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politicalbetting.com » Blog Archive » Dealing with the Brexit trilemma : How Johnson’s approach diff

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  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 42,893
    edited October 2019
    HYUFD said:

    Scott_P said:

    HYUFD said:

    the Boris Deal keeps the UK just with looser ties

    It really doesn't

    It has already carved off NI, and as pointed out earlier, if NI can have special arrangements, why can't Scotland?

    The Little Englanders have prioritized Brexit over the Union.
    Scotland does not have a history of terrorism unlike Northern Ireland, nor does it have a border with another EU nation like Northern Ireland.

    Avoiding No Deal will be enough for most Scots bar the SNP and diehard Nationalists who only want to use Brexit as their latest excuse for independence anyway
    Eh? Scotland's got a land border with England. And effectively borders at every seaport, every air port ...

    Are you seriously telling us that terrorism is the only route to exerting the existing triple democratic mandate for indyref2 simply because some English nationalists don't want indyref2?

    And you keep denying the fact that the resolution of Brexit will collapse the currently-up-in-the-air probnability function of Schrodinger's cat of support for the Union in a way not necessarily to the moggy's advantage.

    In this as in so many other ways to do with Brexit, I have to agree with many other posters, we are only at the end of the beginning. And Oblitussumme's analysis is very interesting from this point of view.
  • CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758
    That’s a wrecking amendment- will blow everything up

    It should be “approve in principle subject to”
  • Charles said:

    One positive about Johnson’s Brexit Deal is that it delivers victory for the people of the Republic of Ireland, who have had to live for three years with the uncertainty and worry caused by a Brexit they never asked for. After 800 years of taking our shite, they’ve won.

    This is not about winning and losing

    This is about finding a workable compromise

    If at some point the people of NI decide to join the RoI that is a matter for them
    Whenever @SouthamObserver writes a post like that it’s pretty obvious he’s trying to troll Brexiteers.

    TSE is better at it.

    No, I genuinely mean It. Dumping on Ireland yet again via a No Deal would have been absolutely disastrous for the UK. We would have moved from laughing stock to pariah. Johnson’s deal prevents that. It’s the main reason why I hope (and trust) it will pass.

  • CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 60,216
    Foxy said:

    Scott_P said:

    HYUFD said:

    bar the SNP and diehard Nationalists who only want to use Brexit as their latest excuse for independence anyway

    BoZo has gifted the SNP an excuse for customs posts at Coldstream.
    You think the SNP are in favour of customs posts?

    Having a border at Gretna is kind of the point of the SNP.
    The SNP have striven mightily to shut down any talk of a border at Gretna - Boris deal makes that more likely so the case for Sindy has just got harder to sell.

    Therefore if Brexit means coming out of the European single market then there is going to be a hard border. And Scotland is either going to stay within that UK hard border or it is going to come out of the UK and get into the EU, then it will be on the other side of that hard border.”


    https://www.scotsman.com/news-2-15012/snp-seeks-a-way-to-avoid-border-checkpoints-after-independence-1-4208480
  • DougSealDougSeal Posts: 12,541
    edited October 2019
    Charles said:

    The U.K. is a bastion of democratic and liberal values. We are a force for good in the world. I am saddened that you look forward to that being diminished

    With the Bannon loving, ethno-nationalist, “citizens of nowhere”, “enemies of the people”, “letterboxes” administration we have had since 2015 we are probably the most illiberal country (currently) in the EU behind Hungary. As for being a force for good, especially in the context of Ireland, read a book.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 48,729
    148grss said:

    Twitter: all the straws in the wind are that all Brexiteers are backing this, even high priestesses like Isabel Oakeshott and Julia Hartley-Brewer, should Johnson should get away with it on that flank.

    Only the DUP who don’t like it at present.

    And Farage, but I'm not sure how many Leavers he now represents.

    I have seen some online anti Deal messaging from Leavers, saying that this is a betrayal from Johnson and stuff, but I don't know how much of a representative sample this is.
    The BXP goon on BBCQT last night was opposed, and getting more support than the Surrender Deal.
  • timmotimmo Posts: 1,469
    If the vote is tied on Saturday does Bercow have to vote with the govt.?
    Wouldnt that just be the best Karma.....
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 22,131
    @moonshine. I know what a short is but I don't know how to buy one. I dont know what an EFT is and I don't know how to buy one.
  • CyclefreeCyclefree Posts: 25,318

    Cyclefree said:

    alex. said:

    Do you think his brand will remain the same post Brexit? The problem for the Libdems will be that their current Brexit policies are a solution to “making it all go away”. If Brexit happens they will suddenly be potentially positioning themselves as promising to make it all come back.

    There's plenty more it where that came from.
    And presumably it starts coming soon, given that the initial transition deadline is the end of net year. By which time the UK either needs a frictionless trade deal with the EU or the facilities to deal with the friction or an extension.
    Another way in which this deal is worse than May’s deal is that at the end of the transition period Britain faces a cliff edge if no FTA has been agreed - a crash out or a further transition - whereas May’s deal had the backstop, which removed the cliff edge. So we will be going through this all over again in little over a year.

    And that gives the EU even more leverage than it has as a result of this deal over Britain.

    In essence Boris has kicked the can down the road just like May did by weakening Britain’s position in order to get something now. It is the very essence of short-termist thinking.

    Thank you to @OblitusSumMe for a very interesting header.
    I’m relatively relaxed about that, to be honest.

    Shitloads of groundwork will have been done by both sides on the full FTA (behind the scenes) and the UK and EU will know roughly where they’re heading. All the really contentious and emotional stuff about citizens rights, divorce and NI will have been dealt with so it’ll be about tariffs, services access, EU programme cooperation and payments.

    Yes, it requires unanimity and the Walloon Parliament etc. but if a Deal is reached it will go through in 12 months because no EU country will want to risk a No Deal then either.
    You may be right. Much will depend on whether the PM will now prioritise the US over the EU. I rather fear he will and as a result Britain will be shafted twice over.

    The Tories under Boris have now turned into an English nationalist party but are also very determinedly following Trump’s playbook. I see nothing good coming from that - for the rest of us anyway.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 52,616
    Sandpit said:

    It looks like punting approval for the WA from a “meaningful vote” to the actual new Act of Parliament that would need to follow a week or two later.

    But, I don’t get it. That’s always been required. A meaningful vote is just that - a show of hands.

    Yes, more time may be needed (extension) to pass the deal and all its associated legislation, but why then leave out Deal from them amendment?

    It suggests they’re worried they’ll lose and want another couple of weeks to rally political support to defeat it, but they could do that anyway.
    Because the *ONLY* thing the Opposition cares about, is seeing Johnson’s signature on the extension letter. If you look at everything through that prism it all starts to make sense.
    Which is pretty damned feeble, if he gets an effective date of 31st October in the deal..... "We left on 31st October, 2019. It says so here....."

    Labour's entire problem with the Boris Deal is that Boris got it.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 96,163
    edited October 2019
    Henry_C said:

    Scott_P said:

    AndyJS said:

    What happens if it's a tie?

    Bercow has the casting vote
    The status quo is no ratification, but Speaker Bercow might not follow Speaker Denison's rule.
    The hero of Remain would vote for Brexit when in this instance following precedent delays it? (As nothing would be confirmed, requiring an extension)
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 60,491

    Charles said:

    One positive about Johnson’s Brexit Deal is that it delivers victory for the people of the Republic of Ireland, who have had to live for three years with the uncertainty and worry caused by a Brexit they never asked for. After 800 years of taking our shite, they’ve won.

    This is not about winning and losing

    This is about finding a workable compromise

    If at some point the people of NI decide to join the RoI that is a matter for them
    Whenever @SouthamObserver writes a post like that it’s pretty obvious he’s trying to troll Brexiteers.

    TSE is better at it.

    No, I genuinely mean It. Dumping on Ireland yet again via a No Deal would have been absolutely disastrous for the UK. We would have moved from laughing stock to pariah. Johnson’s deal prevents that. It’s the main reason why I hope (and trust) it will pass.

    It makes NI slightly more of a special case than it currently is already.

    I’m comfortable with that.
  • Henry_CHenry_C Posts: 73
    edited October 2019

    Scott_P said:

    HYUFD said:

    bar the SNP and diehard Nationalists who only want to use Brexit as their latest excuse for independence anyway

    BoZo has gifted the SNP an excuse for customs posts at Coldstream.
    You think the SNP are in favour of customs posts?
    If an independent Scotland were to join the EU (SNP policy) then with the Boris deal between rUK and the EU there would not only be customs points but also immigration checks on the border with England. (There's no McGFA). Cue 65%+ for No to independence.

    The SNP could change their policy to being outside the EU and in a CU and SM with rUK, but they would be pushed for answers to the questions 1. "Why bother?" and 2. "What if rUK says no?"
  • NickPalmerNickPalmer Posts: 21,534
    Interesting article, thanks - OSM is very welcome above the line. The prevailing expectation seems to be that the deal will pass and the referendum backers don't feel they have the votes,, which after all the psychodrama feels a bit flat. As Timothy perhaps implies, we've ended up with the less attractive deal for most people - not because we've weighed them up but because the music stopped at the moment when Boris had grabbed the chair. It suits him for now; as a way of deciding the national future it's suboptimal.

    Assuming that's right, the opposition parties all need to scratch their heads over what to do now. Labour will want to change the subject - what about those 30 hospitals, eh? - but may struggle to do so as we stumble into the transition period. The LibDems will be tempted to go for Return, the logical extension of Revoke, but I'm not sure even most LibDem voters have the stomach for restarting an application to join all over again - let alone EU countries.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 48,729
    Charles said:

    Alistair said:

    Scott_P said:

    HYUFD said:

    bar the SNP and diehard Nationalists who only want to use Brexit as their latest excuse for independence anyway

    Yes

    That's the point.

    BoZo has gifted the SNP an excuse for customs posts at Coldstream.
    Will there be any guards?

    At Coldstream.

    Will there be Coldstream Guards?

