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  • CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758
    Omnium said:

    He [Pete Buttigieg]’s certainly the strongest contender under the age of 70.

    This is a pretty damning indictment of the quality of the Democratic field that their best candidate who is not of an age that would normally be well into retirement, is no more than the mayor of a town in Indiana.
    I think its rather good. You could have Chelsea Clinton and Hunter Biden - they've got great CVs.

    I've blown my cash on this, but for precisely these sort of reasons I'd backed Gabbard.

    I'd quite like to know how to pronounce Buttigieg's name. We may need to know.
    I’d vote for Tulsi
  • EPGEPG Posts: 6,652
    kle4 said:

    HYUFD said:

    AndyJS said:

    Bad news for Trudeau. He's been endorsed by one of Remain's brightest stars:

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-50074603

    The Liberals' average poll rating has slipped below 30% in most recent polls. They got 39.4% last time. It's going to be difficult for Trudeau to stay in office unless the surveys are completely wrong.
    On current polling the Liberals still lead in Ontario and Quebec, both marginal ridings rich, even if the Conservatives lead in the national popular vote thanks to a big lead in Alberta. So Liberals win most seats but Conservatives win most votes looks possible.
    A coincidence that getting rid of FPTP was abandoned once Trudeau got in to office I am sure, but convenient.
    Technically they had enough votes to replace it with AV, which would have really helped them because the smaller parties in Ontario prefer Liberals to Conservatives by a distance. But it would have been, clearly, a fix.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 123,151

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    justin124 said:

    From his comments to Andrew Neil, it appears far from certain that Philip Hammond will vote for Johnson's Deal. Others such as Gauke and Greening might well take a similar view.

    Then he and they will likely be expelled from the Tory party, never mind have the whip restored
    Since the Tory Party seems to be writing off the moderates anyway.... that is hardly likely to be a disincentive.

    How did your day go? The weather was nice enough in Belfast.
    Well fine but thus ends their political career and they can be replaced by pro Brexit Tory candidates.

    Yes was good weather, spent some time clambering around the rocks at Giant's Causeway, then went to the whisky distillery in Bushmills, then had a look at Dunluce Castle, then headed to Portrush followed by coffee and cake in Portstewart and finished off at the memorial in Ballykelly church which was poignant and well done.
    No Carrick-a-Rede bridge then?

    What is tomorrow's iternary? Antrim Coast Road? If so, stop in Carnlough.
    Sadly was in the wrong direction.

    Tomorrow not doing too much as heading back via Belfast ferry Friday morning, mainly pottering around Enniskillen and going to some museums and packing.

    Will have to come again sometime and do a few more things like those you suggest
    Where are you staying tonight?

    Northern Ireland is seriously underrated as a tourist destination.
    Rural Fermanagah, near Enniskillen.

    Yes it is very beautiful, though the Causeway was pretty busy with tourists even today
  • dyedwooliedyedwoolie Posts: 7,786
    edited October 2019
    Possible yes votes from outside the tory/dup/ex Tory axis
    Kate Hoey
    Kelvin Hopkins
    Frank Field
    Ian Austin
    Ivan Lewis
    Stephen Lloyd
    Norman Lamb
    Charlie Elphicke
    John Woodcock
    Sarah Champion

    Possible abstentions based on past voting
    Stringer, Skinner, Flint

    Mann and O'Mara will be abstentions not present
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 123,151
    kle4 said:

    HYUFD said:

    AndyJS said:

    Bad news for Trudeau. He's been endorsed by one of Remain's brightest stars:

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-50074603

    The Liberals' average poll rating has slipped below 30% in most recent polls. They got 39.4% last time. It's going to be difficult for Trudeau to stay in office unless the surveys are completely wrong.
    On current polling the Liberals still lead in Ontario and Quebec, both marginal ridings rich, even if the Conservatives lead in the national popular vote thanks to a big lead in Alberta. So Liberals win most seats but Conservatives win most votes looks possible.
    A coincidence that getting rid of FPTP was abandoned once Trudeau got in to office I am sure, but convenient.
    Not impossible the NDP could demand PR in any coalition deal
  • TGOHF2 said:
    Hahah parody account stuff.
    I am really confused. Why would the courts stop an agreement being laid before the Commons? I can see no grounds for that.
  • Beibheirli_CBeibheirli_C Posts: 8,163

    Personally I'd prefer if there wasn't a Saturday sitting of Parliament.

    Would bugger up my plans for writing my threads.

    Follow our glorious Leader's example and write two headers then use the one that makes you look the most prophetic.... ;)
    Ooh, if he loses the vote on Saturday and publish the piece comparing Boris Johnson to Neville Chamberlain and the Norway Debate?

    I like your thinking.
    JFDI ;)
  • nichomarnichomar Posts: 7,483
    kle4 said:

    TGOHF2 said:

    Imagine the rage of the public if MPs vote down this deal ?

    Very brave of MPs to consider it.

    Rage of which public? Yes, people are sick to death of all this and so on, but million still want to remain, which requires a deal not pass.
    They want your to believe that revoke will biring riots to the streets, it will get a few right wing nutters out on the streets but beyond that nothing.
  • nichomar said:

    Live pictures from the centre of Barcelona with cars on fire

    Jailing the separatists was plain stupid

    There are a lot of pensioners on the streets in Madrid complaining about their pensions but they won’t burn cars or get headlines.
    On the subject pf pensioners I see we will get a 3.9% rise next April thanks to labour preventing the abolishion of the triple lock

    My wife and I are very grateful but it was just playing politics and an absurd thing to do

    TM stopping the triple lock and her policy on dementia tax were spot on, but of course she was a terrible salesperson hence the dementia tax failure
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 52,616
    kle4 said:

    TGOHF2 said:

    Imagine the rage of the public if MPs vote down this deal ?

    Very brave of MPs to consider it.

    Rage of which public? Yes, people are sick to death of all this and so on, but million still want to remain, which requires a deal not pass.
    The press will be brutal.
  • AlastairMeeksAlastairMeeks Posts: 30,340

    Scott_P said:
    The PB ‘mood’ always assures that a deal will pass, so far it’s been wrong every single time. I’ll believe it when I see it.
    I refer you to my thread header last week. People are underestimating the stubbornness of the Spartans, assuming the DUP can be bought and counting all votes for Theresa May as read for Boris Johnson. But Theresa May secured loyalty from some. Who is going to trust Boris Johnson given his track record, or reward his duplicity?
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 96,163
    nico67 said:

    This is always the problem gain MPs on one side lose them on the other .

    Those Labour MPs who want to vote for a deal need a ladder and Bozos deal kicks it away .

    Any Labour MP voting for the deal without a few crumbs to justify it are toast and will be deselected. At this rate Bozo will be lucky to get at best 10 Labour MPs and that’s being generous.

