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politicalbetting.com » Blog Archive » A second referendum is a dangerous distraction to the real act

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  • Nigelb said:

    That’s also a view, rather than a fact.
    Given that a number of those who helped lead the Brexit campaign have expressed a preference for remaining over the deal, it is an open question. The personal outrage of various individuals doesn’t settle it one way or the other.

    My own preference would be for parliament to approve the imperfect deal. Should it fail to do so there is no settled legal, constitutional or democratic position for what should happen next - and whatever does will seriously annoy large numbers of people.

    They only make that claim because they seek to force the decision towards no deal and they know that this Deal makes that more unlikely.
  • In the latest YouGov opinion poll, 50% of women think Brexit was the wrong decision and only 35% think it was right. Numbers like that must make you question the long-term viability of your project.
    Not for a second.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,479

    They only make that claim because they seek to force the decision towards no deal and they know that this Deal makes that more unlikely.
    As I said, you’re entitled to your views. It doesn’t make them settled facts.
  • justin124justin124 Posts: 11,527
    The Opposition can move a VONC at any time whether the Deal is rejected or approved. Thatcher did so on a regular basis to the Callaghan Government in the late 1970s.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,878
    edited November 2018

    Theresa's deal is surely doomed - the Leavers eviscerated it with the same speed and ruthlessness as they did with Dave's before it. The wretched thing never stood a chance. I can only foresee two outcomes now:

    1) If the EU is prepared to indulge us, we could go through the farce of Theresa's replacement (DD or whoever) 'renegotiating' something else. It will be crap, of course, but the Leavers are more likely to back it simply because one of their own has his name on it.

    2) No Deal it is then. This might be salutary in the long term. Despite the economic damage of No Deal, exposing the Brexit ultras as charlatans, fantasists or nincompoops will surely amount to a kind of political cleansing. We can then peer into the future poorer but healthier.

    The EU would not give a Leaver PM any different a Deal to May.

    The economic consequences of No Deal would be so damaging they would probably take decades to recover from, especially if they are followed by Corbyn as PM as would be more likely in the event of Crash Out Brexit
  • justin124justin124 Posts: 11,527
    IanB2 said:

    It would however be a "Brexit election", in which voters might expect Labour to actually have a settled position on the matter. One that is a little more thought through than the current "exact same unicorn" policy.
    But it would not be a Brexit election however much political anoraks and the commentariat might like to think otherwise. Most people are far more interested in other issues and would be very receptive to them being raised in the campaign.
  • GIN1138GIN1138 Posts: 22,831
    First JRM. Now the DUP.

    Seems the "Saint's" love nothing more than a "Sinner" :D
  • RoyalBlueRoyalBlue Posts: 3,223
    edited November 2018
    Afternoon all!

    Thinking on it further, would a second referendum really be between the Deal and Remain? Why would the Labour leadership eliminate the one option from the ballot that would let them totally reshape the country? Their backbenchers could opt for No Deal over Deal on the basis that they’ve already rejected the Deal as being unacceptable. The ERG will clearly agree.

    Perhaps it will be Remain vs No Deal.
  • NickPalmerNickPalmer Posts: 21,672
    RoyalBlue said:

    Afternoon all!

    Thinking on it further, would a second referendum really be between the Deal and Remain? Why would the Labour leadership eliminate the one option from the ballot that would let them totally reshape the country? Their backbenchers could opt for No Deal over Deal on the basis that they’ve already rejected the Deal as being unacceptable. The ERG will clearly agree.

    Perhaps it will be Remain vs No Deal.

    Yes, I think that's what Labour would want, if we can't get an election.
  • HYUFD said:

    The EU would not give a Leaver PM any different a Deal to May.

    The economic consequences of No Deal would be so damaging they would probably take decades to recover from, especially if they are followed by Corbyn as PM as would be more likely in the event of Crash Out Brexit
    Quite right. But the only way No Deal can be avoided now is to go through the pretence of a renegotiation under an untainted Leave PM. Of course, he'll just return with Theresa's deal (at best) but the saboteurs are so stupid/cynical/shameless that they're probably go along with it this time.
  • justin124justin124 Posts: 11,527

    That’s a fair point. May’s dogwhistles are a very powerful anti-Tory motivator. Her anti-immigrant rhetoric and talk of queue jumping is appalling, as well as almost entirely destructive. That’s why I see the Tories winning most seats next time, but not a majority.
    If the Tories drop below 310 seats ,they are likely to lose office even if they remain the largest party.
  • JonathanJonathan Posts: 22,100
    Xenon said:

    The problem with this line of thinking is that it only seems to apply to the decision to leave the EU.