    You see I'm making a joke as there is a famous military.....
    It would be a Black Watch if you were ever in charge of humour on this site
    The Black Watch were formed as a Loyalist regiment as I recall, though may well be less Unionist now.
  • FF43FF43 Posts: 17,208
    edited October 2019
    HYUFD said:

    FF43 said:

    HYUFD said:
    Um. Voters are not forgiving Labour for choosing Corbyn as leader. Most Labour supporters and voters oppose Brexit.
    Most 2017 Labour voters maybe but many of them are now voting Liberal Democrat anyway
    Labour's electoral problem is Corbyn, not a lack of Brexitness.
  • Foxy said:

    Foxy said:

    Foxy said:

    kyf_100 said:

    alex. said:

    Lib Dems should have pushed for that election. A major blunder. Golden rule - oppositions should never turn down elections, especially those at which they stand to benefit. They were too obsessed with the belief that Johnson wanted no deal - he never did, even if he was almost recklessly driven into it by error and miscalculation.

    My guess is that the LDs will do OK whenever an election is called. If it happens post-Brexit, a lot of people who might have voted tactically for Labour will no longer feel the need to do so, while I imagine it’s going to be hard for Johnson’s brand of populist English nationalism to win back a lot of Remain-voting, liberal Tories.

    Tories will come running back when they see Labour's eat-the-rich manifesto, which will come down on the middle classes like a ton of bricks.

    Everyone knows Labour can’t win. And, as we keep being told by wealthy Brexit supporters, it’s not about money anyway.

    Can anyone name a target seat for a Lab gain? They all seem pretty implausible to me. In which case the threat of a Corbyn government is a hollow one.

    Labour will do well to return to the next Parliament with close to its current number of MPs. Sub-220 must be odds on.

    Lab currently have 235 MPs, down from 262 immediately after the last GE. They may retake some of the defectors seats, but sub 200 looks more likely to me.

    The SNP will make gains from both SCON and SLAB, but the key to preventing a Tory majority is LD gains from Con, which is how former Lab voters should move in Tory held constituencies.

    Yep. But I doubt the LDs can prevent a good-sized Tory majority.

    I think probably not too, but shall do what I can. I see a lot of LD second places, with gains then likely in 2025.

    Perhaps the big unknown is how the BXP will react to BoZo's Surrender Deal.

    I have secured my own investments quite well for Brexit, and BoZo's NHS spending and tax cuts for those over £80 000 will be some compensation.

    I don’t think surrender deal works. It’s only a surrender if you really care about the Union and most BXP voters don’t. The more interesting point is whether people who have never voted Tory in their lives will feel the need to if Brexit happens before an election.

  • MortimerMortimer Posts: 14,127
    edited October 2019
    Jonathan said:

    PClipp said:

    Mortimer said:

    Foxy said:

    Foxy said:

    kyf_100 said:

    My guess is that the LDs will do OK whenever an election is called. If it happens post-Brexit, a lot of people who might have voted tactically for Labour will no longer feel the need to do so, while I imagine it’s going to be hard for Johnson’s brand of populist English nationalism to win back a lot of Remain-voting, liberal Tories.

    Tories will come running back when they see Labour's eat-the-rich manifesto, which will come down on the middle classes like a ton of bricks.
    Everyone knows Labour can’t win. And, as we keep being told by wealthy Brexit supporters, it’s not about money anyway.
    Can anyone name a target seat for a Lab gain? They all seem pretty implausible to me. In which case the threat of a Corbyn government is a hollow one.
    Labour will do well to return to the next Parliament with close to its current number of MPs. Sub-220 must be odds on.

    Lab currently have 235 MPs, down from 262 immediately after the last GE. They may retake some of the defectors seats, but sub 200 looks more likely to me.

    The SNP will make gains from both SCON and SLAB, but the key to preventing a Tory majority is LD gains from Con, which is how former Lab voters should move in Tory held constituencies.
    There is a pretty hard ceiling to LD gains from Cons.
    Ex LB/Tory marginals, for example in Dorset, now have huge Tory majorities. And as MarqueeMark and I keep reminding people, many previously LD voters down here in the SW are not pro-EU.
    But the problem that you hard-line Tories are not facing up to is that many previous Conservative voters are most definitely in favour of the EU, a sound economy and a contented and stable society.
    Not "many" that are moving their vote to the LibDems there aren't......
    Chuckle.
    Doing much canvassing of voters in the SW, are you?

    I am. We're keeping most of the Remainers, winning life-long anti-EU socialists over and getting the Leavers who voted BXP/INDY/DNV in May, back on board.

    Boris is genuinely popular.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 60,491
    This is why so many ERG’ers are happy IMHO:

    “Article 4 - Customs Territory of the United Kingdom

    Northern Ireland is part of the customs territory of the United Kingdom.

    Accordingly, nothing in this Protocol shall prevent the United Kingdom from including Northern Ireland in the territorial scope of any agreements it may conclude with third countries, provided that those agreements do not prejudice the application of this Protocol.

    In particular, nothing in this Protocol shall prevent the United Kingdom from concluding agreements with a third country that grant goods produced in Northern Ireland preferential access to that country’s market on the same terms as goods produced in other parts of the United Kingdom.

    Nothing in this Protocol shall prevent the United Kingdom from including Northern Ireland in the territorial scope of its Schedules of Concessions annexed to the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade 1994.”
  • HYUFD said:

    Scott_P said:

    HYUFD said:

    bar the SNP and diehard Nationalists who only want to use Brexit as their latest excuse for independence anyway

    Yes

    That's the point.

    BoZo has gifted the SNP an excuse for customs posts at Coldstream.
    He hasn't as he has kept an open border in Ireland and of course Bozo will block indyref2 anyway.

    Sturgeon should count herself lucky Bozo is not going to pass a law to put her in jail as the Spanish government and courts have done to Catalan nationalists
    What an utterly stupid and crass last sentence. What on earth has happened to you
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 96,163
    timmo said:

    If the vote is tied on Saturday does Bercow have to vote with the govt.?
    Wouldnt that just be the best Karma.....

    He doesnt have to vote in any particular way. I dislike Bercows inconsistent commitment to precedent and convention but hes right sometimes you do have to set new precedents. But I think actually following it would mean a no - thered be no genuine majority for a major change. No means various options are still open.
  • logical_songlogical_song Posts: 9,914

    Scott_P said:

    Twitter: all the straws in the wind are that all Brexiteers are backing this, even high priestesses like Isabel Oakeshott and Julia Hartley-Brewer, should Johnson should get away with it on that flank.

    Only the DUP who don’t like it at present.

    Poor Nigel Fucking Farage, forgotten so quickly...
    Indeed, he’s miscalculated.

    His betrayal soundtrack isn’t getting much traction this time, and he’s largely shut out of the news.
    When an election comes the smaller parties and indeed Labour will get more coverage and probably more support in the polls.
    However, what happens to the limited company known as The Brexit Party? They have MEPs but no MPs and I'm guessing only a handful of councillors, so do they get any PPBs or much coverage outside of the Daily Express?
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 52,616
    Scott_P said:
    Alexei Sayle had a line about "anybody that uses the term "workshop" who isn't involved in light engineeering is a c**t."

    Similarly, anyone who isn't involved in Victorian street illumination who uses the term "gaslighting".....
  • 148grss148grss Posts: 4,155
    kle4 said:

    Foxy said:
    Seems optimistic on the independent conservatives to me, and on how many ERG hardliners will back it. It's a good 13 higher than my highest estimate. It's so close with view additional labour votes that it really should be able pass if it's right.

    We have had theories befote that some labour votes will unlock simply because if it is close, as before that it is not worth sticking your neck out. I wonder if the reverse is also possible, and some who are potential yes votes are holding off as they know 3-4 more will see it through and so think they can wait for one of the others to jump the line first.
    Obviously it is better for Johnson for this to pass. But if it doesn't pass is it better for it to be a small gap, where he can ask for another vote and hope to convince the maybe half dozen votes he needs, or a big gap, where he can justify a GE because he could never convince 2 dozen votes without losing other votes on his side?

    I assume he would prefer 2nd course of action, as he will still have the problem "post Brexit" (should such a time exist) that he still won't have a majority for his domestic policy. Should Brexit pass out of the political zeitgeist (HA) and Labour picks a new Leader by 2022, Johnson may have had a few years as PM, but unable to do anything, and Labour could storm to government.

    In this vein, listening to the Red Box podcast, they were discussing how the electorate rarely rewards governments for what they do, and instead votes on what more they promise. Churchill won the war, but Labour won the peace. Could we get the same with Brexit?
  • OblitusSumMeOblitusSumMe Posts: 9,143

    Very well thought through and explained. Thank you, Obitus.

    It is hard to see a referendum of the type you imagine however, and I suspect you were proposing it slightly tongue in cheek. People are simply too fed up with Brexit and the point has been reached where almost any decision is preferable to no decision.

    Johnson will get this through, and we will all digest it at our leisure.

    Thanks PtP. You are right that I'm not entirely serious with my referendum suggestion.

    A Commons that can vote for a compromise referendum can probably manage to vote for a Brexit Deal first.

    It looks like the number of Labour rebels needs to exceed the number of ERG rebels by nine - and it's probably the case that there will be fewer Labour rebels if there are more ERG rebels.
    Noted with thanks, Obitus.

    I'm not sure I follow your final point. Surely there will be more Labour rebels if they are sure there are a lot of ERG rebels (because they can rebel without advers consequences.) Am I missing something? It is early for me.
    It was argued that there were few Labour rebels on the votes for May's deal because there was no point in receiving the criticism for rebelling when it couldn't affect the outcome of the vote.

    If there are few ERG rebels then a Labour rebel might be able to pass the deal by rebelling.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 96,163
    Charles said:

    That’s a wrecking amendment- will blow everything up

    It should be “approve in principle subject to”
    Yes, withholds approval reads like another vote would be needed.
  • CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 60,216
    DougSeal said:

    Charles said:

    The U.K. is a bastion of democratic and liberal values. We are a force for good in the world. I am saddened that you look forward to that being diminished

    we are probably the most illiberal country (currently) in the EU behind Hungary.
    Only in your head.

    In the real world the UK is the only large EU country in the 'top 10' of most liberal countries in the world and is one of the 6 out of the 28 to make the top 10:

    http://worldpopulationreview.com/countries/most-liberal-countries/

    Of the top 10 most liberal countries in the world, more than half the people resident in them live in the UK.
  • Scott_P said:

    Jonathan said:

    If Boris succeeds first time around it will be because May failed three times before that. Why did she fail? Because Boris undermined her.