    A number of Tory MPs finally stood up to demonstrate they could only be pushed so far on Brexit, and at least several of them have ended their effective careers by doing so. Its not an easy price, but at some point, even if not now, if those MPs do think we should Brexit they will need to take action that will end their effective careers.
  • The_TaxmanThe_Taxman Posts: 2,979

    nichomar said:

    Live pictures from the centre of Barcelona with cars on fire

    Jailing the separatists was plain stupid

    There are a lot of pensioners on the streets in Madrid complaining about their pensions but they won’t burn cars or get headlines.
    On the subject pf pensioners I see we will get a 3.9% rise next April thanks to labour preventing the abolishion of the triple lock

    My wife and I are very grateful but it was just playing politics and an absurd thing to do

    TM stopping the triple lock and her policy on dementia tax were spot on, but of course she was a terrible salesperson hence the dementia tax failure
    Meanwhile some on benefits have not had an increase since 2015...
  • AlastairMeeksAlastairMeeks Posts: 30,340
    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    justin124 said:

    From his comments to Andrew Neil, it appears far from certain that Philip Hammond will vote for Johnson's Deal. Others such as Gauke and Greening might well take a similar view.

    Then he and they will likely be expelled from the Tory party, never mind have the whip restored
    Since the Tory Party seems to be writing off the moderates anyway.... that is hardly likely to be a disincentive.

    How did your day go? The weather was nice enough in Belfast.
    Well fine but thus ends their political career and they can be replaced by pro Brexit Tory candidates.

    Yes was good weather, spent some time clambering around the rocks at Giant's Causeway, then went to the whisky distillery in Bushmills, then had a look at Dunluce Castle, then headed to Portrush followed by coffee and cake in Portstewart and finished off at the memorial in Ballykelly church which was poignant and well done.
    No Carrick-a-Rede bridge then?

    What is tomorrow's iternary? Antrim Coast Road? If so, stop in Carnlough.
    Sadly was in the wrong direction.

    Tomorrow not doing too much as heading back via Belfast ferry Friday morning, mainly pottering around Enniskillen and going to some museums and packing.

    Will have to come again sometime and do a few more things like those you suggest
    Where are you staying tonight?

    Northern Ireland is seriously underrated as a tourist destination.
    Rural Fermanagah, near Enniskillen
    Another hidden gem of an area. Rural Northern Ireland has so much to offer and so few people see it.
  • TGOHF2 said:
    Hahah parody account stuff.
    I am really confused. Why would the courts stop an agreement being laid before the Commons? I can see no grounds for that.
    I think his argument is HMG can't ' conclude ' an agreement that is currently illegal under statute law. And if the agreement isn't ' concluded ' by HMG it doesn't meet the test for a MV.

    I've absolutely no idea of the legal strength of that argument and of course it's hypothetical. No one has seen the agreement text or even if Super Saturday will be a MV. However that appears to be his base argument. If he won they'd need primary legislation to repeal the conflicting law before ' concluding ' the agreement. So it's a delaying tactic.
  • Beibheirli_CBeibheirli_C Posts: 8,163
    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    justin124 said:

    From his comments to Andrew Neil, it appears far from certain that Philip Hammond will vote for Johnson's Deal. Others such as Gauke and Greening might well take a similar view.

    Then he and they will likely be expelled from the Tory party, never mind have the whip restored
    Since the Tory Party seems to be writing off the moderates anyway.... that is hardly likely to be a disincentive.

    How did your day go? The weather was nice enough in Belfast.
    Well fine but thus ends their political career and they can be replaced by pro Brexit Tory candidates.

    Yes was good weather, spent some time clambering around the rocks at Giant's Causeway, then went to the whisky distillery in Bushmills, then had a look at Dunluce Castle, then headed to Portrush followed by coffee and cake in Portstewart and finished off at the memorial in Ballykelly church which was poignant and well done.
    No Carrick-a-Rede bridge then?

    What is tomorrow's iternary? Antrim Coast Road? If so, stop in Carnlough.
    Sadly was in the wrong direction.

    Tomorrow not doing too much as heading back via Belfast ferry Friday morning, mainly pottering around Enniskillen and going to some museums and packing.

    Will have to come again sometime and do a few more things like those you suggest
    :+1:

    I will give the Friday morning Stena as wave as it goes past :D

    The weather is meant to be nice on Friday so you will have an easy trip back.
  • AndrewAndrew Posts: 2,900
    edited October 2019

    Possible yes votes from outside the tory/dup/ex Tory axis
    Kate Hoey
    Kelvin Hopkins
    Frank Field
    Ian Austin
    Ivan Lewis
    Stephen Lloyd
    Norman Lamb
    Charlie Elphicke
    John Woodcock
    Sarah Champion

    Possible abstentions based on past voting
    Stringer, Skinner, Flint

    Mann and O'Mara will be abstentions not present


    So if all current Con+DUP MPs (Paterson/Francois etc?) vote for, it's up to 297. Assume as Bebb said, 6-8 of the 21 vote against (some possible abstentions in there?), takes us to 310-12.

    Then if no O'Mara/Mann, it needs 7-9 from the above - plus Hermon, has she said anything yet?
  • nichomar said:

    Live pictures from the centre of Barcelona with cars on fire

    Jailing the separatists was plain stupid

    There are a lot of pensioners on the streets in Madrid complaining about their pensions but they won’t burn cars or get headlines.
    On the subject pf pensioners I see we will get a 3.9% rise next April thanks to labour preventing the abolishion of the triple lock

    My wife and I are very grateful but it was just playing politics and an absurd thing to do

    TM stopping the triple lock and her policy on dementia tax were spot on, but of course she was a terrible salesperson hence the dementia tax failure
    Meanwhile some on benefits have not had an increase since 2015...
    Do you agree with me then ?
  • Beibheirli_CBeibheirli_C Posts: 8,163

    TGOHF2 said:
    Hahah parody account stuff.
    I am really confused. Why would the courts stop an agreement being laid before the Commons? I can see no grounds for that.
    I think his argument is HMG can't ' conclude ' an agreement that is currently illegal under statute law. And if the agreement isn't ' concluded ' by HMG it doesn't meet the test for a MV.

    I've absolutely no idea of the legal strength of that argument and of course it's hypothetical. No one has seen the agreement text or even if Super Saturday will be a MV. However that appears to be his base argument. If he won they'd need primary legislation to repeal the conflicting law before ' concluding ' the agreement. So it's a delaying tactic.
    A delaying tactic might be all that is needed. Boris does not have much time...
  • nichomarnichomar Posts: 7,483
    TGOHF2 said:

    Imagine the rage of the public if MPs vote down this deal ?

    Very brave of MPs to consider it.


    The public: what deal?
    They haven’t got a clue what is going on as no one else does, anyone with two ounces of intelligence would want to see what the deal was and then make an informed judgment, you’re not suggesting people form their opinions without considered thought based on detailed analysis of the available information.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 96,163
    edited October 2019

    Possible yes votes from outside the tory/dup/ex Tory axis
    Kate Hoey
    Kelvin Hopkins
    Frank Field
    Ian Austin
    Ivan Lewis
    Stephen Lloyd
    Norman Lamb
    Charlie Elphicke
    John Woodcock
    Sarah Champion

    Possible abstentions based on past voting
    Stringer, Skinner, Flint

    Mann and O'Mara will be abstentions not present

    Flint is the only Labour MP to back MV2 and MV3 who was not on board from the beginning, would she really vote down this fresh deal?

    1 MP voted yes at MV1 and MV2, but abstained on MV3, I wonder what was behind that.

    H/t to Mr Meeks for the FT link on this

    https://ig.ft.com/brexit-exit-deal-vote/
  • nico67nico67 Posts: 4,502
    edited October 2019
    kle4 said:

    nico67 said:

    This is always the problem gain MPs on one side lose them on the other .