    We have been having new information about the EU for 40 years since the original referendum eg. Maastricht Treaty, Lisbon Treaty, ever closer union etc. and never been asked to confirm this decision democratically.

    But when we vote to leave then that decision suddenly doesn't count with each new piece of information apparently. It's a bad argument.
    No. It’s a perfectly valid argument. There is a ton of new information. We can make an informed choice.
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 34,530
    edited November 2018

    While I'm sure he's right about Hayes' motivation, the language and tone of this letter is everything one's come to expect from the ERG... rude, bullying, highly personal, unprofessional - on Commons paper addressed to a colleague, and allowed to leak out. Keep it for the pub.

    If Frankie Boyle had made those comments about someone on TV, a lot of the people who are guffawing him on would be outraged.

    https://www.iaindale.com/articles/tory-mps-go-to-war-over-john-hayes-utter-cock-knighthood

    'K'nell, making that public, too. Once upon a time it would have been pistols (and with a bit of luck someone would have emptied Francois')

    Edited for English
  • NickPalmerNickPalmer Posts: 21,672



    How does Labour place a Referendum Bill before parliament and guide it through the legislative steps so that the vote can be held before March 29?

    It can't. But if the Government has no viable options and a motion is carried instructing them to go for a referendum, do they really refuse and opt for chaos, or ask the EU for time to do it? For the reasons I suggested, the EU would agree, in the hope of a Remain outcome.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,878
    justin124 said:

    But it would not be a Brexit election however much political anoraks and the commentariat might like to think otherwise. Most people are far more interested in other issues and would be very receptive to them being raised in the campaign.

    Other issues would be largely irrelevant if we face economic crash out Brexit which would see higher unemployment and less money for public services and higher taxes and shortages of supplies and likely riots and rising crime, albeit with lower immigration, all other issues would flow from Brexit
  • JonathanJonathan Posts: 22,100
    Stella Creasy is impressive.
  • Theresa's deal is surely doomed - the Leavers eviscerated it with the same speed and ruthlessness as they did with Dave's before it. The wretched thing never stood a chance. I can only foresee two outcomes now:

    1) If the EU is prepared to indulge us, we could go through the farce of Theresa's replacement (DD or whoever) 'renegotiating' something else. It will be crap, of course, but the Leavers are more likely to back it simply because one of their own has his name on it.

    2) No Deal it is then. This might be salutary in the long term. Despite the economic damage of No Deal, exposing the Brexit ultras as charlatans, fantasists or nincompoops will surely amount to a kind of political cleansing. We can then peer into the future poorer but healthier.

    Whatever now happens there will be change, and people don't like change. In either scenario above, Remainers will look to blame Leavers, but do not assume that will become the dominant story. History shows that societies find it easier to blame others - so expect that the guilty men tag will end up hung on the EU, civil service negotiators, the media, etc. Of course history also shows this is fertile ground for populist leaders so we have to be on our guard against those.
  • NickPalmerNickPalmer Posts: 21,672



    Thanks for the considered response. Two things I have an issue with:

    1) At this stage, is it even guaranteed that "Remain" is a live option, practically? Also it would be difficult to get any Brexiteer MPs to support a referendum with Remain as an option, so the parliamentary arithmetic would require support across the spectrum to make up for this.

    2) In principle the "surviving options" could include "the Deal"? MPs might not feel able to vote through the Deal themselves, but might be content to let the electorate grubby their hands by doing it for them? Essentially, any situation in which an MP agrees to a referendum means presenting at least one option that the MP doesn't like. Couldn't the Deal be one of them?

    Re 1): yes, would need a cross-Parliament move. Labour would vote pretty solidly in favour in that situation, and if the Deal had been rejected, enough Conservatives probably would too. But ultimately it would need the Government to agree to proceed, possibly under threat of VONC if they refused.