    If May had brought back this deal Boris would have opposed it. It is the circumstances of her defeat that now make it possible.

    To that extent Boris has played a blinder, but it’s nothing to be proud of.

    Still waiting for the banter possibility of May voting against this deal...
    TM is voting for the deal
  • CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758
    Henry_C said:

    Charles said:

    One positive about Johnson’s Brexit Deal is that it delivers victory for the people of the Republic of Ireland, who have had to live for three years with the uncertainty and worry caused by a Brexit they never asked for. After 800 years of taking our shite, they’ve won.

    This is not about winning and losing

    This is about finding a workable compromise

    If at some point the people of NI decide to join the RoI that is a matter for them
    Not only for them. There would have to be majorities both sides of the border.
    I suspect if NI voted to join RoI a way would be found to make that happen
  • not_on_firenot_on_fire Posts: 4,449

    Scott_P said:
    Alexei Sayle had a line about "anybody that uses the term "workshop" who isn't involved in light engineeering is a c**t."

    Similarly, anyone who isn't involved in Victorian street illumination who uses the term "gaslighting".....
    Can we apply the same to the idiots who use the term “snowflake”?
  • DougSealDougSeal Posts: 12,541
    HYUFD said:

    Scott_P said:

    HYUFD said:

    bar the SNP and diehard Nationalists who only want to use Brexit as their latest excuse for independence anyway

    Yes

    That's the point.

    BoZo has gifted the SNP an excuse for customs posts at Coldstream.
    He hasn't as he has kept an open border in Ireland and of course Bozo will block indyref2 anyway.

    Sturgeon should count herself lucky Bozo is not going to pass a law to put her in jail as the Spanish government and courts have done to Catalan nationalists
    Welcome to the “liberal” Tory Party. Not authoritarian at all, no not at all.
  • MangoMango Posts: 1,019
    "Taking back control" is meaningless and pointless arsewittery.

    Unless you're a tax "avoider".
  • CyclefreeCyclefree Posts: 25,318
    Charles said:

    HYUFD said:

    All the polling shows that Tory members put Brexit before the Union. As the ERG represents them better than anyone else in Parliament, it’s no surprise it’s members do, too.

    The only ways to preserve the Union in full would have been first to cancel Brexit so the whole UK stays in the EU or second to keep the whole UK in the Single Market and Customs Union so the need for any backstop or equivalent is removed from the EU and Irish side but clearly the ERG and Leavers could not support stopping Brexit and reversing the Leave vote or a BINO Brexit that is in most respects staying in the EU in all but name with free movement and the inability to do our own trade deals.

    The other way of course would have been to go to No Deal and impose a hard border in Ireland between Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland complete with checkpoints etc. The DUP might support that, as would some ERG hardliners like Owen Paterson however it would have made a return to terrorism and the Troubles in Northern Ireland likely and polls show a majority of Northern Ireland voters prefer a United Ireland to a hard border with the Republic of Ireland anyway so it would not in reality preserve the UK at all. Even if the British did not impose a hard border the Irish likely would have done and it would have required ripping up the Good Friday Agreement and the sending of troops back into Northern Ireland to keep the angry Catholic and Nationalist community under control and deal with a resurgent IRA.

    Plus of course No Deal would also have made Scots more likely to vote for independence too as Scottish polls show, again threatening the Union

    As Timothy says, the Tories have chosen taking back control over the Union. For right-wing English nationalists it’s an entirely rational move. I am also very pleased it means a big victory for Ireland. The Irish people never deserved the uncertainty and worry Brexit inflicted on them. I see all this as the first step to England finally learning where it truly sits in the world. It’ll take a while longer yet, but we’re now starting. That is a good thing.

    The U.K. is a bastion of democratic and liberal values. We are a force for good in the world. I am saddened that you look forward to that being diminished
    Allying itself with Trump’s USA as Boris’s Tories want to do is rather going to diminish Britain’s standing in the world. But that’s the choice the Tories - and those who vote for them - will be making. Fair enough: just don’t give us all this hypocritical guff about being the patriotic unionist party at the same time.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 60,491
    Cyclefree said:

    Cyclefree said:

    alex. said:

    Do you think his brand will remain the same post Brexit? The problem for the Libdems will be that their current Brexit policies are a solution to “making it all go away”. If Brexit happens they will suddenly be potentially positioning themselves as promising to make it all come back.

    There's plenty more it where that came from.
    And presumably it starts coming soon, given that the initial transition deadline is the end of net year. By which time the UK either needs a frictionless trade deal with the EU or the facilities to deal with the friction or an extension.
    Another way in which this deal is worse than May’s deal is that at the end of the transition period Britain faces a cliff edge if no FTA has been agreed - a crash out or a further transition - whereas May’s deal had the backstop, which removed the cliff edge. So we will be going through this all over again in little over a year.

    And that gives the EU even more leverage than it has as a result of this deal over Britain.

    In essence Boris has kicked the can down the road just like May did by weakening Britain’s position in order to get something now. It is the very essence of short-termist thinking.

    Thank you to @OblitusSumMe for a very interesting header.
    I’m relatively relaxed about that, to be honest.

    Shitloads of groundwork will have been done by both sides on the full FTA (behind the scenes) and the UK and EU will know roughly where they’re heading. All the really contentious and emotional stuff about citizens rights, divorce and NI will have been dealt with so it’ll be about tariffs, services access, EU programme cooperation and payments.

    Yes, it requires unanimity and the Walloon Parliament etc. but if a Deal is reached it will go through in 12 months because no EU country will want to risk a No Deal then either.
    You may be right. Much will depend on whether the PM will now prioritise the US over the EU. I rather fear he will and as a result Britain will be shafted twice over.

    The Tories under Boris have now turned into an English nationalist party but are also very determinedly following Trump’s playbook. I see nothing good coming from that - for the rest of us anyway.
    I’m a Unionist. I have no truck with English nationalism.

    We’ll see. Boris would be advised to wrap up the Deal with the EU *before* the next US presidential election and President take office. Trump may not be around in 14 months time.
  • ozymandiasozymandias Posts: 1,503
    FF43 said:

    HYUFD said:

    FF43 said:

    HYUFD said:
    Um. Voters are not forgiving Labour for choosing Corbyn as leader. Most Labour supporters and voters oppose Brexit.
    Most 2017 Labour voters maybe but many of them are now voting Liberal Democrat anyway
    Labour's electoral problem is Corbyn, not a lack of Brexitness.
    Surely Labour must be able to dig under its collective toenail and find a leader more popular than a having dose of dysentery.

    You know - one who hasn’t paraded under the Soviet flag and who wants us to be turned into Airstrip One.
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 61,806
    Mr. Seal, hasn't the burka/niqab been banned, fully or partially, in various EU nations?
  • CyclefreeCyclefree Posts: 25,318
    viewcode said:

    @moonshine. I know what a short is but I don't know how to buy one. I dont know what an EFT is and I don't know how to buy one.

    If you don’t know what a financial instrument is you’re best advised not to buy it. :)
  • Charles said:

    One positive about Johnson’s Brexit Deal is that it delivers victory for the people of the Republic of Ireland, who have had to live for three years with the uncertainty and worry caused by a Brexit they never asked for. After 800 years of taking our shite, they’ve won.

    This is not about winning and losing

    This is about finding a workable compromise

    If at some point the people of NI decide to join the RoI that is a matter for them
    Whenever @SouthamObserver writes a post like that it’s pretty obvious he’s trying to troll Brexiteers.

    TSE is better at it.

    No, I genuinely mean It. Dumping on Ireland yet again via a No Deal would have been absolutely disastrous for the UK. We would have moved from laughing stock to pariah. Johnson’s deal prevents that. It’s the main reason why I hope (and trust) it will pass.

    It makes NI slightly more of a special case than it currently is already.

    I’m comfortable with that.

    Absolutely. Johnson’s deal fulfils the moral obligation the UK owes to Ireland. I think that part of it, at least, is worth celebrating.

  • Very well thought through and explained. Thank you, Obitus.

    It is hard to see a referendum of the type you imagine however, and I suspect you were proposing it slightly tongue in cheek. People are simply too fed up with Brexit and the point has been reached where almost any decision is preferable to no decision.

    Johnson will get this through, and we will all digest it at our leisure.

    Thanks PtP. You are right that I'm not entirely serious with my referendum suggestion.

    A Commons that can vote for a compromise referendum can probably manage to vote for a Brexit Deal first.

    It looks like the number of Labour rebels needs to exceed the number of ERG rebels by nine - and it's probably the case that there will be fewer Labour rebels if there are more ERG rebels.
    Noted with thanks, Obitus.

    I'm not sure I follow your final point. Surely there will be more Labour rebels if they are sure there are a lot of ERG rebels (because they can rebel without advers consequences.) Am I missing something? It is early for me.
    It was argued that there were few Labour rebels on the votes for May's deal because there was no point in receiving the criticism for rebelling when it couldn't affect the outcome of the vote.

    If there are few ERG rebels then a Labour rebel might be able to pass the deal by rebelling.
    OK, got it, but still seems a bit counter-intuitive to me.

    Labour rebels who help Boris over the line would not be hugely popular amongst Labour voters. Do you think those 'rebels' might have tacit support from the Leaderhip? Personally I doubt it but I wouldn't put it past them.
  • DougSealDougSeal Posts: 12,541
    Mortimer said:

    Jonathan said:

    PClipp said:

    Mortimer said:

    Foxy said:

    Foxy said:

    kyf_100 said:

    My guess is that the LDs will do OK whenever an election is called. If it happens post-Brexit, a lot of people who might have voted tactically for Labour will no longer feel the need to do so, while I imagine it’s going to be hard for Johnson’s brand of populist English nationalism to win back a lot of Remain-voting, liberal Tories.

