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  • FF43FF43 Posts: 17,188
    I don't see a way through this. May's Deal certainly isn't it. No Deal is the least popular option of them all. And the rest of the options a just being squabbled over.
  • Richard_NabaviRichard_Nabavi Posts: 30,821
    Sean_F said:

    MaxPB said:

    Jonathan said:

    May, once again, caused this by forcing her cabinet to abstain and not using the whip to back a compromise.

    Rubbish, she gave the party a free vote. More than can be said for Labour MPs when the PM's deal comes to the house. Labour are cowards who want no deal.
    May can be criticised for many things, but allowing her junior ministers and MP's to vote as they wish is not one of them.
    Exactly, it's absolutely hilarious as a criticism. Previously @Jonathan has been blaming her for not listening and trying to force her view of things on MPs. Now he's criticising her for letting MPs say what they want rather than telling them what to do.
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 21,646
    Andrew said:


    The pro-EU fanatics and the ERG ultras are two cheeks of the same arse. They get their way or the world burns.
    Agreed.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 42,676
    edited April 2019
    The winner tonight was the speaker wasn’t it?

    Like a handicapper seeing ten horses cross the line in a dead heat.
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 41,751

    kle4 said:

    I know it's their raison d'etre, and there is some righteous anger that Scotland very much does not want Brexit, but is 'disrespected' the right word? Their votes were not disrespected, they were defeated, those are not the same thing.

    SNP's Westminster leader Ian Blackford said the Commons needed to find consensus and work together.

    He said a "vast majority" of Scottish MPs voted to revoke Article 50, to back a second referendum and to stay in the single market and customs union.

    He said it was "crystal clear that our votes in this house are disrespected".

    He says the day is coming "where we'll determine our future and it will be as an independent country".

    Shame Scots were too frit to take their future in their hands last time. No wonder it irks the SNP so much to have lost 2/2 referenda - the Scots are too frit to be independent but the UK isn't. Tough.
    Hey Scottish Unionists, your fellow Brits think you're cowards, bottlers and frit. How's about them apples?
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 51,179
    15 Conservatives for a people's vote.
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,320
    HYUFD said:
    Any spread market on the majority at the end of the week?
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 51,179
    FF43 said:

    I don't see a way through this. May's Deal certainly isn't it. No Deal is the least popular option of them all. And the rest of the options a just being squabbled over.

    May can choose to go for a second referendum.
  • JonathanJonathan Posts: 21,471
    edited April 2019

    Jonathan said:

    Amazing to watch our entire political system blowing up. It is incredibly hard to see how it get puts back together again.

    It just can't cope with both party politics and Leave/Remain. Too many division lines.
    It can’t cope with an utterly incompetent and impotent executive.
    Then it has options to get rid of that executive. But it doesn’t seem to want to do that either.

    The government is utterly incompetent and impotent, true. Thing is, Parliament is behaving no better.
    The poorly drafted ftpa and poorly drafted party leadership rules seriously compromised our ability to deal with the executive. David Cameron, the git that keeps on giving.
  • viewcode said:

    Andrew said:


    The pro-EU fanatics and the ERG ultras are two cheeks of the same arse. They get their way or the world burns.
    Agreed.
    Absolutely. I'm a foolish old Remainer, but we need to exit in the least damaging way possible.

    They all need to grow the hell up.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 95,576
    BBC site seems to be pushing that the referendum option got the most support. Not sure how relevant that is when another option came closer, and another option other than tonight got more support. If the government option is derided compared to a referendum because it got defeated by more, than that makes the CU close call more relevant than the referendum vote.
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 21,646
    GIN1138 said:

    Is it even possible to be "progressive" and "conservative" ? :D
    The Canadians thought so.

    But they did rather test the thesis to destruction... :)

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Progressive_Conservative_Party_of_Canada
  • GIN1138GIN1138 Posts: 22,120
    TOPPING said:

    The winner tonight was the speaker wasn’t it?

    He got another chance to grab the limelight... But if it does all end in No Deal the first thing MPs will do if throw him to the wolves and they did Speaker Martin...
  • solarflaresolarflare Posts: 3,705
    I mean I'm all for the indicative votes thing but was it *really* always a 3 stage process as Anna Soubry says? I'd have accepted it was always a 2 stage process but...
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 81,347
    kle4 said:

    BBC site seems to be pushing that the referendum option got the most support. Not sure how relevant that is when another option came closer, and another option other than tonight got more support. If the government option is derided compared to a referendum because it got defeated by more, than that makes the CU close call more relevant than the referendum vote.