    Those Labour MPs who want to vote for a deal need a ladder and Bozos deal kicks it away .

    Any Labour MP voting for the deal without a few crumbs to justify it are toast and will be deselected. At this rate Bozo will be lucky to get at best 10 Labour MPs and that’s being generous.

    A number of Tory MPs finally stood up to demonstrate they could only be pushed so far on Brexit, and at least several of them have ended their effective careers by doing so. Its not an easy price, but at some point, even if not now, if those MPs do think we should Brexit they will need to take action that will end their effective careers.
    The right wing press have been a disgrace to attack MPs who refused to act as lobby fodder.

    Those MPs who were told they’d lose the whip and still voted to stop no deal deserve credit.

  • SquareRootSquareRoot Posts: 7,095

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    justin124 said:

    From his comments to Andrew Neil, it appears far from certain that Philip Hammond will vote for Johnson's Deal. Others such as Gauke and Greening might well take a similar view.

    Then he and they will likely be expelled from the Tory party, never mind have the whip restored
    Since the Tory Party seems to be writing off the moderates anyway.... that is hardly likely to be a disincentive.

    How did your day go? The weather was nice enough in Belfast.
    Well fine but thus ends their political career and they can be replaced by pro Brexit Tory candidates.

    Yes was good weather, spent some time clambering around the rocks at Giant's Causeway, then went to the whisky distillery in Bushmills, then had a look at Dunluce Castle, then headed to Portrush followed by coffee and cake in Portstewart and finished off at the memorial in Ballykelly church which was poignant and well done.
    No Carrick-a-Rede bridge then?

    What is tomorrow's iternary? Antrim Coast Road? If so, stop in Carnlough.
    Sadly was in the wrong direction.

    Tomorrow not doing too much as heading back via Belfast ferry Friday morning, mainly pottering around Enniskillen and going to some museums and packing.

    Will have to come again sometime and do a few more things like those you suggest
    Where are you staying tonight?

    Northern Ireland is seriously underrated as a tourist destination.
    Rural Fermanagah, near Enniskillen
    Another hidden gem of an area. Rural Northern Ireland has so much to offer and so few people see it.
    Why would you risk it. I certainly would not..
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 52,616
    CatMan said:
    I wonder to what extent the public are waking up to the fact that *every single one* of these endless 'Get Your Flu Jab' communications shows flu making life far more difficult and complicated whilst *not a single one* shows flu making life easier or better.

  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 123,151

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    justin124 said:

    From his comments to Andrew Neil, it appears far from certain that Philip Hammond will vote for Johnson's Deal. Others such as Gauke and Greening might well take a similar view.

    Then he and they will likely be expelled from the Tory party, never mind have the whip restored
    Since the Tory Party seems to be writing off the moderates anyway.... that is hardly likely to be a disincentive.

    How did your day go? The weather was nice enough in Belfast.
    Well fine but thus ends their political career and they can be replaced by pro Brexit Tory candidates.

    Yes was good weather, spent some time clambering around the rocks at Giant's Causeway, then went to the whisky distillery in Bushmills, then had a look at Dunluce Castle, then headed to Portrush followed by coffee and cake in Portstewart and finished off at the memorial in Ballykelly church which was poignant and well done.
    No Carrick-a-Rede bridge then?

    What is tomorrow's iternary? Antrim Coast Road? If so, stop in Carnlough.
    Sadly was in the wrong direction.

    Tomorrow not doing too much as heading back via Belfast ferry Friday morning, mainly pottering around Enniskillen and going to some museums and packing.

    Will have to come again sometime and do a few more things like those you suggest
    Where are you staying tonight?

    Northern Ireland is seriously underrated as a tourist destination.
    Rural Fermanagah, near Enniskillen
    Another hidden gem of an area. Rural Northern Ireland has so much to offer and so few people see it.
    Yes if you are in the right part can be very peaceful with few crowds
  • AlastairMeeksAlastairMeeks Posts: 30,340

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    justin124 said:

    From his comments to Andrew Neil, it appears far from certain that Philip Hammond will vote for Johnson's Deal. Others such as Gauke and Greening might well take a similar view.

    Then he and they will likely be expelled from the Tory party, never mind have the whip restored
    Since the Tory Party seems to be writing off the moderates anyway.... that is hardly likely to be a disincentive.

    How did your day go? The weather was nice enough in Belfast.
    Well fine but thus ends their political career and they can be replaced by pro Brexit Tory candidates.

    Yes was good weather, spent some time clambering around the rocks at Giant's Causeway, then went to the whisky distillery in Bushmills, then had a look at Dunluce Castle, then headed to Portrush followed by coffee and cake in Portstewart and finished off at the memorial in Ballykelly church which was poignant and well done.
    No Carrick-a-Rede bridge then?

    What is tomorrow's iternary? Antrim Coast Road? If so, stop in Carnlough.
    Sadly was in the wrong direction.

    Tomorrow not doing too much as heading back via Belfast ferry Friday morning, mainly pottering around Enniskillen and going to some museums and packing.

    Will have to come again sometime and do a few more things like those you suggest
    Where are you staying tonight?

    Northern Ireland is seriously underrated as a tourist destination.
    Rural Fermanagah, near Enniskillen
    Another hidden gem of an area. Rural Northern Ireland has so much to offer and so few people see it.
    Why would you risk it. I certainly would not..
    Your biggest risk by a long chalk is cholesterol poisoning.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 96,163

    kle4 said:

    TGOHF2 said:

    Imagine the rage of the public if MPs vote down this deal ?

    Very brave of MPs to consider it.

    Rage of which public? Yes, people are sick to death of all this and so on, but million still want to remain, which requires a deal not pass.
    The press will be brutal.
    'Enemies of the People' brutal?
  • dyedwooliedyedwoolie Posts: 7,786
    Andrew said:

    Possible yes votes from outside the tory/dup/ex Tory axis
    Kate Hoey
    Kelvin Hopkins
    Frank Field
    Ian Austin
    Ivan Lewis
    Stephen Lloyd
    Norman Lamb
    Charlie Elphicke
    John Woodcock
    Sarah Champion

    Possible abstentions based on past voting
    Stringer, Skinner, Flint

    Mann and O'Mara will be abstentions not present


    So if all current Con+DUP MPs (Paterson/Francois etc?) vote for, it's up to 297. Assume as Bebb said, 6-8 of the 21 vote against (some possible abstentions in there?), take the midpoint of 14, takes us to 311.

    Then if no O'Mara/Mann, it needs 8 from the above - plus Hermon, has she said anything yet?
    Of them Hoey, Field, Elphicke, Champion, Lloyd and Austin are definite yes I think, woodcock very likely to vote yes, Lamb maybe or maybe abstain, Lewis would prefer a referendum but might vote yes
    The 3 abstainers I think will abstain again and I forgot Kevin Barron, he voted for May's deal so is a possible.

