the SNP on 39%, that is a swing of just 4% from the Tories to the SNP since 2017 meaning the Tories would hold 7 out of their 13 Scottish seats ie a majority.

    SLAB though have slumped to just 12%, below the LDs on 14% and would lose all their Scottish seats to the SNP bar Ian Murray's in Edinburgh South

    https://yougov.co.uk/topics/politics/articles-reports/2019/08/08/voting-intention-con-31-lab-22-lib-dem-21-brex-14-

    That would mean the Tories have 6 less seats which means Boris is doing worse than TM and further away from an overall majority. A bit embarrassing for Boris! :smiley: That's before tactical voting is taken into account which will break UNS...
    No as the same poll has the Tories gaining at least 31 seats from Labour across GB so even with 6 less seats in Scotland that is still a net Tory gain of 25 and they only need 8 more seats on 2017 for a Tory majority
    You remind me of Adolf Hitler marshalling ghost armies to vanquish the enemy! :smiley: To be honest I wonder if the purpose of Boris Johnson is not to lead the Tories to victory but to minimise its defeat? Of course Tories would welcome a surprise victory but I suspect holding enough seats to mount a challenge a few years later against a several party Government is as good as it gets for the Tories under Boris...
    On today's Yougov poll there is no doubt the Tories will be largest party, Labour would even fall below 200 seats, it would need a Labour and SNP and LD and PC and Green Government at least to stop it, which I doubt Boris would be too bothered by, even if he falls fractionally short of a majority he would still be the strongest force at Westminster
    Yes, and it's well known fact that being the larget party - but lacking a majority - ensures strong and stable government.
    Well certainly more than a 5 party Government and Boris would win a small majority on today's Yougov anyway
    Do you really think that would be the case after 5 weeks of Nigel shouting "you promised we would have left by October 31st" for an election on November 7th / 14th when we are still in the EU...
    No as Boris will not extend beyond October 31st himself and can pitch himself against other MPs who try to do so
  • The_TaxmanThe_Taxman Posts: 2,979
    HYUFD said:

    dixiedean said:

    I would also say that I don’t think purdah rules prevent the government from taking the UK out of the EU in an election period. It is a passive occurrence and the legal default. The government has already pre-announced that it intends for the UK to leave on that date and assuming no alternative government is found, it would still be the government on exit day.

    Whether it SHOULD do that is another matter, but I don’t actually see anything constitutionally improper with it, unless someone can enlighten me?

    I would tend to agree.
    However, were Boris to win a majority on November 1st on 32% of the vote, in such a circumstance, the idea that Brexit would have been "delivered" and everything would be just fine and dandy, is stretching optimism, I reckon.
    What’s more, I think it’s not a given that Boris would win a 1 November GE. 1945 anyone? “Oh they’ve done what we needed them to do, let’s vote for someone who will spend more on schools and hospitals.”
    Given the EU will likely extend until election day that is unlikely, though yes as 2017 showed the Tories need a clear Brexit division with Labour and the LDs to win and to be the party to get Brexit done, they can probably only win 1 more term given they have been in power for 3 terms already, if this is an austerity election rather than a Brexit election then the Tories are more likely to lose.

    However this is more a 1940 general election (taken 9 years into the Tories term just like an autumn general election) as Churchill prepared for war not a 1945 general election (taken 14 years into a Tory led government) when Churchill had won the war
    The UK did not have a General election in 1940!
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 123,156

    HYUFD said:

    Yougov today has the Tories back up to 23% in Scotland with the SNP on 39%, that is a swing of just 4% from the Tories to the SNP since 2017 meaning the Tories would hold 7 out of their 13 Scottish seats ie a majority.

    SLAB though have slumped to just 12%, below the LDs on 14% and would lose all their Scottish seats to the SNP bar Ian Murray's in Edinburgh South.

    The LDs meanwhile would gain Fife North East from the SNP

    https://yougov.co.uk/topics/politics/articles-reports/2019/08/08/voting-intention-con-31-lab-22-lib-dem-21-brex-14-

    That's a bit surprising. Anything like that in 2021 would mean the pro-Indy majority in the Scottish Parliament would be kaput. 5 more years of Nicola as FM leading a minority govt with no prospect of an IndyRef to keep the troops happy. Not a pretty sight come 2026!
    Yup could even be a Davidson Government propped up by LDs, Tories plus LDs on 37%, just 2% behind SNP on 39%
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 123,156

    HYUFD said:

    dixiedean said:

    I would also say that I don’t think purdah rules prevent the government from taking the UK out of the EU in an election period. It is a passive occurrence and the legal default. The government has already pre-announced that it intends for the UK to leave on that date and assuming no alternative government is found, it would still be the government on exit day.

    Whether it SHOULD do that is another matter, but I don’t actually see anything constitutionally improper with it, unless someone can enlighten me?

    I would tend to agree.
    However, were Boris to win a majority on November 1st on 32% of the vote, in such a circumstance, the idea that Brexit would have been "delivered" and everything would be just fine and dandy, is stretching optimism, I reckon.
    What’s more, I think it’s not a given that Boris would win a 1 November GE. 1945 anyone? “Oh they’ve done what we needed them to do, let’s vote for someone who will spend more on schools and hospitals.”
    Given the EU will likely extend until election day that is unlikely, though yes as 2017 showed the Tories need a clear Brexit division with Labour and the LDs to win and to be the party to get Brexit done, they can probably only win 1 more term given they have been in power for 3 terms already, if this is an austerity election rather than a Brexit election then the Tories are more likely to lose.

    However this is more a 1940 general election (taken 9 years into the Tories term just like an autumn general election) as Churchill prepared for war not a 1945 general election (taken 14 years into a Tory led government) when Churchill had won the war
    The UK did not have a General election in 1940!
    The point is Churchill would have won it if it had
  • AlastairMeeksAlastairMeeks Posts: 30,340
    algarkirk said:

    algarkirk said:

    dixiedean said:

    Foxy said:

    I would also say that I don’t think purdah rules prevent the government from taking the UK out of the EU in an election period. It is a passive occurrence and the legal default. The government has already pre-announced that it intends for the UK to leave on that date and assuming no alternative government is found, it would still be the government on exit day.

    Whether it SHOULD do that is another matter, but I don’t actually see anything constitutionally improper with it, unless someone can enlighten me?

    I think a No Deal Brexit mid election is the way to guarantee a crisis. Not wise.

    I think that HM and her advisors would recommend an October date, and it would be hard to refuse.
    The monarch can advise, but constitutionally I think would have to defer. In pretty much every situation where a monarch has advised a PM against a course of action, but they have been determined to do the contrary, the Crown has had to roll over.
    There has seldom been a matter of such import. All this talk of the Queen getting involved in politics. She's the Head of State. It is what we pay her for.
    It is extraordinary that one of the two party leaders is Jeremy Corbyn and he is not the one determined to cause a crisis for the monarchy.
    There isn't going to be a crisis for the monarchy. The monarchy is just fine thanks. the crisis is for our political party configuration, FPTP, the FTPA and the incompetence of our political class.

    You don’t think a momentous decision that will inevitably alienate one half or the other of the population will cause them problems?
    To be honest, no. I think the monarchy could easily end up more popular than ever. I can't imagine a time when sentiment is less in favour of a politicised Head of State. (And I don't think Mr Trump has helped the republican cause much.) But for the political realm, yes. Unless something like TMs deal goes through your fears are right. It will cause everyone else problems.
    If Boris Johnson goes outside precedent, the queen sitting on her hands will be a political decision too. She is the person who has the responsibility of deciding whether to enforce precedent.
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 33,478

    GIN1138 said:

    So after Nabaviexit we've had TheEaglesExit !!!!!!! :D
    I've been away - you've followed the herd(son) and RN?

    won't be long for me I fear BUT not just yet.
    Yup, the headlong rush in to No Deal confirmed it, I couldn't disagree with a word David wrote.

    What really depressed me was the realisation that if and when Boris Johnson crashes and burns later on this year the party will not return to sanity with someone like Hunt or Stewart, but the party will double down and go for someone like Patel, Baker, or our own Corbyn Andrew Bridgen.
    You missed Mark Francois! :trollface:
    Why hasn’t Francois got a ministerial post?
    It says on wiki page that his chairmanship of the ERG makes him chief whip of that grouping. So, I doubt he could do a Government job and the ERG one. Given the purist and ideological fervour or ERG, he is not likely to give that up! :naughty:

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mark_Francois
    I suppose that’s a small mercy!
  • numbertwelvenumbertwelve Posts: 6,814

    algarkirk said:

    algarkirk said:

    dixiedean said:

    Foxy said:

    I would also say that I don’t think purdah rules prevent the government from taking the UK out of the EU in an election period. It is a passive occurrence and the legal default. The government has already pre-announced that it intends for the UK to leave on that date and assuming no alternative government is found, it would still be the government on exit day.

    Whether it SHOULD do that is another matter, but I don’t actually see anything constitutionally improper with it, unless someone can enlighten me?

    I think a No Deal Brexit mid election is the way to guarantee a crisis. Not wise.

    I think that HM and her advisors would recommend an October date, and it would be hard to refuse.
    The monarch can advise, but constitutionally I think would have to defer. In pretty much every situation where a monarch has advised a PM against a course of action, but they have been determined to do the contrary, the Crown has had to roll over.
    There has seldom been a matter of such import. All this talk of the Queen getting involved in politics. She's the Head of State. It is what we pay her for.
    It is extraordinary that one of the two party leaders is Jeremy Corbyn and he is not the one determined to cause a crisis for the monarchy.
    There isn't going to be a crisis for the monarchy. The monarchy is just fine thanks. the crisis is for our political party configuration, FPTP, the FTPA and the incompetence of our political class.