    Re 2) Maybe. But this does run into the objection that it asks people to assess a 500-page document already rejected by Parliament. The "worse than either Remain or Hard Brexit" view is pretty widespread. One can reasonably have a referendum on two clear concepts, but not on fiddly detail.

    Are there any guarantees? Hell no. We are trying to escape in one piece, not steering towards a guaranteed safe solution.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,128

    Quite right. But the only way No Deal can be avoided now is to go through the pretence of a renegotiation under an untainted Leave PM. Of course, he'll just return with Theresa's deal (at best) but the saboteurs are so stupid/cynical/shameless that they're probably go along with it this time.
    There could be a planned "WTO* Brexit" undera new regime, and there is something to be said for preparing for these things, but it would need A50 extension.

    * Even "No Deal" requires mini-Deals over a number of issues.

    In reality the ERG will be paper tigers, meekly cave in to allow May's Deal to pass.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,878
    RoyalBlue said:

    Afternoon all!

    Thinking on it further, would a second referendum really be between the Deal and Remain? Why would the Labour leadership eliminate the one option from the ballot that would let them totally reshape the country? Their backbenchers could opt for No Deal over Deal on the basis that they’ve already rejected the Deal as being unacceptable. The ERG will clearly agree.

    Perhaps it will be Remain vs No Deal.


    If May calls a referendum it will likely be Deal v No Deal, 75% of Tory voters oppose a Deal v Remain referendum compared to 73% who oppose a Deal v No Deal referendum with Tory voters split 35% for the Deal, 35% for No Deal. The ERG would demand a No Deal option and the majority of Tory MPs would back the Deal.


    If Corbyn called a referendum it would likely be Remain v Deal (ie permanent customs union which would be his Deal), 56% of Labour voters want a Remain v Deal referendum compared to only 50% who want a Deal v No Deal referendum. Labour voters also prefer the Deal over No Deal 35% to 24%. The majority of Labour MPs would demand a Remain option with Corbynistas backing Corbyn's Deal.


    http://lordashcroftpolls.com/2018/11/my-new-brexit-poll-good-for-theresa-may-bad-for-her-deal/
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,878

    Quite right. But the only way No Deal can be avoided now is to go through the pretence of a renegotiation under an untainted Leave PM. Of course, he'll just return with Theresa's deal (at best) but the saboteurs are so stupid/cynical/shameless that they're probably go along with it this time.
    They won't, for the ERG out of the EU, the Customs Union and the Single Market is non negotiable and the EU will not agree that for the UK and NI, only GB
  • HYUFD said:

    They won't, for the ERG out of the EU, the Customs Union and the Single Market is non negotiable and the EU will not agree that for the UK and NI, only GB
    The EU don't have a choice if we insist upon it. In 125 days NI leaves them both automatically. Tic toc.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,878
    edited November 2018
    justin124 said:

    If the Tories drop below 310 seats ,they are likely to lose office even if they remain the largest party.
    Fine, let Corbyn deal with Brexit then.

    On 300-309 seats the Tories will also likely have a majority in England and be the strongest and most powerful opposition in postwar British History and Corbyn with the weakest support in Parliament of any postwar PM.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,128
    Jonathan said:

    Stella Creasy is impressive.

    On AQ?

    I am a big fan, and quite green on her.
  • anothernickanothernick Posts: 3,591

    It can't. But if the Government has no viable options and a motion is carried instructing them to go for a referendum, do they really refuse and opt for chaos, or ask the EU for time to do it? For the reasons I suggested, the EU would agree, in the hope of a Remain outcome.
    I think if May's deal is rejected by a substantial majority then many Tories, perhaps including May herself, will switch to supporting a second referendum. There are no other options - bringing back the deal with cosmetic changes is not a runner if it has been defeated by a 3 figure majority the first time. And no deal is also inconceivable for reasons that have been discussed here ad infinitum.

    And I think that many MPs, probably including the DUP and some ministers, would secretly like to junk Brexit but are too invested in the idea to say so publicly yet.
  • BarnesianBarnesian Posts: 9,058
    edited November 2018

    Utterly wrong as usual. I have never claimed it would be illegal and clearly did not in this case. You are just squirming because you have no other response. I choose my words carefully. You should try to do the same.
    Which I do, more carefully than you, as I've demonstrated. But you're going to have the last word as usual because I'm about to get on a plane to Shannon.
  • JonathanJonathan Posts: 22,100
    Foxy said:

    On AQ?

