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politicalbetting.com » Blog Archive » Johnson/Cummings propose moving the House of Lords to York

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  • SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 22,038

    ydoethur said:

    One infrastructure priority should be to complete electrification of the Midland Main Line - and preferably all other railways too.

    I can’t be bothered to explain why, but I think this video does it very eloquently:

    https://youtu.be/Ro0016JG2Ms

    With electrification comes driver only control of trains. The unions have been successful in blocking this elsewhere.
    I believe that the appropriate responses are 'Hellfire!' 'Dreadful!' and 'My Lords!'
  • SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 22,038
    With the Lords chamber vacated, the next step is to follow through on my proposal from some years ago to turn it into a bingo hall.
  • Byronic said:

    Byronic said:

    eek said:

    Byronic said:

    Excellent idea. Do it. York is a good choice

    Incidentally, in the middle of the Brexit horror show, won't someone think of UK universities? They are doomed to decline as foreign students shun the hostile atmos...

    Oh.

    "Number of international students at UK universities jumps

    Chinese students help fuel surge in non-European foreigners starting courses"

    https://www.ft.com/content/8f025b0e-3872-11ea-a6d3-9a26f8c3cba4

    Universities had 3 years to prepare for something that only has a 12-18 month sales cycle (I did some pre-sales to universities over the past 18 months and the sales cycle is easy to work out. With UCAS forms for September 2020 admissions done things now turn to September 2021.
    But... but.... but... we were explicitly told the racist and hostile attitude, expressed by Brexit, would put off all the foreign students?!

    "Brexit would put one in five international students off studying in UK, study finds"

    https://www.independent.co.uk/news/education/education-news/brexit-international-students-uk-universities-a8862081.html

    As it turns out, that was total bollocks. EUgemon. So it's win-win.

    The same process will, I think, apply to many of the areas cited by Project Fear. eg. EU academic staff. Sure, some will go home, but others will come from further afield.

    Brexit is a pivot away from Europe, and out towards the wider world, just as Brexiteers predicted.

    What makes our universities great is the R&D they do. It is vital this continues. We will always be able to find students to teach undergraduate engineering, computing and science courses to. The challenge will be attracting the post-graduates and absorbing them into the wider university hinterlands that currently exist. That will depend heavily on the immigration rules we put in place. Chinese students will go home.

    Boris is already relaxing immigration rules for students. He's not an idiot like TMay.

    "Immigration status: Ministers tear up May-era student visa rules"

    https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-49655719?ocid=socialflow_twitter&ns_campaign=bbcnews&ns_mchannel=social&ns_source=twitter

    It’s the earnings and conditions for post-grads and beyond that's the issue. Johnson does understand the importance of our tertiary sector, but we need rules that make recruitment and retention of R&D talent as easy as possible. Our universities are being shut-out of pan-EU projects and are losing the ability to recruit freely from a talent pool of 500 million. They’ll be competing directly with the Americans now. They are going to need a lot of practical help.

  • ByronicByronic Posts: 3,578
    Put a pip on my shoulder and call me Sergeant Over-Sanguine, but I think Brexit is going to be simultaneously hard, but fine.

    So many of the dire predictions (as with UK universities) are dissolving as we approach them, like mist on a mountain road.

    Onwards, fellow Britons. Onwards.


  • kle4kle4 Posts: 96,153

    Why the north of England? Why not Scotland or Wales?

    The only people in Wales interested in the House of Lords are dying or dead Llafur politicians. We don't want them. York is a good choice, IMO.

    The expulsion of these bodies from London is completely correct and long overdue. There is absolutely no need for these bodies to be headquartered in London. House of Lords, the BBC, the Universities, charity headquarters, cultural institutions --- they all need too be booted out of London.

    If you are charity partly relying on charitable donations, then it seems to me that shifting out of expensive London property is absolutely crucial. Why is Shelter England HQ-ed in London -- why not e.g., Newcastle or Birmingham?
    I get the argument with respect of charities, cultural institutions government departments and so on. I dont see how it follows with parliament or half of parliament. Yes I know many places have split capitals or parliaments not in their largest city, but the UK is hugely dominated by London and will continue to be even without parliament in it.

    To me such plans look like identifying a real issue, London being dominant and the rest not getting enough attention, but coming up with an ineffective and inappropriate solution because it looks like its addressing the issue but isn't. Its political virtue signalling of proving who is the most not London supporter.
  • ByronicByronic Posts: 3,578

    Byronic said:

    Byronic said:

    eek said:

    Byronic said:

    Excellent idea. Do it. York is a good choice

    Incidentally, in the middle of the Brexit horror show, won't someone think of UK universities? They are doomed to decline as foreign students shun the hostile atmos...

    Oh.

    "Number of international students at UK universities jumps

    Chinese students help fuel surge in non-European foreigners starting courses"

    https://www.ft.com/content/8f025b0e-3872-11ea-a6d3-9a26f8c3cba4

    Universities had 3 years to prepare for something that only has a 12-18 month sales cycle (I did some pre-sales to universities over the past 18 months and the sales cycle is easy to work out. With UCAS forms for September 2020 admissions done things now turn to September 2021.
    But... but.... but... we were explicitly told the racist and hostile attitude, expressed by Brexit, would put off all the foreign students?!

    "Brexit would put one in five international students off studying in UK, study finds"

    https://www.independent.co.uk/news/education/education-news/brexit-international-students-uk-universities-a8862081.html

    As it turns out, that was total bollocks. EUgemon. So it's win-win.

    The same process will, I think, apply to many of the areas cited by Project Fear. eg. EU academic staff. Sure, some will go home, but others will come from further afield.

    Brexit is a pivot away from Europe, and out towards the wider world, just as Brexiteers predicted.

    Whatme.

    Boris is already relaxing immigration rules for students. He's not an idiot like TMay.

    "Immigration status: Ministers tear up May-era student visa rules"

    https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-49655719?ocid=socialflow_twitter&ns_campaign=bbcnews&ns_mchannel=social&ns_source=twitter

    It’s the earnings and conditions for post-grads and beyond that's the issue. Johnson does understand the importance of our tertiary sector, but we need rules that make recruitment and retention of R&D talent as easy as possible. Our universities are being shut-out of pan-EU projects and are losing the ability to recruit freely from a talent pool of 500 million. They’ll be competing directly with the Americans now. They are going to need a lot of practical help.

    They can recruit freely from a pool of 8 billion. ie The world.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 28,386
    edited January 2020
    This is a smokescreen. Nero fiddling while Rome burns or just Cummings fiddling about?

    Apart from anything else, imagine the cost. HS2 will be a cut priced bargain compared to moving HoL out of London. It's like we haven't got anything else to spend the money on.

    I bet one could buy countless water-cannon and a hatful of garden bridges.
  • Byronic said:

    Byronic said:

    Byronic said:

    eek said:

    Byronic said:

    Excellent idea. Do it. York is a good choice

    Incidentally, in the middle of the Brexit horror show, won't someone think of UK universities? They are doomed to decline as foreign students shun the hostile atmos...

    Oh.

    "Number of international students at UK universities jumps

    Chinese students help fuel surge in non-European foreigners starting courses"

    https://www.ft.com/content/8f025b0e-3872-11ea-a6d3-9a26f8c3cba4

    Universities had 3 years to prepare for something that only has a 12-18 month sales cycle (I did some pre-sales to universities over the past 18 months and the sales cycle is easy to work out. With UCAS forms for September 2020 admissions done things now turn to September 2021.
    But... but.... but... we were explicitly told the racist and hostile attitude, expressed by Brexit, would put off all the foreign students?!

    "Brexit would put one in five international students off studying in UK, study finds"

    https://www.independent.co.uk/news/education/education-news/brexit-international-students-uk-universities-a8862081.html

    As it turns out, that was total bollocks. EUgemon. So it's win-win.

    The same process will, I think, apply to many of the areas cited by Project Fear. eg. EU academic staff. Sure, some will go home, but others will come from further afield.

    Brexit is a pivot away from Europe, and out towards the wider world, just as Brexiteers predicted.

    Whatme.

    Boris is already relaxing immigration rules for students. He's not an idiot like TMay.

    "Immigration status: Ministers tear up May-era student visa rules"

    https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-49655719?ocid=socialflow_twitter&ns_campaign=bbcnews&ns_mchannel=social&ns_source=twitter

    It’s the earnings and conditions for post-grads and beyond that's the issue. Johnson does understand the importance of our tertiary sector, but we need rules that make recruitment and retention of R&D talent as easy as possible. Our universities are being shut-out of pan-EU projects and are losing the ability to recruit freely from a talent pool of 500 million. They’ll be competing directly with the Americans now. They are going to need a lot of practical help.

    They can recruit freely from a pool of 8 billion. ie The world.

    That depends on the immigration regime and rules.

  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 33,468
    Mark Thompson, ex-BBC DG has just said on Marr that the LibDems, during the Coalition, blocked Osborne's attempt to transfer the costs of over 75's (my) licence fees to the Beeb.
    So much for my generation voting Tory, not LD. Such blockages ween't publicised, of course.
  • FF43FF43 Posts: 17,208
    edited January 2020

    https://twitter.com/scotonsunday/status/1218826711846064128?s=20

    Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s decision to refuse the Scottish Government the right to call another independence referendum starts to look a lot less like the outrage described by nationalists and more like an example of him defending the wishes of a majority of Scots.

    Having gone through five years and counting of non-stop constitutional wrangling, most Scots are not gagging for another referendum (although some are).

    If there is one, I expect independence to win. No-one much will speak for the Union. The Tories have comprehensively poisoned the unionism well.
  • CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 60,216

    Why the north of England? Why not Scotland or Wales?

    Why is Shelter England HQ-ed in London
    And if it has to be in London why is it in EC1?

    One of the reasons Northern Rock failed was the lazy feckers supervising it couldn't be arsed to spend 3 hours on the train to Newcastle....

  • Jonathan said:

    kle4 said:

    Jonathan said:

    The state opening of parliament is going to be a nightmare for HM. I am not sure the Gold State Coach can stand up to the potholes on the A1. They will have to divert via the Starbucks drive thru at South Mimms.

    As amusing as that might be this sort of plan seems like it would go in tandem with elimination of pageantry and traditional procedures. No summoning commons to the lords, no speech from the throne possibly- probably get the pm to read out the speech theyve always written instead.

    If you're making a radical change like this youd have to make changes to presentation and procedure, and the British system is full of 'you wouldn't design it this way from scratch but leave it as it is as no harm to doing so' style situations, and lacking that you might as well change everything and do away with the flappery.

    Corbyn will have to work on his small talk with Boris if he is to walk down Westminster tube, change at Green Park, take Victoria line to Kings Cross and then pass the time through the inevitable delays at Pret A Manger, before the long journey to York.
    Won't he just sit on the floor?
  • ByronicByronic Posts: 3,578
    edited January 2020
    Southam:

    "That depends on the immigration regime and rules."

    ++++

    Boris' Tories have seriously relaxed the student visa rules already. They have also abandoned the commitment to net migration "in the tens of thousands". Foreign students are enrolling in UK universities in greater numbers than ever before.

    Cheer up.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 52,609
    Jonathan said:

    kle4 said:

    Jonathan said:

    The state opening of parliament is going to be a nightmare for HM. I am not sure the Gold State Coach can stand up to the potholes on the A1. They will have to divert via the Starbucks drive thru at South Mimms.

    As amusing as that might be this sort of plan seems like it would go in tandem with elimination of pageantry and traditional procedures. No summoning commons to the lords, no speech from the throne possibly- probably get the pm to read out the speech theyve always written instead.

    If you're making a radical change like this youd have to make changes to presentation and procedure, and the British system is full of 'you wouldn't design it this way from scratch but leave it as it is as no harm to doing so' style situations, and lacking that you might as well change everything and do away with the flappery.

    Corbyn will have to work on his small talk with Boris if he is to walk down Westminster tube, change at Green Park, take Victoria line to Kings Cross and then pass the time through the inevitable delays at Pret A Manger, before the long journey to York.
    Except Boris will find a seat, Corbyn will be sat on the floor.....
  • ByronicByronic Posts: 3,578

    This is a smokescreen. Nero fiddling while Rome burns or just Cummings fiddling about?

    Apart from anything else, imagine the cost. HS2 will be a cut priced bargain compared to moving HoL out of London. It's like we haven't got anything else to spend the money on.

    I bet one could buy countless water-cannon and a hatful of garden bridges.