    BBC pushing their preferred agenda....
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 48,356
    Surely we nowhave more independents in parliament than for a very long time.
  • Richard_TyndallRichard_Tyndall Posts: 32,253
    Andrew said:


    The pro-EU fanatics and the ERG ultras are two cheeks of the same arse. They get their way or the world burns.
    Sadly true.
  • AlistairAlistair Posts: 23,670

    Pulpstar said:

    Boles: SNP 32, Lab 185, Con 33, Ind 5, Plaid 4, Lib Dem 2
    Clarke: Lab 230, Con 37, Ind 5, Lib Dem 1
    Kyle-Wilson SNP 31, Lab 203, Con 15, Ind 15, Green 1, Plaid 4

    Very surprised the SNP didn't back a Customs Union.
    SNP want single market or bust.
  • glwglw Posts: 9,855
    Jonathan said:

    The poorly drafted ftpa and poorly drafted party leadership rules seriously compromised our ability to deal with the executive. David Cameron, the git that keeps on giving.

    I think most of the constitutional reform since Major was in power has been very poor.
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 38,518
    Sean_F said:

    MaxPB said:

    Jonathan said:

    May, once again, caused this by forcing her cabinet to abstain and not using the whip to back a compromise.

    Rubbish, she gave the party a free vote. More than can be said for Labour MPs when the PM's deal comes to the house. Labour are cowards who want no deal.
    May can be criticised for many things, but allowing her junior ministers and MP's to vote as they wish is not one of them.
    Indeed. It's a completely stupid argument from Labour supporters. Asking the government to whip in favour of positions it opposes whilst similarly offering nothing close to that on the government's position.

    Labour MPs are signing the no deal paperwork along with the ERG, they will get the blame. Especially now that Parliament has rejected all other options.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 95,576
    Is Boles the first literal floor crossing there's been in a while? Cannot be often you first find out about a defection on the floor.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 95,576
    FF43 said:

    I don't see a way through this. May's Deal certainly isn't it. No Deal is the least popular option of them all. And the rest of the options a just being squabbled over.

    AV AV AV AV!
  • JonathanJonathan Posts: 21,471
    edited April 2019

    Sean_F said:

    MaxPB said:

    Jonathan said:

    May, once again, caused this by forcing her cabinet to abstain and not using the whip to back a compromise.

    Rubbish, she gave the party a free vote. More than can be said for Labour MPs when the PM's deal comes to the house. Labour are cowards who want no deal.
    May can be criticised for many things, but allowing her junior ministers and MP's to vote as they wish is not one of them.
    Exactly, it's absolutely hilarious as a criticism. Previously @Jonathan has been blaming her for not listening and trying to force her view of things on MPs. Now he's criticising her for letting MPs say what they want rather than telling them what to do.
    She ain’t listening. It’s just more brinkmanship in pursuit of her lousy deal. She could end this at any time, by whipping either of today’s top options. She doesn’t because she would lose her right wing. It’s carefully constructed.
  • dyedwooliedyedwoolie Posts: 7,786
    18 labour abstentions on PV..... any shadow cabinet?
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 77,769
    Alistair said:

    Pulpstar said:

    Boles: SNP 32, Lab 185, Con 33, Ind 5, Plaid 4, Lib Dem 2
    Clarke: Lab 230, Con 37, Ind 5, Lib Dem 1
    Kyle-Wilson SNP 31, Lab 203, Con 15, Ind 15, Green 1, Plaid 4

    Very surprised the SNP didn't back a Customs Union.
    SNP want single market or bust.
    Who was the SNP abstention (Except Mcneill) on Kyle-Wilson ?!
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 81,347
    Does this mean I need to head back to CostCo for a years supply of bog roll?
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 51,179
    Andrew said:


    The pro-EU fanatics and the ERG ultras are two cheeks of the same arse. They get their way or the world burns.
    Labour supporters of Common Market 2.0 voted against the WA.
  • RH1992RH1992 Posts: 788
    Alistair said:

    Pulpstar said:

    Boles: SNP 32, Lab 185, Con 33, Ind 5, Plaid 4, Lib Dem 2
    Clarke: Lab 230, Con 37, Ind 5, Lib Dem 1
    Kyle-Wilson SNP 31, Lab 203, Con 15, Ind 15, Green 1, Plaid 4

    Very surprised the SNP didn't back a Customs Union.
    SNP want single market or bust.
    Bust for them is a calculation that increases the prospect of a Scottish independence referendum, so it's not hard to see why. They're as entrenched as the DUP.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 59,872

    I'm feeling a lot like Nick Boles at the moment.