    You don’t think a momentous decision that will inevitably alienate one half or the other of the population will cause them problems?
    To be honest, no. I think the monarchy could easily end up more popular than ever. I can't imagine a time when sentiment is less in favour of a politicised Head of State. (And I don't think Mr Trump has helped the republican cause much.) But for the political realm, yes. Unless something like TMs deal goes through your fears are right. It will cause everyone else problems.
    If Boris Johnson goes outside precedent, the queen sitting on her hands will be a political decision too. She is the person who has the responsibility of deciding whether to enforce precedent.
    What is the precedent Boris is going against? I don’t think it’s not resigning. If it’s calling a GE for after Brexit, I think there’s a good chance you can argue it’s fully constitutional (although IMHO divisive and a bad decision for the country).
  • nichomarnichomar Posts: 7,483
    Redwood is a lier he ignores the possibility of an alternative PM. They get away with bloody murder and all they want to do is protect their hidden financial assets. The good thing is he may well lose his seat.
  • felixfelix Posts: 15,164

    algarkirk said:

    dixiedean said:

    Foxy said:

    I would also say that I don’t think purdah rules prevent the government from taking the UK out of the EU in an election period. It is a passive occurrence and the legal default. The government has already pre-announced that it intends for the UK to leave on that date and assuming no alternative government is found, it would still be the government on exit day.

    Whether it SHOULD do that is another matter, but I don’t actually see anything constitutionally improper with it, unless someone can enlighten me?

    I think a No Deal Brexit mid election is the way to guarantee a crisis. Not wise.

    I think that HM and her advisors would recommend an October date, and it would be hard to refuse.
    The monarch can advise, but constitutionally I think would have to defer. In pretty much every situation where a monarch has advised a PM against a course of action, but they have been determined to do the contrary, the Crown has had to roll over.
    There has seldom been a matter of such import. All this talk of the Queen getting involved in politics. She's the Head of State. It is what we pay her for.
    It is extraordinary that one of the two party leaders is Jeremy Corbyn and he is not the one determined to cause a crisis for the monarchy.
    There isn't going to be a crisis for the monarchy. The monarchy is just fine thanks. the crisis is for our political party configuration, FPTP, the FTPA and the incompetence of our political class.

    You don’t think a momentous decision that will inevitably alienate one half or the other of the population will cause them problems?
    That ship sailed with the failure to implement the referendum result.
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 119,679
    edited August 2019

    If Boris Johnson goes outside precedent, the queen sitting on her hands will be a political decision too. She is the person who has the responsibility of deciding whether to enforce precedent.

    Shouldn't we be looking at the 1975 Australian precedent?

    Boris Johnson the Gough Whitlam de nos jours?

    The Queen has no problems effectively sacking a Prime Minister?

    Note this happened three years before I was born, so I might be talking shite
  • DavidL said:

    eek said:

    DavidL said:

    No we take a clean exit because we can and its the only option available to us that respects our wishes. If there is hurt so be it. Exercising hurts but the motto there is no pain, no gain.

    I am sorry Philip but that is just nuts. It is delusional to think that we would have a "clean exit". I have argued the case that the consequences of departure with or without a deal are being grossly overstated and still believe that but to avoid perfectly sensible arrangements with our major trading partners giving us many of the advantages of membership without all the political guff and with minimal cost is, well, nuts.
    In an ideal world yes it is nuts, I completely and 100% agree.

    But a deal offering "perfectly sensible arrangements with our major trading partners giving us many of the advantages of membership without all the political guff and with minimal cost" has never been on the table.

    The backstop is political guff. It has to go. You may be OK with that guff - others are too - but for those of us who aren't which now includes the Prime Minister . . . if the EU aren't prepared to drop the political guff then what else are we supposed to do? We can't force them to give us a better offer.
    Have you read what the backstop actually is or have you based your opinion on what the papers say?
    The clue is in the name. We have the entire transition period to come up with something better. And if we don’t, well, how exactly do the EU hold us to it? We’d have the option of a no deal situation then.
    We won't have the option of a no deal situation legally because we'll be stuck in the backstop.

    I'm not going to be dishonest and say lets sign this while having zero intention of honouring the agreement. That's not a solution.
  • AlastairMeeksAlastairMeeks Posts: 30,340

    algarkirk said:

    algarkirk said:

    dixiedean said:

    Foxy said:



    I think a No Deal Brexit mid election is the way to guarantee a crisis. Not wise.

    I think that HM and her advisors would recommend an October date, and it would be hard to refuse.

    The monarch can advise, but constitutionally I think would have to defer. In pretty much every situation where a monarch has advised a PM against a course of action, but they have been determined to do the contrary, the Crown has had to roll over.
    There has seldom been a matter of such import. All this talk of the Queen getting involved in politics. She's the Head of State. It is what we pay her for.
    It is extraordinary that one of the two party leaders is Jeremy Corbyn and he is not the one determined to cause a crisis for the monarchy.
    There isn't going to be a crisis for the monarchy. The monarchy is just fine thanks. the crisis is for our political party configuration, FPTP, the FTPA and the incompetence of our political class.

    You don’t think a momentous decision that will inevitably alienate one half or the other of the population will cause them problems?
    To be honest, no. I think the monarchy could easily end up more popular than ever. I can't imagine a time when sentiment is less in favour of a politicised Head of State. (And I don't think Mr Trump has helped the republican cause much.) But for the political realm, yes. Unless something like TMs deal goes through your fears are right. It will cause everyone else problems.
    If Boris Johnson goes outside precedent, the queen sitting on her hands will be a political decision too. She is the person who has the responsibility of deciding whether to enforce precedent.
    What is the precedent Boris is going against? I don’t think it’s not resigning. If it’s calling a GE for after Brexit, I think there’s a good chance you can argue it’s fully constitutional (although IMHO divisive and a bad decision for the country).
    Imposing a long term policy decision after losing a vote of no confidence during the election period by the selection of the election date would certainly be against precedent.
  • Scott_PScott_P Posts: 51,453
    The ^&$%ing twat that schemed his way into Downing Street on the back of a campaign explicitly targeting immigrants, has announced that he will relax immigration controls as his next cunning plan.
  • numbertwelvenumbertwelve Posts: 6,814

    If Boris Johnson goes outside precedent, the queen sitting on her hands will be a political decision too. She is the person who has the responsibility of deciding whether to enforce precedent.

    Shouldn't we be looking at the 1975 Australian precedent?

    Boris Johnson the Gough Whitlam de nos jours?

    The Queen has no problems effectively sacking a Prime Minister?

    Note this happened three years before I was born, so I might be talking shite
    I may be wrong here (please do correct me if I am) but wasn’t the 1975 crisis around the failure to secure supply, and when an alternative government could prove that it could, this was the reason for the dismissal. Although I think it was unclear it could secure supply so whether that was constitutionally proper is arguable. Again, please do correct me if I’m wrong.
  • The_TaxmanThe_Taxman Posts: 2,979
    edited August 2019
    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    dixiedean said:

    I would also say that I don’t think purdah rules prevent the government from taking the UK out of the EU in an election period. It is a passive occurrence and the legal default. The government has already pre-announced that it intends for the UK to leave on that date and assuming no alternative government is found, it would still be the government on exit day.

    Whether it SHOULD do that is another matter, but I don’t actually see anything constitutionally improper with it, unless someone can enlighten me?

    I would tend to agree.
    However, were Boris to win a majority on November 1st on 32% of the vote, in such a circumstance, the idea that Brexit would have been "delivered" and everything would be just fine and dandy, is stretching optimism, I reckon.
    What’s more, I think it’s not a given that Boris would win a 1 November GE. 1945 anyone? “Oh they’ve done what we needed them to do, let’s vote for someone who will spend more on schools and hospitals.”
    Given the EU will likely extend until election day that is unlikely, though yes as 2017 showed the Tories need a clear Brexit division with Labour and the LDs to win and to be the party to get Brexit done, they can probably only win 1 more term given they have been in power for 3 terms already, if this is an austerity election rather than a Brexit election then the Tories are more likely to lose.

    However this is more a 1940 general election (taken 9 years into the Tories term just like an autumn general election) as Churchill prepared for war not a 1945 general election (taken 14 years into a Tory led government) when Churchill had won the war
    The UK did not have a General election in 1940!
    The point is Churchill would have won it if it had
    Who knows? People in 1945 thought Churchill would win as the victor of WW2 and yet Labour won a landslide! It is entirely possible that in a GE, Labour or the Liberals may have sought a mandate to sue for peace. Not much in the way of polling back then to make a fantasy House of Commons...

    The fact remains instead of seeking a mandate, the parties worked together in the National interest. I don't think Boris is remotely capable of Churchillian leadership or the Conservative party governing in the interests of the whole UK when they prioritise tax cuts for the rich because they think the rich need more money...
  • numbertwelvenumbertwelve Posts: 6,814
    edited August 2019

    algarkirk said:

    algarkirk said:

    dixiedean said:

    Foxy said:



    I think a No Deal Brexit mid election is the way to guarantee a crisis. Not wise.

    I think that HM and her advisors would recommend an October date, and it would be hard to refuse.

    The monarch can advise, but constitutionally I think would have to defer. In pretty much every situation where a monarch has advised a PM against a course of action, but they have been determined to do the contrary, the Crown has had to roll over.
    There has seldom been a matter of such import. All this talk of the Queen getting involved in politics. She's the Head of State. It is what we pay her for.
    It is extraordinary that one of the two party leaders is Jeremy Corbyn and he is not the one determined to cause a crisis for the monarchy.
    There isn't going to be a crisis for the monarchy. The monarchy is just fine thanks. the crisis is for our political party configuration, FPTP, the FTPA and the incompetence of our political class.