    I am a big fan, and quite green on her.
    Yup. Intelligent. Articulate. Assertive. Exactly what we’re lacking.
  • CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758
    felix said:

    Except when they are Russing to judgement.
    In my Estonation that’s a Latt of bad humour. Bulgar me, it leaves me Hungary for more
  • justin124justin124 Posts: 11,527
    HYUFD said:

    Indeed, Tories got a 10% swing from Labour in the Bush Hill Park by election in Remain voting Enfield on Thursday after May got her Deal. In 2017 Enfield swung to Labour to try and stop hard Brexit with Labour gaining Enfield Southgate from the Tories and increasing its majority in Enfield North and Edmonton
    Apparently that by election was dominated by very local issues - such as unpopoular plans for cycle lanes.
  • XenonXenon Posts: 471
    Jonathan said:

    No. It’s a perfectly valid argument. There is a ton of new information. We can make an informed choice.
    So if we were to have a vote to remain, you'd be happy for a new referendum afterwards about remaining or leaving every time new information appears? Which would be very often as the EU changes all the time.

    The answer is of course no.
  • CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758
    Pulpstar said:

    There are no good routes out of this now !
    Pass the deal, sort out an FTA and improve it over time
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,726
    Charles said:

    Pass the deal, sort out an FTA and improve it over time
    Border down the Irish sea then...
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,128
    Jonathan said:

    Yup. Intelligent. Articulate. Assertive. Exactly what we’re lacking.
    Great communicator too, and concerned with real issues rather than abstract debates.
  • justin124justin124 Posts: 11,527
    edited November 2018
    HYUFD said:


    Other issues would be largely irrelevant if we face economic crash out Brexit which would see higher unemployment and less money for public services and higher taxes and shortages of supplies and likely riots and rising crime, albeit with lower immigration, all other issues would flow from Brexit
    You and others might think that - as you doubtless did in 2017 - but the electorate would be very happy to discuss other issues to which they can relate much better than the technicalities of Brexit.
  • Re 1): yes, would need a cross-Parliament move. Labour would vote pretty solidly in favour in that situation, and if the Deal had been rejected, enough Conservatives probably would too. But ultimately it would need the Government to agree to proceed, possibly under threat of VONC if they refused.

    Re 2) Maybe. But this does run into the objection that it asks people to assess a 500-page document already rejected by Parliament. The "worse than either Remain or Hard Brexit" view is pretty widespread. One can reasonably have a referendum on two clear concepts, but not on fiddly detail.

    Are there any guarantees? Hell no. We are trying to escape in one piece, not steering towards a guaranteed safe solution.
    Yes I also think 2) involves some stretching of the imagination, but it doesn't seem completely implausible. There are certainly some MPs who would find a Deal vs No Deal referendum preferable.

    As for 1), what has to happen for "Remain" even to be a plausible ballot option? Do we need the EU27 to come together and make a solemn declaration beforehand that the UK can remain and retain all its opt-outs etc? (I can imagine that for internal political reasons, Spain in particular might want to stick some conditions on.)
  • RoyalBlueRoyalBlue Posts: 3,223
    edited November 2018
    Jonathan said:

    Stella Creasy is impressive.

    She’s greatly. Unfortunately, a majority of Labour Party members would consider her right-wing.
  • CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758
    Pulpstar said:

    Clarke potentially too.
    In no way will Ken vote down a Tory government and risk a Bennite being elected
  • JonathanJonathan Posts: 22,100
    Xenon said:

    So if we were to have a vote to remain, you'd be happy for a new referendum afterwards about remaining or leaving every time new information appears? Which would be very often as the EU changes all the time.

    The answer is of course no.
    If there is as substantial development as we have seen this past two years then absolutely yes. Just because people made mistakes in the past doesn’t mean that we have to repeat them.

    Additionally whatever the outcome of this current crisis we should see this reviewed in 5/10 years. Are we still happy out/in?
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,128
    HYUFD said:

    Fine, let Corbyn deal with Brexit then.