    Moving the HoL to York would probably save us money after about three years. Lower accommodation costs, fewer deadbeat Lords turning up just to get their daily bung. Etc etc

    The idea it would cost us more than HS2 - ie more than £80bn - is "interesting". Is Boris proposing to build their new home out of moonrock?
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 123,148
    edited January 2020
    FF43 said:

    https://twitter.com/scotonsunday/status/1218826711846064128?s=20

    Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s decision to refuse the Scottish Government the right to call another independence referendum starts to look a lot less like the outrage described by nationalists and more like an example of him defending the wishes of a majority of Scots.

    Having gone through five years and counting of non-stop constitutional wrangling, most Scots are not gagging for another referendum (although some are).

    If there is one, I expect independence to win. No-one much will speak for the Union. The Tories have comprehensively poisoned the unionism well.
    The Tories have just won a majority on a manifesto commitment to no indyref2 for their full 5 year term and that is what they will do and block it regardless of what Sturgeon says.

    Though of course 54% of Scots voted for Unionist parties at the general election last month anyway
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 28,386
    Byronic said:

    Southam:

    "That depends on the immigration regime and rules."

    ++++

    Boris' Tories have seriously relaxed the student visa rules already. They have also abandoned the commitment to net migration "in the tens of thousands". Foreign students are enrolling in UK universities in greater numbers than ever before.

    Cheer up.

    I thought the nub of Brexit was keeping Johnny Foreigner out. Have I been sold a pup?
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 52,609
    Has the Civil Service yet learnt that they are to be headquartered in Skelmersdale?

    It was as near as Cummings could find to them being hung drawn and quartered.....
  • Byronic said:

    Southam:

    "That depends on the immigration regime and rules."

    ++++

    Boris' Tories have seriously relaxed the student visa rules already. They have also abandoned the commitment to net migration "in the tens of thousands". Foreign students are enrolling in UK universities in greater numbers than ever before.

    Cheer up.

    I think Johnson is far more flexible on these things than May. My point is more that the real issue is about post-graduates and beyond, and the ability to recruit and retain talent. Up to now, we’ve had the huge advantage of freedom of movement and, therefore, a talent pool of 500 million to tap into. That is going, so we are now competing directly with the Americans in a way we haven’t been previously. We need an immigration regime that recognises that.

  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 33,468

    Why the north of England? Why not Scotland or Wales?

    Why is Shelter England HQ-ed in London
    And if it has to be in London why is it in EC1?

    One of the reasons Northern Rock failed was the lazy feckers supervising it couldn't be arsed to spend 3 hours on the train to Newcastle....

    One of the major pharmaceutical organisations moved, some 40 or so years ago, to St Albans, on the basis of 'getting out of London'. IIRC it proved a failure, basically because ALL meetings with the DoH, formal and informal, had be held back in London.
    I see it has now moved back to EC1.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 52,609

    Byronic said:

    Southam:

    "That depends on the immigration regime and rules."

    ++++

    Boris' Tories have seriously relaxed the student visa rules already. They have also abandoned the commitment to net migration "in the tens of thousands". Foreign students are enrolling in UK universities in greater numbers than ever before.

    Cheer up.

    I thought the nub of Brexit was keeping Johnny Foreigner out. Have I been sold a pup?
    Johnny Foreigner has always been able to come here - as long as he pays royally for the privilege.
  • ByronicByronic Posts: 3,578

    Byronic said:

    Southam:

    "That depends on the immigration regime and rules."

    ++++

    Boris' Tories have seriously relaxed the student visa rules already. They have also abandoned the commitment to net migration "in the tens of thousands". Foreign students are enrolling in UK universities in greater numbers than ever before.

    Cheer up.

    I thought the nub of Brexit was keeping Johnny Foreigner out. Have I been sold a pup?
    No, the point of Brexit was Taking Back Control. We have done that. We will control our borders by the end of the year.

    Then we can let in millions of nice, quiet, hard working Chinese students with loads of money. Fine by me.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 28,386
    Byronic said:

    This is a smokescreen. Nero fiddling while Rome burns or just Cummings fiddling about?

    Apart from anything else, imagine the cost. HS2 will be a cut priced bargain compared to moving HoL out of London. It's like we haven't got anything else to spend the money on.

    I bet one could buy countless water-cannon and a hatful of garden bridges.

    Moving the HoL to York would probably save us money after about three years. Lower accommodation costs, fewer deadbeat Lords turning up just to get their daily bung. Etc etc

    The idea it would cost us more than HS2 - ie more than £80bn - is "interesting". Is Boris proposing to build their new home out of moonrock?
    It isn't just the cost of turning the Rowntrees factory into the HoL.

    Imagine all the public enquiry costs, civil service costs to shuffle papers, agreeing planning permissions. It will have cost billions, before Lord Bercow takes his seat on the Labour benches for the first time.
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 33,468
    edited January 2020
    Byronic said:

    Byronic said:

    Southam:

    "That depends on the immigration regime and rules."

    ++++

    Boris' Tories have seriously relaxed the student visa rules already. They have also abandoned the commitment to net migration "in the tens of thousands". Foreign students are enrolling in UK universities in greater numbers than ever before.

    Cheer up.

    I thought the nub of Brexit was keeping Johnny Foreigner out. Have I been sold a pup?
    No, the point of Brexit was Taking Back Control. We have done that. We will control our borders by the end of the year.

    Then we can let in millions of nice, quiet, hard working Chinese students with loads of money. Fine by me.
    We'll discourage post-grads and other researchers though. Apparently.
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 22,127

    ydoethur said:

    One infrastructure priority should be to complete electrification of the Midland Main Line - and preferably all other railways too.

    I can’t be bothered to explain why, but I think this video does it very eloquently:

    https://youtu.be/Ro0016JG2Ms

    With electrification comes driver only control of trains. The unions have been successful in blocking this elsewhere.
    Except on Thameslink which which has been driver only since 1987 without any negative consequences.
    [rant mode on]

    Which carries nice posh people to nice posh destinations whilst whistling the tune to Blade Runner past the gleaming skyscrapers.

    Try doing it in a carriage at 11pm in the company of loud rough kids, the high and the drunk, the menacingly violent, the near rapists, the drunken footy fans, the hen nights, and then do it whilst the train is travelling slow due to a failure in the signalling and a suicide near the station, and it's pissing down and if you miss your connection you you will be stranded in Lower CrapTownOnShit trying to find the taxi rank to find a PremierInn that has a room free.

    [rant mode off]
  • mattmatt Posts: 3,789

    Byronic said:

    This is a smokescreen. Nero fiddling while Rome burns or just Cummings fiddling about?

    Apart from anything else, imagine the cost. HS2 will be a cut priced bargain compared to moving HoL out of London. It's like we haven't got anything else to spend the money on.

    I bet one could buy countless water-cannon and a hatful of garden bridges.

    Moving the HoL to York would probably save us money after about three years. Lower accommodation costs, fewer deadbeat Lords turning up just to get their daily bung. Etc etc

    The idea it would cost us more than HS2 - ie more than £80bn - is "interesting". Is Boris proposing to build their new home out of moonrock?
    It isn't just the cost of turning the Rowntrees factory into the HoL.

    Imagine all the public enquiry costs, civil service costs to shuffle papers, agreeing planning permissions. It will have cost billions, before Lord Bercow takes his seat on the Labour benches for the first time.
    Your argument is one for making no change ever.
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,486
    Not a bad idea to move the Lords to York, but hardly a priority. Another gimmicky idea really.
  • IshmaelZIshmaelZ Posts: 21,830

    Byronic said:

    Southam:

    "That depends on the immigration regime and rules."

    ++++

    Boris' Tories have seriously relaxed the student visa rules already. They have also abandoned the commitment to net migration "in the tens of thousands". Foreign students are enrolling in UK universities in greater numbers than ever before.

    Cheer up.

    I thought the nub of Brexit was keeping Johnny Foreigner out. Have I been sold a pup?
    Johnny Foreigner has always been able to come here - as long as he pays royally for the privilege.
    The reverse appears to be the case for Meghan.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 96,153
    edited January 2020
    matt said:

    Byronic said:

    This is a smokescreen. Nero fiddling while Rome burns or just Cummings fiddling about?

    Apart from anything else, imagine the cost. HS2 will be a cut priced bargain compared to moving HoL out of London. It's like we haven't got anything else to spend the money on.

    I bet one could buy countless water-cannon and a hatful of garden bridges.

    Moving the HoL to York would probably save us money after about three years. Lower accommodation costs, fewer deadbeat Lords turning up just to get their daily bung. Etc etc

    The idea it would cost us more than HS2 - ie more than £80bn - is "interesting". Is Boris proposing to build their new home out of moonrock?
    It isn't just the cost of turning the Rowntrees factory into the HoL.

    Imagine all the public enquiry costs, civil service costs to shuffle papers, agreeing planning permissions. It will have cost billions, before Lord Bercow takes his seat on the Labour benches for the first time.
    Your argument is one for making no change ever.
    No it isn't, it's an argument about whether the cost would be worth the benefits. If the benefits are higher then such costs would not be prohibitive. It would't cost HS2 levels but there would be signicant costs and lots of other constituional procedural adjustments as part of it, and for what? That people will be super happy that the Lords meet in some other city, as if that solves issues of economic and political focus in the UK?
  • ByronicByronic Posts: 3,578

    Byronic said:

    Southam:

    "That depends on the immigration regime and rules."

    ++++

    Boris' Tories have seriously relaxed the student visa rules already. They have also abandoned the commitment to net migration "in the tens of thousands". Foreign students are enrolling in UK universities in greater numbers than ever before.

    Cheer up.

    I think Johnson is far more flexible on these things than May. My point is more that the real issue is about post-graduates and beyond, and the ability to recruit and retain talent. Up to now, we’ve had the huge advantage of freedom of movement and, therefore, a talent pool of 500 million to tap into. That is going, so we are now competing directly with the Americans in a way we haven’t been previously. We need an immigration regime that recognises that.

    Byronic said:

    Southam:

    "That depends on the immigration regime and rules."

    ++++

    Boris' Tories have seriously relaxed the student visa rules already. They have also abandoned the commitment to net migration "in the tens of thousands". Foreign students are enrolling in UK universities in greater numbers than ever before.

    Cheer up.

    I think Johnson is far more flexible on these things than May. My point is more that the real issue is about post-graduates and beyond, and the ability to recruit and retain talent. Up to now, we’ve had the huge advantage of freedom of movement and, therefore, a talent pool of 500 million to tap into. That is going, so we are now competing directly with the Americans in a way we haven’t been previously. We need an immigration regime that recognises that.

    The UK university sector is booming. See the figures. And as far as I know, the government is not going to stop them recruiting French maths professors or expert Greek physicists. At the same time, these Frogs and Greeks will still be pretty keen to work in the UK, because we have many of Europe's best universities, and we teach in English.

    Brexit is a change, a bump in the road - but it is not the apocalypse.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 28,386
    Byronic said:

    Byronic said:

    Southam:

    "That depends on the immigration regime and rules."

    ++++

    Boris' Tories have seriously relaxed the student visa rules already. They have also abandoned the commitment to net migration "in the tens of thousands". Foreign students are enrolling in UK universities in greater numbers than ever before.

    Cheer up.

    I thought the nub of Brexit was keeping Johnny Foreigner out. Have I been sold a pup?
    No, the point of Brexit was Taking Back Control. We have done that. We will control our borders by the end of the year.

    Then we can let in millions of nice, quiet, hard working Chinese students with loads of money. Fine by me.
    Boris previously indicated that the shortfall from EU nationals returning to Eastern Europe could be offset by inviting our friends from the Indian subcontinent to replace them.

    It will be interesting to see how the points system will work.
  • FF43FF43 Posts: 17,208
    edited January 2020
    HYUFD said:

    FF43 said:

    https://twitter.com/scotonsunday/status/1218826711846064128?s=20

    Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s decision to refuse the Scottish Government the right to call another independence referendum starts to look a lot less like the outrage described by nationalists and more like an example of him defending the wishes of a majority of Scots.

    Having gone through five years and counting of non-stop constitutional wrangling, most Scots are not gagging for another referendum (although some are).

    If there is one, I expect independence to win. No-one much will speak for the Union. The Tories have comprehensively poisoned the unionism well.
    The Tories have just won a majority on a manifesto commitment to no indyref2 for their full 5 year term and that is what they will do and block it regardless of what Sturgeon says.

    Though of course 54% of Scots voted for Unionist parties at the general election last month anyway
    From Johnson's point of view, facing down calls for a second independence referendum makes complete sense because it represents a clear danger to him.