    Hermon will vote against I think, shes waspish on the idea
  • The_TaxmanThe_Taxman Posts: 2,979
    CatMan said:
    I wonder if the Brexit advertising has boosted Government popularity? I say this as any Government advertising is thought to favour the Government. To me, it just reminds me that they will spend money on a stupid policy like that, which will make life harder and leave us relatively poorer compared to Germany and France.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 123,151

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    justin124 said:

    From his comments to Andrew Neil, it appears far from certain that Philip Hammond will vote for Johnson's Deal. Others such as Gauke and Greening might well take a similar view.

    Then he and they will likely be expelled from the Tory party, never mind have the whip restored
    Since the Tory Party seems to be writing off the moderates anyway.... that is hardly likely to be a disincentive.

    How did your day go? The weather was nice enough in Belfast.
    Well fine but thus ends their political career and they can be replaced by pro Brexit Tory candidates.

    Yes was good weather, spent some time clambering around the rocks at Giant's Causeway, then went to the whisky distillery in Bushmills, then had a look at Dunluce Castle, then headed to Portrush followed by coffee and cake in Portstewart and finished off at the memorial in Ballykelly church which was poignant and well done.
    No Carrick-a-Rede bridge then?

    What is tomorrow's iternary? Antrim Coast Road? If so, stop in Carnlough.
    Sadly was in the wrong direction.

    Tomorrow not doing too much as heading back via Belfast ferry Friday morning, mainly pottering around Enniskillen and going to some museums and packing.

    Will have to come again sometime and do a few more things like those you suggest
    :+1:

    I will give the Friday morning Stena as wave as it goes past :D

    The weather is meant to be nice on Friday so you will have an easy trip back.
    Thank you though will still avoid a big breakfast on Friday morning just in case
  • FF43FF43 Posts: 17,208

    CatMan said:
    I wonder to what extent the public are waking up to the fact that *every single one* of these endless 'Get Your Flu Jab' communications shows flu making life far more difficult and complicated whilst *not a single one* shows flu making life easier or better.

    Why do you compare leaving the EU with having a potentially fatal disease ?
  • CatManCatMan Posts: 3,060

    CatMan said:
    I wonder to what extent the public are waking up to the fact that *every single one* of these endless 'Get Your Flu Jab' communications shows flu making life far more difficult and complicated whilst *not a single one* shows flu making life easier or better.

    Errr, you what?
  • nichomarnichomar Posts: 7,483

    kle4 said:

    TGOHF2 said:

    Imagine the rage of the public if MPs vote down this deal ?

    Very brave of MPs to consider it.

    Rage of which public? Yes, people are sick to death of all this and so on, but million still want to remain, which requires a deal not pass.
    The press will be brutal.
    Yes the Mail etc I wouldn’t wipe my arse on it
  • dyedwooliedyedwoolie Posts: 7,786
    GIN1138 said:
    That sounds very Leadsom to me ;)
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 96,163

    Andrew said:

    Possible yes votes from outside the tory/dup/ex Tory axis
    Kate Hoey
    Kelvin Hopkins
    Frank Field
    Ian Austin
    Ivan Lewis
    Stephen Lloyd
    Norman Lamb
    Charlie Elphicke
    John Woodcock
    Sarah Champion

    Possible abstentions based on past voting
    Stringer, Skinner, Flint

    Mann and O'Mara will be abstentions not present


    So if all current Con+DUP MPs (Paterson/Francois etc?) vote for, it's up to 297. Assume as Bebb said, 6-8 of the 21 vote against (some possible abstentions in there?), take the midpoint of 14, takes us to 311.

    Then if no O'Mara/Mann, it needs 8 from the above - plus Hermon, has she said anything yet?
    Of them Hoey, Field, Elphicke, Champion, Lloyd and Austin are definite yes I think, woodcock very likely to vote yes, Lamb maybe or maybe abstain, Lewis would prefer a referendum but might vote yes
    The 3 abstainers I think will abstain again and I forgot Kevin Barron, he voted for May's deal so is a possible.

    Hermon will vote against I think, shes waspish on the idea
    Could come down to the Speaker. Pretty sure the convention would anticipate a No vote in that situation.
  • The_TaxmanThe_Taxman Posts: 2,979

    nichomar said:

    Live pictures from the centre of Barcelona with cars on fire

    Jailing the separatists was plain stupid

    There are a lot of pensioners on the streets in Madrid complaining about their pensions but they won’t burn cars or get headlines.
    On the subject pf pensioners I see we will get a 3.9% rise next April thanks to labour preventing the abolishion of the triple lock

    My wife and I are very grateful but it was just playing politics and an absurd thing to do

    TM stopping the triple lock and her policy on dementia tax were spot on, but of course she was a terrible salesperson hence the dementia tax failure
    Meanwhile some on benefits have not had an increase since 2015...
    Do you agree with me then ?
    Yes, I agree with you. I was just saying that it is unjust. Government spending seems to have become very uneven of late. It is storing up big trouble further down the line...
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 52,616
    kle4 said:

    kle4 said:

    TGOHF2 said:

    Imagine the rage of the public if MPs vote down this deal ?

    Very brave of MPs to consider it.

    Rage of which public? Yes, people are sick to death of all this and so on, but million still want to remain, which requires a deal not pass.
    The press will be brutal.
    'Enemies of the People' brutal?
    "Drain the Swamp" brutal......
  • kle4 said:

    nico67 said:

    This is always the problem gain MPs on one side lose them on the other .

    Those Labour MPs who want to vote for a deal need a ladder and Bozos deal kicks it away .

    Any Labour MP voting for the deal without a few crumbs to justify it are toast and will be deselected. At this rate Bozo will be lucky to get at best 10 Labour MPs and that’s being generous.

    A number of Tory MPs finally stood up to demonstrate they could only be pushed so far on Brexit, and at least several of them have ended their effective careers by doing so. Its not an easy price, but at some point, even if not now, if those MPs do think we should Brexit they will need to take action that will end their effective careers.
    What about Remainer Labour MPs representing Leave seats who are not standing again? For example Geoffrey Robinson or Ian Lucas. They can ignore Corbyn's whip and vote fearlessly according to their conscience. But how? And what about Labour MPs who anticipate imminent deselection, regardless of how they vote this week?
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 34,696

    kle4 said:

    kle4 said:

    TGOHF2 said:

    Imagine the rage of the public if MPs vote down this deal ?

    Very brave of MPs to consider it.

    Rage of which public? Yes, people are sick to death of all this and so on, but million still want to remain, which requires a deal not pass.
    The press will be brutal.
    'Enemies of the People' brutal?
    "Drain the Swamp" brutal......
    Hah! The biggest swamp is the tabloid press!
  • Beibheirli_CBeibheirli_C Posts: 8,163

    Your biggest risk by a long chalk is cholesterol poisoning.

    Are you referring to the World Famous Ulster Fry? A heart-attack in every mouthful?
  • The_TaxmanThe_Taxman Posts: 2,979

    kle4 said:

    kle4 said:

    TGOHF2 said:

    Imagine the rage of the public if MPs vote down this deal ?

    Very brave of MPs to consider it.

    Rage of which public? Yes, people are sick to death of all this and so on, but million still want to remain, which requires a deal not pass.
    The press will be brutal.
    'Enemies of the People' brutal?
    "Drain the Swamp" brutal......
    Makes a change from moat cleaning! :wink:
  • CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758

    ydoethur said:

    HYUFD said:

    kle4 said:

    Is there anything to the Buttigieg hype? Someone said he has good organisation in Iowa and oodles of cash, but is it working?