    You don’t think a momentous decision that will inevitably alienate one half or the other of the population will cause them problems?
    To be honest, no. I think the monarchy could easily end up more popular than ever. I can't imagine a time when sentiment is less in favour of a politicised Head of State. (And I don't think Mr Trump has helped the republican cause much.) But for the political realm, yes. Unless something like TMs deal goes through your fears are right. It will cause everyone else problems.
    If Boris Johnson goes outside precedent, the queen sitting on her hands will be a political decision too. She is the person who has the responsibility of deciding whether to enforce precedent.
    What is the precedent Boris is going against? I don’t think it’s not resigning. If it’s calling a GE for after Brexit, I think there’s a good chance you can argue it’s fully constitutional (although IMHO divisive and a bad decision for the country).
    Imposing a long term policy decision after losing a vote of no confidence during the election period by the selection of the election date would certainly be against precedent.
    But is it unconstitutional?

    It is the legal default. It is the natural consequence of the Article 50 Act.

    It has been pre-announced that HMG intend to leave the EU on 31st, deal or no deal.
  • If Boris Johnson goes outside precedent, the queen sitting on her hands will be a political decision too. She is the person who has the responsibility of deciding whether to enforce precedent.

    Shouldn't we be looking at the 1975 Australian precedent?

    Boris Johnson the Gough Whitlam de nos jours?

    The Queen has no problems effectively sacking a Prime Minister?

    Note this happened three years before I was born, so I might be talking shite
    I may be wrong here (please do correct me if I am) but wasn’t the 1975 crisis around the failure to secure supply, and when an alternative government could prove that it could, this was the reason for the dismissal. Although I think it was unclear it could secure supply so whether that was constitutionally proper is arguable. Again, please do correct me if I’m wrong.
    I was more thinking about this

    Whitlam's Labor government had been elected in 1972 with a small majority in the House of Representatives, but with the Senate balance of power being held by the Democratic Labor Party who usually supported the Liberal-Country Opposition. Another election in 1974 resulted in little change. While the Whitlam Government introduced many new policies and programs, it was also rocked by scandals and political miscalculations. In October 1975, the Opposition used its control of the Senate to defer passage of appropriation bills (needed to finance government expenditure), that had been passed by the House of Representatives. The Opposition stated that they would continue their stance unless Whitlam called an election for the House of Representatives, and urged Kerr to dismiss Whitlam unless he agreed to their demand. Whitlam believed that Kerr would not dismiss him, and Kerr did nothing to disabuse Whitlam of this notion.

    On 11 November 1975, Whitlam intended to call a half-Senate election in an attempt to break the deadlock. When he went to seek Kerr's approval of the election, Kerr instead dismissed him as Prime Minister and shortly thereafter installed Fraser in his place. Acting quickly before all ALP parliamentarians became aware of the change of government, Fraser and his allies were able to secure passage of the appropriation bills, and Kerr dissolved Parliament for a double dissolution election. Fraser and his government were returned with a massive majority in the election held the following month.


    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1975_Australian_constitutional_crisis
  • Scott_PScott_P Posts: 51,453
    HYUFD said:

    No as Boris will not extend beyond October 31st himself and can pitch himself against other MPs who try to do so

    According to Brexiteers the People voted for No Deal, but if it happens it will be because the EU forced us in to it.

    The EU forced us in to the will of the People...
  • FFS - no secret song for you lot tonight

    https://twitter.com/AberdeenFC/status/1159551269289320448
  • StuartDicksonStuartDickson Posts: 12,146
    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    Yougov today has the Tories back up to 23% in Scotland with the SNP on 39%, that is a swing of just 4% from the Tories to the SNP since 2017 meaning the Tories would hold 7 out of their 13 Scottish seats ie a majority.

    SLAB though have slumped to just 12%, below the LDs on 14% and would lose all their Scottish seats to the SNP bar Ian Murray's in Edinburgh South.

    The LDs meanwhile would gain Fife North East from the SNP

    https://yougov.co.uk/topics/politics/articles-reports/2019/08/08/voting-intention-con-31-lab-22-lib-dem-21-brex-14-

    That's a bit surprising. Anything like that in 2021 would mean the pro-Indy majority in the Scottish Parliament would be kaput. 5 more years of Nicola as FM leading a minority govt with no prospect of an IndyRef to keep the troops happy. Not a pretty sight come 2026!
    Yup could even be a Davidson Government propped up by LDs, Tories plus LDs on 37%, just 2% behind SNP on 39%
    The blind misleading the blind.
  • AlastairMeeksAlastairMeeks Posts: 30,340

    algarkirk said:

    algarkirk said:

    dixiedean said:



    There has seldom been a matter of such import. All this talk of the Queen getting involved in politics. She's the Head of State. It is what we pay her for.

    It is extraordinary that one of the two party leaders is Jeremy Corbyn and he is not the one determined to cause a crisis for the monarchy.
    There isn't going to be a crisis for the monarchy. The monarchy is just fine thanks. the crisis is for our political party configuration, FPTP, the FTPA and the incompetence of our political class.

    You don’t think a momentous decision that will inevitably alienate one half or the other of the population will cause them problems?
    To be honest, no. I think the monarchy could easily end up more popular than ever. I can't imagine a time when sentiment is less in favour of a politicised Head of State. (And I don't think Mr Trump has helped the republican cause much.) But for the political realm, yes. Unless something like TMs deal goes through your fears are right. It will cause everyone else problems.
    If Boris Johnson goes outside precedent, the queen sitting on her hands will be a political decision too. She is the person who has the responsibility of deciding whether to enforce precedent.
    What is the precedent Boris is going against? I don’t think it’s not resigning. If it’s calling a GE for after Brexit, I think there’s a good chance you can argue it’s fully constitutional (although IMHO divisive and a bad decision for the country).
    Imposing a long term policy decision after losing a vote of no confidence during the election period by the selection of the election date would certainly be against precedent.
    But is it unconstitutional?

    It is the legal default. It is the natural consequence of the Article 50 Act.

    It has been pre-announced that HMG I tend to leave the EU on 31st, deal or no deal.
    You asked if it is against precedent. I explained why it is. Now you ask me a different question.

    The government was not elected on its current policy. The date of 31 October did not figure in the 2017 election. If the current government is defeated in a vote of no confidence, you have a Prime Minister who was not put before the national electorate who does not command a majority in Parliament whose policy has no mandate of any kind, seeking to impose it outside the scope of established precedent. So yes, I’d call that unconstitutional.
  • numbertwelvenumbertwelve Posts: 6,814
    TSE - Hmm, yes, it’s certainly a murky one I’ll give you that. I guess it comes down to whether the monarch is allowed to be pro-active in seeking a particular policy action, and whether that is limited to securing supply or not (which is the natural consequence of governing) and whether that overrides the advice of the government. With Brexit, this would be a policy decision outside of the usual constitutional status quo. I think it’s quite rightly considered a controversial move but yes certainly food for thought.
  • algarkirkalgarkirk Posts: 12,573

    algarkirk said:

    algarkirk said:

    dixiedean said:

    Foxy said:



    I think a No Deal Brexit mid election is the way to guarantee a crisis. Not wise.

    I think that HM and her advisors would recommend an October date, and it would be hard to refuse.

    The monarch can advise, but constitutionally I think would have to defer. In pretty much every situation where a monarch has advised a PM against a course of action, but they have been determined to do the contrary, the Crown has had to roll over.
    There has seldom been a matter of such import. All this talk of the Queen getting involved in politics. She's the Head of State. It is what we pay her for.
    It is extraordinary that one of the two party leaders is Jeremy Corbyn and he is not the one determined to cause a crisis for the monarchy.
    There isn't going to be a crisis for the monarchy. The monarchy is just fine thanks. the crisis is for our political party configuration, FPTP, the FTPA and the incompetence of our political class.

    You don’t think a momentous decision that will inevitably alienate one half or the other of the population will cause them problems?
    To be honest, no. I think the monarchy could easily end up more popular than ever. I can't imagine a time when sentiment is less in favour of a politicised Head of State. (And I don't think Mr Trump has helped the republican cause much.) But for the political realm, yes. Unless something like TMs deal goes through your fears are right. It will cause everyone else problems.
    If Boris Johnson goes outside precedent, the queen sitting on her hands will be a political decision too. She is the person who has the responsibility of deciding whether to enforce precedent.
    What is the precedent Boris is going against? I don’t think it’s not resigning. If it’s calling a GE for after Brexit, I think there’s a good chance you can argue it’s fully constitutional (although IMHO divisive and a bad decision for the country).
    Imposing a long term policy decision after losing a vote of no confidence during the election period by the selection of the election date would certainly be against precedent.
    Not convinced. Parliament has legislated for leaving, it has failed to agree with a moderate deal, and has signally failed to provide an alternative. Article 50 is EU law. BTW, none of this has happened yet, nor will I I think. A VONC is now very unlikely.
  • The_TaxmanThe_Taxman Posts: 2,979

    algarkirk said:

    algarkirk said:

    dixiedean said:



    There has seldom been a matter of such import. All this talk of the Queen getting involved in politics. She's the Head of State. It is what we pay her for.

    It is extraordinary that one of the two party leaders is Jeremy Corbyn and he is not the one determined to cause a crisis for the monarchy.
    There isn't going to be a crisis for the monarchy. The monarchy is just fine thanks. the crisis is for our political party configuration, FPTP, the FTPA and the incompetence of our political class.

    You don’t think a momentous decision that will inevitably alienate one half or the other of the population will cause them problems?
    To be honest, no. I think the monarchy could easily end up more popular than ever. I can't imagine a time when sentiment is less in favour of a politicised Head of State. Unless something like TMs deal goes through your fears are right. It will cause everyone else problems.
    If Boris Johnson goes outside precedent, the queen sitting on her hands will be a political decision too. She is the person who has the responsibility of deciding whether to enforce precedent.
    What is the precedent Boris is going against? I don’t think it’s not resigning. If it’s calling a GE for after Brexit, I think there’s a good chance you can argue it’s fully constitutional (although IMHO divisive and a bad decision for the country).
    Imposing a long term policy decision after losing a vote of no confidence during the election period by the selection of the election date would certainly be against precedent.
    But is it unconstitutional?