    Tories will come running back when they see Labour's eat-the-rich manifesto, which will come down on the middle classes like a ton of bricks.
    Everyone knows Labour can’t win. And, as we keep being told by wealthy Brexit supporters, it’s not about money anyway.
    Can anyone name a target seat for a Lab gain? They all seem pretty implausible to me. In which case the threat of a Corbyn government is a hollow one.
    Labour will do well to return to the next Parliament with close to its current number of MPs. Sub-220 must be odds on.

    Lab currently have 235 MPs, down from 262 immediately after the last GE. They may retake some of the defectors seats, but sub 200 looks more likely to me.

    The SNP will make gains from both SCON and SLAB, but the key to preventing a Tory majority is LD gains from Con, which is how former Lab voters should move in Tory held constituencies.
    There is a pretty hard ceiling to LD gains from Cons.
    Ex LB/Tory marginals, for example in Dorset, now have huge Tory majorities. And as MarqueeMark and I keep reminding people, many previously LD voters down here in the SW are not pro-EU.
    But the problem that you hard-line Tories are not facing up to is that many previous Conservative voters are most definitely in favour of the EU, a sound economy and a contented and stable society.
    Not "many" that are moving their vote to the LibDems there aren't......
    Chuckle.
    Doing much canvassing of voters in the SW, are you?

    I am. We're keeping most of the Remainers, winning life-long anti-EU socialists over and getting the Leavers who voted BXP/INDY/DNV in May, back on board.

    Boris is genuinely popular.
    You seriously expect me to believe Boris is picking up any stripe of socialist and (in the unlikely event you are correct) he will keep the anti-EU ones post Brexit? Seriously?
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 96,163
    Cyclefree said:

    nichomar said:

    What I find completely laughable is people opining on the public thinking this deal is better than the previous one or even that it’s better than remaining. How did any polling organization find 1000 people out in the country who have a clue what this deal or even what Mays deal was. For MPs to pass it without proper scrutiny would be an act of criminal neglect. I would assume the MP who keeps stopping private members bills because the lack scrutiny will support Letwins amendment? I’m not capable of making a judgment on this particular deal even though I followed every twist and turn of this saga. I’m impressed how many people clearly have been able to make such informed opinions unless thos opinions are solely based on ‘is this deal good for the Tory party? If yes then it’s a good deal’ regardless of what it really entails.

    My opinion of it - which is that it is worse for Britain than May’s deal (and that was not much good frankly) - is based on reading the legal text and the PD. But beware: the former is not an easy read and there will undoubtedly be implications I (and others) will have missed.

    We will - if this goes through - discover these at our leisure over the next year. That is why the PM is so anxious to push it through without too much scrutiny. Beware a salesman who asks you to sign now in a rush and won’t give you time to think about it carefully.
    Again, that's true, but his opponents have had no issue rushing through acts of parliament without proper scrutiny when it suits them, acts which people have argued about the meaning and effect of because they were not scrutinised properly.

    I think they need to take time to consider this properly and the 31 deadline rush is nonsense and down to politics, but even accepting the differences in complexity between the situations I'm not persuaded that opponents in parliament are on strong ground when they bemoan a rush against them and praise the geniuses behind a rush for them.
  • CyclefreeCyclefree Posts: 25,318

    Cyclefree said:

    Cyclefree said:

    alex. said:

    Do you think his brand will remain the same post Brexit? The problem for the Libdems will be that their current Brexit policies are a solution to “making it all go away”. If Brexit happens they will suddenly be potentially positioning themselves as promising to make it all come back.

    There's plenty more it where that came from.
    And presumably it starts coming soon, given that the initial transition deadline is the end of net year. By which time the UK either needs a frictionless trade deal with the EU or the facilities to deal with the friction or an extension.
    Another way in which this deal is worse than May’s deal is that at the end of the transition period Britain faces a cliff edge if no FTA has been agreed - a crash out or a further transition - whereas May’s deal had the backstop, which removed the cliff edge. So we will be going through this all over again in little over a year.

    And that gives the EU even more leverage than it has as a result of this deal over Britain.

    In essence Boris has kicked the can down the road just like May did by weakening Britain’s position in order to get something now. It is the very essence of short-termist thinking.

    Thank you to @OblitusSumMe for a very interesting header.
    I’m relatively relaxed about that, to be honest.

    Shitloads of groundwork will have been done by both sides on the full FTA (behind the scenes) and the UK and EU will know roughly where they’re heading. All the really contentious and emotional stuff about citizens rights, divorce and NI will have been dealt with so it’ll be about tariffs, services access, EU programme cooperation and payments.

    Yes, it requires unanimity and the Walloon Parliament etc. but if a Deal is reached it will go through in 12 months because no EU country will want to risk a No Deal then either.
    You may be right. Much will depend on whether the PM will now prioritise the US over the EU. I rather fear he will and as a result Britain will be shafted twice over.

    The Tories under Boris have now turned into an English nationalist party but are also very determinedly following Trump’s playbook. I see nothing good coming from that - for the rest of us anyway.
    I’m a Unionist. I have no truck with English nationalism.

    We’ll see. Boris would be advised to wrap up the Deal with the EU *before* the next US presidential election and President take office. Trump may not be around in 14 months time.
    You are. The current Tory party is not.
  • Charles said:

    One positive about Johnson’s Brexit Deal is that it delivers victory for the people of the Republic of Ireland, who have had to live for three years with the uncertainty and worry caused by a Brexit they never asked for. After 800 years of taking our shite, they’ve won.

    This is not about winning and losing

    This is about finding a workable compromise

    If at some point the people of NI decide to join the RoI that is a matter for them
    Whenever @SouthamObserver writes a post like that it’s pretty obvious he’s trying to troll Brexiteers.

    TSE is better at it.

    No, I genuinely mean It. Dumping on Ireland yet again via a No Deal would have been absolutely disastrous for the UK. We would have moved from laughing stock to pariah. Johnson’s deal prevents that. It’s the main reason why I hope (and trust) it will pass.

    It makes NI slightly more of a special case than it currently is already.

    I’m comfortable with that.

    Absolutely. Johnson’s deal fulfils the moral obligation the UK owes to Ireland. I think that part of it, at least, is worth celebrating.

    Me too.
  • Pro_RataPro_Rata Posts: 5,289
    edited October 2019
    I accept the offer trilemma argument, and where the two deals sit within that, but that is not to say there weren't many variations within each choice of two - Customs Union and May's deal both sit within the GFA/Union choice, both were valid options the EU could have written something for, Yet May's deal did more in terms of getting close trade with looser (non NI relevant) obligationss.

    It was quantum rather than continuous and every variation on the control arm meant different countermeasures fell naturally on the union and/or Irish border arms.

    If we get to FTA talks, the Union/Freedom debate will continue to apply to every bit of level playing field, market access etc etc that GB discuss.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 71,236

    HYUFD said:

    Scott_P said:

    HYUFD said:

    bar the SNP and diehard Nationalists who only want to use Brexit as their latest excuse for independence anyway

    Yes

    That's the point.

    BoZo has gifted the SNP an excuse for customs posts at Coldstream.
    He hasn't as he has kept an open border in Ireland and of course Bozo will block indyref2 anyway.

    Sturgeon should count herself lucky Bozo is not going to pass a law to put her in jail as the Spanish government and courts have done to Catalan nationalists
    What an utterly stupid and crass last sentence. What on earth has happened to you
    Drunk on vicarious power ?
  • DougSealDougSeal Posts: 12,541

    Mr. Seal, hasn't the burka/niqab been banned, fully or partially, in various EU nations?

    And your point is?
  • Foxy said:

    Is it true that there will be no customs checks on goods entering GB from NI, only on goods going the other way? This seems incompatible with WTO obligations.

    https://twitter.com/mdouganlpool/status/1184948125838008321?s=19

    Why? I don't see how MFN would apply from NI to GB given that NI is legally part of the UK.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 52,616
    DougSeal said:

    Mortimer said:

    Jonathan said:

    PClipp said:

    Mortimer said:

    Foxy said:

    Foxy said:

    kyf_100 said:

    My guess is that the LDs will do OK whenever an election is called. If it happens post-Brexit, a lot of people who might have voted tactically for Labour will no longer feel the need to do so, while I imagine it’s going to be hard for Johnson’s brand of populist English nationalism to win back a lot of Remain-voting, liberal Tories.

    Tories will come running back when they see Labour's eat-the-rich manifesto, which will come down on the middle classes like a ton of bricks.
    Everyone knows Labour can’t win. And, as we keep being told by wealthy Brexit supporters, it’s not about money anyway.
    Can anyone name a target seat for a Lab gain? They all seem pretty implausible to me. In which case the threat of a Corbyn government is a hollow one.
    Labour will do well to return to the next Parliament with close to its current number of MPs. Sub-220 must be odds on.

    Lab currently have 235 MPs, down from 262 immediately after the last GE. They may retake some of the defectors seats, but sub 200 looks more likely to me.

    The SNP will make gains from both SCON and SLAB, but the key to preventing a Tory majority is LD gains from Con, which is how former Lab voters should move in Tory held constituencies.
    There is a pretty hard ceiling to LD gains from Cons.
    Ex LB/Tory marginals, for example in Dorset, now have huge Tory majorities. And as MarqueeMark and I keep reminding people, many previously LD voters down here in the SW are not pro-EU.
    But the problem that you hard-line Tories are not facing up to is that many previous Conservative voters are most definitely in favour of the EU, a sound economy and a contented and stable society.
    Not "many" that are moving their vote to the LibDems there aren't......
    Chuckle.
    Doing much canvassing of voters in the SW, are you?

    I am. We're keeping most of the Remainers, winning life-long anti-EU socialists over and getting the Leavers who voted BXP/INDY/DNV in May, back on board.

    Boris is genuinely popular.
    You seriously expect me to believe Boris is picking up any stripe of socialist and (in the unlikely event you are correct) he will keep the anti-EU ones post Brexit? Seriously?
    Believe it. He ain't alone with finding that......

    Maybe it's just a SW thing.

    Maybe.
  • SquareRootSquareRoot Posts: 7,095

    AndyJS said:

    There's something slightly ridiculous about MPs only having 36 hours to scrutinise such an important document before having to vote on it.

    You think MPs 'scrutinise' documents? awww bless
    There are some changes, the essence of the deal is probably much the samwe
  • moonshinemoonshine Posts: 5,751
    Cyclefree said:

    viewcode said:

    @moonshine. I know what a short is but I don't know how to buy one. I dont know what an EFT is and I don't know how to buy one.

