politicalbetting.com » Blog Archive » Punters now make it a 77% chance that MPs won’t agree a deal b

Lots of betting activity as we move closer to March – the month when the UK is due to leave the EU.
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We only abrogate in the circumstance where the EU does not abide by its treaty obligations; abrogation is not our intention.
David Cameron turns to Meerkats in bid to drive up Remain vote
https://www.totalpolitics.com/articles/news/david-cameron-turns-meerkats-bid-drive-remain-vote#.XHW00XEDB
No funny Russian money involved...simples.
Nigel Farage 'wouldn't campaign or vote' in second Brexit referendum.
The MEP says choosing between the PM's deal and Remain would be an "outrage" - and that he would rather go on holiday.
https://news.sky.com/story/nigel-farage-wouldnt-campaign-or-vote-in-second-brexit-referendum-11648823
The only comfort is that the right people are getting upset at the moment.
But Leavers would then spend the next years claiming it was illegitimate and we'd never hear the end of it.
But we would remain. For a while.
That's longer than the 12 months exit we'll have to give under the Vienna Convention (if it applies)
PS Thanks for your positive remarks FPT about my proposal to extend to end 2020. From where we are now that seems to me the most logical thing to do, extending for a couple of months (unless a deal has already been agreed and we just need time to get it implemented) is utterly pointless. A lengthy extension would allow us to get stuff done and get Fox replaced or to take his job seriously.
I see that and raise you liking Andrea Jenkyns and helping her win her seat.
Thank goodness, though, that there's no one out there who might suggest it should not be accepted because the EU agree with it, and that anything they agree to is unacceptable.
If the UK were seen to withdraw from a treaty without due cause, each and every country in the world would be judging us to some extent. We rely on many, many treaties around the world most of which depend primarily on good will and the good name of a country to abide by them. If we were to start unilaterally abandoning treaties without following the proper procedures or without the other side first clearly breaching the terms then who is going to trust us in any other existing or future treaty?
It really is something we need to avoid if at all possible which is why I think Robert's position is debatable. In effect we would be relying on the rest of the International Community agreeing with us that the EU had acted in bad faith. I am not sure that is a case we could reasonably make.
But to keep things moving, we should simply announce we would be forming an international committee of independent trade academics. We should even invite someone from the EU to be on it. And it writes a report every year on whether the parties are abiding by their treaty commitments.
The only circumstance where we would abrogate the treaty would be one where the EU had demonstrably failed to meet its commitments, and where it was confirmed by people who weren't principles in the matter.
There exist today systems for international arbitration to whom Her Majesty's Government and the EU submit themselves all the time. This would be no different.
https://twitter.com/AllieHBNews/status/1100519134398431233
Might be better if Williamson dressed like the followers of Rodderick The 7th Earl of Sidcup.
Nearest guess (no Googling) get a free copy of SeanT's new book.
"Writing in the Daily Mail she says she is close to winning concessions from the EU that could persuade Eurosceptic MPs to back her."
See
https://www.realclearpolitics.com/epolls/2020/president/us/2020_democratic_presidential_nomination-6730.html
The lack of smiley emojis tell me I must believe you are 100% sincere.
It is like those who used to say that because we would have to pay the equivalent of a year or two's payments to the EU we should instead stay in and keep paying year in, year out for ever more. It is just stupid reasoning.
I don’t know him that well but surely there are others who messed up worse?
Instead what we are signing up to is an unequal treaty like the Treaty of Nanking that effectively cedes our customs regulations etc to the EU in eternity. Unless or until the EU voluntarily relinquishes control over us.
There are multiple forms of Europe in this continent as the famous Venn Diagram shows but as far as I'm aware in the EU nations have a unilateral exit right. In the EEA I believe nations can exit. In the EFTA nations can exit.
In the backstop we can't. That is to my knowledge unprecedented. It is simply unacceptable.
It was famously said recently we were always sovereign as we could always leave. If we leave but cede in eternity control over certain laws, regulations, customs etc in the backstop then we have fully lost sovereignty over those matters. Not only do we have laws, regulations and customs set elsewhere but we can't exit that without permission.
My wife is a South African. What does that say about her race?
Joe Biden has suggested that many of his family want him to run but he has concerns about the impact on them. He looks to be 80% of the way to throwing the hat into the ring.
And yes, many people have messed up 100x more.
In fact, I actually (personally) quite like the guy.
He's just not who I would choose as an investor if I wanted a non-exec to ask awkward questions of management.
Any more...
So on that basis, it says quite a lot.
If instead of a Remain backing Cameron or May we had someone like a UK Alex Salmond we would be in a different scenario.
If the backstop is eternal then the long game to get a proper Brexit could be to revoke now and win again later.
(100% not saying this is a high possibility chance)