    It is the legal default. It is the natural consequence of the Article 50 Act.

    It has been pre-announced that HMG I tend to leave the EU on 31st, deal or no deal.
    You asked if it is against precedent. I explained why it is. Now you ask me a different question.

    The government was not elected on its current policy. The date of 31 October did not figure in the 2017 election. If the current government is defeated in a vote of no confidence, you have a Prime Minister who was not put before the national electorate who does not command a majority in Parliament whose policy has no mandate of any kind, seeking to impose it outside the scope of established precedent. So yes, I’d call that unconstitutional.
    +1 I agree with your comment 100%!
  • StuartDicksonStuartDickson Posts: 12,146
    Scott_P said:

    The ^&$%ing twat that schemed his way into Downing Street on the back of a campaign explicitly targeting immigrants, has announced that he will relax immigration controls as his next cunning plan.


    It’s your party. Proud of your membership?
  • justin124justin124 Posts: 11,527
    felix said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    I am sure the LDs will be grateful that a core voter such as yourself (voting LD in 2017 when the LDs got 7% and the Tories got 42%) will be voting LD again at the next general election
    Unlike you, my vote in 2017 helped the Tories gain a seat from Labour.

    You lose seats to the opponents of the Tories, I help them gain them.
    Even in Hallam 23% voted for the Tory candidate Ian Walker at the last general election and we held the district seat the LDs were targeting in Epping this year
    I correctly recognised the Tories weren't going to win Hallam so swapped my vote with a Lib Dem in North East Derbyshire to help the Tories gain the seat.

    Tell me about your council seat you personally fought (and lost) in August 2017.
    So you still voted LD then in a seat the Tories held until 1997.

    I will tell you about the last district seat I fought in 2018 certainly when I increased the Tory vote to 554 from the 420 the Tories got the last time the seat was up in 2014
    It is twenty seven years since the Tories last won Hallam, things have changed.

    But thanks for confirming you keep on losing seats/elections, personally I reckon the reason you keep on losing is the people in Essex don't want to vote for a diehard remainer like you.
    This is magnificent. Tories taking the piss out of each other can only be good for the country.
    HYUFD isn't a Tory.

    In 2001 he voted for Ken Clarke, the guy who wanted to take us in to the Euro, and in 2005 he voted the David Davis, the civil liberties guy, HYUFD is a Lib Dem, that's even before you factor in that he voted for Remain.
    How about cutting out the personal attacks. You demean the site.
    You are not well placed to make such a comment.
  • AlastairMeeksAlastairMeeks Posts: 30,340
    algarkirk said:

    algarkirk said:

    algarkirk said:

    dixiedean said:



    There has seldom been a matter of such import. All this talk of the Queen getting involved in politics. She's the Head of State. It is what we pay her for.

    It is extraordinary that one of the two party leaders is Jeremy Corbyn and he is not the one determined to cause a crisis for the monarchy.
    There isn't going to be a crisis for the monarchy. The monarchy is just fine thanks. the crisis is for our political party configuration, FPTP, the FTPA and the incompetence of our political class.

    You don’t think a momentous decision that will inevitably alienate one half or the other of the population will cause them problems?
    To be honest, no. I think the monarchy could easily end up more popular than ever. I can't imagine a time when sentiment is less in favour of a politicised Head of State. (And I don't think Mr Trump has helped the republican cause much.) But for the political realm, yes. Unless something like TMs deal goes through your fears are right. It will cause everyone else problems.
    If Boris Johnson goes outside precedent, the queen sitting on her hands will be a political decision too. She is the person who has the responsibility of deciding whether to enforce precedent.
    What is the precedent Boris is going against? I don’t think it’s not resigning. If it’s calling a GE for after Brexit, I think there’s a good chance you can argue it’s fully constitutional (although IMHO divisive and a bad decision for the country).
    Imposing a long term policy decision after losing a vote of no confidence during the election period by the selection of the election date would certainly be against precedent.
    Not convinced. Parliament has legislated for leaving, it has failed to agree with a moderate deal, and has signally failed to provide an alternative. Article 50 is EU law. BTW, none of this has happened yet, nor will I I think. A VONC is now very unlikely.
    Right now I think the single most likely outcome is a panicky revocation of the Article 50 notice, perhaps in the 14 day vote of no confidence period. Boris Johnson threatening to disregard democratic norms effectively forces his opponents in that direction.
  • numbertwelvenumbertwelve Posts: 6,814
    Mr Meeks, I’d call it divisive and undemocratic. I wouldn’t call it unconstitutional for the reasons I’ve set out. As for precedent, I’m not sure there IS a precedent where something so seismic is the legal default and takes place in an election period, so yes literally I think it is without precedent, but I dont believe that just because it hasn’t happened before it means that it’s by definition unconstitutional
  • AlastairMeeksAlastairMeeks Posts: 30,340

    Mr Meeks, I’d call it divisive and undemocratic. I wouldn’t call it unconstitutional for the reasons I’ve set out. As for precedent, I’m not sure there IS a precedent where something so seismic is the legal default and takes place in an election period, so yes literally I think it is without precedent, but I dont believe that just because it hasn’t happened before it means that it’s by definition unconstitutional

    As I said, whatever the Queen decided in those circumstances would cause huge ructions.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 123,156
    Scott_P said:

    The ^&$%ing twat that schemed his way into Downing Street on the back of a campaign explicitly targeting immigrants, has announced that he will relax immigration controls as his next cunning plan.

    No, he will replace free movement from the EU with a skills based migration system
  • numbertwelvenumbertwelve Posts: 6,814

    Mr Meeks, I’d call it divisive and undemocratic. I wouldn’t call it unconstitutional for the reasons I’ve set out. As for precedent, I’m not sure there IS a precedent where something so seismic is the legal default and takes place in an election period, so yes literally I think it is without precedent, but I dont believe that just because it hasn’t happened before it means that it’s by definition unconstitutional

    As I said, whatever the Queen decided in those circumstances would cause huge ructions.
    And I agree with you. We’re in for a bumpy ride.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 123,156
    edited August 2019

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    dixiedean said:

    I would also say that I don’t think purdah rules prevent the government from taking the UK out of the EU in an election period. It is a passive occurrence and the legal default. The government has already pre-announced that it intends for the UK to leave on that date and assuming no alternative government is found, it would still be the government on exit day.

    Whether it SHOULD do that is another matter, but I don’t actually see anything constitutionally improper with it, unless someone can enlighten me?

    I would tend to agree.
    However, were Boris to win a majority on November .
    What’s more, I think it’s not a given that Boris would win a 1 November GE. 1945 anyone? “Oh they’ve done what we needed them to do, let’s vote for someone who will spend more on schools and hospitals.”
    Given the EU will likely extend until election day that is unlikely, though yes as 2017 showed the Tories need a clear Brexit division with Labour and the LDs to win and to be the party to get Brexit done, they can probably only win 1 more term given they have been in power for 3 terms already, if this is an austerity election rather than a Brexit election then the Tories are more likely to lose.

    However this is more a 1940 general election (taken 9 years into the Tories term just like an autumn general election) as Churchill prepared for war not a 1945 general election (taken 14 years into a Tory led government) when Churchill had won the war
    The UK did not have a General election in 1940!
    The point is Churchill would have won it if it had
    Who knows? People in 1945 thought Churchill would win as the victor of WW2 and yet Labour won a landslide! It is entirely possible that in a GE, Labour or the Liberals may have sought a mandate to sue for peace. Not much in the way of polling back then to make a fantasy House of Commons...

    The fact remains instead of seeking a mandate, the parties worked together in the National interest. I don't think Boris is remotely capable of Churchillian leadership or the Conservative party governing in the interests of the whole UK when they prioritise tax cuts for the rich because they think the rich need more money...
    WW2 had ended in 1945 in Europe, in 1940 Britain was facing Nazi invasion, Churchill would obviously have won.

    Boris is also pushing tax cuts and more money for the NHS rather than May's Dementia tax and 'no magic money tree' as well as committing to deliver Brexit
  • Scott_PScott_P Posts: 51,453

    It’s your party.

    No, it isn't.
  • Scott_PScott_P Posts: 51,453
    HYUFD said:

    No, he will replace free movement from the EU with a skills based migration system

    https://twitter.com/Reuters/status/1159548915164880899
  • algarkirk said:

    algarkirk said:

    dixiedean said:

    Foxy said:



    I think a No Deal Brexit mid election is the way to guarantee a crisis. Not wise.

    I think that HM and her advisors would recommend an October date, and it would be hard to refuse.

    The monarch can advise, but constitutionally I think would have to defer. In pretty much every situation where a monarch has advised a PM against a course of action, but they have been determined to do the contrary, the Crown has had to roll over.
    There has seldom been a matter of such import. All this talk of the Queen getting involved in politics. She's the Head of State. It is what we pay her for.
    It is extraordinary that one of the two party leaders is Jeremy Corbyn and he is not the one determined to cause a crisis for the monarchy.
    There isn't going to be a crisis for the monarchy. The monarchy is just fine thanks. the crisis is for our political party configuration, FPTP, the FTPA and the incompetence of our political class.

    You don’t think a momentous decision that will inevitably alienate one half or the other of the population will cause them problems?
    To be honest, no. I think the monarchy could easily end up more popular than ever. I can't imagine a time when sentiment is less in favour of a politicised Head of State. (And I don't think Mr Trump has helped the republican cause much.) But for the political realm, yes. Unless something like TMs deal goes through your fears are right. It will cause everyone else problems.
    If Boris Johnson goes outside precedent, the queen sitting on her hands will be a political decision too. She is the person who has the responsibility of deciding whether to enforce precedent.
    What is the precedent Boris is going against? I don’t think it’s not resigning. If it’s calling a GE for after Brexit, I think there’s a good chance you can argue it’s fully constitutional (although IMHO divisive and a bad decision for the country).
    Imposing a long term policy decision after losing a vote of no confidence during the election period by the selection of the election date would certainly be against precedent.
    If you don't want to risk October 31st falling during GE purdah, don't call a chuffing VONC.
  • PClippPClipp Posts: 2,138
    Scott_P said:

    The ^&$%ing twat that schemed his way into Downing Street on the back of a campaign explicitly targeting immigrants, has announced that he will relax immigration controls as his next cunning plan.