    He is 'Oxford-educated'
    Ah, he went to Oxford Brookes.
    So he was at the proper university in Oxford?
    He went to Pembroke College.

    Place is an utter dump, turns out Viktor Orbán is also an alumnus.
    Pot Hall? 😂😂
  • dyedwooliedyedwoolie Posts: 7,786
    kle4 said:

    Andrew said:

    Possible yes votes from outside the tory/dup/ex Tory axis
    Kate Hoey
    Kelvin Hopkins
    Frank Field
    Ian Austin
    Ivan Lewis
    Stephen Lloyd
    Norman Lamb
    Charlie Elphicke
    John Woodcock
    Sarah Champion

    Possible abstentions based on past voting
    Stringer, Skinner, Flint

    Mann and O'Mara will be abstentions not present


    So if all current Con+DUP MPs (Paterson/Francois etc?) vote for, it's up to 297. Assume as Bebb said, 6-8 of the 21 vote against (some possible abstentions in there?), take the midpoint of 14, takes us to 311.

    Then if no O'Mara/Mann, it needs 8 from the above - plus Hermon, has she said anything yet?
    Of them Hoey, Field, Elphicke, Champion, Lloyd and Austin are definite yes I think, woodcock very likely to vote yes, Lamb maybe or maybe abstain, Lewis would prefer a referendum but might vote yes
    The 3 abstainers I think will abstain again and I forgot Kevin Barron, he voted for May's deal so is a possible.

    Hermon will vote against I think, shes waspish on the idea
    Could come down to the Speaker. Pretty sure the convention would anticipate a No vote in that situation.
    Abstentions will be critical. Will labour waverers who fear losing the whip for voting yes abstain instead and see it over the line? And what of the retiring labour MPs who favour a deal, there is nothing to threaten them with.
    Then the ex Tories, vote against or abstain?
  • kle4 said:

    kle4 said:

    TGOHF2 said:

    Imagine the rage of the public if MPs vote down this deal ?

    Very brave of MPs to consider it.

    Rage of which public? Yes, people are sick to death of all this and so on, but million still want to remain, which requires a deal not pass.
    The press will be brutal.
    'Enemies of the People' brutal?
    "Drain the Swamp" brutal......
    Is that more or fewer less brutal than 'Crush the saboteurs'?
  • TGOHF2TGOHF2 Posts: 584
    nichomar said:

    TGOHF2 said:

    Imagine the rage of the public if MPs vote down this deal ?

    Very brave of MPs to consider it.


    The public: what deal?
    They haven’t got a clue what is going on as no one else does, anyone with two ounces of intelligence would want to see what the deal was and then make an informed judgment, you’re not suggesting people form their opinions without considered thought based on detailed analysis of the available information.
    At the ballot box - remainers can’t hide forever.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 96,163

    kle4 said:

    nico67 said:

    This is always the problem gain MPs on one side lose them on the other .

    Those Labour MPs who want to vote for a deal need a ladder and Bozos deal kicks it away .

    Any Labour MP voting for the deal without a few crumbs to justify it are toast and will be deselected. At this rate Bozo will be lucky to get at best 10 Labour MPs and that’s being generous.

    A number of Tory MPs finally stood up to demonstrate they could only be pushed so far on Brexit, and at least several of them have ended their effective careers by doing so. Its not an easy price, but at some point, even if not now, if those MPs do think we should Brexit they will need to take action that will end their effective careers.
    What about Remainer Labour MPs representing Leave seats who are not standing again? For example Geoffrey Robinson or Ian Lucas. They can ignore Corbyn's whip and vote fearlessly according to their conscience. But how? And what about Labour MPs who anticipate imminent deselection, regardless of how they vote this week?
    They should feel freer to vote as they like of course (though all should vote as they like on this issue, however difficult), but as you suggest how that makes them vote is crucial, and some of them will be no keener on a deal than they were previously.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 52,616
    CatMan said:

    CatMan said:
    I wonder to what extent the public are waking up to the fact that *every single one* of these endless 'Get Your Flu Jab' communications shows flu making life far more difficult and complicated whilst *not a single one* shows flu making life easier or better.

    Errr, you what?
    My purpose seems to be to flush out the terminally dim tonght.
  • AlastairMeeksAlastairMeeks Posts: 30,340

    Your biggest risk by a long chalk is cholesterol poisoning.

    Are you referring to the World Famous Ulster Fry? A heart-attack in every mouthful?
    I’m doing Michelin dining in Belfast next month. Something Mancunians might be able to do one day.
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 34,696
    CatMan said:

    CatMan said:
    I wonder to what extent the public are waking up to the fact that *every single one* of these endless 'Get Your Flu Jab' communications shows flu making life far more difficult and complicated whilst *not a single one* shows flu making life easier or better.

    Errr, you what?
    Brexit = a dose of the flu?
  • Charles said:

    ydoethur said:

    HYUFD said:

    kle4 said:

    Is there anything to the Buttigieg hype? Someone said he has good organisation in Iowa and oodles of cash, but is it working?

    He is 'Oxford-educated'
    Ah, he went to Oxford Brookes.
    So he was at the proper university in Oxford?
    He went to Pembroke College.

    Place is an utter dump, turns out Viktor Orbán is also an alumnus.
    Pot Hall? 😂😂
    Isn't that St Peters?
  • Your biggest risk by a long chalk is cholesterol poisoning.

    Are you referring to the World Famous Ulster Fry? A heart-attack in every mouthful?
    I’m doing Michelin dining in Belfast next month. Something Mancunians might be able to do one day.
    Manchester now has a Michelin starred establishment.

    https://www.theguardian.com/food/2019/oct/07/manchester-restaurant-wins-citys-first-michelin-star-in-40-years
  • SquareRootSquareRoot Posts: 7,095

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    justin124 said:

    From his comments to Andrew Neil, it appears far from certain that Philip Hammond will vote for Johnson's Deal. Others such as Gauke and Greening might well take a similar view.

    Then he and they will likely be expelled from the Tory party, never mind have the whip restored
    Since the Tory Party seems to be writing off the moderates anyway.... that is hardly likely to be a disincentive.

    How did your day go? The weather was nice enough in Belfast.
    Well fine but thus ends their political career and they can be replaced by pro Brexit Tory candidates.

    Yes was good weather, spent some time clambering around the rocks at Giant's Causeway, then went to the whisky distillery in Bushmills, then had a look at Dunluce Castle, then headed to Portrush followed by coffee and cake in Portstewart and finished off at the memorial in Ballykelly church which was poignant and well done.
    No Carrick-a-Rede bridge then?

    What is tomorrow's iternary? Antrim Coast Road? If so, stop in Carnlough.
    Sadly was in the wrong direction.

    Tomorrow not doing too much as heading back via Belfast ferry Friday morning, mainly pottering around Enniskillen and going to some museums and packing.

    Will have to come again sometime and do a few more things like those you suggest
    Where are you staying tonight?