    On 300-309 seats the Tories will also likely have a majority in England and be the strongest and most powerful opposition in postwar British History and Corbyn with the weakest support in Parliament of any postwar PM.
    If there were GE then there would be a Tory bloodbath. How could there be a manifesto over Brexit, when Brexit has just collapsed the government?
  • JonathanJonathan Posts: 22,100
    Foxy said:

    Great communicator too, and concerned with real issues rather than abstract debates.
    She is one of those increasingly rare politicians that can change minds and reframe a question. Hopefully the coming storm will allow such talent to come through. We’ll need it.
  • Even if it votes for No Deal - as it well might?
    That will also be disastrous. But no one can claim it was a disaster inflicted without a mandate.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,128

    Yes I also think 2) involves some stretching of the imagination, but it doesn't seem completely implausible. There are certainly some MPs who would find a Deal vs No Deal referendum preferable.

    As for 1), what has to happen for "Remain" even to be a plausible ballot option? Do we need the EU27 to come together and make a solemn declaration beforehand that the UK can remain and retain all its opt-outs etc? (I can imagine that for internal political reasons, Spain in particular might want to stick some conditions on.)
    I don't think a binary Deal/No Deal referendum would get through Parliament, with out Remain being added as an option.

    If there is a #peoplesvote, Remain will be included.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,726

    That will also be disastrous. But no one can claim it was a disaster inflicted without a mandate.
    Yes they can. The people outside the UK who will be impacted by it as well as the people within the UK without a vote.
  • CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758

    Would put Labour in an interesting spot. If they didn't back the amendment because their "better deal" was not about the backstop - then what was it? What suddenly changes May's Deal to make it OK to sign?
    Was also thinking it gives May ammunition to take to Brussels
  • RecidivistRecidivist Posts: 4,679
    Xenon said:

    So if we were to have a vote to remain, you'd be happy for a new referendum afterwards about remaining or leaving every time new information appears? Which would be very often as the EU changes all the time.

    The answer is of course no.
    We have a parliamentary democracy and it is always open to any political party to advocate leaving the EU, and doing so if they get a mandate. Indeed Labour proposed just such a policy in 1983. We've had two referendums on the subject and neither have settled the matter. Indeed the second one could have been comfortably ignored had the government that called it not also made a commitment to be bound by the result.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,878
    edited November 2018
    Foxy said:

    I don't think a binary Deal/No Deal referendum would get through Parliament, with out Remain being added as an option.

    If there is a #peoplesvote, Remain will be included.
    Deal v No Deal would just about I think get through Parliament, almost all Tory MPs would vote for it bar Soubry, Wollaston and Grieve and Lee and Jo Johnson, a few Labour Leavers like Hoey, Field and Stringer along with Labour MPs who want a Deal like Flint and Snell would back it and probably Stephen Lloyd from the LDs too. The DUP could also back it as they prefer No Deal to the Deal and it gives the option to reject the Deal while still leaving the EU and the DUP backed Leave in 2016
  • NotchNotch Posts: 145
    HYUFD said:

    May could quite easily call a Deal v No Deal referendum if she cannot get her Deal through the Commons which would get enough of the ERG on board and potentially the DUP to get through Parliament and still adhere to her commitment that we will Brexit next March.

    According to Ashcroft's poll yesterday Deal would narrowly win it
    She can't realistically tell the Commons they're wrong and then ask them to back her in telling them so. Once they've finished celebrating the defeat of the Deal in the Commons, why would the DUP support this? Her Deal loses and she's out. (She may then flip to Remain, on the grounds that it's better than No Deal.)
  • CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758

    Aside from what the question should be, and how the voters would respond to different combinations of questions, has anybody set out a serious analysis of what the route to choosing a referendum question would actually involve? What are the political dynamics, and the most likely choice to be put to voters?

    As David said, it's difficult enough to see how a referendum gets through Parliament in time. But I am unsure how any particular question would get approved, since each variant clearly favours a certain side (and therefore hits the same problem that no side controls the Commons), some questions seem purely hypothetical (e.g. if there is no defined route for the UK to stay in the EU, can "Remain" even be a referendum option?) and other questions risk being completely overtaken by events (David notes that the referendum campaign would result in a negotiations freeze but that doesn't mean the whole world freezes - presumably various No Deal prep for example will still be going on behind the scenes, and it's conceivable that options for the UK could either be put on or taken off the table e.g. by joint declaration of EU27 leaders).