    Is that Johnson or Cummings? I get confused.
  • justin124justin124 Posts: 11,527
    Today's Yougov poll implies a 16% swing from Labour to LibDem - which would result in five gains at Labour expense - Sheffield Hallam - Leeds NW - Cambridge - Bermondsey - and Burnley. In reality, I suspect that only Hallam would be likely to fall.
  • TheWhiteRabbitTheWhiteRabbit Posts: 12,454

    Foxy said:

    HYUFD said:
    So that's 11.01 pm on the 31st October then......
    Yes, I am sure the US is going to give us everything we want and comparatively a better deal than the one we have the EU? In the real world they are going to screw us relentlessly for every concession due to the 5:1 or 6:1 bigger economic weight they have comparatively..
    For example:

    https://twitter.com/foxinsoxuk/status/1158254546256355328?s=19
    Not a good deal for UK taxpayers who pay for the NHS or the recipients of prescribed treatments! This is just crazy... :disappointed:
    How does a free trade deal oblige the NHS to ditch its current suppliers and accept ones which are five times more expensive?
  • algarkirkalgarkirk Posts: 12,573

    Mr Meeks, I’d call it divisive and undemocratic. I wouldn’t call it unconstitutional for the reasons I’ve set out. As for precedent, I’m not sure there IS a precedent where something so seismic is the legal default and takes place in an election period, so yes literally I think it is without precedent, but I dont believe that just because it hasn’t happened before it means that it’s by definition unconstitutional

    As I said, whatever the Queen decided in those circumstances would cause huge ructions.
    Under the FTPA HM decides the date of election on the recommendation of the PM. The statute does not give HM a discretion (FWIW) - it doesn't say that HM must have due regard or whatever. The wording appears absolute. HM's safe course is to stick to the legislation and of course her own courts can decide whether the recommendation of the PM was rational/lawful. HM can and of course will keep out of it.

    Anyway, it won't happen like that. Chances are a tweaked deal will get through. And because Boris plainly under the clear words of the FTPA can defer an election, there won't be a VONC.

  • YorkcityYorkcity Posts: 4,382

    algarkirk said:

    algarkirk said:

    dixiedean said:

    Foxy said:



    I think a No Deal Brexit mid election is the way to guarantee a crisis. Not wise.

    I think that HM and her advisors would recommend an October date, and it would be hard to refuse.

    The monarch can advise, but constitutionally I think would have to defer. In pretty much every situation where a monarch has advised a PM against a course of action, but they have been determined to do the contrary, the Crown has had to roll over.
    There has seldom been a matter of such import. All this talk of the Queen getting involved in politics. She's the Head of State. It is what we pay her for.
    It is extraordinary that one of the two party leaders is Jeremy Corbyn and he is not the one determined to cause a crisis for the monarchy.
    There isn't going to be a crisis for the monarchy. The monarchy is just fine thanks. the crisis is for our political party configuration, FPTP, the FTPA and the incompetence of our political class.

    You don’t think a momentous decision that will inevitably alienate one half or the other of the population will cause them problems?
    To be honest, no. I think the monarchy could easily end up more popular than ever. I can't imagine a time when sentiment is less in favour of a politicised Head of State. (And I don't think Mr Trump has helped the republican cause much.) But for the political realm, yes. Unless something like TMs deal goes through your fears are right. It will cause everyone else problems.
    If Boris Johnson goes outside precedent, the queen sitting on her hands will be a political decision too. She is the person who has the responsibility of deciding whether to enforce precedent.
    What is the precedent Boris is going against? I don’t think it’s not resigning. If it’s calling a GE for after Brexit, I think there’s a good chance you can argue it’s fully constitutional (although IMHO divisive and a bad decision for the country).
    Imposing a long term policy decision after losing a vote of no confidence during the election period by the selection of the election date would certainly be against precedent.
    If you don't want to risk October 31st falling during GE purdah, don't call a chuffing VONC.
    I agree , makes sense.
    Why Labour Mps would want an election with current polls is a mystery.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 57,237

    DavidL said:

    eek said:

    DavidL said:

    No we take a clean exit because we can and its the only option available to us that respects our wishes. If there is hurt so be it. Exercising hurts but the motto there is no pain, no gain.

    I am sorry Philip but that is just nuts. It is delusional to think that we would have a "clean exit". I have argued the case that the consequences of departure with or without a deal are being grossly overstated and still believe that but to avoid perfectly sensible arrangements with our major trading partners giving us many of the advantages of membership without all the political guff and with minimal cost is, well, nuts.
    In an ideal world yes it is nuts, I completely and 100% agree.

    But a deal offering "perfectly sensible arrangements with our major trading partners giving us many of the advantages of membership without all the political guff and with minimal cost" has never been on the table.

    The backstop is political guff. It has to go. You may be OK with that guff - others are too - but for those of us who aren't which now includes the Prime Minister . . . if the EU aren't prepared to drop the political guff then what else are we supposed to do? We can't force them to give us a better offer.
    Have you read what the backstop actually is or have you based your opinion on what the papers say?
    The clue is in the name. We have the entire transition period to come up with something better. And if we don’t, well, how exactly do the EU hold us to it? We’d have the option of a no deal situation then.
    We won't have the option of a no deal situation legally because we'll be stuck in the backstop.

    I'm not going to be dishonest and say lets sign this while having zero intention of honouring the agreement. That's not a solution.
    We would honour the agreement so long as they honoured their side.

    Your entire hatred of the backstop is based on assuming the EU is not sincere in wanting either an FTA or a technical solution. (And if they weren't, we would be quite within our rights to leave.)

    Not only that, but you then go on to propose breaking existing treaty commitments under the GATT 1974 and 1994 Treaties. Are those treaties not sacred too?
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 123,156
    edited August 2019
    Scott_P said:

    HYUFD said:

    No, he will replace free movement from the EU with a skills based migration system

    https://twitter.com/Reuters/status/1159548915164880899
    Yes highly skilled migrants, it was bar and cafe workers and taxi drivers and hospitality and construction and factory and shop workers Leavers wanted fewer of not scientists, scientists are not competition for the average Hartlepool, Thurrock or Barnsley Leave voter and their wages
  • kyf_100kyf_100 Posts: 4,951
    HYUFD said:

    Scott_P said:

    HYUFD said:

    No, he will replace free movement from the EU with a skills based migration system

    https://twitter.com/Reuters/status/1159548915164880899
    Yes highly skilled migrants, it was bar and cafe workers and taxi drivers and hospitality and construction and factory and shop workers Leavers wanted fewer of not scientists, scientists are not competition for the average Hartlepool, Thurrock or Barnsley Leave voter
    It's almost like having control of our borders allows us to choose more immigrants with skills we need and fewer with skills (or lack of skills) we don't... funny that!
  • StuartDicksonStuartDickson Posts: 12,146
    Scott_P said:

    It’s your party.

    No, it isn't.
    News for me. Have you joined another party?
  • Scott_PScott_P Posts: 51,453

    Have you joined another party?

    No
  • FF43FF43 Posts: 17,208

    Foxy said:

    HYUFD said:
    So that's 11.01 pm on the 31st October then......
    Yes, I am sure the US is going to give us everything we want and comparatively a better deal than the one we have the EU? In the real world they are going to screw us relentlessly for every concession due to the 5:1 or 6:1 bigger economic weight they have comparatively..
    For example:

    https://twitter.com/foxinsoxuk/status/1158254546256355328?s=19
    Not a good deal for UK taxpayers who pay for the NHS or the recipients of prescribed treatments! This is just crazy... :disappointed:
    How does a free trade deal oblige the NHS to ditch its current suppliers and accept ones which are five times more expensive?
    Because the US see restrictions on medicines on grounds of effectiveness or value for money to be restrictions on trade. So NICE etc will be forbidden by any US trade deal.
  • EndillionEndillion Posts: 4,976
    TOPPING said:

    First off the Queen isn't going to get involved in anything. It would be the end of the monarchy.

    If anyone is going to do anything it will be a politician.

    Second, what the politicians decide to do will be according to the precedent and protocol.

    There is no precedent. The FTPA is only eight years old, and this has never happened in that time.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 123,156
    kyf_100 said:

    HYUFD said:

    Scott_P said:

    HYUFD said:

    No, he will replace free movement from the EU with a skills based migration system

    https://twitter.com/Reuters/status/1159548915164880899
    Yes highly skilled migrants, it was bar and cafe workers and taxi drivers and hospitality and construction and factory and shop workers Leavers wanted fewer of not scientists, scientists are not competition for the average Hartlepool, Thurrock or Barnsley Leave voter
    It's almost like having control of our borders allows us to choose more immigrants with skills we need and fewer with skills (or lack of skills) we don't... funny that!
    Exactly, we need more highly skilled doctors and nurses, scientists and engineers not more bar workers, factory and warehouse and building site workers
  • AlastairMeeksAlastairMeeks Posts: 30,340
    algarkirk said:

    Mr Meeks, I’d call it divisive and undemocratic. I wouldn’t call it unconstitutional for the reasons I’ve set out. As for precedent, I’m not sure there IS a precedent where something so seismic is the legal default and takes place in an election period, so yes literally I think it is without precedent, but I dont believe that just because it hasn’t happened before it means that it’s by definition unconstitutional

    As I said, whatever the Queen decided in those circumstances would cause huge ructions.
    Under the FTPA HM decides the date of election on the recommendation of the PM. The statute does not give HM a discretion (FWIW) - it doesn't say that HM must have due regard or whatever. The wording appears absolute. HM's safe course is to stick to the legislation and of course her own courts can decide whether the recommendation of the PM was rational/lawful. HM can and of course will keep out of it.