    So we have Sturgeon representing Scotland saying we want a referendum and Johnson representing England* saying, no you can't. That doesn't sit very well with me and I don't even want another referendum.

    * Technically Johnson is the prime minister of the United Kingdom but his party's brand of English nationalism doesn't play well in Scotland, beyond a hard core. Johnson has no interest in supporting the Union beyond rejecting a second referendum.
  • ClippPClippP Posts: 1,905
    IshmaelZ said:

    kle4 said:

    DavidL said:

    I think we have better things to spend money on right now tbh but getting more government out of London and more of the government spend up north is clearly a good idea.

    Why is the Supreme Court in London, for example?

    Why wouldnt it be? You say clearly moving things out is a good idea - why? It isn't clear to me at all.

    I must be the only non londoner who doesnt have a problem with major national institutions being centred in our capital and largest city.

    Government departments? Sure. But parliament? The supposed benefits look iffy, and definitely so if it's only half.
    Quite so. Joined up government sounds better to me than wilfully disjointed.
    Not ifthe aim is to set up a dictatorship.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 60,491
    As some may have guessed I'm now working on the palace of Westminster restoration and renewal programme as of last week.

    I knew nothing about this. The design brief is to decant both houses out temporarily for 8-9 years and relocate them back in a fully refurbished Westminster fit for the next 150 years by about 2037. Parliament has already voted for this and the enabling legislation is now on the statue books.

    I will ask the programme director and external affairs director if they knew/know anything about this bonkers idea tomorrow but for now I'd treat with the same level of caution as the foreign office/DfiD merger floated before Christmas, and now canned.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 28,386
    edited January 2020
    matt said:

    Byronic said:

    This is a smokescreen. Nero fiddling while Rome burns or just Cummings fiddling about?

    Apart from anything else, imagine the cost. HS2 will be a cut priced bargain compared to moving HoL out of London. It's like we haven't got anything else to spend the money on.

    I bet one could buy countless water-cannon and a hatful of garden bridges.

    Moving the HoL to York would probably save us money after about three years. Lower accommodation costs, fewer deadbeat Lords turning up just to get their daily bung. Etc etc

    The idea it would cost us more than HS2 - ie more than £80bn - is "interesting". Is Boris proposing to build their new home out of moonrock?
    It isn't just the cost of turning the Rowntrees factory into the HoL.

    Imagine all the public enquiry costs, civil service costs to shuffle papers, agreeing planning permissions. It will have cost billions, before Lord Bercow takes his seat on the Labour benches for the first time.
    Your argument is one for making no change ever.
    Not really. My argument is that all wasteful vanity projects are always best left in the box.

    I suspect this one will remain in its box.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 60,491
    Jonathan said:

    The state opening of parliament is going to be a nightmare for HM. I am not sure the Gold State Coach can stand up to the potholes on the A1. They will have to divert via the Starbucks drive thru at South Mimms.

    There are all sorts of practical issues with this idea that make it an absurdity.

    Parliament works as one.

  • Byronic said:

    Byronic said:

    Southam:

    "That depends on the immigration regime and rules."

    ++++

    Boris' Tories have seriously relaxed the student visa rules already. They have also abandoned the commitment to net migration "in the tens of thousands". Foreign students are enrolling in UK universities in greater numbers than ever before.

    Cheer up.

    I think Johnson is far more flexible on these things than May. My point is more that the real issue is about post-graduates and beyond, and the ability to recruit and retain talent. Up to now, we’ve had the huge advantage of freedom of movement and, therefore, a talent pool of 500 million to tap into. That is going, so we are now competing directly with the Americans in a way we haven’t been previously. We need an immigration regime that recognises that.

    Byronic said:

    Southam:

    "That depends on the immigration regime and rules."

    ++++

    Boris' Tories have seriously relaxed the student visa rules already. They have also abandoned the commitment to net migration "in the tens of thousands". Foreign students are enrolling in UK universities in greater numbers than ever before.

    Cheer up.

    I think Johnson is far more flexible on these things than May. My point is more that the real issue is about post-graduates and beyond, and the ability to recruit and retain talent. Up to now, we’ve had the huge advantage of freedom of movement and, therefore, a talent pool of 500 million to tap into. That is going, so we are now competing directly with the Americans in a way we haven’t been previously. We need an immigration regime that recognises that.

    The UK university sector is booming. See the figures. And as far as I know, the government is not going to stop them recruiting French maths professors or expert Greek physicists. At the same time, these Frogs and Greeks will still be pretty keen to work in the UK, because we have many of Europe's best universities, and we teach in English.

    Brexit is a change, a bump in the road - but it is not the apocalypse.

    It doesn’t have to be, that is for sure. And for many of us, it definitely won’t be.

  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 60,491
    Neither am I.

    It's bonkers.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 123,148
    edited January 2020
    FF43 said:

    HYUFD said:

    FF43 said:

    https://twitter.com/scotonsunday/status/1218826711846064128?s=20

    Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s decision to refuse the Scottish Government the right to call another independence referendum starts to look a lot less like the outrage described by nationalists and more like an example of him defending the wishes of a majority of Scots.

    Having gone through five years and counting of non-stop constitutional wrangling, most Scots are not gagging for another referendum (although some are).

    If there is one, I expect independence to win. No-one much will speak for the Union. The Tories have comprehensively poisoned the unionism well.
    The Tories have just won a majority on a manifesto commitment to no indyref2 for their full 5 year term and that is what they will do and block it regardless of what Sturgeon says.

    Though of course 54% of Scots voted for Unionist parties at the general election last month anyway
    From Johnson's point of view, facing down calls for a second independence referendum makes complete sense because it represents a clear danger to him.

    So we have Sturgeon representing Scotland saying we want a referendum and Johnson representing England* saying, no you can't. That doesn't sit very well with me and I don't even want another referendum.

    * Technically Johnson is the prime minister of the United Kingdom but his party's brand of English nationalism doesn't play well in Scotland, beyond a hard core. Johnson has no interest in supporting the Union beyond rejecting a second referendum.
    Well that is up to you but any indyref2 needs the consent of the UK government and this Tory government has made clear it will refuse indyref2 whatever the circumstances.

    2014 was said by the SNP to be a 'once in a generation referendum' and they must be held to that. Quebec for example was only allowed a second independence referendum by the Canadian government in 1995, 15 years after the first in 1980. 2014 was only 6 years ago.

    The SNP should count themselves lucky they are not yet in Catalonia with the Spanish government sending in armed police to arrest nationalist leaders and stop any referendum taking place
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 42,231
    The Lords moved to York? Fine. Quite like it. But one hopes that this is not the flagship measure in the great plan to boost the North.
  • squareroot2squareroot2 Posts: 6,729
    edited January 2020

    Jonathan said:

    The state opening of parliament is going to be a nightmare for HM. I am not sure the Gold State Coach can stand up to the potholes on the A1. They will have to divert via the Starbucks drive thru at South Mimms.

    There are all sorts of practical issues with this idea that make it an absurdity.

    Parliament works as one.

    I had to stop at S Mimms yesterday for minimum fuel fill up 1.519 for derv I put a gallon in because I had to (4.5litres approx. to non imperial folk).. its almost akin to theft at that price.. S Mimms is a bastard to get into and a bastard to get out of, especially in the dark.
  • AlastairMeeksAlastairMeeks Posts: 30,340
    DavidL said:

    I think we have better things to spend money on right now tbh but getting more government out of London and more of the government spend up north is clearly a good idea.

    Why is the Supreme Court in London, for example?

    Nearly all government is already outside London. London has by far the smallest public sector as a share of employment in the country.

    The Supreme Court is a good example of an institution that should be based in London. As you know, the recruitment of judges depends on flattering the vanity of barristers enough to accept a huge pay cut. Most of those vain but highly able barristers are in London. Best not to put them off by forcing them to move too.
  • AlastairMeeksAlastairMeeks Posts: 30,340
    edited January 2020
    The proposal is half-baked and far too unambitious. All of Parliament should move to Middlesbrough.
  • brokenwheelbrokenwheel Posts: 3,352
    Just get rid of it. The abomination that is the Supreme Court can **** off too.
  • FF43FF43 Posts: 17,208
    Byronic said:

    Byronic said:

    Southam:

    "That depends on the immigration regime and rules."

    ++++

    Boris' Tories have seriously relaxed the student visa rules already. They have also abandoned the commitment to net migration "in the tens of thousands". Foreign students are enrolling in UK universities in greater numbers than ever before.

    Cheer up.

    I think Johnson is far more flexible on these things than May. My point is more that the real issue is about post-graduates and beyond, and the ability to recruit and retain talent. Up to now, we’ve had the huge advantage of freedom of movement and, therefore, a talent pool of 500 million to tap into. That is going, so we are now competing directly with the Americans in a way we haven’t been previously. We need an immigration regime that recognises that.

    Byronic said:

    Southam:

    "That depends on the immigration regime and rules."

    ++++

    Boris' Tories have seriously relaxed the student visa rules already. They have also abandoned the commitment to net migration "in the tens of thousands". Foreign students are enrolling in UK universities in greater numbers than ever before.

    Cheer up.

    I think Johnson is far more flexible on these things than May. My point is more that the real issue is about post-graduates and beyond, and the ability to recruit and retain talent. Up to now, we’ve had the huge advantage of freedom of movement and, therefore, a talent pool of 500 million to tap into. That is going, so we are now competing directly with the Americans in a way we haven’t been previously. We need an immigration regime that recognises that.

    The UK university sector is booming. See the figures. And as far as I know, the government is not going to stop them recruiting French maths professors or expert Greek physicists. At the same time, these Frogs and Greeks will still be pretty keen to work in the UK, because we have many of Europe's best universities, and we teach in English.

    Brexit is a change, a bump in the road - but it is not the apocalypse.
    Probably. If Brexit really was a catastrophe we wouldn't be doing it. But that's a low bar for decision-making. Deliberately infecting myself with HIV probably isn't a catastrophe these days. You can manage it with expensive drugs
  • squareroot2squareroot2 Posts: 6,729
    edited January 2020

    Has the Civil Service yet learnt that they are to be headquartered in Skelmersdale?

    It was as near as Cummings could find to them being hung drawn and quartered.....

    Cumbernauld would be ideal.. full of cultural cement.
  • kjhkjh Posts: 11,805
    HYUFD said:

    FF43 said:

    https://twitter.com/scotonsunday/status/1218826711846064128?s=20

    Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s decision to refuse the Scottish Government the right to call another independence referendum starts to look a lot less like the outrage described by nationalists and more like an example of him defending the wishes of a majority of Scots.

    Having gone through five years and counting of non-stop constitutional wrangling, most Scots are not gagging for another referendum (although some are).

    If there is one, I expect independence to win. No-one much will speak for the Union. The Tories have comprehensively poisoned the unionism well.
    The Tories have just won a majority on a manifesto commitment to no indyref2 for their full 5 year term and that is what they will do and block it regardless of what Sturgeon says.

    Though of course 54% of Scots voted for Unionist parties at the general election last month anyway
    Hi HYUFD. As I posted last time you mixed percentage of vote with a FPTP result you can't logically use both in an argument for the following 2 reasons:

    a) You can not assume the percentage votes under FPTP implies the percentage of Unionist voters. Voters are voting for a plethora of reasons during a GE not just on unionism v independence.

    b) And more importantly if you are an advocate of FPTP you can not put forward an argument on the basis of the percentage of the vote and also accept Boris won the election. I assume you do accept Boris did win the election which implies saying 54% voting unionist is not meaningful. If you think it is meaningful you have to accept Boris lost the election. You can't have your cake and eat it. It is one or the other.

    The argument is logically flawed. Try breaking it down by replacing statements with non meaningful expressions e.g. replace each statement with a letter of the alphabet and you will see you get mathematical logical contradictions.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 52,609
    ClippP said:

    IshmaelZ said:

    kle4 said:

    DavidL said:

    I think we have better things to spend money on right now tbh but getting more government out of London and more of the government spend up north is clearly a good idea.

    Why is the Supreme Court in London, for example?

    Why wouldnt it be? You say clearly moving things out is a good idea - why? It isn't clear to me at all.

    I must be the only non londoner who doesnt have a problem with major national institutions being centred in our capital and largest city.