    If you don’t know what a financial instrument is you’re best advised not to buy it. :)
    Cyclefree is right.

    ETFs are on the face of it quite a simple product that replicate a particular reference - in this case the value of sterling versus the dollar. You buy and sell them as you do a stock, through any accredited broker.

    But... they are not all made equal. Once you know what you’re doing they’re a very easy way of hedging this sort of risk.
  • Charles said:

    Henry_C said:

    Charles said:

    One positive about Johnson’s Brexit Deal is that it delivers victory for the people of the Republic of Ireland, who have had to live for three years with the uncertainty and worry caused by a Brexit they never asked for. After 800 years of taking our shite, they’ve won.

    This is not about winning and losing

    This is about finding a workable compromise

    If at some point the people of NI decide to join the RoI that is a matter for them
    Not only for them. There would have to be majorities both sides of the border.
    I suspect if NI voted to join RoI a way would be found to make that happen

    Lots and lots of American money, with some from the EU and UK thrown in.

  • kle4kle4 Posts: 96,163

    Very well thought through and explained. Thank you, Obitus.

    It is hard to see a referendum of the type you imagine however, and I suspect you were proposing it slightly tongue in cheek. People are simply too fed up with Brexit and the point has been reached where almost any decision is preferable to no decision.

    Johnson will get this through, and we will all digest it at our leisure.

    Thanks PtP. You are right that I'm not entirely serious with my referendum suggestion.

    A Commons that can vote for a compromise referendum can probably manage to vote for a Brexit Deal first.

    It looks like the number of Labour rebels needs to exceed the number of ERG rebels by nine - and it's probably the case that there will be fewer Labour rebels if there are more ERG rebels.
    Noted with thanks, Obitus.

    I'm not sure I follow your final point. Surely there will be more Labour rebels if they are sure there are a lot of ERG rebels (because they can rebel without advers consequences.) Am I missing something? It is early for me.
    It was argued that there were few Labour rebels on the votes for May's deal because there was no point in receiving the criticism for rebelling when it couldn't affect the outcome of the vote.

    If there are few ERG rebels then a Labour rebel might be able to pass the deal by rebelling.
    OK, got it, but still seems a bit counter-intuitive to me.

    Labour rebels who help Boris over the line would not be hugely popular amongst Labour voters. Do you think those 'rebels' might have tacit support from the Leaderhip? Personally I doubt it but I wouldn't put it past them.
    I think that is a risk, certainly. Any rebels need to be prepared to end their careers over this, the same way Tory rebels were over no deal. Now, it may be it wont end those careers, some of those Tories might make their way back to the fold, but they risked it and some are definitely gone. If labour leavers believe in Brexit happening enough they need to show that spine.

    Call it 5-10. Potentially enough but needs everything else to go right for Boris, so probably not quite enough.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 52,616

    Scott_P said:
    Alexei Sayle had a line about "anybody that uses the term "workshop" who isn't involved in light engineeering is a c**t."

    Similarly, anyone who isn't involved in Victorian street illumination who uses the term "gaslighting".....
    Can we apply the same to the idiots who use the term “snowflake”?
    Be my guest....
  • DougSealDougSeal Posts: 12,541

    DougSeal said:

    Mortimer said:

    Jonathan said:

    PClipp said:

    Mortimer said:

    Foxy said:

    Foxy said:



    Everyone knows Labour can’t win. And, as we keep being told by wealthy Brexit supporters, it’s not about money anyway.

    Can anyone name a target seat for a Lab gain? They all seem pretty implausible to me. In which case the threat of a Corbyn government is a hollow one.
    Labour will do well to return to the next Parliament with close to its current number of MPs. Sub-220 must be odds on.

    Lab currently have 235 MPs, down from 262 immediately after the last GE. They may retake some of the defectors seats, but sub 200 looks more likely to me.

    The SNP will make gains from both SCON and SLAB, but the key to preventing a Tory majority is LD gains from Con, which is how former Lab voters should move in Tory held constituencies.
    There is a pretty hard ceiling to LD gains from Cons.
    Ex LB/Tory marginals, for example in Dorset, now have huge Tory majorities. And as MarqueeMark and I keep reminding people, many previously LD voters down here in the SW are not pro-EU.
    But the problem that you hard-line Tories are not facing up to is that many previous Conservative voters are most definitely in favour of the EU, a sound economy and a contented and stable society.
    Not "many" that are moving their vote to the LibDems there aren't......
    Chuckle.
    Doing much canvassing of voters in the SW, are you?

    I am. We're keeping most of the Remainers, winning life-long anti-EU socialists over and getting the Leavers who voted BXP/INDY/DNV in May, back on board.

    Boris is genuinely popular.
    You seriously expect me to believe Boris is picking up any stripe of socialist and (in the unlikely event you are correct) he will keep the anti-EU ones post Brexit? Seriously?
    Believe it. He ain't alone with finding that......

    Maybe it's just a SW thing.

    Maybe.
    If someone who tells you they are a Socialist is voting Tory then they are lying in one of two ways. Both statements cannot be true.
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 61,806
    Mr. Seal, it seems strange to attack the apparent illiberalism of the UK compared to the EU nations by citing the incumbent PM's letterbox commentary deriding the niqab, whilst disregarding that said garment has been made illegal in numerous EU nations.
  • 148grss148grss Posts: 4,155
    edited October 2019

    DougSeal said:

    Mortimer said:

    Jonathan said:

    PClipp said:

    Mortimer said:

    Foxy said:

    Foxy said:

    kyf_100 said:



    Tories will come running back when they see Labour's eat-the-rich manifesto, which will come down on the middle classes like a ton of bricks.

    Everyone knows Labour can’t win. And, as we keep being told by wealthy Brexit supporters, it’s not about money anyway.
    Can anyone name a target seat for a Lab gain? They all seem pretty implausible to me. In which case the threat of a Corbyn government is a hollow one.
    Labour will do well to return to the next Parliament with close to its current number of MPs. Sub-220 must be odds on.

    Lab currently have 235 MPs, down from 262 immediately after the last GE. They may retake some of the defectors seats, but sub 200 looks more likely to me.

    The SNP will make gains from both SCON and SLAB, but the key to preventing a Tory majority is LD gains from Con, which is how former Lab voters should move in Tory held constituencies.
    There is a pretty hard ceiling to LD gains from Cons.
    Ex LB/Tory marginals, for example in Dorset, now have huge Tory majorities. And as MarqueeMark and I keep reminding people, many previously LD voters down here in the SW are not pro-EU.
    But the problem that you hard-line Tories are not facing up to is that many previous Conservative voters are most definitely in favour of the EU, a sound economy and a contented and stable society.
    Not "many" that are moving their vote to the LibDems there aren't......
    Chuckle.
    Doing much canvassing of voters in the SW, are you?

    I am. We're keeping most of the Remainers, winning life-long anti-EU socialists over and getting the Leavers who voted BXP/INDY/DNV in May, back on board.

    Boris is genuinely popular.
    You seriously expect me to believe Boris is picking up any stripe of socialist and (in the unlikely event you are correct) he will keep the anti-EU ones post Brexit? Seriously?
    Believe it. He ain't alone with finding that......

    Maybe it's just a SW thing.

    Maybe.
    Isn't the South West currently looking like a LD resurgence? Are you sure this isn't just confirmation bias? The polls would suggest differently, would love to know why your canvassing should be trusted above it?
  • DougSealDougSeal Posts: 12,541

    Mr. Seal, it seems strange to attack the apparent illiberalism of the UK compared to the EU nations by citing the incumbent PM's letterbox commentary deriding the niqab, whilst disregarding that said garment has been made illegal in numerous EU nations.

    One looks at the overall picture of the hostile environment, castigating internationalism as traitorous, overall xenophobia. Just because certain countries have done something this administration has not (yet) doesn’t make us better.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 96,163
    148grss said:

    kle4 said:

    Foxy said:
    Seems optimistic on the independent conservatives to me, and on how many ERG hardliners will back it. It's a good 13 higher than my highest estimate. It's so close with view additional labour votes that it really should be able pass if it's right.

    We have had theories befote that some labour votes will unlock simply because if it is close, as before that it is not worth sticking your neck out. I wonder if the reverse is also possible, and some who are potential yes votes are holding off as they know 3-4 more will see it through and so think they can wait for one of the others to jump the line first.
    Obviously it is better for Johnson for this to pass. But if it doesn't pass is it better for it to be a small gap, where he can ask for another vote and hope to convince the maybe half dozen votes he needs, or a big gap, where he can justify a GE because he could never convince 2 dozen votes without losing other votes on his side?

    I assume he would prefer 2nd course of action, as he will still have the problem "post Brexit" (should such a time exist) that he still won't have a majority for his domestic policy. Should Brexit pass out of the political zeitgeist (HA) and Labour picks a new Leader by 2022, Johnson may have had a few years as PM, but unable to do anything, and Labour could storm to government.

    In this vein, listening to the Red Box podcast, they were discussing how the electorate rarely rewards governments for what they do, and instead votes on what more they promise. Churchill won the war, but Labour won the peace. Could we get the same with Brexit?
    A year ago I was convinced if the deal passed the Tories would then lose an election. I'm less certain now because fewer Tory voters hate it. But I doubt they will get as much a reward as they think.
  • Henry_CHenry_C Posts: 73
    edited October 2019

    Scott_P said:
    Alexei Sayle had a line about "anybody that uses the term "workshop" who isn't involved in light engineeering is a c**t."

    Similarly, anyone who isn't involved in Victorian street illumination who uses the term "gaslighting".....
    :smile: In the latter case, I'd say only 95% of users of the term. It has a legitimate metaphorical use to denote a certain very nasty type of conditioning. Usage as a synonym for persuasion or spin is annoying and immediately conveys the message "this person is intellectually superficial and a trendy poser".
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 42,992

    Alistair said:

    Scott_P said:

    HYUFD said:

    bar the SNP and diehard Nationalists who only want to use Brexit as their latest excuse for independence anyway

    Yes

    That's the point.