    Anyway, it won't happen like that. Chances are a tweaked deal will get through. And because Boris plainly under the clear words of the FTPA can defer an election, there won't be a VONC.

    My view is that Parliament will take each step singly.

    So it will pass a vote of no confidence, then it will panic. Exactly what it will do in the panic I’m not sure, but it will do something. It is likely to be highly unpredictable.
  • Scott_PScott_P Posts: 51,453
    HYUFD said:

    not more bar workers, factory and warehouse and building site workers

    Because factories and warehouses are closing, so they won't need new housing and can't afford to go to bars.

    Got it.
  • Scott_P said:
    If we can get cheap pork from USA then why would we not want that?

    He says that like its a price not a benefit.
  • Gabs2Gabs2 Posts: 1,268
    FF43 said:

    Foxy said:

    HYUFD said:
    So that's 11.01 pm on the 31st October then......
    Yes, I am sure the US is going to give us everything we want and comparatively a better deal than the one we have the EU? In the real world they are going to screw us relentlessly for every concession due to the 5:1 or 6:1 bigger economic weight they have comparatively..
    For example:

    https://twitter.com/foxinsoxuk/status/1158254546256355328?s=19
    Not a good deal for UK taxpayers who pay for the NHS or the recipients of prescribed treatments! This is just crazy... :disappointed:
    How does a free trade deal oblige the NHS to ditch its current suppliers and accept ones which are five times more expensive?
    Because the US see restrictions on medicines on grounds of effectiveness or value for money to be restrictions on trade. So NICE etc will be forbidden by any US trade deal.
    Did they do this for TPP before they pulled out? Genuine question.

    It seems to me that there are two countries and two sets of countries developing common standards that could win out globally:

    USA
    China
    EU
    CPTPP
  • OllyTOllyT Posts: 5,006
    dixiedean said:

    alex. said:

    I remain mystified as to quite what U.K. objectives from a trade deal with the US will be? And what they will be prepared to concede to achieve them? Have any of the leading Brexiteers provided much illumination on this?

    They seem remarkably unforthcoming and incurious when it comes to details of any kind on any topic really.
    I think "clueless"is the word you are searching for.
  • Scott_PScott_P Posts: 51,453

    If we can get cheap pork from USA then why would we not want that?

    Because they have lower food standards.

    Which bit of that is confusing you?
  • rcs1000 said:

    We would honour the agreement so long as they honoured their side.

    Your entire hatred of the backstop is based on assuming the EU is not sincere in wanting either an FTA or a technical solution. (And if they weren't, we would be quite within our rights to leave.)

    Not only that, but you then go on to propose breaking existing treaty commitments under the GATT 1974 and 1994 Treaties. Are those treaties not sacred too?

    No, my hatred of the backstop is that it is unacceptable to have another countries Parliament set laws our Parliament should be setting, when we have no MPs/MEPs in their Parliament. No ifs, no buts.

    I don't propose breaking any existing commitments.
  • Scott_P said:

    If we can get cheap pork from USA then why would we not want that?

    Because they have lower food standards.

    Which bit of that is confusing you?
    Worse than horsemeat as beef?

    Their standards are fine.
  • alex.alex. Posts: 4,658

    Scott_P said:
    If we can get cheap pork from USA then why would we not want that?

    He says that like its a price not a benefit.

    Scott_P said:
    If we can get cheap pork from USA then why would we not want that?

    He says that like its a price not a benefit.
    Are you serious? The objective of free trade deals is to reduce external barriers for your home producers. Offering access to your own market is your bargaining chip.

  • rcs1000 said:

    We would honour the agreement so long as they honoured their side.

    Your entire hatred of the backstop is based on assuming the EU is not sincere in wanting either an FTA or a technical solution. (And if they weren't, we would be quite within our rights to leave.)

    Not only that, but you then go on to propose breaking existing treaty commitments under the GATT 1974 and 1994 Treaties. Are those treaties not sacred too?

    No, my hatred of the backstop is that it is unacceptable to have another countries Parliament set laws our Parliament should be setting, when we have no MPs/MEPs in their Parliament. No ifs, no buts.

    I don't propose breaking any existing commitments.
    What's your view on Judicial Committee of the Privy Council?
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 21,298
    edited August 2019
    Scott_P said:
    £2bn less to the Exchequer.
    There’s £38mn less a week right there...
  • algarkirk said:

    Mr Meeks, I’d call it divisive and undemocratic. I wouldn’t call it unconstitutional for the reasons I’ve set out. As for precedent, I’m not sure there IS a precedent where something so seismic is the legal default and takes place in an election period, so yes literally I think it is without precedent, but I dont believe that just because it hasn’t happened before it means that it’s by definition unconstitutional

    As I said, whatever the Queen decided in those circumstances would cause huge ructions.
    Under the FTPA HM decides the date of election on the recommendation of the PM. The statute does not give HM a discretion (FWIW) - it doesn't say that HM must have due regard or whatever. The wording appears absolute. HM's safe course is to stick to the legislation and of course her own courts can decide whether the recommendation of the PM was rational/lawful. HM can and of course will keep out of it.

    Anyway, it won't happen like that. Chances are a tweaked deal will get through. And because Boris plainly under the clear words of the FTPA can defer an election, there won't be a VONC.

    My view is that Parliament will take each step singly.

    So it will pass a vote of no confidence, then it will panic. Exactly what it will do in the panic I’m not sure, but it will do something. It is likely to be highly unpredictable.
    Passing a VONC is a dangerous move. It gives them just 2 weeks to find a solution, if Boris can stall them for 2 weeks its over. If there's no VONC they've got 8 weeks to find a solution.
  • alex. said:

    Scott_P said:
    If we can get cheap pork from USA then why would we not want that?

    He says that like its a price not a benefit.

    Scott_P said:
    If we can get cheap pork from USA then why would we not want that?

    He says that like its a price not a benefit.
    Are you serious? The objective of free trade deals is to reduce external barriers for your home producers. Offering access to your own market is your bargaining chip.

    Yes its a chip and its a chip we should use. Plus its not a price its a benefit for consumers - instead of paying over the odds for pork we can get it cheaper.

    Viewing it as an unacceptable price is absurd.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 123,156
    Scott_P said:

    HYUFD said:

    not more bar workers, factory and warehouse and building site workers

    Because factories and warehouses are closing, so they won't need new housing and can't afford to go to bars.

    Got it.
    Any British worker can do that, you do not need to be very highly skilled to do those jobs
  • justin124justin124 Posts: 11,527
    Yorkcity said:

    algarkirk said:

    algarkirk said:

    dixiedean said:

    Foxy said:



    I think a No Deal Brexit mid election is the way to guarantee a crisis. Not wise.

    I think that HM and her advisors would recommend an October date, and it would be hard to refuse.

    The monarch can advise, but constitutionally I think would have to defer. In pretty much every situation where a monarch has advised a PM against a course of action, but they have been determined to do the contrary, the Crown has had to roll over.
    There has seldom been a matter of such import. All this talk of the Queen getting involved in politics. She's the Head of State. It is what we pay her for.


    You don’t think a momentous decision that will inevitably alienate one half or the other of the population will cause them problems?
    To be honest, no. I think the monarchy could easily end up more popular than ever. I can't imagine a time when sentiment is less in favour of a politicised Head of State. (And I don't think Mr Trump has helped the republican cause much.) But for the political realm, yes. Unless something like TMs deal goes through your fears are right. It will cause everyone else problems.
    If Boris Johnson goes outside precedent, the queen sitting on her hands will be a political decision too. She is the person who has the responsibility of deciding whether to enforce precedent.
    What is the precedent Boris is going against? I don’t think it’s not resigning. If it’s calling a GE for after Brexit, I think there’s a good chance you can argue it’s fully constitutional (although IMHO divisive and a bad decision for the country).
    Imposing a long term policy decision after losing a vote of no confidence during the election period by the selection of the election date would certainly be against precedent.
    If you don't want to risk October 31st falling during GE purdah, don't call a chuffing VONC.
    I agree , makes sense.
    Why Labour Mps would want an election with current polls is a mystery.
    Comres has Labour ahead! Opinium pretty neck and neck.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 42,992
    Endillion said:

    TOPPING said:

    First off the Queen isn't going to get involved in anything. It would be the end of the monarchy.

    If anyone is going to do anything it will be a politician.

    Second, what the politicians decide to do will be according to the precedent and protocol.

    There is no precedent. The FTPA is only eight years old, and this has never happened in that time.
    I hear you but HMQ is not going to get involved meaningfully
  • rcs1000 said:

    We would honour the agreement so long as they honoured their side.

    Your entire hatred of the backstop is based on assuming the EU is not sincere in wanting either an FTA or a technical solution. (And if they weren't, we would be quite within our rights to leave.)

    Not only that, but you then go on to propose breaking existing treaty commitments under the GATT 1974 and 1994 Treaties. Are those treaties not sacred too?

    No, my hatred of the backstop is that it is unacceptable to have another countries Parliament set laws our Parliament should be setting, when we have no MPs/MEPs in their Parliament. No ifs, no buts.

    I don't propose breaking any existing commitments.
    What's your view on Judicial Committee of the Privy Council?
    Not much of one TBH. AFAIK its a final appeal court for a few territories that have chosen to remain under its purview. That's their choice. Any of them that wanted to be independent are welcome to leave it and quite right too.
  • CyclefreeCyclefree Posts: 25,318
    H

    algarkirk said:

    algarkirk said:

    dixiedean said:


    It is extraordinary that one of the two party leaders is Jeremy Corbyn and he is not the one determined to cause a crisis for the monarchy.
    There isn't going to be a crisis for the monarchy. The monarchy is just fine thanks. the crisis is for our political party configuration, FPTP, the FTPA and the incompetence of our political class.