    Northern Ireland is seriously underrated as a tourist destination.
    Rural Fermanagah, near Enniskillen
    Another hidden gem of an area. Rural Northern Ireland has so much to offer and so few people see it.
    Why would you risk it. I certainly would not..
    Your biggest risk by a long chalk is cholesterol poisoning.
    not if you use benecol butter and get your cholesterol tested regularly....
  • nichomarnichomar Posts: 7,483
    kle4 said:

    Andrew said:

    Possible yes votes from outside the tory/dup/ex Tory axis
    Kate Hoey
    Kelvin Hopkins
    Frank Field
    Ian Austin
    Ivan Lewis
    Stephen Lloyd
    Norman Lamb
    Charlie Elphicke
    John Woodcock
    Sarah Champion

    Possible abstentions based on past voting
    Stringer, Skinner, Flint

    Mann and O'Mara will be abstentions not present


    So if all current Con+DUP MPs (Paterson/Francois etc?) vote for, it's up to 297. Assume as Bebb said, 6-8 of the 21 vote against (some possible abstentions in there?), take the midpoint of 14, takes us to 311.

    Then if no O'Mara/Mann, it needs 8 from the above - plus Hermon, has she said anything yet?
    Of them Hoey, Field, Elphicke, Champion, Lloyd and Austin are definite yes I think, woodcock very likely to vote yes, Lamb maybe or maybe abstain, Lewis would prefer a referendum but might vote yes
    The 3 abstainers I think will abstain again and I forgot Kevin Barron, he voted for May's deal so is a possible.

    Hermon will vote against I think, shes waspish on the idea
    Could come down to the Speaker. Pretty sure the convention would anticipate a No vote in that situation.
    I always thought that, from my time as mayor, if it came to a casting vote one should vote for the status quo regardless of your first vote which you were always free to exercise. So the status quo is to remain in the EU so the speaker is obliged to not change our current status.
  • CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758
    justin124 said:

    HYUFD said:

    justin124 said:

    HYUFD said:

    justin124 said:

    From his comments to Andrew Neil, it appears far from certain that Philip Hammond will vote for Johnson's Deal. Others such as Gauke and Greening might well take a similar view.

    Then he and they will likely be expelled from the Tory party, never mind have the whip restored
    Why should they suffer that fate given that Johnson and the ERG group MPs were not treated like that when they failed to support Theresa May's Deal?
    As Johnson and the ERG MPs still backed Brexit with No Deal over further extension, EUref2 or revoke.

    While you also support expelling Labour MPs who vote for any Boris Brexit Deal, I assume you do not back expelling Labour MPs committed to back Remain in all circumstances or revoke against official Labour policy?
    But many of the ERG MPs voted against Mays Deal three times - indeed Johnson did so twice. Why should others be expelled for failing to do so on a single occasion?If May's Deal returned to the House, they would support it again.
    Because the decision to grant the whip or not is at the discretion of the party leader
  • RobDRobD Posts: 59,936

    TGOHF2 said:
    Hahah parody account stuff.
    I am really confused. Why would the courts stop an agreement being laid before the Commons? I can see no grounds for that.
    It’s all about stopping Brexit.
  • Beibheirli_CBeibheirli_C Posts: 8,163
    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    justin124 said:

    From his comments to Andrew Neil, it appears far from certain that Philip Hammond will vote for Johnson's Deal. Others such as Gauke and Greening might well take a similar view.

    Then he and they will likely be expelled from the Tory party, never mind have the whip restored
    Since the Tory Party seems to be writing off the moderates anyway.... that is hardly likely to be a disincentive.

    How did your day go? The weather was nice enough in Belfast.
    Well fine but thus ends their political career and they can be replaced by pro Brexit Tory candidates.

    Yes was good weather, spent some time clambering around the rocks at Giant's Causeway, then went to the whisky distillery in Bushmills, then had a look at Dunluce Castle, then headed to Portrush followed by coffee and cake in Portstewart and finished off at the memorial in Ballykelly church which was poignant and well done.
    No Carrick-a-Rede bridge then?

    What is tomorrow's iternary? Antrim Coast Road? If so, stop in Carnlough.
    Sadly was in the wrong direction.

    Tomorrow not doing too much as heading back via Belfast ferry Friday morning, mainly pottering around Enniskillen and going to some museums and packing.

    Will have to come again sometime and do a few more things like those you suggest
    :+1:

    I will give the Friday morning Stena as wave as it goes past :D

    The weather is meant to be nice on Friday so you will have an easy trip back.
    Thank you though will still avoid a big breakfast on Friday morning just in case
    You landlubber!!! A bouncy sea makes the journey interesting and cuts the queues in the reataurant :D:D
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 52,616

    kle4 said:

    kle4 said:

    TGOHF2 said:

    Imagine the rage of the public if MPs vote down this deal ?

    Very brave of MPs to consider it.

    Rage of which public? Yes, people are sick to death of all this and so on, but million still want to remain, which requires a deal not pass.
    The press will be brutal.
    'Enemies of the People' brutal?
    "Drain the Swamp" brutal......
    Is that more or fewer less brutal than 'Crush the saboteurs'?
    Drain the Swamp is Top Trump.
  • Beibheirli_CBeibheirli_C Posts: 8,163
    RobD said:

    TGOHF2 said:
    Hahah parody account stuff.
    I am really confused. Why would the courts stop an agreement being laid before the Commons? I can see no grounds for that.
    It’s all about stopping Brexit.
    It works for me :)
  • spudgfshspudgfsh Posts: 1,494
    nichomar said:

    kle4 said:

    Andrew said:

    Possible yes votes from outside the tory/dup/ex Tory axis
    Kate Hoey
    Kelvin Hopkins
    Frank Field
    Ian Austin
    Ivan Lewis
    Stephen Lloyd
    Norman Lamb
    Charlie Elphicke
    John Woodcock
    Sarah Champion

    Possible abstentions based on past voting
    Stringer, Skinner, Flint

    Mann and O'Mara will be abstentions not present


    So if all current Con+DUP MPs (Paterson/Francois etc?) vote for, it's up to 297. Assume as Bebb said, 6-8 of the 21 vote against (some possible abstentions in there?), take the midpoint of 14, takes us to 311.

    Then if no O'Mara/Mann, it needs 8 from the above - plus Hermon, has she said anything yet?
    Of them Hoey, Field, Elphicke, Champion, Lloyd and Austin are definite yes I think, woodcock very likely to vote yes, Lamb maybe or maybe abstain, Lewis would prefer a referendum but might vote yes
    The 3 abstainers I think will abstain again and I forgot Kevin Barron, he voted for May's deal so is a possible.

    Hermon will vote against I think, shes waspish on the idea
    Could come down to the Speaker. Pretty sure the convention would anticipate a No vote in that situation.
    I always thought that, from my time as mayor, if it came to a casting vote one should vote for the status quo regardless of your first vote which you were always free to exercise. So the status quo is to remain in the EU so the speaker is obliged to not change our current status.
    https://www.parliament.uk/about/how/business/divisions/
    Tied votes
    If the vote is tied - which is very unusual - in the Commons the Speaker has the casting vote. The Speaker casts his vote according to what was done in similar circumstances in the past. Where possible the issue should remain open for further discussion and no final decision should be made by a casting vote.
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 34,696
    edited October 2019

    HYUFD said:

    kle4 said:

    Is there anything to the Buttigieg hype? Someone said he has good organisation in Iowa and oodles of cash, but is it working?

