One of the most haunting Arthurian legends concerns Sir Balin. Merlin had long prophesied that he would “strike a stroke most dolorous that ever man struck”. Shrugging off this particular instance of Project Fear from an expert, Sir Balin entered into a feud with the family of King Pellam. Being pursued by the king through his castle, Sir Balin seized “a marvellous spear strangely wrought” and dealt a fierce blow to the king. The spear turned out to be the spear of destiny that struck Jesus and the blow caused immeasurably wider devastation than Sir Balin could have conceived. Sir Thomas Malory recorded that:
Comments
The people have spoken, the EU will be left. Following this a trade deal will be reached which the people will either accept or reject.
The PM being rejected directly on this topic, had to go.
The Labour party has used this as cover to move against their failed leader but it was only a question of when not if.
The world hasn't ended, accommodations will be reached, the world still turns. It's not like 1642
The referendum gave the government a policy goal. Mr Cameron had to be replaced, but once the new PM is in place the government has a task to accomplish. A general election would just be an unnecessary distraction.
Republicans 18 to 21 July
Democrats 25 to 28 July
And unpopular with the electorate, in my view. There's been enough upheaval. Form a government, implement a brexit, and let the voters deliver their view in four years.
New election for CLP reps on the NEC are due this summer. Last Friday was the deadline for CLPs to submit nominations...but HQ didn't manage to release the final tally yet. We have the last Wednesday figures though
1 - He talked about McDonnell quite a bit. '[McDonnell and Corbyn] are a team' [McDonnell] speaks for Jeremy'. Part of me wondered if that was clever politics, trying to suggest to the Corbynites that changing to McDonnell as leader would not be a big difference and so acceptable to them, and so hopefully convince them to get Corbyn to stand down.
2 - He said the felt one of the prerequisites of being deputy is never wanting to be Leader. Huh? The whole point would be if the Leader is gone, or has to go, you can step up.
Mind you keep this a bit hush-hush as a substantial rise in sterling will be rather crap for us.
The smart players mainly look for the next stress point rather than worrying about the last.
https://twitter.com/harryph/status/748210650493648896/photo/1?ref_src=twsrc^tfw
However, with Lab in all this turmoil, surely Lab "backbench" MPs (ie the vast majority of Lab MPs) would say "No, you can't call a GE right now, until we've sorted ourselves out". They wouldn't have to specify how long that would be but the effect would be to prevent the snap GE.
Going down the other route of actually repealing the FTPA is a non-starter as it couldn't be done rapidly due to the Lords.
Yes that's fair.
It will be difficult to craft a decent Leave position, but the Tories seem like they are remaining united, more so than I would have thought, so it can be done.
I think this piece is quite right the key is what is Labour's position to be. It cannot be to not declare article 50 (if that is ever to become someone's position it will not be right now, when it is too early to change track, even if it is ever possible), so what? LDs have the rejoin option, and that's not without problems for Labour to copy. The Tories are coming together to form one. But what options are Labour even considering?
I am glad to see we have rerun and he has at last had his say
Per Guido spreadsheet (including the candidate) it's now:
Boris - 38
Crabb - 20
May - 18
Fox - 7
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/19mKbV0UnIbX_lbiinKiquP0ghiFpsMl0owUO6_TJyzI/htmlview?pref=2&pli=1&sle=true#gid=0
All of which leaves 170-odd labour MPs with a bit of a problem....
EEA agreement or no EEA agreement?
https://twitter.com/DMcCaffreySKY/status/748215325963988992
It would take about 30 people to follow the messiah around Islington saying JezWeCan and some kind of Internet proxy that redirects his traffic to a cached copy of the Morning Star.
He need never know.
If he has actually got 110 (and spare on top to do as you say) then he's in the Final which in turn surely means he should be odds on - or at the very worst even money as he must have at the very least a 50:50 shot with the members.
But in fact he's still significantly odds against - implying he doesn't actually have the 110 - and indeed that he must be well short.
After 5pm. UK stock markets up, some above pre Brexit level
Crisis. what fecking crisis?
What's the point of a campaign if you have to try and stack up the votes in advance?
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/business/2016/06/29/new-zealand-offers-uk-its-top-trade-negotiators-for-post-brexit/
http://www.conservativewoman.co.uk/david-keighleys-bbc-watch-the-beeb-is-on-a-mission-to-destroy-the-brexit-vote/
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2016/06/28/we-leavers-are-not-racists-bigots-or-hooligans--no-matter-what-t/
So I just about voted to leave - I really wrestled with the decision. I would not agree at all with your assertion though. The barometer is all over the place. It is definitely not pointing anywhere. My guess is towards mild drizzle at worst.
The big risk to the UK is mainly the EU as it stands now.
We have walked away from a bomb that's ticking. In part we may have contributed to starting the timer (which is a bad thing, so sorry). We're not walking away fast enough, and will get some quite nasty wounds in the blast.
AusExit campaign for Australia to cut ties with Commonwealth gains momentum after historic Brexit vote
http://heatst.com/uk/11-countries-gearing-up-to-strike-trade-deals-with-britain/
https://twitter.com/brianspanner1/status/746488316510482433
OK, I'll get my wife to leak an email saying you are not up to it. Then neither of us has to take it.
Splendid!
More likely to be telling his son to STFU
Coffee should never have 100degree boiling water it kills it. On the other hand tea.....
There's a major hit on UK-focused sectors. Companies whose revenues are largely in US dollars have benefited. That's not exactly a vote of confidence in the effect of Brexit on the UK economy.
(I'm a big Tony Benn fan despite being a Tory voter)
& Not having any sort of post brexit plan. I assumed whilst Boris was the piss and wind of the campaign Gove might be formulating some post-Brexit outline.
Interestingly, some are already moving on to worry about NLexit, which would be far more of a test for the EZ. Can't see that happening myself.
Still time for Falconer to declare
The EEC.
As this forum clearly shows. The idea that a vote for Leave is a vote for a Red BNP prospectus of zero immigration, unlimited welfare payments and an ultra rich NHS staffed by Harley Street doctors and supermodel nurses is palpable nonsense.
Friday I had visions of A&E being filled with PB'ers stretched in having thrown themselves out of Windows 10.