    BoZo has gifted the SNP an excuse for customs posts at Coldstream.
    Will there be any guards?

    At Coldstream.

    Will there be Coldstream Guards?

    You see I'm making a joke as there is a famous military.....
    Oldest Regiment in the British Army in continuous service.
    But not the senior one, having got it wrong, loyalty-wise, all those years ago.

    And on topic - great thread and puts it very well indeed. It is certainly a trilemma and as you say, and we noted last night, Theresa May must be kicking herself that she didn't throw the DUP under the bus and accede to a diminished Union ages ago.

    Well of course there were the ERG-ers who let's think, oh yes, passed an actual law forbidding what BoJo has now included in his deal but again, how was she to know the ERG were all hat and no cattle.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 52,616
    edited October 2019
    148grss said:


    Isn't the South West currently looking like a LD resurgence? Are you sure this isn't just confirmation bias? The polls would suggest differently, would love to know why your canvassing should be trusted above it?

    There are people on here who made good money in 2015 on the back of my relaying my doorstep insights that the LibDems were going to get crushed. I had them holding 17 seats in the pb.com sweepstake when the perceived wisdom was that they couldn't possibly drop below 28. As it was, I was too generous.

    You?

    So here's a tip from the inside: Dr. Sarah Wollaston will not hold Totnes for the LibDems.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 123,151
    Cyclefree said:

    Charles said:

    HYUFD said:

    All the polling shows that Tory members put Brexit before the Union. As the ERG represents them better than anyone else in Parliament, it’s no surprise it’s members do, too.

    The only ways to preserve the Union in full would have been first to cancel Brexit so the whole UK stays in the EU or second to keep the whole UK in the Single Market and Customs Union so the need for any backstop or equivalent is removed from the EU and Irish side but clearly the ERG and Leavers could not support stopping Brexit and reversing the Leave vote or a BINO Brexit that is in most respects staying in the EU in all but name with free movement and the inability to do our own trade deals.

    The other way of course would have been to go to No Deal and impose a hard border in Ireland between Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland complete with checkpoints etc. The DUP might support that, as would some ERG hardliners like Owen Paterson however it would have made a return to terrorism and the Troubles ack into Northern Ireland to keep the angry Catholic and Nationalist community under control and deal with a resurgent IRA.

    Plus of course No Deal would also have made Scots more likely to vote for independence too as Scottish polls show, again threatening the Union

    As Timothy says, the Tories have chosen taking back control over the Union. For right-wing English nationalists it’s an entirely rational move. I am also very pleased it means a big victory for Ireland. The Irish people never deserved the uncertainty and worry Brexit inflicted on them. I see all this as the first step to England finally learning where it truly sits in the world. It’ll take a while longer yet, but we’re now starting. That is a good thing.

    The U.K. is a bastion of democratic and liberal values. We are a force for good in the world. I am saddened that you look forward to that being diminished
    Allying itself with Trump’s USA as Boris’s Tories want to do is rather going to diminish Britain’s standing in the world. But that’s the choice the Tories - and those who vote for them - will be making. Fair enough: just don’t give us all this hypocritical guff about being the patriotic unionist party at the same time.
    Allying with the most powerful nation on earth is hardly diminishing the UK but of course Boris calls out Trump when he disagrees, e.g. over the Kurds
  • To those ex-Conservative Members that quit the party when Boris was elected as you thought he was irresponsible or going for No Deal - are you now considering rejoining the Party now he has his own Deal?
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 48,729

    Scott_P said:
    Alexei Sayle had a line about "anybody that uses the term "workshop" who isn't involved in light engineeering is a c**t."

    Similarly, anyone who isn't involved in Victorian street illumination who uses the term "gaslighting".....
    I think this is the first post from you that I can heartily endorse!
  • 148grss148grss Posts: 4,155
    kle4 said:

    148grss said:

    kle4 said:

    Foxy said:
    Seems optimistic on the independent conservatives to me, and on how many ERG hardliners will back it. It's a good 13 higher than my highest estimate. It's so close with view additional labour votes that it really should be able pass if it's right.

    We have had theories befote that some labour votes will unlock simply because if it is close, as before that it is not worth sticking your neck out. I wonder if the reverse is also possible, and some who are potential yes votes are holding off as they know 3-4 more will see it through and so think they can wait for one of the others to jump the line first.
    Obviously it is better for Johnson for this to pass. But if it doesn't pass is it better for it to be a small gap, where he can ask for another vote and hope to convince the maybe half dozen votes he needs, or a big gap, where he can justify a GE because he could never convince 2 dozen votes without losing other votes on his side?

    I assume he would prefer 2nd course of action, as he will still have the problem "post Brexit" (should such a time exist) that he still won't have a majority for his domestic policy. Should Brexit pass out of the political zeitgeist (HA) and Labour picks a new Leader by 2022, Johnson may have had a few years as PM, but unable to do anything, and Labour could storm to government.

    In this vein, listening to the Red Box podcast, they were discussing how the electorate rarely rewards governments for what they do, and instead votes on what more they promise. Churchill won the war, but Labour won the peace. Could we get the same with Brexit?
    A year ago I was convinced if the deal passed the Tories would then lose an election. I'm less certain now because fewer Tory voters hate it. But I doubt they will get as much a reward as they think.
    I just don't see where Cons make gains. Obviously Labour loses some seats, but not nearly enough to Cons for Cons to get a majority. Both parties likely to lose net 20 - 40 seats each, maybe more, what with SNP in Scotland and LD in the south (although if Brexit goes through I have no idea what happens to the LD revival). Some Lab seats switch to Cons by the look of it, the Stoke seats probably, maybe some in Wales some others like them, but that isn't enough for a majority. And if Labour does get shift of Corbyn, which I can imagine if Brexit happens, no immediate GE and bad local results come May, they may be able to keep some of those... It just looks so weird atm.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 123,151
    DougSeal said:

    Charles said:

    The U.K. is a bastion of democratic and liberal values. We are a force for good in the world. I am saddened that you look forward to that being diminished

    With the Bannon loving, ethno-nationalist, “citizens of nowhere”, “enemies of the people”, “letterboxes” administration we have had since 2015 we are probably the most illiberal country (currently) in the EU behind Hungary. As for being a force for good, especially in the context of Ireland, read a book.
    Poland says hello, as does Italy, Austria and Spain
  • Mr. Seal, it seems strange to attack the apparent illiberalism of the UK compared to the EU nations by citing the incumbent PM's letterbox commentary deriding the niqab, whilst disregarding that said garment has been made illegal in numerous EU nations.

    Indeed the PM the wrote that article in reply to many EU nations banning that reprehensible and oppressive garment and he wrote that we shouldn't ban it.
  • StereotomyStereotomy Posts: 4,092
    Henry_C said:

    Scott_P said:
    Alexei Sayle had a line about "anybody that uses the term "workshop" who isn't involved in light engineeering is a c**t."

    Similarly, anyone who isn't involved in Victorian street illumination who uses the term "gaslighting".....
    :smile: In the latter case, I'd say only 95% of users of the term. It has a legitimate metaphorical use to denote a certain very nasty type of conditioning. Usage as a synonym for persuasion or spin is annoying and immediately conveys the message "this person is intellectually superficial and a trendy poser".
    Yeah it seems to be misused very often, but I don't mind there being a term for what it actually means
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 54,627

    Very well thought through and explained. Thank you, Obitus.

    It is hard to see a referendum of the type you imagine however, and I suspect you were proposing it slightly tongue in cheek. People are simply too fed up with Brexit and the point has been reached where almost any decision is preferable to no decision.

    Johnson will get this through, and we will all digest it at our leisure.

    Thanks PtP. You are right that I'm not entirely serious with my referendum suggestion.

    A Commons that can vote for a compromise referendum can probably manage to vote for a Brexit Deal first.

    It looks like the number of Labour rebels needs to exceed the number of ERG rebels by nine - and it's probably the case that there will be fewer Labour rebels if there are more ERG rebels.
    Noted with thanks, Obitus.

    I'm not sure I follow your final point. Surely there will be more Labour rebels if they are sure there are a lot of ERG rebels (because they can rebel without advers consequences.) Am I missing something? It is early for me.
    It was argued that there were few Labour rebels on the votes for May's deal because there was no point in receiving the criticism for rebelling when it couldn't affect the outcome of the vote.

    If there are few ERG rebels then a Labour rebel might be able to pass the deal by rebelling.
    OK, got it, but still seems a bit counter-intuitive to me.

    Labour rebels who help Boris over the line would not be hugely popular amongst Labour voters. Do you think those 'rebels' might have tacit support from the Leaderhip? Personally I doubt it but I wouldn't put it past them.
    Jeremy’s at a rally in Liverpool tomorrow night, what chance that he and a few of his acolytes end up being absent from the vote, sufficient abstentions to see it over the line?
  • HYUFD said:

    DougSeal said:

    Charles said:

    The U.K. is a bastion of democratic and liberal values. We are a force for good in the world. I am saddened that you look forward to that being diminished

    With the Bannon loving, ethno-nationalist, “citizens of nowhere”, “enemies of the people”, “letterboxes” administration we have had since 2015 we are probably the most illiberal country (currently) in the EU behind Hungary. As for being a force for good, especially in the context of Ireland, read a book.
    Poland says hello, as does Italy, Austria and Spain
    And France and Sweden and the Netherlands and ...
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 52,616
    DougSeal said:

    DougSeal said:

    Mortimer said:

    Jonathan said:

    PClipp said:

    Mortimer said:

    Foxy said:

    Foxy said:



    Everyone knows Labour can’t win. And, as we keep being told by wealthy Brexit supporters, it’s not about money anyway.

    Can anyone name a target seat for a Lab gain? They all seem pretty implausible to me. In which case the threat of a Corbyn government is a hollow one.
    Labour will do well to return to the next Parliament with close to its current number of MPs. Sub-220 must be odds on.

    Lab currently have 235 MPs, down from 262 immediately after the last GE. They may retake some of the defectors seats, but sub 200 looks more likely to me.