    Government departments? Sure. But parliament? The supposed benefits look iffy, and definitely so if it's only half.
    Quite so. Joined up government sounds better to me than wilfully disjointed.
    Not ifthe aim is to set up a dictatorship.
    "whores" now "dictatorship".... The LibDems going backwards in seats seems to have got you quite unhinged.....
  • felixfelix Posts: 15,164
    I see ex MP for Bishop Auckland has been banned from the H/C for bullying of staff. She is also the manager of Emily Thornberry's leadership campaign. Hilarious.
  • ByronicByronic Posts: 3,578

    Byronic said:

    Byronic said:

    Southam:

    "That depends on the immigration regime and rules."

    ++++

    Boris' To
    Cheer up.

    I think Jcognises that.

    Byronic said:

    Southam:

    "That depends on the immigration regime and rules."

    ++++

    Boris' Tories have seriously relaxed the student visa rules already. They have also abandoned the commitment to net migration "in the tens of thousands". Foreign students are enrolling in UK universities in greater numbers than ever before.

    Cheer up.

    I think Johnson is far more flexible on these things than May. My point is more that the real issue is about post-graduates and beyond, and the ability to recruit and retain talent. Up to now, we’ve had the huge advantage of freedom of movement and, therefore, a talent pool of 500 million to tap into. That is going, so we are now competing directly with the Americans in a way we haven’t been previously. We need an immigration regime that recognises that.

    The UK university sector is booming. See the figures. And as far as I know, the government is not going to stop them recruiting French maths professors or expert Greek physicists. At the same time, these Frogs and Greeks will still be pretty keen to work in the UK, because we have many of Europe's best universities, and we teach in English.

    Brexit is a change, a bump in the road - but it is not the apocalypse.

    It doesn’t have to be, that is for sure. And for many of us, it definitely won’t be.

    Already, some of the Project Fearmonger predictions about Brexit's wider impact look absolutely embarrassing. Education is one sector where this is true. See here:

    "For centuries, British schools were the envy of the world. Now they’re scrambling to stay alive."

    SCRAMBLING TO STAY ALIVE

    https://foreignpolicy.com/2018/12/07/the-brexit-fueled-death-of-the-british-university/

    Meanwhile, back on Planet Reality:

    "There is good news for the UK university sector with HESA’s first release of data for the 2018/19 academic year: international student numbers are up by 5.9% on the previous period – with a notable 42% hike in new student enrolments from India."

    https://thepienews.com/news/uk-hesa-data-shows-another-year-of-growth-in-international-student-numbers/
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 123,148
    kjh said:

    HYUFD said:

    FF43 said:

    https://twitter.com/scotonsunday/status/1218826711846064128?s=20

    Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s decision to refuse the Scottish Government the right to call another independence referendum starts to look a lot less like the outrage described by nationalists and more like an example of him defending the wishes of a majority of Scots.

    Having gone through five years and counting of non-stop constitutional wrangling, most Scots are not gagging for another referendum (although some are).

    If there is one, I expect independence to win. No-one much will speak for the Union. The Tories have comprehensively poisoned the unionism well.
    The Tories have just won a majority on a manifesto commitment to no indyref2 for their full 5 year term and that is what they will do and block it regardless of what Sturgeon says.

    Though of course 54% of Scots voted for Unionist parties at the general election last month anyway
    Hi HYUFD. As I posted last time you mixed percentage of vote with a FPTP result you can't logically use both in an argument for the following 2 reasons:

    a) You can not assume the percentage votes under FPTP implies the percentage of Unionist voters. Voters are voting for a plethora of reasons during a GE not just on unionism v independence.

    b) And more importantly if you are an advocate of FPTP you can not put forward an argument on the basis of the percentage of the vote and also accept Boris won the election. I assume you do accept Boris did win the election which implies saying 54% voting unionist is not meaningful. If you think it is meaningful you have to accept Boris lost the election. You can't have your cake and eat it. It is one or the other.

    The argument is logically flawed. Try breaking it down by replacing statements with non meaningful expressions e.g. replace each statement with a letter of the alphabet and you will see you get mathematical logical contradictions.
    I accept it is a moral argument only.

    The only thing that really matters is the Tory UK government has a majority of seats on a manifesto commitment to ban indyref2 for its full 5 year term and that is precisely what it will do.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 42,231
    edited January 2020
    HYUFD said:

    2014 was said by the SNP to be a 'once in a generation referendum' and they must be held to that. Quebec for example was only allowed a second independence referendum by the Canadian government in 1995, 15 years after the first in 1980. 2014 was only 6 years ago.

    Scotland is being stripped of the EU membership which its people overwhelmingly wish to retain. The EU membership which those same people were assured in 2014 that only a vote against independence would guarantee.

    This does not constitute a "material change in circumstances" and thus grounds for another vote? C'mon. Of course it does.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 28,386

    The proposal is half-baked and far too unambitious. All of Parliament should move to Middlesbrough.

    If we divert the entire NHS budget for the next 25 years that might just work!
  • AlastairMeeksAlastairMeeks Posts: 30,340

    The proposal is half-baked and far too unambitious. All of Parliament should move to Middlesbrough.

    If we divert the entire NHS budget for the next 25 years that might just work!
    Is there any reason to give MPs and peers opulence? They can make do with what’s there already.
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 33,468
    Byronic said:

    Byronic said:

    Byronic said:

    Southam:

    "That depends on the immigration regime and rules."

    ++++

    Boris' To
    Cheer up.

    I think Jcognises that.

    Byronic said:

    Southam:

    "That depends on the immigration regime and rules."

    ++++

    Boris' Tories have seriously relaxed the student visa rules already. They have also abandoned the commitment to net migration "in the tens of thousands". Foreign students are enrolling in UK universities in greater numbers than ever before.

    Cheer up.

    I think Johnson is far more flexible on these things than May. My point is more that the real issue is about post-graduates and beyond, and the ability to recruit and retain talent. Up to now, we’ve had the huge advantage of freedom of movement and, therefore, a talent pool of 500 million to tap into. That is going, so we are now competing directly with the Americans in a way we haven’t been previously. We need an immigration regime that recognises that.

    The UK university sector is booming. See the figures. And as far as I know, the government is not going to stop them recruiting French maths professors or expert Greek physicists. At the same time, these Frogs and Greeks will still be pretty keen to work in the UK, because we have many of Europe's best universities, and we teach in English.

    Brexit is a change, a bump in the road - but it is not the apocalypse.

    It doesn’t have to be, that is for sure. And for many of us, it definitely won’t be.

    Already, some of the Project Fearmonger predictions about Brexit's wider impact look absolutely embarrassing. Education is one sector where this is true. See here:

    "For centuries, British schools were the envy of the world. Now they’re scrambling to stay alive."

    SCRAMBLING TO STAY ALIVE

    https://foreignpolicy.com/2018/12/07/the-brexit-fueled-death-of-the-british-university/

    Meanwhile, back on Planet Reality:

    "There is good news for the UK university sector with HESA’s first release of data for the 2018/19 academic year: international student numbers are up by 5.9% on the previous period – with a notable 42% hike in new student enrolments from India."

    https://thepienews.com/news/uk-hesa-data-shows-another-year-of-growth-in-international-student-numbers/
    Not really certain yer average Brexiteer is going to be that chuffed with such an increase.
  • ByronicByronic Posts: 3,578
    kinabalu said:

    HYUFD said:

    2014 was said by the SNP to be a 'once in a generation referendum' and they must be held to that. Quebec for example was only allowed a second independence referendum by the Canadian government in 1995, 15 years after the first in 1980. 2014 was only 6 years ago.

    Scotland is being stripped of the EU membership which its people overwhelmingly wish to retain. The EU membership which those same people were assured in 2014 that only a vote against independence would guarantee.

    This does not constitute a "material change in circumstances" and thus grounds for another vote? C'mon. Of course it does.
    It is up to the UK government to decide. And the UK government has decided this change does not warrant another independence referendum.

    What can the SNP do about it? Absolutely fuck all. They can, I suppose, use it to fire up grievance against Westminster, and stoke the desire of the Scots for indy, but the SNP already does that with every single possible issue, so the UK government loses nothing.

    The Scots need to get a new British government if they want a new referendum. It's that simple.

  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 123,148
    kinabalu said:

    HYUFD said:

    2014 was said by the SNP to be a 'once in a generation referendum' and they must be held to that. Quebec for example was only allowed a second independence referendum by the Canadian government in 1995, 15 years after the first in 1980. 2014 was only 6 years ago.

    Scotland is being stripped of the EU membership which its people overwhelmingly wish to retain. The EU membership which those same people were assured in 2014 that only a vote against independence would guarantee.

    This does not constitute a "material change in circumstances" and thus grounds for another vote? C'mon. Of course it does.
    No it does not and the fact a majority of Scots voted for Unionist parties at the general election despite the Brexit vote confirms that.

    However regardless we have a Tory UK government elected with a clear manifesto commitment to block indyref2
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 52,609
    edited January 2020

    Has the Civil Service yet learnt that they are to be headquartered in Skelmersdale?

    It was as near as Cummings could find to them being hung drawn and quartered.....

    Cumbernauld would be ideal.. full of cultural cement.
    That's been earmarked for the Supreme Court.....
  • felixfelix Posts: 15,164
    Corbyn nominates for the H/L a man who faces allegations of bullying his former staff and a woman under investigation for anti-semitism oh and the nonce finder general. Way to go JC!
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 28,386

    The proposal is half-baked and far too unambitious. All of Parliament should move to Middlesbrough.

    If we divert the entire NHS budget for the next 25 years that might just work!
    Is there any reason to give MPs and peers opulence? They can make do with what’s there already.
    The move might still be pricey even if we house them in a series of Portakabins in working men's club car parks. Depriving them of the bars would be a step too far!

  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 52,609
    felix said:

    Corbyn nominates for the H/L a man who faces allegations of bullying his former staff and a woman under investigation for anti-semitism oh and the nonce finder general. Way to go JC!

    But it's all OK because they have nominated the Jew Bercow.....
  • FF43FF43 Posts: 17,208
    HYUFD said:

    FF43 said:

    HYUFD said:

    FF43 said:

    https://twitter.com/scotonsunday/status/1218826711846064128?s=20

    Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s decision to refuse the Scottish Government the right to call another independence referendum starts to look a lot less like the outrage described by nationalists and more like an example of him defending the wishes of a majority of Scots.

    Having gone through five years and counting of non-stop constitutional wrangling, most Scots are not gagging for another referendum (although some are).

    If there is one, I expect independence to win. No-one much will speak for the Union. The Tories have comprehensively poisoned the unionism well.
    The Tories have just won a majority on a manifesto commitment to no indyref2 for their full 5 year term and that is what they will do and block it regardless of what Sturgeon says.

    Though of course 54% of Scots voted for Unionist parties at the general election last month anyway
    From Johnson's point of view, facing down calls for a second independence referendum makes complete sense because it represents a clear danger to him.

    So we have Sturgeon representing Scotland saying we want a referendum and Johnson representing England* saying, no you can't. That doesn't sit very well with me and I don't even want another referendum.

    * Technically Johnson is the prime minister of the United Kingdom but his party's brand of English nationalism doesn't play well in Scotland, beyond a hard core. Johnson has no interest in supporting the Union beyond rejecting a second referendum.
    Well that is up to you but any indyref2 needs the consent of the UK government and this Tory government has made clear it will refuse indyref2 whatever the circumstances.

    2014 was said by the SNP to be a 'once in a generation referendum' and they must be held to that. Quebec for example was only allowed a second independence referendum by the Canadian government in 1995, 15 years after the first in 1980. 2014 was only 6 years ago.

    The SNP should count themselves lucky they are not yet in Catalonia with the Spanish government sending in armed police to arrest nationalist leaders and stop any referendum taking place
    You and Johnson are not making it easy for me. I'm a unionist. I want to stay in the United Kingdom. Johnson and his whole rancid crowd will eventually be swept away by the tides of history. We need to take a longer view.

    But if the only thing keeping us in is the heavily implied threat of violence, it's time to get out.
  • ByronicByronic Posts: 3,578

    Byronic said:

    Byronic said:

    Byronic said:

    Southam:

    "That depends on the immigration regime and rules."

    ++++

    Boris' To
    Cheer up.

    I think Jcognises that.

    Byronic said:

    Southam:

    "That depends on the immigration regime and rules."

    ++++

    Boris' Tories have seriously relaxed the student visa rules already. They have also abandoned the commitment to net migration "in the tens of thousands". Foreign students are enrolling in UK universities in greater numbers than ever before.

    Cheer up.

    I think Johnson is far more flexthe Americans in a way we haven’t been previously. We need an immigration regime that recognises that.

    Th
    Brexit is a change, a bump in the road - but it is not the apocalypse.