    You don’t think a momentous decision that will inevitably alienate one half or the other of the population will cause them problems?
    To be honest, no. I think the monarchy could easily end up more popular than ever. I can't imagine a time when sentiment is less in favour of a politicised Head of State. (And I don't think Mr Trump has helped the republican cause much.) But for the political realm, yes. Unless something like TMs deal goes through your fears are right. It will cause everyone else problems.
    If Boris Johnson goes outside precedent, the queen sitting on her hands will be a political decision too. She is the person who has the responsibility of deciding whether to enforce precedent.
    What is the precedent Boris is going against? I don’t think it’s not resigning. If it’s calling a GE for after Brexit, I think there’s a good chance you can argue it’s fully constitutional (although IMHO divisive and a bad decision for the country).
    Imposing a long term policy decision after losing a vote of no confidence during the election period by the selection of the election date would certainly be against precedent.
    But is it unconstitutional?

    It is the legal default. It is the natural consequence of the Article 50 Act.

    It has been pre-announced that HMG I tend to leave the EU on 31st, deal or no deal.
    You asked if it is against precedent. I explained why it is. Now you ask me a different question.

    The government was not elected on its current policy. The date of 31 October did not figure in the 2017 election. If the current government is defeated in a vote of no confidence, you have a Prime Minister who was not put before the national electorate who does not command a majority in Parliament whose policy has no mandate of any kind, seeking to impose it outside the scope of established precedent. So yes, I’d call that unconstitutional.
    Thank God! That was the whole point of my header this morning. I’m glad I’m not alone.
  • EndillionEndillion Posts: 4,976

    algarkirk said:

    Mr Meeks, I’d call it divisive and undemocratic. I wouldn’t call it unconstitutional for the reasons I’ve set out. As for precedent, I’m not sure there IS a precedent where something so seismic is the legal default and takes place in an election period, so yes literally I think it is without precedent, but I dont believe that just because it hasn’t happened before it means that it’s by definition unconstitutional

    As I said, whatever the Queen decided in those circumstances would cause huge ructions.
    Under the FTPA HM decides the date of election on the recommendation of the PM. The statute does not give HM a discretion (FWIW) - it doesn't say that HM must have due regard or whatever. The wording appears absolute. HM's safe course is to stick to the legislation and of course her own courts can decide whether the recommendation of the PM was rational/lawful. HM can and of course will keep out of it.

    Anyway, it won't happen like that. Chances are a tweaked deal will get through. And because Boris plainly under the clear words of the FTPA can defer an election, there won't be a VONC.

    My view is that Parliament will take each step singly.

    So it will pass a vote of no confidence, then it will panic. Exactly what it will do in the panic I’m not sure, but it will do something. It is likely to be highly unpredictable.
    Passing a VONC is a dangerous move. It gives them just 2 weeks to find a solution, if Boris can stall them for 2 weeks its over. If there's no VONC they've got 8 weeks to find a solution.
    Technically they've got up to 5 and a bit weeks to find a solution, then two weeks to implement it. It won't be enough, though. Alastair is entirely correct.
  • Scott_PScott_P Posts: 51,453
    HYUFD said:

    Any British worker can do that, you do not need to be very highly skilled to do those jobs

    As you pointed out, there will be fewer of those jobs for British workers.

    Win, win.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 48,733
    nichomar said:

    rcs1000 said:

    HYUFD said:
    So that's 11.01 pm on the 31st October then......
    Do you think Conservative MPs from rural seats would welcome US agricultural products coming into the UK tariff free?

    I ask this, because the Conservative Party doesn't actually have much of a majority, and it's by no means clear that the DUP, who have lots of farmers as members, will be keen either.

    Specifically, do you think those Conservative MPs with a long history of opposing GM crops, such as Zac Goldsmith, will now be in favour?
    I’m afraid no one wants to discus tariff issues on here I’ve tried for three days to get a discussion going because I want to understand the issues involved.

    Foxy said:

    HYUFD said:
    So that's 11.01 pm on the 31st October then......
    Yes, I am sure the US is going to give us everything we want and comparatively a better deal than the one we have the EU? In the real world they are going to screw us relentlessly for every concession due to the 5:1 or 6:1 bigger economic weight they have comparatively..
    For example:

    https://twitter.com/foxinsoxuk/status/1158254546256355328?s=19
    Not a good deal for UK taxpayers who pay for the NHS or the recipients of prescribed treatments! This is just crazy... :disappointed:
    How does a free trade deal oblige the NHS to ditch its current suppliers and accept ones which are five times more expensive?
    I suppose Big Pharma would see it as the ending of monopoly purchasing by the NHS, same as in the States.

    Evey advantage being touted seems to be America First, from Chlorine Chicken to US involvement in the NHS.

    Benefits to British exporters seem thin on the ground.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 48,733

    Scott_P said:

    If we can get cheap pork from USA then why would we not want that?

    Because they have lower food standards.

    Which bit of that is confusing you?
    Worse than horsemeat as beef?

    Their standards are fine.
    Horsemeat as beef was a breach of standards, and one that was punished.
  • HYUFD said:

    Scott_P said:

    HYUFD said:

    No, he will replace free movement from the EU with a skills based migration system

    https://twitter.com/Reuters/status/1159548915164880899
    Yes highly skilled migrants, it was bar and cafe workers and taxi drivers and hospitality and construction and factory and shop workers Leavers wanted fewer of not scientists, scientists are not competition for the average Hartlepool, Thurrock or Barnsley Leave voter and their

    I wonder how many EU citizens there are working in Hartlepool coffee shops dragging down the wages of local baristas.

  • DruttDrutt Posts: 1,124
    On topic, a good spot. The temptation for the Dems to use the process of impeachment as the punishment, timed so that the Senate won't hear it before the 2020 election, must be stronger than 5.7 suggests.

    On the Meeks/12 discussion, no-deal wouldn't be the imposition of a policy decision so much as a legislative default and compliance with a treaty obligation. Can anyone give examples of times HMG has sought during election purdah to amend not only domestic legislation but international treaty operation, even if it is 'only' a commencement provision?

    I think a similar argument runs for the constitutionality question. We should start from the premise that nobody needs a mandate for inertia, especially where that inertia is of the operation of a recent Act. We know Pmt has voted to serve an A50 notice in the knowledge of A50 contents, and has voted to give itself veto on a WA, then voted the WA down three times. Inertia, I'm sure we'd all agree, leads us to no deal. No further mandate is required.

    By contrast, you'd have to look pretty hard to find a precedent for a PM who isn't a party leader, or even in the largest party, to come to power other than by election and then change such a crucial policy direction. And they would certainly have no mandate to revoke or call another referendum. I'd argue they could extend constitutionally, as that is an exec power and any legislative authority to do so would be negative SI work.

    On a betting point, has anyone done a big spreadsheet with how many MPs would support any particular MP in a GONU? I realise as I type that this requires a third of a million pieces of data, so probably not.
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,414
    That is extremely disappointing.
    I thought it was going to be John Bolton.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 123,156
    edited August 2019
    Scott_P said:

    HYUFD said:

    Any British worker can do that, you do not need to be very highly skilled to do those jobs

    As you pointed out, there will be fewer of those jobs for British workers.

    Win, win.
    Not necessarily but certainly higher wages for British workers with a lower supply of low and medium skilled workers to meet demand for low and medium skilled jobs
  • Endillion said:

    algarkirk said:

    Mr Meeks, I’d call it divisive and undemocratic. I wouldn’t call it unconstitutional for the reasons I’ve set out. As for precedent, I’m not sure there IS a precedent where something so seismic is the legal default and takes place in an election period, so yes literally I think it is without precedent, but I dont believe that just because it hasn’t happened before it means that it’s by definition unconstitutional

    As I said, whatever the Queen decided in those circumstances would cause huge ructions.
    Under the FTPA HM decides the date of election on the recommendation of the PM. The statute does not give HM a discretion (FWIW) - it doesn't say that HM must have due regard or whatever. The wording appears absolute. HM's safe course is to stick to the legislation and of course her own courts can decide whether the recommendation of the PM was rational/lawful. HM can and of course will keep out of it.

    Anyway, it won't happen like that. Chances are a tweaked deal will get through. And because Boris plainly under the clear words of the FTPA can defer an election, there won't be a VONC.

    My view is that Parliament will take each step singly.

    So it will pass a vote of no confidence, then it will panic. Exactly what it will do in the panic I’m not sure, but it will do something. It is likely to be highly unpredictable.
    Passing a VONC is a dangerous move. It gives them just 2 weeks to find a solution, if Boris can stall them for 2 weeks its over. If there's no VONC they've got 8 weeks to find a solution.
    Technically they've got up to 5 and a bit weeks to find a solution, then two weeks to implement it. It won't be enough, though. Alastair is entirely correct.
    If its not enough then we leave no deal.

    My point though is that even if all you are seeking is an extension, there will be 8 weeks to get an extension. If there is a VONC then there will be 2 weeks to get one.

    If there's no extension or alternative solution after 2 weeks its Game Over, Parliament has dissolved itself and now is utterly powerless. Only the executive will exist anymore.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 48,733
    Yorkcity said:

    algarkirk said:

    algarkirk said:

    dixiedean said:

    Foxy said:



    I think a No Deal Brexit mid election is the way to guarantee a crisis. Not wise.

    I think that HM and her advisors would recommend an October date, and it would be hard to refuse.

    The monarch
    There has seldom been a matter of such import. All this talk of the Queen getting involved in politics. She's the Head of State. It is what we pay her for.
    It is extraordinary that one of the two party leaders is Jeremy Corbyn and he is not the one determined to cause a crisis for the monarchy.
    There isn't going to be a crisis for the monarchy. The monarchy is just fine thanks. the crisis is for our political party configuration, FPTP, the FTPA and the incompetence of our political class.