    About 15 years I negotiated the breakup of a joint venture

    There was a 90 day clock.

    On day 87, by mutual agreement, we suspended the clock

    It took 400 days of discussion before we were ready to restart it so we could complete the negotiation in the 90 day window allowed in the contract
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,878
    justin124 said:

    You and others might think that - as you doubtless did in 2017 - but the electorate would be very happy to discuss other issues to which they can relate much better than the technicalities of Brexit.
    2017 is irrelevant as we were still in the EU, single market and customs union then, not crashing out of all of them without a trade deal. Plus even in 2017 many even a majority voted mainly on Brexit.


    All other issues flow from the question of a Crash Out Brexit
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,878
    justin124 said:

    Apparently that by election was dominated by very local issues - such as unpopoular plans for cycle lanes.
    And bins but still the swing was so big it clearly shows some Remain areas moving back to the Tories
  • NotchNotch Posts: 145

    The Government hav already managed to reach a deal. If you want a referendum then the only legitimate choice should be between accepting or rejecting the Deal. Rejecting Brexit should not be an option as that question had already been settled.
    I meant to type "the government didn't manage to get their deal through the Commons".

    What do you think should happen in that scenario? Straight to WTO?
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,878

    The EU don't have a choice if we insist upon it. In 125 days NI leaves them both automatically. Tic toc.
    They do. They just say sod off, No Deal hammers your economy far more than ours.

    If NI leaves the EU with a hard border the only Tic Toc will be to a United Ireland
  • Foxy said:



    I don't think a binary Deal/No Deal referendum would get through Parliament, with out Remain being added as an option.

    If there is a #peoplesvote, Remain will be included.

    To be clear, I view a Deal/No Deal referendum as very unlikely. But there are Brexiteers who would be content with that as the question, and it does offer a way out for the government - "we can't get it through parliament, where no option has majority support, so we're putting it to the people". On that basis I wouldn't rule it as impossible.

    I wouldn't rule a Remain vs something referendum as impossible either. But who is going to be pushing one through parliament? And would Remain even be something that you can give to voters as an option, is it something within their control (particularly "remain on the old basis with no strings attached")?

    It's quite difficult to compare the relative probabilities of two events when you view both as difficult or unlikely.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,878
    Foxy said:

    If there were GE then there would be a Tory bloodbath. How could there be a manifesto over Brexit, when Brexit has just collapsed the government?
    The Tory vote is holding up well, the Tories still 3% ahead with YouGov.

    It will be Labour which will have collapsed the Government over voting down May's Deal, most Tory MPs will have voted for the Deal
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,726
    Boris Johnson calling for a Minister for No Deal.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,878
    edited November 2018

    Boris Johnson calling for a Minister for No Deal.

    Finally we have a Cabinet job even worse than Brexit Secretary
  • Boris Johnson calling for a Minister for No Deal.

    Is he volunteering? Perfect appointment I would say.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,878
    Notch said:

    She can't realistically tell the Commons they're wrong and then ask them to back her in telling them so. Once they've finished celebrating the defeat of the Deal in the Commons, why would the DUP support this? Her Deal loses and she's out. (She may then flip to Remain, on the grounds that it's better than No Deal.)
    May knows her Premiership depends on her Deal getting through, if No Deal she will be ousted by a Brexiteer sooner rather than later.

    At the end of the day only the PM can propose legislation and EUref2 and if she cannot get her Deal through even after a second vote a Deal v No Deal referendum would be a last resort. She also knows she cannot very easily switch to Remain and stay Tory leader but most Tory MPs still back her Deal
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,878
    It means Spain has to be involved alongside the UK and EU in any future relationship discussions involving Gibraltar, exactly as it says
  • justin124justin124 Posts: 11,527
    HYUFD said:

    And bins but still the swing was so big it clearly shows some Remain areas moving back to the Tories
    On a 27% turnout.
    Very little sign of that in Westminster, the Wirral or Datchet.
  • justin124justin124 Posts: 11,527
    HYUFD said:

    2017 is irrelevant as we were still in the EU, single market and customs union then, not crashing out of all of them without a trade deal. Plus even in 2017 many even a majority voted mainly on Brexit.