    It doesn’t have to be, that is for sure. And for many of us, it definitely won’t be.

    Already, some of the Project Fearmonger predictions about Brexit's wider impact look absolutely embarrassing. Education is one sector where this is true. See here:

    "For centuries, British schools were the envy of the world. Now they’re scrambling to stay alive."

    SCRAMBLING TO STAY ALIVE

    https://foreignpolicy.com/2018/12/07/the-brexit-fueled-death-of-the-british-university/

    Meanwhile, back on Planet Reality:

    "There is good news for the UK university sector with HESA’s first release of data for the 2018/19 academic year: international student numbers are up by 5.9% on the previous period – with a notable 42% hike in new student enrolments from India."

    https://thepienews.com/news/uk-hesa-data-shows-another-year-of-growth-in-international-student-numbers/
    Not really certain yer average Brexiteer is going to be that chuffed with such an increase.
    If Brits are unhappy with this increase, we should be seeing a surge in concern about immigration, in the polls.

    Funnily enough, the opposite has happened.

    https://www.theguardian.com/world/2019/may/02/britons-more-sold-on-immigration-benefits-than-other-europeans

    https://www.ft.com/content/a8007652-0b97-11ea-b2d6-9bf4d1957a67
  • kjhkjh Posts: 11,805
    HYUFD said:

    kjh said:

    HYUFD said:

    FF43 said:

    Having gone through five years and counting of non-stop constitutional wrangling, most Scots are not gagging for another referendum (although some are).

    If there is one, I expect independence to win. No-one much will speak for the Union. The Tories have comprehensively poisoned the unionism well.
    The Tories have just won a majority on a manifesto commitment to no indyref2 for their full 5 year term and that is what they will do and block it regardless of what Sturgeon says.

    Though of course 54% of Scots voted for Unionist parties at the general election last month anyway
    Hi HYUFD. As I posted last time you mixed percentage of vote with a FPTP result you can't logically use both in an argument for the following 2 reasons:

    a) You can not assume the percentage votes under FPTP implies the percentage of Unionist voters. Voters are voting for a plethora of reasons during a GE not just on unionism v independence.

    b) And more importantly if you are an advocate of FPTP you can not put forward an argument on the basis of the percentage of the vote and also accept Boris won the election. I assume you do accept Boris did win the election which implies saying 54% voting unionist is not meaningful. If you think it is meaningful you have to accept Boris lost the election. You can't have your cake and eat it. It is one or the other.

    The argument is logically flawed. Try breaking it down by replacing statements with non meaningful expressions e.g. replace each statement with a letter of the alphabet and you will see you get mathematical logical contradictions.
    I accept it is a moral argument only.

    The only thing that really matters is the Tory UK government has a majority of seats on a manifesto commitment to ban indyref2 for its full 5 year term and that is precisely what it will do.
    I can't argue with that. Either argument was valid, it was a both together I had an issue with.

    I actually don't have strong views re independence one way or another. However a strong argument against Independence at the time was the issue of staying in the EU. In my view (and it appears the nation's as well, regardless of whether you are a leaver or remainer) that change is a mind bogglingly fundamental change.

    Consequently it can be argued that a subsequent vote is valid. The 'once in a generation' argument is irrelevant if you have changed the playing field and the argument so fundamentally.

    I don't actually care what the result of such a vote would be from leafy Surrey.
  • Byronic said:

    Byronic said:

    Southam:

    "That depends on the immigration regime and rules."

    ++++

    Boris' Tories have seriously relaxed the student visa rules already. They have also abandoned the commitment to net migration "in the tens of thousands". Foreign students are enrolling in UK universities in greater numbers than ever before.

    Cheer up.

    I think Johnson is far more flexible on these things than May. My point is more that the real issue is about post-graduates and beyond, and the ability to recruit and retain talent. Up to now, we’ve had the huge advantage of freedom of movement and, therefore, a talent pool of 500 million to tap into. That is going, so we are now competing directly with the Americans in a way we haven’t been previously. We need an immigration regime that recognises that.

    Byronic said:

    Southam:

    "That depends on the immigration regime and rules."

    ++++

    Boris' Tories have seriously relaxed the student visa rules already. They have also abandoned the commitment to net migration "in the tens of thousands". Foreign students are enrolling in UK universities in greater numbers than ever before.

    Cheer up.

    I think Johnson is far more flexible on these things than May. My point is more that the real issue is about post-graduates and beyond, and the ability to recruit and retain talent. Up to now, we’ve had the huge advantage of freedom of movement and, therefore, a talent pool of 500 million to tap into. That is going, so we are now competing directly with the Americans in a way we haven’t been previously. We need an immigration regime that recognises that.

    The UK university sector is booming. See the figures. And as far as I know, the government is not going to stop them recruiting French maths professors or expert Greek physicists. At the same time, these Frogs and Greeks will still be pretty keen to work in the UK, because we have many of Europe's best universities, and we teach in English.

    Brexit is a change, a bump in the road - but it is not the apocalypse.
    As a parent with 3 successful Univ graduates i can tell you imo that some Universities are barely fit for purpose. Lectures are threadbare, tutors invisible and students study alone in their rooms 90% of the time. Fees are ridiculous and
    the fact that you only need to be able to breathe to gain entry is a farce. And what
    do you end up with? (offspring excluded naturally) - naive, ill-prepared adults
    with zero common sense.
  • kjhkjh Posts: 11,805
    kinabalu said:

    HYUFD said:

    2014 was said by the SNP to be a 'once in a generation referendum' and they must be held to that. Quebec for example was only allowed a second independence referendum by the Canadian government in 1995, 15 years after the first in 1980. 2014 was only 6 years ago.

    Scotland is being stripped of the EU membership which its people overwhelmingly wish to retain. The EU membership which those same people were assured in 2014 that only a vote against independence would guarantee.

    This does not constitute a "material change in circumstances" and thus grounds for another vote? C'mon. Of course it does.
    Snap.
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 33,468
    Byronic said:

    Byronic said:

    Byronic said:

    Byronic said:

    Southam:

    "That depends on the immigration regime and rules."

    ++++

    Boris' To
    Cheer up.

    I think Jcognises that.

    Byronic said:

    Southam:

    "That depends on the immigration regime and rules."

    ++++

    Boris' Tories have seriously relaxed the student visa rules already. They have also abandoned the commitment to net migration "in the tens of thousands". Foreign students are enrolling in UK universities in greater numbers than ever before.

    Cheer up.

    I think Johnson is far more flexthe Americans in a way we haven’t been previously. We need an immigration regime that recognises that.

    Th
    Brexit is a change, a bump in the road - but it is not the apocalypse.

    It doesn’t have to be, that is for sure. And for many of us, it definitely won’t be.

    Already, some of the Project Fearmonger predictions about Brexit's wider impact look absolutely embarrassing. Education is one sector where this is true. See here:

    "For centuries, British schools were the envy of the world. Now they’re scrambling to stay alive."

    SCRAMBLING TO STAY ALIVE

    https://foreignpolicy.com/2018/12/07/the-brexit-fueled-death-of-the-british-university/

    Meanwhile, back on Planet Reality:

    "There is good news for the UK university sector with HESA’s first release of data for the 2018/19 academic year: international student numbers are up by 5.9% on the previous period – with a notable 42% hike in new student enrolments from India."

    https://thepienews.com/news/uk-hesa-data-shows-another-year-of-growth-in-international-student-numbers/
    Not really certain yer average Brexiteer is going to be that chuffed with such an increase.
    If Brits are unhappy with this increase, we should be seeing a surge in concern about immigration, in the polls.

    Funnily enough, the opposite has happened.

    https://www.theguardian.com/world/2019/may/02/britons-more-sold-on-immigration-benefits-than-other-europeans

    https://www.ft.com/content/a8007652-0b97-11ea-b2d6-9bf4d1957a67
    I didn't mention the majority of Brits; I referred to Brexiteers. As you know, the polls suggest the majority of Brits now want to stay in the EU.
  • kjhkjh Posts: 11,805
    HYUFD said:

    kinabalu said:

    HYUFD said:

    2014 was said by the SNP to be a 'once in a generation referendum' and they must be held to that. Quebec for example was only allowed a second independence referendum by the Canadian government in 1995, 15 years after the first in 1980. 2014 was only 6 years ago.

    Scotland is being stripped of the EU membership which its people overwhelmingly wish to retain. The EU membership which those same people were assured in 2014 that only a vote against independence would guarantee.

    This does not constitute a "material change in circumstances" and thus grounds for another vote? C'mon. Of course it does.
    No it does not and the fact a majority of Scots voted for Unionist parties at the general election despite the Brexit vote confirms that.

    However regardless we have a Tory UK government elected with a clear manifesto commitment to block indyref2
    Naughty.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 52,609
    sirclive said:

    Byronic said:

    Byronic said:

    Southam:

    "That depends on the immigration regime and rules."

    ++++

    Boris' Tories have seriously relaxed the student visa rules already. They have also abandoned the commitment to net migration "in the tens of thousands". Foreign students are enrolling in UK universities in greater numbers than ever before.

    Cheer up.

    I think Johnson is far more flexible on these things than May. My point is more that the real issue is about post-graduates and beyond, and the ability to recruit and retain talent. Up to now, we’ve had the huge advantage of freedom of movement and, therefore, a talent pool of 500 million to tap into. That is going, so we are now competing directly with the Americans in a way we haven’t been previously. We need an immigration regime that recognises that.

    Byronic said:

    Southam:

    "That depends on the immigration regime and rules."

    ++++

    Boris' Tories have seriously relaxed the student visa rules already. They have also abandoned the commitment to net migration "in the tens of thousands". Foreign students are enrolling in UK universities in greater numbers than ever before.

    Cheer up.

    I think Johnson is far more flexible on these things than May. My point is more that the real issue is about post-graduates and beyond, and the ability to recruit and retain talent. Up to now, we’ve had the huge advantage of freedom of movement and, therefore, a talent pool of 500 million to tap into. That is going, so we are now competing directly with the Americans in a way we haven’t been previously. We need an immigration regime that recognises that.

    The UK university sector is booming. See the figures. And as far as I know, the government is not going to stop them recruiting French maths professors or expert Greek physicists. At the same time, these Frogs and Greeks will still be pretty keen to work in the UK, because we have many of Europe's best universities, and we teach in English.

    Brexit is a change, a bump in the road - but it is not the apocalypse.
    As a parent with 3 successful Univ graduates i can tell you imo that some Universities are barely fit for purpose. Lectures are threadbare, tutors invisible and students study alone in their rooms 90% of the time. Fees are ridiculous and
    the fact that you only need to be able to breathe to gain entry is a farce. And what
    do you end up with? (offspring excluded naturally) - naive, ill-prepared adults
    with zero common sense.
    naive, ill-prepared Labour-voting adults with zero common sense.
  • EPGEPG Posts: 6,652
    It could work. In general, be wary of attempts to put distance between the government and those who scrutinise it.
  • felix said:

    Corbyn nominates for the H/L a man who faces allegations of bullying his former staff and a woman under investigation for anti-semitism oh and the nonce finder general. Way to go JC!

    Johnson’s nominations will also be interesting.

  • sirclive said:

    Byronic said:

    Byronic said:

    Southam:

    "That depends on the immigration regime and rules."

    ++++

    Boris' Tories have seriously relaxed the student visa rules already. They have also abandoned the commitment to net migration "in the tens of thousands". Foreign students are enrolling in UK universities in greater numbers than ever before.

    Cheer up.

    I think Johnson is far more flexible on these things than May. My point is more that the real issue is about post-graduates and beyond, and the ability to recruit and retain talent. Up to now, we’ve had the huge advantage of freedom of movement and, therefore, a talent pool of 500 million to tap into. That is going, so we are now competing directly with the Americans in a way we haven’t been previously. We need an immigration regime that recognises that.

    Byronic said:

    Southam:

    "That depends on the immigration regime and rules."

    ++++

    Boris' Tories have seriously relaxed the student visa rules already. They have also abandoned the commitment to net migration "in the tens of thousands". Foreign students are enrolling in UK universities in greater numbers than ever before.

    Cheer up.

    I think Johnson is far more flexible on these things than May. My point is more that the real issue is about post-graduates and beyond, and the ability to recruit and retain talent. Up to now, we’ve had the huge advantage of freedom of movement and, therefore, a talent pool of 500 million to tap into. That is going, so we are now competing directly with the Americans in a way we haven’t been previously. We need an immigration regime that recognises that.