    You don’t think a momentous decision that will inevitably alienate one half or the other of the population will cause them problems?
    To be honest, no. I think the monarchy could easily end up more popular than ever. I can't imagine a time when sentiment is less in favour of a politicised Head of State. (And I don't think Mr Trump has helped the republican cause much.) But for the political realm, yes. Unless something like TMs deal goes through your fears are right. It will cause everyone else problems.
    If Boris Johnson goes outside precedent, the queen sitting on her hands will be a political decision too. She is the person who has the responsibility of deciding whether to enforce precedent.
    What is the precedent Boris is going against? I don’t think it’s not resigning. If it’s calling a GE for after Brexit, I think there’s a good chance you can argue it’s fully constitutional (although IMHO divisive and a bad decision for the country).
    Imposing a long term policy decision after losing a vote of no confidence during the election period by the selection of the election date would certainly be against precedent.
    If you don't want to risk October 31st falling during GE purdah, don't call a chuffing VONC.
    I agree , makes sense.
    Why Labour Mps would want an election with current polls is a mystery.
    Corbyn has stated that he wants a VONC. Since when has he been swayed by polls?
  • Foxy said:

    Scott_P said:

    If we can get cheap pork from USA then why would we not want that?

    Because they have lower food standards.

    Which bit of that is confusing you?
    Worse than horsemeat as beef?

    Their standards are fine.
    Horsemeat as beef was a breach of standards, and one that was punished.
    Indeed. And what is wrong with US pork standards?
  • eekeek Posts: 28,406

    HYUFD said:

    Scott_P said:

    HYUFD said:

    No, he will replace free movement from the EU with a skills based migration system

    https://twitter.com/Reuters/status/1159548915164880899
    Yes highly skilled migrants, it was bar and cafe workers and taxi drivers and hospitality and construction and factory and shop workers Leavers wanted fewer of not scientists, scientists are not competition for the average Hartlepool, Thurrock or Barnsley Leave voter and their

    I wonder how many EU citizens there are working in Hartlepool coffee shops dragging down the wages of local baristas.

    Yep - it's remarkable how white a lot of (left behind) leave areas are.
  • algarkirkalgarkirk Posts: 12,573

    algarkirk said:

    Mr Meeks, I’d call it divisive and undemocratic. I wouldn’t call it unconstitutional for the reasons I’ve set out. As for precedent, I’m not sure there IS a precedent where something so seismic is the legal default and takes place in an election period, so yes literally I think it is without precedent, but I dont believe that just because it hasn’t happened before it means that it’s by definition unconstitutional

    As I said, whatever the Queen decided in those circumstances would cause huge ructions.
    Under the FTPA HM decides the date of election on the recommendation of the PM. The statute does not give HM a discretion (FWIW) - it doesn't say that HM must have due regard or whatever. The wording appears absolute. HM's safe course is to stick to the legislation and of course her own courts can decide whether the recommendation of the PM was rational/lawful. HM can and of course will keep out of it.

    Anyway, it won't happen like that. Chances are a tweaked deal will get through. And because Boris plainly under the clear words of the FTPA can defer an election, there won't be a VONC.

    My view is that Parliament will take each step singly.

    So it will pass a vote of no confidence, then it will panic. Exactly what it will do in the panic I’m not sure, but it will do something. It is likely to be highly unpredictable.
    Passing a VONC is a dangerous move. It gives them just 2 weeks to find a solution, if Boris can stall them for 2 weeks its over. If there's no VONC they've got 8 weeks to find a solution.
    Got a feeling we are going to have to wait and see.

  • EndillionEndillion Posts: 4,976
    TOPPING said:

    Endillion said:

    TOPPING said:

    First off the Queen isn't going to get involved in anything. It would be the end of the monarchy.

    If anyone is going to do anything it will be a politician.

    Second, what the politicians decide to do will be according to the precedent and protocol.

    There is no precedent. The FTPA is only eight years old, and this has never happened in that time.
    I hear you but HMQ is not going to get involved meaningfully
    I imagine that the Palace has ways of making Her Majesty's feelings known without phoning a Sun journalist. If Boris's time is up, he'll be reeled in one way or another.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 48,733
    HYUFD said:

    Scott_P said:

    HYUFD said:

    No, he will replace free movement from the EU with a skills based migration system

    https://twitter.com/Reuters/status/1159548915164880899
    Yes highly skilled migrants, it was bar and cafe workers and taxi drivers and hospitality and construction and factory and shop workers Leavers wanted fewer of not scientists, scientists are not competition for the average Hartlepool, Thurrock or Barnsley Leave voter and their wages
    Actually, I think higher skilled migrants are resented more, as they are perceived to inhibit the upward social mobility of indigenous Britons. The good folk of Hartlepool don't want to be the skivies for middle class foreigners in their own land.
  • Black_RookBlack_Rook Posts: 8,905

    algarkirk said:

    Mr Meeks, I’d call it divisive and undemocratic. I wouldn’t call it unconstitutional for the reasons I’ve set out. As for precedent, I’m not sure there IS a precedent where something so seismic is the legal default and takes place in an election period, so yes literally I think it is without precedent, but I dont believe that just because it hasn’t happened before it means that it’s by definition unconstitutional

    As I said, whatever the Queen decided in those circumstances would cause huge ructions.
    Under the FTPA HM decides the date of election on the recommendation of the PM. The statute does not give HM a discretion (FWIW) - it doesn't say that HM must have due regard or whatever. The wording appears absolute. HM's safe course is to stick to the legislation and of course her own courts can decide whether the recommendation of the PM was rational/lawful. HM can and of course will keep out of it.

    Anyway, it won't happen like that. Chances are a tweaked deal will get through. And because Boris plainly under the clear words of the FTPA can defer an election, there won't be a VONC.

    My view is that Parliament will take each step singly.

    So it will pass a vote of no confidence, then it will panic. Exactly what it will do in the panic I’m not sure, but it will do something. It is likely to be highly unpredictable.
    How can the Commons do anything to affect the course of events *unless* a majority of MPs can be found to back an alternative Prime Minister?

    Unless at least some Tory rebels - as well as everybody else besides the Tory loyalists and the DUP, including various ex-Labour "never Corbyn" types - can be persuaded to install Jeremy Corbyn as PM, then there is no other alternative. Because no alternative to Corbyn will be backed by Corbyn, and he has enough hardcore supporters on his own benches to stymie a Labour rebellion of any size.

    The Commons can't pass legislation to unilaterally extend the A50 deadline, because it also needs the agreement of the EU27 and - if my understanding is correct - the only acceptable interlocutor between the UK and the European Council would be either the head of Government or the head of State. Boris Johnson remains acting head of Government in the event of a VoNC until a replacement can command the confidence of the House - so the only option that leaves MPs with is to attempt to command the Queen to do their dirty work for them.

    HM is, of course, a constitutional monarch whose position is conventionally interpreted as being apolitical, so the Palace would presumably be both inclined and entitled to refuse were such a daft request to be made. Then what?
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,414
    HYUFD said:

    Scott_P said:

    HYUFD said:

    not more bar workers, factory and warehouse and building site workers

    Because factories and warehouses are closing, so they won't need new housing and can't afford to go to bars.

    Got it.
    Any British worker can do that, you do not need to be very highly skilled to do those jobs
    You don't need high skills to build a house? My Dad's seven year bricklaying apprenticeship calls bollocks.
  • Beibheirli_CBeibheirli_C Posts: 8,163

    HYUFD said:

    Scott_P said:

    HYUFD said:

    No, he will replace free movement from the EU with a skills based migration system

    twitter.com/Reuters/status/1159548915164880899
    Yes highly skilled migrants, it was bar and cafe workers and taxi drivers and hospitality and construction and factory and shop workers Leavers wanted fewer of not scientists, scientists are not competition for the average Hartlepool, Thurrock or Barnsley Leave voter and their

    I wonder how many EU citizens there are working in Hartlepool coffee shops dragging down the wages of local baristas.

    I would think it would be LOTS. When I go into a coffee shop all the baristas have a foreign accent (and I do not mean English!)

    Admittedly, I do not frequent Hartlepool. Perhaps they do things differently there.

  • AndyJSAndyJS Posts: 29,395
    "A third of millennials want martial law and 66 per cent prefer strong leader over parliament, poll finds"

    (£)

    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/politics/2019/08/07/third-millennials-want-martial-law-66-per-cent-prefer-strong/
  • CatManCatMan Posts: 3,060
    edited August 2019
    Regarding this new immiragtion policy from BJ:

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-49282689

    "Science bodies have welcomed the proposals but warn any benefits to research would be greatly outweighed by the damage caused by a no-deal Brexit."

    Oh well...
  • rpjsrpjs Posts: 3,787

    Scott_P said:

    If we can get cheap pork from USA then why would we not want that?

    Because they have lower food standards.

    Which bit of that is confusing you?
    Worse than horsemeat as beef?

    Their standards are fine.
    Take it from someone who lives in the US: food standards here are much lower than in the EU.
  • DruttDrutt Posts: 1,124

    HYUFD said:

    Scott_P said:

    HYUFD said:

    No, he will replace free movement from the EU with a skills based migration system

    https://twitter.com/Reuters/status/1159548915164880899
    Yes highly skilled migrants, it was bar and cafe workers and taxi drivers and hospitality and construction and factory and shop workers Leavers wanted fewer of not scientists, scientists are not competition for the average Hartlepool, Thurrock or Barnsley Leave voter and their

    I wonder how many EU citizens there are working in Hartlepool coffee shops dragging down the wages of local baristas.

    I bet most of them are EU citizens.
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 19,468
    Our food is already ridiculously cheap. I would rather we didn’t have a race to the bottom.
This discussion has been closed.