    You may believe that but I doubt that many involved in the last month of the campaign are likely to agree. Attitudes to Corbyn were far more salient.
  • CyclefreeCyclefree Posts: 25,632
    justin124 said:

    You and others might think that - as you doubtless did in 2017 - but the electorate would be very happy to discuss other issues to which they can relate much better than the technicalities of Brexit.
    Well, indeed. I for one would like to understand more what all this talk from Corbynista-types about land nationalisation and taking of all ex-council houses back into public ownership actually actually means, for instance.

    On Brexit I very much hope that we avoid a No Deal outcome.

    I have no idea whether we will get another referendum. But if we do at least my vote might mean something. At a GE not only is my vote meaningless but we have a choice between two appallingly inept and malicious (in their own special ways) parties. It is not a happy prospect.
  • MortimerMortimer Posts: 14,186
    Jonathan said:

    She is one of those increasingly rare politicians that can change minds and reframe a question. Hopefully the coming storm will allow such talent to come through. We’ll need it.
    Stella is very impressive.

    The idea that any of Rayner, RBL, Nandy, Thornberry or Abbot are more likely to become leader baffles me...
  • May does what she does best. Utter and abject capitulation.
  • May does what she does best. Utter and abject capitulation.
    If you say so.

    The reality is the WA never set any rules for how Gibraltar would be handled under the FP.

    That was the UK's position well before today, along with the Commission's and most other member states.

    So we've written it down for them.
  • It can't. But if the Government has no viable options and a motion is carried instructing them to go for a referendum, do they really refuse and opt for chaos, or ask the EU for time to do it? For the reasons I suggested, the EU would agree, in the hope of a Remain outcome.
    What I expect the government would (seek to) do is go back to Brussels and renegotiate the deal.

    From May's point of view, there are few downsides to that.

    - There's the remote possibility that she might actually get something more saleable;
    - If not, she can always return for a second vote in the Commons with some political declaration, which no doubt the EU would be happy to give as it wouldn't be binding and they really would like the Deal agreed as a minimum;
    - Further negotiations runs the clock down further, so making a referendum less viable.
  • At this rate it wouldn't surprise me if at some point Greece demands the Elgin Marbles back or they'll veto the future deal (which does require unanimity).
  • At this rate it wouldn't surprise me if at some point Greece demands the Elgin Marbles back or they'll veto the future deal (which does require unanimity).
  • If you say so.

    The reality is the WA never set any rules for how Gibraltar would be handled under the FP.

    That was the UK's position well before today, along with the Commission's and most other member states.

    So we've written it down for them.
    Does it set any rules for how Surrey is handled? Lancashire? Gibraltar is part of the UK.
  • Just watched the Sanchez statement. Sounds like a slam dunk win for Spain.
  • Does it set any rules for how Surrey is handled? Lancashire? Gibraltar is part of the UK.
    It.... quite literally isn't.

    Also it isn't part of the VAT or Customs Union.

    Also, no, it doesn't set any parameters for Surrey or Lancashire. Those are up for negotiation in the FP.

  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,726

    Just watched the Sanchez statement. Sounds like a slam dunk win for Spain.

    https://twitter.com/pmdfoster/status/1066338557063761921
  • mattmatt Posts: 3,789

    Does it set any rules for how Surrey is handled? Lancashire? Gibraltar is part of the UK.
    I must have missed the MPs they send to Parliament in their capacity as part of the UK.
  • paulyork64paulyork64 Posts: 2,507

    At this rate it wouldn't surprise me if at some point Greece demands the Elgin Marbles back or they'll veto the future deal (which does require unanimity).

    A report this week called for France to hand back much of the sub-saharan african art held in french museums.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,878
    edited November 2018
    justin124 said:

    You may believe that but I doubt that many involved in the last month of the campaign are likely to agree. Attitudes to Corbyn were far more salient.
    And Corbyn of course lost.

    Brexit is of course the defining issue of the age and will define our nation for decades even centuries either way. Corbyn is a here today gone tomorrow politician
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,878
    justin124 said:

    On a 27% turnout.
    Very little sign of that in Westminster, the Wirral or Datchet.
    The Tories held Westminster and Datchet comfortably, Labour only held Wirral.