    The UK university sector is booming. See the figures. And as far as I know, the government is not going to stop them recruiting French maths professors or expert Greek physicists. At the same time, these Frogs and Greeks will still be pretty keen to work in the UK, because we have many of Europe's best universities, and we teach in English.

    Brexit is a change, a bump in the road - but it is not the apocalypse.
    As a parent with 3 successful Univ graduates i can tell you imo that some Universities are barely fit for purpose. Lectures are threadbare, tutors invisible and students study alone in their rooms 90% of the time. Fees are ridiculous and
    the fact that you only need to be able to breathe to gain entry is a farce. And what
    do you end up with? (offspring excluded naturally) - naive, ill-prepared adults
    with zero common sense.
    naive, ill-prepared Labour-voting adults with zero common sense.
    Ha Ha
  • FF43FF43 Posts: 17,208

    Byronic said:

    Byronic said:

    Byronic said:

    Byronic said:

    Southam:

    "That depends on the immigration regime and rules."

    ++++

    Boris' To
    Cheer up.

    I think Jcognises that.

    Byronic said:

    Southam:

    "That depends on the immigration regime and rules."

    ++++

    Boris' Tories have seriously relaxed the student visa rules already. They have also abandoned the commitment to net migration "in the tens of thousands". Foreign students are enrolling in UK universities in greater numbers than ever before.

    Cheer up.

    I think Johnson is far more flexthe Americans in a way we haven’t been previously. We need an immigration regime that recognises that.

    Th
    Brexit is a change, a bump in the road - but it is not the apocalypse.

    It doesn’t have to be, that is for sure. And for many of us, it definitely won’t be.

    Already, some of the Project Fearmonger predictions about Brexit's wider impact look absolutely embarrassing. Education is one sector where this is true. See here:

    "For centuries, British schools were the envy of the world. Now they’re scrambling to stay alive."

    SCRAMBLING TO STAY ALIVE

    https://foreignpolicy.com/2018/12/07/the-brexit-fueled-death-of-the-british-university/

    Meanwhile, back on Planet Reality:

    "There is good news for the UK university sector with HESA’s first release of data for the 2018/19 academic year: international student numbers are up by 5.9% on the previous period – with a notable 42% hike in new student enrolments from India."

    https://thepienews.com/news/uk-hesa-data-shows-another-year-of-growth-in-international-student-numbers/
    Not really certain yer average Brexiteer is going to be that chuffed with such an increase.
    If Brits are unhappy with this increase, we should be seeing a surge in concern about immigration, in the polls.

    Funnily enough, the opposite has happened.

    https://www.theguardian.com/world/2019/may/02/britons-more-sold-on-immigration-benefits-than-other-europeans

    https://www.ft.com/content/a8007652-0b97-11ea-b2d6-9bf4d1957a67
    I didn't mention the majority of Brits; I referred to Brexiteers. As you know, the polls suggest the majority of Brits now want to stay in the EU.
    Actually the poll Byronic pointed to shows that more Britons oppose immigration than support it. The difference is less than in some other countries. The headline doesn't support the article.
  • EPGEPG Posts: 6,652

    felix said:

    Corbyn nominates for the H/L a man who faces allegations of bullying his former staff and a woman under investigation for anti-semitism oh and the nonce finder general. Way to go JC!

    Johnson’s nominations will also be interesting.

    Johnson "faces allegations" of his own, worse than bullying, which in any case his chief of staff Cummings has blogged about doing to civil servants.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 123,148
    FF43 said:

    HYUFD said:

    FF43 said:

    HYUFD said:

    FF43 said:

    https://twitter.com/scotonsunday/status/1218826711846064128?s=20

    Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s decision to refuse the Scottish Government the right to call another independence referendum starts to look a lot less like the outrage described by nationalists and more like an example of him defending the wishes of a majority of Scots.

    Having gone through five years and counting of non-stop constitutional wrangling, most Scots are not gagging for another referendum (although some are).

    If there is one, I expect independence to win. No-one much will speak for the Union. The Tories have comprehensively poisoned the unionism well.
    The Tories have just won a majority on a manifesto commitment to no indyref2 for their full 5 year term and that is what they will do and block it regardless of what Sturgeon says.

    Though of course 54% of Scots voted for Unionist parties at the general election last month anyway
    From Johnson's point of view, facing down calls for a second independence referendum makes complete sense because it represents a clear danger to him.

    So we have Sturgeon representing Scotland saying we want a referendum and Johnson representing England* saying, no you can't. That doesn't sit very well with me and I don't even want another referendum.

    * Technically Johnson is the prime minister of the United Kingdom but his party's brand of English nationalism doesn't play well in Scotland, beyond a hard core. Johnson has no interest in supporting the Union beyond rejecting a second referendum.
    Well that is up to you but any indyref2 needs the consent of the UK government and this Tory government has made clear it will refuse indyref2 whatever the circumstances.

    2014 was said by the SNP to be a 'once in a generation referendum' and they must be held alist leaders and stop any referendum taking place
    You and Johnson are not making it easy for me. I'm a unionist. I want to stay in the United Kingdom. Johnson and his whole rancid crowd will eventually be swept away by the tides of history. We need to take a longer view.

    But if the only thing keeping us in is the heavily implied threat of violence, it's time to get out.
    The anger and aggression is coming from the SNP side.

    I accept some liberal wet, pro EU, vaguely Unionist but not really bothered people might not like standing up to Sturgeon so aggressively but Boris will do it anyway and could not care less
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 19,468
    On the subject of strange places to post from; I’m currently posting from Gateshead Ikea. Still a Labour seat!
  • ByronicByronic Posts: 3,578
    FF43 said:

    Byronic said:

    Byronic said:

    Byronic said:

    Byronic said:

    Southam:

    "That depends on the immigration regime and rules."

    ++++

    Boris' To
    Cheer up.

    I think Jcognises that.

    Byronic said:

    Southam:

    "That depends on the immigration regime and rules."

    ++++

    Boris'
    Cheer up.

    I think Johnson is far more flexthe Americans in a way we haven’t been previously. We need an immigration regime that recognises that.

    Th
    Brexit is a change, a bump in the road - but it is not the apocalypse.

    It doesn’t have to be, that is for sure. And for many of us, it definitely won’t be.

    Already, some of the Project Fearmonger predictions about Brexit's wider impact look absolutely embarrassing. Education is one sector where this is true. See here:

    "For centuries, British schools were the envy of the world. Now they’re scrambling to stay alive."

    SCRAMBLING TO STAY ALIVE

    https://foreignpolicy.com/2018/12/07/the-brexit-fueled-death-of-the-british-university/

    Meanwhile, back on Planet Reality:

    "There is good news for the UK university sector with HESA’s first release of data for the 2018/19 academic year: international student numbers are up by 5.9% on the previous period – with a notable 42% hike in new student enrolments from India."

    https://thepienews.com/news/uk-hesa-data-shows-another-year-of-growth-in-international-student-numbers/
    Not really certain yer average Brexiteer is going to be that chuffed with such an increase.
    If Brits are unhappy with this increase, we should be seeing a surge in concern about immigration, in the polls.

    Funnily enough, the opposite has happened.

    https://www.theguardian.com/world/2019/may/02/britons-more-sold-on-immigration-benefits-than-other-europeans

    https://www.ft.com/content/a8007652-0b97-11ea-b2d6-9bf4d1957a67
    I didn't mention the majority of Brits; I referred to Brexiteers. As you know, the polls suggest the majority of Brits now want to stay in the EU.
    Actually the poll Byronic pointed to shows that more Britons oppose immigration than support it. The difference is less than in some other countries. The headline doesn't support the article.
    My point is not absolute numbers, it is the trend. Since Brexit, attitudes to immigration have softened, not hardened, and the salience of the issue has fallen away, it is no longer the first political priority.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 123,148
    kjh said:

    HYUFD said:

    kjh said:

    HYUFD said:

    FF43 said:

    Having gone through five years and counting of non-stop constitutional wrangling, most Scots are not gagging for another referendum (although some are).

    If there is one, I expect independence to win. No-one much will speak for the Union. The Tories have comprehensively poisoned the unionism well.
    The Tories have just won a majority on a manifesto commitment to no indyref2 for their full 5 year term and that is what they will do and block it regardless of what Sturgeon says.

    Though of course 54% of Scots voted for Unionist parties at the general election last month anyway
    Hi HYUFD. As I posted last time you mixed percentage of vote with a FPTP result you can't logically use both in an argument for the following 2 reasons:

    a) You can not assume the percentage votes under FPTP implies the percentage of Unionist voters. Voters are voting for a plethora of reasons during a GE not just on unionism v independence.

    b) And more importantly if you are an advocate of FPTP you can not put forward an argument on the basis of the percentage of the vote and also accept Boris g it down by replacing statements with non meaningful expressions e.g. replace each statement with a letter of the alphabet and you will see you get mathematical logical contradictions.
    I accept it is a moral argument only.

    The only thing that really matters is the Tory UK government has a majority of seats on a manifesto commitment to ban indyref2 for its full 5 year term and that is precisely what it will do.
    I can't argue with that. Either argument was valid, it was a both together I had an issue with.

    I actually don't have strong views re independence one way or another. However a strong argument against Independence at the time was the issue of staying in the EU. In my view (and it appears the nation's as well, regardless of whether you are a leaver or remainer) that change is a mind bogglingly fundamental change.

    Consequently it can be argued that a subsequent vote is valid. The 'once in a generation' argument is irrelevant if you have changed the playing field and the argument so fundamentally.

    I don't actually care what the result of such a vote would be from leafy Surrey.
    You could argue that but then if it was raining tomorrow the SNP would also blame that on Westminster and demand indyref2 so you cannot win, Brexit is just the latest SNP excuse for independence. Even if Remain had won the SNP would still be campaigning for indyref2
  • ByronicByronic Posts: 3,578
    HYUFD said:

    FF43 said:

    HYUFD said:

    FF43 said:

    HYUFD said:

    FF43 said:

    https://twitter.com/scotonsunday/status/1218826711846064128?s=20

    Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s decision to refuse the Scottish Government the right to call another independence referendum starts to look a lot less like the outrage described by nationalists and more like an example of him defending the wishes of a majority of Scots.

    Having gone through five years and counting of non-stop constitutional wrangling, most Scots are not gagging for another referendum (although some are).

    If there is one, I expect independence to win. No-one much will speak for the Union. The Tories have comprehensively poisoned the unionism well.
    The Tories have just won a majority on a manifesto commitment to no indyref2 for their full 5 year term and that is what they will do and block it regardless of what Sturgeon says.

    Though of course 54% of Scots voted for Unionist parties at the general election last month anyway
    From Johnson'se Union beyond rejecting a second referendum.
    Well that is up to you but any indyref2 needs the consent of the UK government and this Tory government has made clear it will refuse indyref2 whatever the circumstances.

    2014 was said by the SNP to be a 'once in a generation referendum' and they must be held alist leaders and stop any referendum taking place
    You and Johnson are not making it easy for me. I'm a unionist. I want to stay in the United Kingdom. Johnson and his whole rancid crowd will eventually be swept away by the tides of history. We need to take a longer view.

    But if the only thing keeping us in is the heavily implied threat of violence, it's time to get out.
    The anger and aggression is coming from the SNP side.

    I accept some liberal wet, pro EU, vaguely Unionist but not really bothered people might not like standing up to Sturgeon so aggressively but Boris will do it anyway and could not care less
    Quite. Boris has nothing to lose. He has a lot to gain. Not least, the support of probably a majority of Scots who REALLY don't want another wrenching referendum.

    My guess is that a few Nats are in this camp. Theoretically they want indy, but right here right now? Hmm.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 28,386

    sirclive said:

    Byronic said:

    Byronic said:

    Southam:

    "That depends on the immigration regime and rules."

    ++++

    Boris' Tories have seriously relaxed the student visa rules already. They have also abandoned the commitment to net migration "in the tens of thousands". Foreign students are enrolling in UK universities in greater numbers than ever before.

    Cheer up.

    I think Johnson is far more flexible on these things than May. My point is more that the real issue is about post-graduates and beyond, and the ability to recruit and retain talent. Up to now, we’ve had the huge advantage of freedom of movement and, therefore, a talent pool of 500 million to tap into. That is going, so we are now competing directly with the Americans in a way we haven’t been previously. We need an immigration regime that recognises that.

    Byronic said:

    Southam:

    "That depends on the immigration regime and rules."

    ++++

    Boris' Tories have seriously relaxed the student visa rules already. They have also abandoned the commitment to net migration "in the tens of thousands". Foreign students are enrolling in UK universities in greater numbers than ever before.