    He is 'Oxford-educated'
    Ah, he went to Oxford Brookes.
    Hey, nothing wrong with Oxford Brookes.

    My wife went there and has been happy on occasion to reply truthfully 'Oxford' when asked where she got her degree. :lol:
  • nichomarnichomar Posts: 7,483
    TGOHF2 said:

    nichomar said:

    TGOHF2 said:

    Imagine the rage of the public if MPs vote down this deal ?

    Very brave of MPs to consider it.


    The public: what deal?
    They haven’t got a clue what is going on as no one else does, anyone with two ounces of intelligence would want to see what the deal was and then make an informed judgment, you’re not suggesting people form their opinions without considered thought based on detailed analysis of the available information.
    At the ballot box - remainers can’t hide forever.
    I’ll take that as yes that people form their opinions without due thought then.
  • nichomar said:

    Live pictures from the centre of Barcelona with cars on fire

    Jailing the separatists was plain stupid

    There are a lot of pensioners on the streets in Madrid complaining about their pensions but they won’t burn cars or get headlines.
    On the subject pf pensioners I see we will get a 3.9% rise next April thanks to labour preventing the abolishion of the triple lock

    My wife and I are very grateful but it was just playing politics and an absurd thing to do

    TM stopping the triple lock and her policy on dementia tax were spot on, but of course she was a terrible salesperson hence the dementia tax failure
    Meanwhile some on benefits have not had an increase since 2015...
    Do you agree with me then ?
    Yes, I agree with you. I was just saying that it is unjust. Government spending seems to have become very uneven of late. It is storing up big trouble further down the line...
    Thank you and a fine example of Corbyn's ill thought out policies
  • Here's why Brexit needs to be cancelled, the French want us gone.

    https://twitter.com/libe/status/1184548505081253889
  • algarkirkalgarkirk Posts: 12,567

    kle4 said:

    Andrew said:

    Possible yes votes from outside the tory/dup/ex Tory axis
    Kate Hoey
    Kelvin Hopkins
    Frank Field
    Ian Austin
    Ivan Lewis
    Stephen Lloyd
    Norman Lamb
    Charlie Elphicke
    John Woodcock
    Sarah Champion

    Possible abstentions based on past voting
    Stringer, Skinner, Flint

    Mann and O'Mara will be abstentions not present


    So if all current Con+DUP MPs (Paterson/Francois etc?) vote for, it's up to 297. Assume as Bebb said, 6-8 of the 21 vote against (some possible abstentions in there?), take the midpoint of 14, takes us to 311.

    Then if no O'Mara/Mann, it needs 8 from the above - plus Hermon, has she said anything yet?
    Of them Hoey, Field, Elphicke, Champion, Lloyd and Austin are definite yes I think, woodcock very likely to vote yes, Lamb maybe or maybe abstain, Lewis would prefer a referendum but might vote yes
    The 3 abstainers I think will abstain again and I forgot Kevin Barron, he voted for May's deal so is a possible.

    Hermon will vote against I think, shes waspish on the idea
    Could come down to the Speaker. Pretty sure the convention would anticipate a No vote in that situation.
    Abstentions will be critical. Will labour waverers who fear losing the whip for voting yes abstain instead and see it over the line? And what of the retiring labour MPs who favour a deal, there is nothing to threaten them with.
    Then the ex Tories, vote against or abstain?
    Can't meaningfully count numbers until the DUP are on board. I doubt if they ever will be. All their actions so far have indicated that they support Remain.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 71,236

    CatMan said:
    I wonder to what extent the public are waking up to the fact that *every single one* of these endless 'Get Your Flu Jab' communications shows flu making life far more difficult and complicated whilst *not a single one* shows flu making life easier or better.

    Brexit, all the advantages of a dose of flu....

    Well at least that has the benefit of being a bit more honest than the original campaign.
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 62,772
    And still the GOP support him.

    Boy, history will eviscerate the current GOP senators and leadership.
  • AndrewAndrew Posts: 2,900
    Here's a thought - what if Boris turns up at the Council tomorrow, asks for and receives a two week extension to finalise the current WA?

    It would essentially bypass the Benn Act.
  • spudgfshspudgfsh Posts: 1,494

    Here's why Brexit needs to be cancelled, the French want us gone.

    https://twitter.com/libe/status/1184548505081253889

    Forgive my ignorance, I did German, what does it actually say?
  • FF43FF43 Posts: 17,208
    TGOHF2 said:

    spudgfsh said:

    TGOHF2 said:
    one question, why?
    He’s making loadsamoney out of it.
    Fake news, he's repeatedly said he's doing this pro bono publico and is in fact costing him money.
    He doesn’t want parliament to debate a deal on Friday ?

    Stinking hypocrite.
    Ironically Maugham appears to be making his case preventing parliament from debating the deal on a wrecking amendment introduced by Jacob Rees-Mogg precisely designed to prevent the government doing what Maugham believes the government wants to do.
  • algarkirkalgarkirk Posts: 12,567
    RobD said:

    TGOHF2 said:
    Hahah parody account stuff.
    I am really confused. Why would the courts stop an agreement being laid before the Commons? I can see no grounds for that.
    It’s all about stopping Brexit.
    Don't think courts can stop it - Section 9 of the Bill of Rights. They can of course interpret it.
  • GIN1138GIN1138 Posts: 22,293
    Have we heard the outcome of the DUPs meeting in Downing St this evening?
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 71,236
    Fourth Giuliani associate in custody:
    https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2019/oct/16/david-correia-rudy-giuliani-associates-campaign-finance

    Bringing down Trump could be Rudi’s greatest achievement,
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 96,163
    nichomar said:

    kle4 said:

    Andrew said:

    Possible yes votes from outside the tory/dup/ex Tory axis
    Kate Hoey
    Kelvin Hopkins
    Frank Field
    Ian Austin
    Ivan Lewis
    Stephen Lloyd
    Norman Lamb
    Charlie Elphicke
    John Woodcock
    Sarah Champion

    Possible abstentions based on past voting
    Stringer, Skinner, Flint

    Mann and O'Mara will be abstentions not present


    So if all current Con+DUP MPs (Paterson/Francois etc?) vote for, it's up to 297. Assume as Bebb said, 6-8 of the 21 vote against (some possible abstentions in there?), take the midpoint of 14, takes us to 311.

    Then if no O'Mara/Mann, it needs 8 from the above - plus Hermon, has she said anything yet?
    Of them Hoey, Field, Elphicke, Champion, Lloyd and Austin are definite yes I think, woodcock very likely to vote yes, Lamb maybe or maybe abstain, Lewis would prefer a referendum but might vote yes
    The 3 abstainers I think will abstain again and I forgot Kevin Barron, he voted for May's deal so is a possible.

    Hermon will vote against I think, shes waspish on the idea
    Could come down to the Speaker. Pretty sure the convention would anticipate a No vote in that situation.
    I always thought that, from my time as mayor, if it came to a casting vote one should vote for the status quo regardless of your first vote which you were always free to exercise. So the status quo is to remain in the EU so the speaker is obliged to not change our current status.
    For the Commons there is the general rule of course
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Speaker_Denison's_rule

    But like any convention does not have to be followed, though he probably would.