    Only Enfield district of the 4 contained a seat that was Tory in 2015 and went Labour in 2017
  • https://twitter.com/pmdfoster/status/1066338557063761921
    Given Gibraltar's unique status as part of the EU but not part of the CU, I'm surprised we've got this far. It suggests to me that the Commission have tried to keep Spain from making a fuss until now.
  • https://twitter.com/pmdfoster/status/1066338557063761921

    Yep, in his speech Sanchez was talking about creating a level playing field between Gibraltar and the region that surrounds it. He has played it very well indeed.

  • AndyJSAndyJS Posts: 29,395

    May does what she does best. Utter and abject capitulation.
    Does this make a leadership challenge more likely?
  • AndyJS said:

    Does this make a leadership challenge more likely?
    No. The Tories have capitulated to her too.

    The time for a challenge was Chequers.
  • RogerRoger Posts: 20,396
    edited November 2018
    Jonathan said:

    Stella Creasy is impressive.

    I came in half way through and I thought it was Caroline Lucas. Pleasant reasonable and bright. She went a little off piste towards the end with her sitting round the campfire while we reached a consensus but should appeal to the old hippy vote. Probably better suited to the Lib Dems now Labour have gone militant but you never know which way Labour will go after Corbyn
  • Today we have found out why 95% of Gibraltarians voted Remain.
  • Today we have found out why 95% of Gibraltarians voted Remain.

    Yes, and they must be rightly miffed that those currently blubbing most about Spain's antics are those who were most adamant that Leave was a flawless idea.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,878

    Today we have found out why 95% of Gibraltarians voted Remain.

    Though 99% of Gibraltarians voted to stay British in 2002
  • philiphphiliph Posts: 4,705
    edited November 2018
    Roger said:

    I came in half way through and I thought it was Caroline Lucas. Pleasant reasonable and bright. She went a little off piste towards the end with her sitting round the campfire while we reached a consensus but should appeal to the old hippy vote. Probably better suited to the Lib Dems now Labour have gone militant but you never know which way Labour will go after Corbyn
    I think you can extrapolate the direction of Labour in the future by examining the changes to the internal power bases, changes to party structure and protocols and the membership profile. As these slowly change so will the future shape and direction of Labour.
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,204
    I think this might change the calculation in the commons, slim hope just became no hope. There was no need for May to agree this, Spain never had any sort of veto over Brexit.
  • Mortimer said:

    Stella is very impressive.

    The idea that any of Rayner, RBL, Nandy, Thornberry or Abbot are more likely to become leader baffles me...
    She looks OK :)
  • HYUFD said:

    Though 99% of Gibraltarians voted to stay British in 2002

    And British they will stay. But their lives are now going to change quite significantly. Probably more so than for anyone in the UK.

  • AndyJSAndyJS Posts: 29,395
    O/T

    "Opinion
    How Loneliness Is Tearing America Apart

    When people have a hole in their life, they often fill it with angry politics.

    By Arthur C. Brooks
    Mr. Brooks is the president of the American Enterprise Institute."


    https://www.nytimes.com/2018/11/23/opinion/loneliness-political-polarization.html
  • AndrewAndrew Posts: 2,900


    May does what she does best. Utter and abject capitulation.

    Nope, nothing has been given away. The future trade deal needs unanimity, so Spain already had a veto.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,726
    Andrew said:

    Nope, nothing has been given away. The future trade deal needs unanimity, so Spain already had a veto.
    The difference is that they have a Gibraltar-specific veto, which means they won't come under pressure from other member states to make compromises to avoid holding up the UK deal.
  • justin124justin124 Posts: 11,527
    HYUFD said:

    And Corbyn of course lost.

    Brexit is of course the defining issue of the age and will define our nation for decades even centuries either way. Corbyn is a here today gone tomorrow politician
    That is clearly your opinion, but from my personal experience it is not representative of the public at large - most of whom are sick to death of Brexit and far more interested in other issues.Too many here are confusing 'important' with 'salient.'
  • FF43FF43 Posts: 17,855

    May does what she does best. Utter and abject capitulation.
    What happened to the gunboats the Tories were going to send to Spain to blast them into submission?
This discussion has been closed.