    The SNP will make gains from both SCON and SLAB, but the key to preventing a Tory majority is LD gains from Con, which is how former Lab voters should move in Tory held constituencies.
    There is a pretty hard ceiling to LD gains from Cons.
    Ex LB/Tory marginals, for example in Dorset, now have huge Tory majorities. And as MarqueeMark and I keep reminding people, many previously LD voters down here in the SW are not pro-EU.
    But the problem that you hard-line Tories are not facing up to is that many previous Conservative voters are most definitely in favour of the EU, a sound economy and a contented and stable society.
    Not "many" that are moving their vote to the LibDems there aren't......
    Chuckle.
    Doing much canvassing of voters in the SW, are you?

    I am. We're keeping most of the Remainers, winning life-long anti-EU socialists over and getting the Leavers who voted BXP/INDY/DNV in May, back on board.

    Boris is genuinely popular.
    You seriously expect me to believe Boris is picking up any stripe of socialist and (in the unlikely event you are correct) he will keep the anti-EU ones post Brexit? Seriously?
    Believe it. He ain't alone with finding that......

    Maybe it's just a SW thing.

    Maybe.
    If someone who tells you they are a Socialist is voting Tory then they are lying in one of two ways. Both statements cannot be true.
    "Been Labour all my life. But never again.

    I like your Boris."

    You saying I've never heard this on the doorsteps? OK, suit yourself.....
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 42,992

    Mr. Seal, it seems strange to attack the apparent illiberalism of the UK compared to the EU nations by citing the incumbent PM's letterbox commentary deriding the niqab, whilst disregarding that said garment has been made illegal in numerous EU nations.

    Indeed the PM the wrote that article in reply to many EU nations banning that reprehensible and oppressive garment and he wrote that we shouldn't ban it.
    A quick look at our foreign policy over the past few decades might give pause to those who think, a la @Charles, that we are a beacon of liberal enlightenment in an otherwise dark, immoral world.
  • geoffwgeoffw Posts: 8,722
    edited October 2019
    This is quite an encomium from Patrick O'Flynn:

    This has, I would contend, been the most brilliant prime ministerial episode since the Falklands War and leaves the occupant of Downing Street potentially on the cusp of a decade in power. He has shown raw political courage and grace under fire. He has been clear-sighted and used to the very maximum effect all the room for manoeuvre he was left with after the parliamentary Lilliputians did their best to tie him up in knots.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 123,151
    edited October 2019
    geoffw said:

    This is quite an encomium from Patrick O'Flynn:

    This has, I would contend, been the most brilliant prime ministerial episode since the Falklands War and leaves the occupant of Downing Street potentially on the cusp of a decade in power. He has shown raw political courage and grace under fire. He has been clear-sighted and used to the very maximum effect all the room for manoeuvre he was left with after the parliamentary Lilliputians did their best to tie him up in knots.

    Yes, if the Deal passes Boris could get up to a decade in power with the opposition split between Corbyn Labour and the LDs and the Brexit Party less relevant with Brexit delivered
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 48,729
    HYUFD said:

    Cyclefree said:

    Charles said:

    HYUFD said:

    All the polling shows that Tory members put Brexit before the Union. As the ERG represents them better than anyone else in Parliament, it’s no surprise it’s members do, too.

    The only ways to preserve the Union in full would have been first to cancel Brexit so the whole UK stays in the EU or second to keep the whole UK in the Single Market and Customs Union so the need for any backstop or equivalent is removed from the EU and Irish side but clearly the ERG and Leavers could not support stopping Brexit and reversing the Leave vote or a BINO Brexit that is in most respects staying in the EU in all but name with free movement and the inability to do our own trade deals.

    The other way of course would have been to go to No Deal and impose a hard border in Ireland between Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland complete with checkpoints etc. The DUP might support that, as would some ERG hardliners like Owen Paterson however it would have made a return to terrorism and the Troubles ack into Northern Ireland to keep the angry Catholic and Nationalist community under control and deal with a resurgent IRA.

    Plus of course No Deal would also have made Scots more likely to vote for independence too as Scottish polls show, again threatening the Union

    As Timothy says, the Tories have chosen taking back control over the Union. For right-wing English nationalists it’s an entirely rational move. I am also very pleased it means a big victory for Ireland. The Irish people never deserved the uncertainty and worry Brexit inflicted on them. I see all this as the first step to England finally learning where it truly sits in the world. It’ll take a while longer yet, but we’re now starting. That is a good thing.

    The U.K. is a bastion of democratic and liberal values. We are a force for good in the world. I am saddened that you look forward to that being diminished
    Allying itself with Trump’s USA as Boris’s Tories want to do is rather going to diminish Britain’s standing in the world. But that’s the choice the Tories - and those who vote for them - will be making. Fair enough: just don’t give us all this hypocritical guff about being the patriotic unionist party at the same time.
    Allying with the most powerful nation on earth is hardly diminishing the UK but of course Boris calls out Trump when he disagrees, e.g. over the Kurds
    Allying with the outgoing regime perhaps not so wise.

    Though I do expect POTUS Bizzie Lizzie to be popular in the UK.
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 19,468
    I see there was a further swing to Lab in Liverpool from 2016. If that is accurate of the national picture then the swing away from Labour elsewhere could be even greater than we realise.
  • MortimerMortimer Posts: 14,127
    edited October 2019

    148grss said:


    Isn't the South West currently looking like a LD resurgence? Are you sure this isn't just confirmation bias? The polls would suggest differently, would love to know why your canvassing should be trusted above it?

    There are people on here who made good money in 2015 on the back of my relaying my doorstep insights that the LibDems were going to get crushed. I had them holding 17 seats in the pb.com sweepstake when the perceived wisdom was that they couldn't possibly drop below 28. As it was, I was too generous.

    You?

    So here's a tip from the inside: Dr. Sarah Wollaston will not hold Totnes for the LibDems.
    Indeed. And IIRC I won the 2015 GE prediction competition outright.

    Like Mark, I've been canvassing in the same areas for a long time. It gives you very useful insight - albeit it is generally seat/region specific. So in 2017 I misjudged the national mood, and specifically the strength of Labour, because locally things were very good for us Blues.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 123,151
    Foxy said:

    HYUFD said:

    Cyclefree said:

    Charles said:

    HYUFD said:

    All the polling shows that Tory members put Brexit before the Union. As the ERG represents them better than anyone else in Parliament, it’s no surprise it’s members do, too.

    The only ways to preserve the Union in full would have been first to cancel Brexit so the whole UK stays in the EU or second to keep the whole UK in the Single Market and Customs Union so the need for any backstop or equivalent is removed from the EU and Irish side but clearly the ERG and Leavers could not support stopping Brexit and reversing the Leave vote or a BINO Brexit that is in most respects staying in the EU in all but name with free movement and the inability to do our own trade deals.

    The other way of course would have been to go to No Deal and impose a hard border in Ireland between Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland complete with checkpoints etc. The DUP might support that, as would some ERG hardliners like Owen Paterson however it would have made a return to terrorism and the Troubles ack into Northern Ireland to keep the angry Catholic and Nationalist community under control and deal with a resurgent IRA.

    Plus of course No Deal would also have made Scots more likely to vote for independence too as Scottish polls show, again threatening the Union

    As Timothy says, the Tories have chosen taking back control over the Union. For right-wing English nationalists it’s an entirely rational move. I am also very pleased it means a big victory for Ireland. The Irish people never deserved the uncertainty and worry Brexit inflicted on them. I see all this as the first step to England finally learning where it truly sits in the world. It’ll take a while longer yet, but we’re now starting. That is a good thing.

    The U.K. is a bastion of democratic and liberal values. We are a force for good in the world. I am saddened that you look forward to that being diminished
    Allying itself with Trump’s USA as Boris’s Tories want to do is rather going to diminish Britain’s standing in the world. But that’s the choice the Tories - and those who vote for them - will be making. Fair enough: just don’t give us all this hypocritical guff about being the patriotic unionist party at the same time.
    Allying with the most powerful nation on earth is hardly diminishing the UK but of course Boris calls out Trump when he disagrees, e.g. over the Kurds
    Allying with the outgoing regime perhaps not so wise.

    Though I do expect POTUS Bizzie Lizzie to be popular in the UK.
    Bizzie Lizzie likely ensures Trump is re elected
  • nico67nico67 Posts: 4,502
    Amendment laid by Letwin .

    Very interesting. It says the house has considered the matter but withholds approval until all the legislation has passed . Effectively the proper vote will be on the WAIB not MV4.
  • numbertwelvenumbertwelve Posts: 6,814
    The key thing here might not be positive votes for or against but abstentions. It may be some can be persuaded to be noticeably absent when the vote is called, enough to see it scrape through.

    On a basic reading of ayes/noes assuming the whole commons votes I can’t see anything other than a narrow defeat.
  • Interesting that EU leaders seem to really want this over with and us out now. Just seen an interview with someone on Sky (think it might have been Luxembourg PM) who when asked if there should be an extension if the vote falls by a few votes seemed to suggest that there shouldn't be an extension and there could be another Meaningful Vote on Tuesday if Saturdays fails by a few votes.

    If the vote fails marginally I suspect the Benn letter may get sent with a quick response from the EU saying we don't want to give you an extension.

    Hard to see Bercow blocking another MV if an extension has been denied.
  • Interview with Luxembourg's PM live on Sky just now saying there has to be a specific reason for an extension but if it just to ask for more time it will not be granted

    He also said that if he the vote is lost tomorrow the HOC has time to pass it next week.

    Clearly Oliver Letwin's amendment is going to get short shift from the EU
  • McDonnell (the defacto labour leader these days) says three line whip, eu leaking to bbc there will be an extension if asked and lewin wrecking amendment...the house of cretins are going to play silly buggers arent they.
  • 148grss said:


    Isn't the South West currently looking like a LD resurgence? Are you sure this isn't just confirmation bias? The polls would suggest differently, would love to know why your canvassing should be trusted above it?

    There are people on here who made good money in 2015 on the back of my relaying my doorstep insights that the LibDems were going to get crushed. I had them holding 17 seats in the pb.com sweepstake when the perceived wisdom was that they couldn't possibly drop below 28. As it was, I was too generous.

    You?