    For local authorities unless standing orders dictate otherwise pretty sure the legal position is you can exercise the casting vote however you wish, but I've known plenty adopt a similar general position (or rather stated they would, since ties rarely occur) as you state around status quo. Plenty of more old school chairs may not vote at all unless it is to cast a decider.

  • spudgfsh said:

    Here's why Brexit needs to be cancelled, the French want us gone.

    https://twitter.com/libe/status/1184548505081253889

    Forgive my ignorance, I did German, what does it actually say?
    My o grade tells me it's time to go now.
  • spudgfsh said:

    Here's why Brexit needs to be cancelled, the French want us gone.

    https://twitter.com/libe/status/1184548505081253889

    Forgive my ignorance, I did German, what does it actually say?
    You (The UK) have to go now.
  • RobDRobD Posts: 59,936
    algarkirk said:

    RobD said:

    TGOHF2 said:
    Hahah parody account stuff.
    I am really confused. Why would the courts stop an agreement being laid before the Commons? I can see no grounds for that.
    It’s all about stopping Brexit.
    Don't think courts can stop it - Section 9 of the Bill of Rights. They can of course interpret it.
    They can't stop Parliament debating something. Parliament is sovereign (or so i've been told).
  • GIN1138GIN1138 Posts: 22,293
    Andrew said:

    Here's a thought - what if Boris turns up at the Council tomorrow, asks for and receives a two week extension to finalise the current WA?

    It would essentially bypass the Benn Act.

    Something similar was mooted on Twitter earlier (a five week extension) - It was assumed that's why panic stricken members of the Rabble Alliance like Grieve and Lammy flew over the Brussles morning to meet with Barnier etc ;)
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 96,163
    Admirably shorn of diplomatic and technical jargon. Historically, I imagine statements of that nature were probably a lot more common. Though I watched a video once which claimed part of the trouble with the Japanese-Korean wars in the late 1590s was diplomats kept changing the messages from their leaders to the other side in order to dial back the tone, but this meant what was actually wanted was getting lost in confusion.
  • Here's why Brexit needs to be cancelled, the French want us gone.

    https://twitter.com/libe/status/1184548505081253889

    I have been saying that all day and it is why I do not expect the EU to provide time for a referendum, ie to June 2020
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 123,151

    Here's why Brexit needs to be cancelled, the French want us gone.

    https://twitter.com/libe/status/1184548505081253889

    If the French make the Benn Act redundant by vetoing extension, I expect Boris will be dining on moules et frites next week
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 123,151
  • spudgfsh said:

    Here's why Brexit needs to be cancelled, the French want us gone.

    https://twitter.com/libe/status/1184548505081253889

    Forgive my ignorance, I did German, what does it actually say?
    You (The UK) have to go now.
    Mais si tu dois partir, va-t'en
    Si non, tu dois rester la nuit
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 34,696
    Andrew said:

    Here's a thought - what if Boris turns up at the Council tomorrow, asks for and receives a two week extension to finalise the current WA?

    It would essentially bypass the Benn Act.

    No.

    The Benn Act dictates the letter he must send requesting an extension until 31 January 2020.

    Now if he asks for the the extension as dictated by the letter but the EU offer him one for only two weeks, then the Benn Act is satisfied and BoJo can (and indeed must) accept their offer.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 52,616
    HYUFD said:

    Here's why Brexit needs to be cancelled, the French want us gone.

    https://twitter.com/libe/status/1184548505081253889

    If the French make the Benn Act redundant by vetoing extension, I expect Boris will be dining on moules et frites next week
    ....and quaffing champagne.
  • justin124justin124 Posts: 11,527
    I am surprised that Hoey voted against May's Deal. Why would Woodcock, Lewis or Champion be likely to support this Deal given that they failed to support May? They must despise Johnson much more.
  • nichomarnichomar Posts: 7,483

    Here's why Brexit needs to be cancelled, the French want us gone.

    https://twitter.com/libe/status/1184548505081253889

    I have been saying that all day and it is why I do not expect the EU to provide time for a referendum, ie to June 2020
    So revoke is the only solution so we can stuff those awful Europeans and make them put up with us for another fifty years, bring it on
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 96,163
    HYUFD said:

    Here's why Brexit needs to be cancelled, the French want us gone.

    https://twitter.com/libe/status/1184548505081253889

    If the French make the Benn Act redundant by vetoing extension, I expect Boris will be dining on moules et frites next week
    They talked tough on extension last time then caved, even though there was no British plan to come up with something new. But if they want us out, it is very easy to ensure.
  • CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758

    Charles said:

    ydoethur said:

    HYUFD said:

    kle4 said:

    Is there anything to the Buttigieg hype? Someone said he has good organisation in Iowa and oodles of cash, but is it working?

    He is 'Oxford-educated'
    Ah, he went to Oxford Brookes.
    So he was at the proper university in Oxford?
    He went to Pembroke College.

    Place is an utter dump, turns out Viktor Orbán is also an alumnus.
    Pot Hall? 😂😂
    Isn't that St Peters?
    You’re right but it’s late...
  • RobDRobD Posts: 59,936
    edited October 2019

    Andrew said:

    Here's a thought - what if Boris turns up at the Council tomorrow, asks for and receives a two week extension to finalise the current WA?

    It would essentially bypass the Benn Act.

    No.

    The Benn Act dictates the letter he must send requesting an extension until 31 January 2020.

    Now if he asks for the the extension as dictated by the letter but the EU offer him one for only two weeks, then the Benn Act is satisfied and BoJo can (and indeed must) accept their offer.
    He can ask for a shorter extension, he just needs a confirmatory vote from the commons for the new date.
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 34,696
    HYUFD said:

    Here's why Brexit needs to be cancelled, the French want us gone.

    https://twitter.com/libe/status/1184548505081253889

    If the French make the Benn Act redundant by vetoing extension, I expect Boris will be dining on moules et frites next week
    What's happened to Hungarian goulash? :wink:
  • Andrew said:

    Here's a thought - what if Boris turns up at the Council tomorrow, asks for and receives a two week extension to finalise the current WA?

    It would essentially bypass the Benn Act.

    No.

    The Benn Act dictates the letter he must send requesting an extension until 31 January 2020.

    Now if he asks for the the extension as dictated by the letter but the EU offer him one for only two weeks, then the Benn Act is satisfied and BoJo can (and indeed must) accept their offer.
    I thought if the EU offer was anything other than 3 months it was for Parliament to decide if they accept.
  • nico67nico67 Posts: 4,502
    HYUFD said:

    Here's why Brexit needs to be cancelled, the French want us gone.

    https://twitter.com/libe/status/1184548505081253889

    If the French make the Benn Act redundant by vetoing extension, I expect Boris will be dining on moules et frites next week
    They won’t veto an extension , we’ve heard it all before but I expect the EU to make any extension the final one .

    That way there will be an end regardless of what happens.
  • AndrewAndrew Posts: 2,900



    The Benn Act dictates the letter he must send requesting an extension until 31 January 2020.

    Sure, once it's triggered on Saturday.

    But in this situation, an X week extension would already have been accepted. His subsequent Benn-forced letter would surely be ignored by the Council.
This discussion has been closed.