    Cheer up.

    I think Johnson is far more flexible on these things than May. My point is more that the real issue is about post-graduates and beyond, and the ability to recruit and retain talent. Up to now, we’ve had the huge advantage of freedom of movement and, therefore, a talent pool of 500 million to tap into. That is going, so we are now competing directly with the Americans in a way we haven’t been previously. We need an immigration regime that recognises that.

    The UK university sector is booming. See the figures. And as far as I know, the government is not going to stop them recruiting French maths professors or expert Greek physicists. At the same time, these Frogs and Greeks will still be pretty keen to work in the UK, because we have many of Europe's best universities, and we teach in English.

    Brexit is a change, a bump in the road - but it is not the apocalypse.
    As a parent with 3 successful Univ graduates i can tell you imo that some Universities are barely fit for purpose. Lectures are threadbare, tutors invisible and students study alone in their rooms 90% of the time. Fees are ridiculous and
    the fact that you only need to be able to breathe to gain entry is a farce. And what
    do you end up with? (offspring excluded naturally) - naive, ill-prepared adults
    with zero common sense.
    naive, ill-prepared Labour-voting adults with zero common sense.
    None taken. Although my fees were courtesy of the local authority.
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 19,468
    Byronic said:

    HYUFD said:

    FF43 said:

    HYUFD said:

    FF43 said:

    HYUFD said:

    FF43 said:

    https://twitter.com/scotonsunday/status/1218826711846064128?s=20

    Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s decision to refuse the Scottish Government the right to call another independence referendum starts to look a lot less like the outrage described by nationalists and more like an example of him defending the wishes of a majority of Scots.

    Having gone through five years and counting of non-stop constitutional wrangling, most Scots are not gagging for another referendum (although some are).

    If there is one, I expect independence to win. No-one much will speak for the Union. The Tories have comprehensively poisoned the unionism well.
    The Tories have just won a majority on a manifesto commitment to no indyref2 for their full 5 year term and that is what they will do and block it regardless of what Sturgeon says.

    Though of course 54% of Scots voted for Unionist parties at the general election last month anyway
    From Johnson'se Union beyond rejecting a second referendum.
    Well that is up to you but any indyref2 needs the consent of the UK government and this Tory government has made clear it will refuse indyref2 whatever the circumstances.

    2014 was said by the SNP to be a 'once in a generation referendum' and they must be held alist leaders and stop any referendum taking place
    You and Johnson are not making it easy for me. I'm a unionist. I want to stay in the United Kingdom. Johnson and his whole rancid crowd will eventually be swept away by the tides of history. We need to take a longer view.

    But if the only thing keeping us in is the heavily implied threat of violence, it's time to get out.
    The anger and aggression is coming from the SNP side.

    I accept some liberal wet, pro EU, vaguely Unionist but not really bothered people might not like standing up to Sturgeon so aggressively but Boris will do it anyway and could not care less
    Quite. Boris has nothing to lose. He has a lot to gain. Not least, the support of probably a majority of Scots who REALLY don't want another wrenching referendum.

    My guess is that a few Nats are in this camp. Theoretically they want indy, but right here right now? Hmm.
    Fine but morally its not your place to decide for them. The SNP and the Scottish Greens were already elected with a mandate to hold another Referendum.
  • FF43FF43 Posts: 17,208
    HYUFD said:

    FF43 said:

    HYUFD said:

    FF43 said:

    HYUFD said:

    FF43 said:

    https://twitter.com/scotonsunday/status/1218826711846064128?s=20

    Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s decision to refuse the Scottish Government the right to call another independence referendum starts to look a lot less like the outrage described by nationalists and more like an example of him defending the wishes of a majority of Scots.

    Having gone through five years and counting of non-stop constitutional wrangling, most Scots are not gagging for another referendum (although some are).

    If there is one, I expect independence to win. No-one much will speak for the Union. The Tories have comprehensively poisoned the unionism well.
    The Tories have just won a majority on a manifesto commitment to no indyref2 for their full 5 year term and that is what they will do and block it regardless of what Sturgeon says.

    Though of course 54% of Scots voted for Unionist parties at the general election last month anyway
    From Johnson's point of view, facing down calls for a second independence referendum makes complete sense because it represents a clear danger to him.

    So we have Sturgeon representing Scotland saying we want a referendum and Johnson representing England* saying, no you can't. That doesn't sit very well with me and I don't even want another referendum.

    * Technically Johnson is the prime minister of the United Kingdom but his party's brand of English nationalism doesn't play well in Scotland, beyond a hard core. Johnson has no interest in supporting the Union beyond rejecting a second referendum.
    Well that is up to you but any indyref2 needs the consent of the UK government and this Tory government has made clear it will refuse indyref2 whatever the circumstances.

    2014 was said by the SNP to be a 'once in a generation referendum' and they must be held alist leaders and stop any referendum taking place
    You and Johnson are not making it easy for me. I'm a unionist. I want to stay in the United Kingdom. Johnson and his whole rancid crowd will eventually be swept away by the tides of history. We need to take a longer view.

    But if the only thing keeping us in is the heavily implied threat of violence, it's time to get out.
    The anger and aggression is coming from the SNP side.

    I accept some liberal wet, pro EU, vaguely Unionist but not really bothered people might not like standing up to Sturgeon so aggressively but Boris will do it anyway and could not care less
    Johnson not caring less is precisely the issue.

    But I guess we've taken this argument as far as we can.
  • EPGEPG Posts: 6,652
    Everyone likes Cummings because he hates the right people, even though he has admitted to bullying, because supporting Con is now about shitposting threats of violence to civil servants and Scots, and ironic antiSemitism from the Labour perspective.
  • Dura_AceDura_Ace Posts: 13,677
    Byronic said:

    Put a pip on my shoulder and call me Sergeant Over-Sanguine, but I think Brexit is going to be simultaneously hard, but fine.

    So many of the dire predictions (as with UK universities) are dissolving as we approach them, like mist on a mountain road.

    Onwards, fellow Britons. Onwards.


    One pip makes you a 2nd lieutenant not a sergeant. ie a member of the least functionally useful stratum in the entire army.
  • dr_spyndr_spyn Posts: 11,300
    Witless, pointless change to pretend that it makes a difference.
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 21,298
    edited January 2020
    If, as @Casino_Royale states upthread, the whole Palace must be decanted, then both Houses should move - and Manchester is probably a better candidate than York.

    Otherwise, this is at best a gimmick and at worst an attempt to emasculate the Lords.
  • ByronicByronic Posts: 3,578
    Gallow:

    "Fine but morally its not your place to decide for them. The SNP and the Scottish Greens were already elected with a mandate to hold another Referendum."

    ++++

    Yes it is my place, as a British citizen with a vote. As long as we are a unified country - the UK - it is the UK government, as a whole, which decides when constituent parts of it may have a referendum to secede.

    This is only sensible. Otherwise the SNP Scots government could call a vote every six minutes, on any pretext, in the hope of a YES.

    Similarly Wales, Yorkshire, Cornwall, Hay-on-Wye and my mad Auntie Mable in Tooting who thinks she is the nation of Andorra. No government can allow endless votes, in various bits of the country, on whether the country should break up.

    I suspect that's what Lisa Nandy was trying to say in her reference to Spain/Catalunya, tho she phrased it badly.

  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 123,148
    edited January 2020
    Byronic said:

    HYUFD said:

    FF43 said:

    HYUFD said:

    FF43 said:

    HYUFD said:

    FF43 said:

    https://twitter.com/scotonsunday/status/1218826711846064128?s=20

    Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s decision to refuse the Scottish Government the right to call another independence referendum starts to look a lot less like the outrage described by nationalists and more like an example of him defending the wishes of a majority of Scots.

    Having gone through five years and counting of non-stop constitutional wrangling, most Scots are not gagging for another referendum (although some are).

    If there is one, I expect independence to win. No-one much will speak for the Union. The Tories have comprehensively poisoned the unionism well.
    The Tories have just won a majority on a manifesto commitment to no indyref2 for their full 5 year term and that is what they will do and block it regardless of what Sturgeon says.

    Though of course 54% of Scots voted for Unionist parties at the general election last month anyway
    From Johnson'se Union beyond rejecting a second referendum.
    Well that is up to you but any indyref2 needs the consent of the UK government and this Tory government has made clear it will refuse indyref2 whatever the circumstances.

    2014 was said by the SNP to be a 'once in a generation referendum' and they must be held alist leaders and stop any referendum taking place
    You and Johnson are not making it easy for me. I'm a d threat of violence, it's time to get out.
    The anger and aggression is coming from the SNP side.

    I accept some liberal wet, pro EU, vaguely Unionist but not really bothered people might not like standing up to Sturgeon so aggressively but Boris will do it anyway and could not care less
    Quite. Boris has nothing to lose. He has a lot to gain. Not least, the support of probably a majority of Scots who REALLY don't want another wrenching referendum.

    My guess is that a few Nats are in this camp. Theoretically they want indy, but right here right now? Hmm.
    Sturgeon I suspect is also just going through the motions, she is not as fanatical a nationalist as Salmond was and quite enjoys the perks and trappings of being First Minister she would lose if she had to resign if No won any indyref2.

    She is just trying to show her base she is committed to the cause but in reality there is nothing the SNP can do as the UK government has refused indyref2, the 2014 referendum only occurred as the UK Cameron and Clegg coalition government consented
  • BluestBlueBluestBlue Posts: 4,556
    FF43 said:

    HYUFD said:

    FF43 said:

    HYUFD said:

    FF43 said:

    HYUFD said:

    FF43 said:

    https://twitter.com/scotonsunday/status/1218826711846064128?s=20

    Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s decision to refuse the Scottish Government the right to call another independence referendum starts to look a lot less like the outrage described by nationalists and more like an example of him defending the wishes of a majority of Scots.

    Having gone through five years and counting of non-stop constitutional wrangling, most Scots are not gagging for another referendum (although some are).

    If there is one, I expect independence to win. No-one much will speak for the Union. The Tories have comprehensively poisoned the unionism well.
    The Tories have just won a majority on a manifesto commitment to no indyref2 for their full 5 year term and that is what they will do and block it regardless of what Sturgeon says.

    Though of course 54% of Scots voted for Unionist parties at the general election last month anyway
    * Technically Johnson is the prime minister of the United Kingdom but his party's brand of English nationalism doesn't play well in Scotland, beyond a hard core. Johnson has no interest in supporting the Union beyond rejecting a second referendum.
    Well that is up to you but any indyref2 needs the consent of the UK government and this Tory government has made clear it will refuse indyref2 whatever the circumstances.

    2014 was said by the SNP to be a 'once in a generation referendum' and they must be held alist leaders and stop any referendum taking place
    You and Johnson are not making it easy for me. I'm a unionist. I want to stay in the United Kingdom. Johnson and his whole rancid crowd will eventually be swept away by the tides of history. We need to take a longer view.

    But if the only thing keeping us in is the heavily implied threat of violence, it's time to get out.
    The anger and aggression is coming from the SNP side.

    I accept some liberal wet, pro EU, vaguely Unionist but not really bothered people might not like standing up to Sturgeon so aggressively but Boris will do it anyway and could not care less
    Johnson not caring less is precisely the issue.

    But I guess we've taken this argument as far as we can.
    Boris isn't likely to lose a wink of sleep over Scotland. If it stays, that's a win for the Union. If it goes, his majority increases by over 50% (+41 net on my reckoning).

    How ever will he cope with either of these terrible outcomes? :wink:
  • kjhkjh Posts: 11,805
    HYUFD said:

    kjh said:

    HYUFD said:

    kjh said:

    HYUFD said:
    Hi HYUFD. As I posted last time you mixed percentage of vote with a FPTP result you can't logically use both in an argument for the following 2 reasons:

    a) You can not assume the percentage votes under FPTP implies the percentage of Unionist voters. Voters are voting for a plethora of reasons during a GE not just on unionism v independence.

    b) And more importantly if you are an advocate of FPTP you can not put forward an argument on the basis of the percentage of the vote and also accept Boris g it down by replacing statements with non meaningful expressions e.g. replace each statement with a letter of the alphabet and you will see you get mathematical logical contradictions.
    I accept it is a moral argument only.

    The only thing that really matters is the Tory UK government has a majority of seats on a manifesto commitment to ban indyref2 for its full 5 year term and that is precisely what it will do.
    I can't argue with that. Either argument was valid, it was a both together I had an issue with.