    So here's a tip from the inside: Dr. Sarah Wollaston will not hold Totnes for the LibDems.
    Let's face it - Boris would have gone for No Deal were it not for the Benn Act. The indignity of having to grovel to the EU for an extension was more than his towering vanity could bear. The calculation was made that appeasing Varadkar and Juncker and humiliating the DUP would be preferable to any damage to Brand Boris.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 123,151

    I see there was a further swing to Lab in Liverpool from 2016. If that is accurate of the national picture then the swing away from Labour elsewhere could be even greater than we realise.

    Yup, Liverpool remember even voted Labour in the European Parliament elections as Labour fell behind the LDs across the UK
  • I see there was a further swing to Lab in Liverpool from 2016. If that is accurate of the national picture then the swing away from Labour elsewhere could be even greater than we realise.

    The last place in the country that Labour needs more votes is Liverpool!
  • AlistairAlistair Posts: 23,670

    HYUFD said:

    Scott_P said:

    HYUFD said:

    bar the SNP and diehard Nationalists who only want to use Brexit as their latest excuse for independence anyway

    Yes

    That's the point.

    BoZo has gifted the SNP an excuse for customs posts at Coldstream.
    He hasn't as he has kept an open border in Ireland and of course Bozo will block indyref2 anyway.

    Sturgeon should count herself lucky Bozo is not going to pass a law to put her in jail as the Spanish government and courts have done to Catalan nationalists
    What an utterly stupid and crass last sentence. What on earth has happened to you
    Do you remeber howuch they bighead up Le Pen during the French presidential election?

    I don't think anything had happened, it has just become more obvious.
  • StockyStocky Posts: 10,222
    MarqueeMark said: "So here's a tip from the inside: Dr. Sarah Wollaston will not hold Totnes for the LibDems."

    I pray that you are right. And I say that as a liberal.

    It astonishes me how MPs can one day be advocating for conservatism and the very next day advocating for liberalism (or collectivism - liberalism etc).

  • AlistairAlistair Posts: 23,670
  • Alistair said:

    HYUFD said:

    Scott_P said:

    HYUFD said:

    bar the SNP and diehard Nationalists who only want to use Brexit as their latest excuse for independence anyway

    Yes

    That's the point.

    BoZo has gifted the SNP an excuse for customs posts at Coldstream.
    He hasn't as he has kept an open border in Ireland and of course Bozo will block indyref2 anyway.

    Sturgeon should count herself lucky Bozo is not going to pass a law to put her in jail as the Spanish government and courts have done to Catalan nationalists
    What an utterly stupid and crass last sentence. What on earth has happened to you
    Do you remeber howuch they bighead up Le Pen during the French presidential election?

    I don't think anything had happened, it has just become more obvious.
    Yes but it is just crass
  • Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826
    edited October 2019
    "Choice is not between Brexit or no Brexit, choice is between Brexit with a deal or without a deal" - French advisor to Macron on Sky now - EU leaders do not want our membership dragging on.
  • 148grss148grss Posts: 4,155
    Mortimer said:

    148grss said:


    Isn't the South West currently looking like a LD resurgence? Are you sure this isn't just confirmation bias? The polls would suggest differently, would love to know why your canvassing should be trusted above it?

    There are people on here who made good money in 2015 on the back of my relaying my doorstep insights that the LibDems were going to get crushed. I had them holding 17 seats in the pb.com sweepstake when the perceived wisdom was that they couldn't possibly drop below 28. As it was, I was too generous.

    You?

    So here's a tip from the inside: Dr. Sarah Wollaston will not hold Totnes for the LibDems.
    Indeed. And IIRC I won the 2015 GE prediction competition outright.

    Like Mark, I've been canvassing in the same areas for a long time. It gives you very useful insight - albeit it is generally seat/region specific. So in 2017 I misjudged the national mood, and specifically the strength of Labour, because locally things were very good for us Blues.
    Okay, will file these thoughts away. Useful to understand.
  • geoffw said:

    This is quite an encomium from Patrick O'Flynn:

    This has, I would contend, been the most brilliant prime ministerial episode since the Falklands War and leaves the occupant of Downing Street potentially on the cusp of a decade in power. He has shown raw political courage and grace under fire. He has been clear-sighted and used to the very maximum effect all the room for manoeuvre he was left with after the parliamentary Lilliputians did their best to tie him up in knots.

    In fairness, O'Flynn doesn't only heap his gushing praise on Boris - he reserves plenty of it for himself too.
  • 148grss148grss Posts: 4,155

    DougSeal said:

    DougSeal said:

    Mortimer said:

    Jonathan said:

    PClipp said:

    Mortimer said:

    Foxy said:

    Foxy said:



    Everyone knows Labour can’t win. And, as we keep being told by wealthy Brexit supporters, it’s not about money anyway.

    Can anyone name a target seat for a Lab gain? They all seem pretty implausible to me. In which case the threat of a Corbyn government is a hollow one.
    Labour will do well to return to the next Parliament with close to its current number of MPs. Sub-220 must be odds on.

    Lab currently have 235 MPs, down from 262 immediately after the last GE. They may retake some of the defectors seats, but sub 200 looks more likely to me.

    The SNP will make gains from both SCON and SLAB, but the key to preventing a Tory majority is LD gains from Con, which is how former Lab voters should move in Tory held constituencies.
    There is a pretty hard ceiling to LD gains from Cons.
    Ex LB/Tory marginals, for example in Dorset, now have huge Tory majorities. And as MarqueeMark and I keep reminding people, many previously LD voters down here in the SW are not pro-EU.
    But the problem that you hard-line Tories are not facing up to is that many previous Conservative voters are most definitely in favour of the EU, a sound economy and a contented and stable society.
    Not "many" that are moving their vote to the LibDems there aren't......
    Chuckle.
    Doing much canvassing of voters in the SW, are you?

    I am. We're keeping most of the Remainers, winning life-long anti-EU socialists over and getting the Leavers who voted BXP/INDY/DNV in May, back on board.

    Boris is genuinely popular.
    You seriously expect me to believe Boris is picking up any stripe of socialist and (in the unlikely event you are correct) he will keep the anti-EU ones post Brexit? Seriously?
    Believe it. He ain't alone with finding that......

    Maybe it's just a SW thing.

    Maybe.
    If someone who tells you they are a Socialist is voting Tory then they are lying in one of two ways. Both statements cannot be true.
    "Been Labour all my life. But never again.

    I like your Boris."

    You saying I've never heard this on the doorsteps? OK, suit yourself.....
    Labour all my life does not equal socialist, so yeah.
  • nichomarnichomar Posts: 7,483

    "Choice is not between Brexit or no Brexit, choice is between Brexit with a deal or without a deal" - EU leaders do not want our membership dragging on.

    Unless it’s for an election or referendum
  • AlistairAlistair Posts: 23,670
    Foxy said:



    Allying with the outgoing regime perhaps not so wise.

    Though I do expect POTUS Bizzie Lizzie to be popular in the UK.

    Please, refer to Elizabeth Warren respectfully. Her full title is: My Girl The Big Shiz Liz Double You To The Max.
  • 148grss said:


    Isn't the South West currently looking like a LD resurgence? Are you sure this isn't just confirmation bias? The polls would suggest differently, would love to know why your canvassing should be trusted above it?

    There are people on here who made good money in 2015 on the back of my relaying my doorstep insights that the LibDems were going to get crushed. I had them holding 17 seats in the pb.com sweepstake when the perceived wisdom was that they couldn't possibly drop below 28. As it was, I was too generous.

    You?

    So here's a tip from the inside: Dr. Sarah Wollaston will not hold Totnes for the LibDems.
    Let's face it - Boris would have gone for No Deal were it not for the Benn Act. The indignity of having to grovel to the EU for an extension was more than his towering vanity could bear. The calculation was made that appeasing Varadkar and Juncker and humiliating the DUP would be preferable to any damage to Brand Boris.
    Bollocks. The wheels were already moving on Boris getting a new deal before Benn Act was passed.

    Boris had already had his meeting with Merkel and Macron were crucially he got them to agree to reopen the WDA.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 42,992

    148grss said:


    Isn't the South West currently looking like a LD resurgence? Are you sure this isn't just confirmation bias? The polls would suggest differently, would love to know why your canvassing should be trusted above it?

    There are people on here who made good money in 2015 on the back of my relaying my doorstep insights that the LibDems were going to get crushed. I had them holding 17 seats in the pb.com sweepstake when the perceived wisdom was that they couldn't possibly drop below 28. As it was, I was too generous.

    You?

    So here's a tip from the inside: Dr. Sarah Wollaston will not hold Totnes for the LibDems.
    Let's face it - Boris would have gone for No Deal were it not for the Benn Act. The indignity of having to grovel to the EU for an extension was more than his towering vanity could bear. The calculation was made that appeasing Varadkar and Juncker and humiliating the DUP would be preferable to any damage to Brand Boris.
    Yes. Now, it may be that the final days of October are indeed spent in the courts as Cummings intimated but there is no doubt that the Benn Act forced Boris' hand otherwise I think they would happily have sailed on as close to no deal as they could have and dared everyone to line up and stop them.

    As for the outcome - you were absolutely spot on yesterday. Boris' desire to be PM is stronger than any desire to maintain the sanctity of the Union.

    The only surprise was the ease with which he jettisoned the DUP and NI after all the fuss when May broached just that subject. The JRM-inspired law and "No British PM could ever.." rhetoric proved to be no impediment for him and I must say I hadn't expected him to be so shameless or that the ERG, say, would accept it so cravenly.

    But we have a deal so we should be happy.
  • Foxy said:

    Charles said:

    Alistair said:

    Scott_P said:

    HYUFD said:

    bar the SNP and diehard Nationalists who only want to use Brexit as their latest excuse for independence anyway

    Yes

    That's the point.

    BoZo has gifted the SNP an excuse for customs posts at Coldstream.
    Will there be any guards?

    At Coldstream.

    Will there be Coldstream Guards?

    You see I'm making a joke as there is a famous military.....
    It would be a Black Watch if you were ever in charge of humour on this site
    The Black Watch were formed as a Loyalist regiment as I recall, though may well be less Unionist now.
    Not even a regiment now, let alone a Loyalist one.
  • Another EU MEP had said that a further extension for the sake of an extension will be declined. If it was for a GE it would be considered but the EU wants this done now
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