    I actually don't have strong views re independence one way or another. However a strong argument against Independence at the time was the issue of staying in the EU. In my view (and it appears the nation's as well, regardless of whether you are a leaver or remainer) that change is a mind bogglingly fundamental change.

    Consequently it can be argued that a subsequent vote is valid. The 'once in a generation' argument is irrelevant if you have changed the playing field and the argument so fundamentally.

    I don't actually care what the result of such a vote would be from leafy Surrey.
    You could argue that but then if it was raining tomorrow the SNP would also blame that on Westminster and demand indyref2 so you cannot win, Brexit is just the latest SNP excuse for independence. Even if Remain had won the SNP would still be campaigning for indyref2
    Well that is true, but that is not where we are so they do now have a valid argument. If we voted remain you would have a more valid argument for denying a them another go.

    Re earlier post I noticed you referred to it being a 'moral argument'. I accept that and would hope it always were, BUT there is no contradiction between being logical and moral.

    There is a big difference between opinion and logic, hence the huge arguments on politics, religion, abortion, crime and punishment, etc. However the opinions should be argued logically. We can disagree without breaking the rules of logic.
  • York is too expensive and too busy as it is.

    Nor does it have good road or air links.

    Put it in one of the towns the Conservatives won in December.

    Leak Burnley, Redcar or Grimsby to the media to really panic the Lords and then announce Crewe, Darlington or Doncaster.
  • ByronicByronic Posts: 3,578
    HYUFD said:

    Byronic said:

    HYUFD said:

    FF43 said:

    HYUFD said:

    FF43 said:

    HYUFD said:

    FF43 said:

    https://twitter.com/scotonsunday/status/1218826711846064128?s=20

    Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s decision to refuse the Scottish Government the right to call another independence referendum starts to look a lot less like the outrage described by nationalists and more like an example of him defending the wishes of a majority of Scots.

    Having gone through five years and counting of non-stop constitutional wrangling, most Scots are not gagging for another referendum (although some are).

    If there is one, I expect independence to win. No-one much will speak for the Union. The Tories have comprehensively poisoned the unionism well.
    The Tories have just won a majority on a manifesto commitment to no indyref2 for their full 5 year term and that is what they will do and block it regardless of what Sturgeon says.

    Though of course 54% of Scots voted for Unionist parties at the general election last month anyway
    From Johnson'se Union beyond rejecting a second referendum.
    Well that is up to you but any indyref2 needs the consent of the UK government and this Tory government has made clear it will refuse indyref2 whatever the circumstances.

    2014 was said by the SNP to be a 'once in a generation referendum' and they must be held alist leaders and stop any referendum taking place
    You and Johnfor me. I'm a d threat of violence, it's time to get out.
    The anger and aggression is coming from the SNP side.

    I accept some liberal wet, pro EU, vaguely Unionist but not really bothered people might not like standing up to Sturgeon so aggressively but Boris will do it anyway and could not care less
    Quite. Boris has nothing to lose. He has a lot to gain. Not least, the support of probably a majority of Scots who REALLY don't want another wrenching referendum.

    My guess is that a few Nats are in this camp. Theoretically they want indy, but right here right now? Hmm.
    Sturgeon I suspect is also just going through the motions, she is not as fanatical a nationalist as Salmond was and quite enjoys the perks and trappings of being First Minister she would lose if she had to resign if No won any indyref2.

    She is just trying to show her base she is committed to the cause but in reality there is nothing the SNP can do as the UK government has refused indyref2, the 2014 referendum only occurred as the UK Cameron and Clegg coalition government consented
    Sturgeon also needs to distract attention from the forthcoming Salmond rape trial.
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 19,468
    Byronic said:

    Gallow:

    "Fine but morally its not your place to decide for them. The SNP and the Scottish Greens were already elected with a mandate to hold another Referendum."

    ++++

    Yes it is my place, as a British citizen with a vote. As long as we are a unified country - the UK - it is the UK government, as a whole, which decides when constituent parts of it may have a referendum to secede.

    This is only sensible. Otherwise the SNP Scots government could call a vote every six minutes, on any pretext, in the hope of a YES.

    Similarly Wales, Yorkshire, Cornwall, Hay-on-Wye and my mad Auntie Mable in Tooting who thinks she is the nation of Andorra. No government can allow endless votes, in various bits of the country, on whether the country should break up.

    I suspect that's what Lisa Nandy was trying to say in her reference to Spain/Catalunya, tho she phrased it badly.

    If the Scots keep electing governments who want to hold that referendum then who are you to say no?
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 33,468
    FF43 said:

    Byronic said:

    Byronic said:

    Byronic said:

    Byronic said:

    Southam:

    "That depends on the immigration regime and rules."

    ++++

    Boris' To
    Cheer up.

    I think Jcognises that.

    Byronic said:

    Southam:

    "That depends on the immigration regime and rules."

    ++++

    Boris' Tories have seriously relaxed the student visa rules already. They have also abandoned the commitment to net migration "in the tens of thousands". Foreign students are enrolling in UK universities in greater numbers than ever before.

    Cheer up.

    I think Johnson is far more flexthe Americans in a way we haven’t been previously. We need an immigration regime that recognises that.

    Th
    Brexit is a change, a bump in the road - but it is not the apocalypse.

    It doesn’t have to be, that is for sure. And for many of us, it definitely won’t be.

    Already, some of the Project Fearmonger predictions about Brexit's wider impact look absolutely embarrassing. Education is one sector where this is true. See here:



    https://foreignpolicy.com/2018/12/07/the-brexit-fueled-death-of-the-british-university/

    Meanwhile, back on Planet Reality:

    "There is good news for the UK university sector with HESA’s first release of data for the 2018/19 academic year: international student numbers are up by 5.9% on the previous period – with a notable 42% hike in new student enrolments from India."

    https://thepienews.com/news/uk-hesa-data-shows-another-year-of-growth-in-international-student-numbers/
    Not really certain yer average Brexiteer is going to be that chuffed with such an increase.
    If Brits are unhappy with this increase, we should be seeing a surge in concern about immigration, in the polls.

    Funnily enough, the opposite has happened.

    https://www.theguardian.com/world/2019/may/02/britons-more-sold-on-immigration-benefits-than-other-europeans

    https://www.ft.com/content/a8007652-0b97-11ea-b2d6-9bf4d1957a67
    I didn't mention the majority of Brits; I referred to Brexiteers. As you know, the polls suggest the majority of Brits now want to stay in the EU.
    Actually the poll Byronic pointed to shows that more Britons oppose immigration than support it. The difference is less than in some other countries. The headline doesn't support the article.
    Blimey, he's twisting stats more than HYUFD
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 61,806
    Mr. Gate, must be a bloody big IKEA to have its own MP!
  • BluestBlueBluestBlue Posts: 4,556

    Byronic said:

    Gallow:

    "Fine but morally its not your place to decide for them. The SNP and the Scottish Greens were already elected with a mandate to hold another Referendum."

    ++++

    Yes it is my place, as a British citizen with a vote. As long as we are a unified country - the UK - it is the UK government, as a whole, which decides when constituent parts of it may have a referendum to secede.

    This is only sensible. Otherwise the SNP Scots government could call a vote every six minutes, on any pretext, in the hope of a YES.

    Similarly Wales, Yorkshire, Cornwall, Hay-on-Wye and my mad Auntie Mable in Tooting who thinks she is the nation of Andorra. No government can allow endless votes, in various bits of the country, on whether the country should break up.

    I suspect that's what Lisa Nandy was trying to say in her reference to Spain/Catalunya, tho she phrased it badly.

    If the Scots keep electing governments who want to hold that referendum then who are you to say no?
    The UK Government. Otherwise known as the English, Welsh, Scottish, and Northern Ireland Governments :wink:
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 123,148
    kjh said:

    HYUFD said:

    kjh said:

    HYUFD said:

    kjh said:

    HYUFD said:
    Hi HYUFD. As I posted last time you mixed percentage of vote with a FPTP result you can't logically use both in an argument for the following 2 reasons:

    a) You can not assume the percentage votes al contradictions.
    I accept it is a moral argument only.

    The only thing that really matters is the Tory UK government has a majority of seats on a manifesto commitment to ban indyref2 for its full 5 year term and that is precisely what it will do.
    I can't argue with that. Either argument was valid, it was a both together I had an issue with.

    I actually don't have strong views re independence one way or another. However a strong argument against Independence at the time was the issue of staying in the EU. In my view (and it appears the nation's as well, regardless of whether you are a leaver or remainer) that change is a mind bogglingly fundamental change.

    Consequently it can be argued that a subsequent vote is valid. The 'once in a generation' argument is irrelevant if you have changed the playing field and the argument so fundamentally.

    I don't actually care what the result of such a vote would be from leafy Surrey.
    You could argue that but then if it was raining tomorrow the SNP would also blame that on Westminster and demand indyref2 so you cannot win, Brexit is just the latest SNP excuse for independence. Even if Remain had won the SNP would still be campaigning for indyref2
    Well that is true, but that is not where we are so they do now have a valid argument. If we voted remain you would have a more valid argument for denying a them another go.

    Re earlier post I noticed you referred to it being a 'moral argument'. I accept that and would hope it always were, BUT there is no contradiction between being logical and moral.

    There is a big difference between opinion and logic, hence the huge arguments on politics, religion, abortion, crime and punishment, etc. However the opinions should be argued logically. We can disagree without breaking the rules of logic.
    No, I outright oppose indyref2 regardless for a generation, exactly as Salmond said the 2014 referendum was once in a generation.

    Brexit is just the latest excuse of the SNP for indyref2, the fact some might agree with them is irrelevant, what matters is whether the UK government agrees with them and it does not having won a majority on a manifesto commitment to no indyref2
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 123,148

    Byronic said:

    Gallow:

    "Fine but morally its not your place to decide for them. The SNP and the Scottish Greens were already elected with a mandate to hold another Referendum."

    ++++

    Yes it is my place, as a British citizen with a vote. As long as we are a unified country - the UK - it is the UK government, as a whole, which decides when constituent parts of it may have a referendum to secede.

    This is only sensible. Otherwise the SNP Scots government could call a vote every six minutes, on any pretext, in the hope of a YES.

    Similarly Wales, Yorkshire, Cornwall, Hay-on-Wye and my mad Auntie Mable in Tooting who thinks she is the nation of Andorra. No government can allow endless votes, in various bits of the country, on whether the country should break up.

    I suspect that's what Lisa Nandy was trying to say in her reference to Spain/Catalunya, tho she phrased it badly.

    If the Scots keep electing governments who want to hold that referendum then who are you to say no?
    The UK government has every right to say no, Scots have already had 1 referendum 6 years ago, the Spanish government has prevented the Catalans having even 1 independence referendum despite the election of Catalan nationalist governments
  • NickPalmerNickPalmer Posts: 21,533
    felix said:

    Corbyn nominates for the H/L a man who faces allegations of bullying his former staff and a woman under investigation for anti-semitism oh and the nonce finder general. Way to go JC!

    Resignation honours are about looking after loyal friends and allies - that's just a fact, if you look at past ones. I'd have liked to see him nominate Seumas Milne too, if only to enjoy the fuss. But anyway Boris should have nominated Bercow hiself - the breach of precedent is undesirable, becuase it implies the Speakers need to please the Government of the day in order to receive the normal honos on retirement.
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 19,468
    HYUFD said:

    Byronic said:

    Gallow:

    "Fine but morally its not your place to decide for them. The SNP and the Scottish Greens were already elected with a mandate to hold another Referendum."

    ++++

    Yes it is my place, as a British citizen with a vote. As long as we are a unified country - the UK - it is the UK government, as a whole, which decides when constituent parts of it may have a referendum to secede.

    This is only sensible. Otherwise the SNP Scots government could call a vote every six minutes, on any pretext, in the hope of a YES.

    Similarly Wales, Yorkshire, Cornwall, Hay-on-Wye and my mad Auntie Mable in Tooting who thinks she is the nation of Andorra. No government can allow endless votes, in various bits of the country, on whether the country should break up.

    I suspect that's what Lisa Nandy was trying to say in her reference to Spain/Catalunya, tho she phrased it badly.

    If the Scots keep electing governments who want to hold that referendum then who are you to say no?
    The UK government has every right to say no, Scots have already had 1 referendum 6 years ago, the Spanish government has prevented the Catalans having even 1 independence referendum despite the election of Catalan nationalist governments
    I know you only recognize democracy when it suits but this is ridiculous.

    You are demeaning yourself.
This discussion has been closed.