    Who’s the Tory MP who appealed to Nick not to go?
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 42,676
    God Mark Francois is a twat. I mean no news there but god he is.
  • FF43FF43 Posts: 17,188
    Jonathan said:

    May, once again, caused this by forcing her cabinet to abstain and not using the whip to back a compromise.

    May certainly holds a degree of (ir)responsibility by trying to undermine the process, rather than attempting to find a consensus and a way forward.
  • RobDRobD Posts: 59,732
    Jonathan said:

    Jonathan said:

    Amazing to watch our entire political system blowing up. It is incredibly hard to see how it get puts back together again.

    It just can't cope with both party politics and Leave/Remain. Too many division lines.
    It can’t cope with an utterly incompetent and impotent executive.
    Then it has options to get rid of that executive. But it doesn’t seem to want to do that either.

    The government is utterly incompetent and impotent, true. Thing is, Parliament is behaving no better.
    The poorly drafted ftpa and poorly drafted party leadership rules seriously compromised our ability to deal with the executive. David Cameron, the git that keeps on giving.
    Clegg, don't you mean?
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 81,347
    TOPPING said:

    God Mark Francois is a twat. I mean no news there but god he is.

    This whole process has really exposed a lot of twats in the HoC.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 95,576

    I mean I'm all for the indicative votes thing but was it *really* always a 3 stage process as Anna Soubry says? I'd have accepted it was always a 2 stage process but...

    I don't recall the Wednesday option being talked about much when the Letwin plan was first approved. I think even they have been taken aback that nothing has yet managed a majority.
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 77,769

    I'm feeling a lot like Nick Boles at the moment.

    Who’s the Tory MP who appealed to Nick not to go?
    Was it Huw Merriman ?
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 95,576
    Foxy said:

    Surely we nowhave more independents in parliament than for a very long time.

    Until the Tiggers' party application goes through, for sure.
  • GIN1138GIN1138 Posts: 22,120

    I mean I'm all for the indicative votes thing but was it *really* always a 3 stage process as Anna Soubry says? I'd have accepted it was always a 2 stage process but...

    No. Stage three (Wednesday) was supposed to be legislating to force the government to accept today's winner.

    Anna's bullshitting... ;)
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 62,160
    glw said:

    Jonathan said:

    The poorly drafted ftpa and poorly drafted party leadership rules seriously compromised our ability to deal with the executive. David Cameron, the git that keeps on giving.

    I think most of the constitutional reform since Major was in power has been very poor.
    FTPA. Ahhhhhhh! What a clusterf*ck that has been. I suspect historians will devote considerable page space to it, when the books are written.
  • another_richardanother_richard Posts: 26,463
    kle4 said:

    BBC site seems to be pushing that the referendum option got the most support. Not sure how relevant that is when another option came closer, and another option other than tonight got more support. If the government option is derided compared to a referendum because it got defeated by more, than that makes the CU close call more relevant than the referendum vote.

    Another referendum received the most opposition as well.

    :wink:

    CU received the least opposition.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 52,207

    Does this mean I need to head back to CostCo for a years supply of bog roll?

    Already stocked up.....
  • AndreaParma_82AndreaParma_82 Posts: 4,714
    Labour Mps against Boles' motion

    Tonia Antoniazzi
    Kevin Barron
    Ronnie Campbell
    Sarah Champion
    Rosie Cooper
    Caroline Flint
    Yvonne Fovargue
    Stephen Hepburn
    Mike Hill
    Kate Hoey
    Emma Lewell Buck
    Jonn Mann
    Siobahin McDonagh
    Anna McMorrin
    Grahame Morris
    Ruth Smeeth
    Owen Smith
    Laura Smith
    Gareth Snell
    John Spella
    Jo Stevens
    Graham Stringer
    Derek Twigg
    Paul Williams
    Daniel Zeichner

    No vote

    Debbie Abrahams
    Ann Clwyd
    Mary Creagh
    Geraint Davies
    Janet Daby
    Stephen Doughty
    Rosie Duffield
    Julie Elliott
    Louise Ellman
    Jim Fitzpatrick
    Helen Hayes
    Meg Hillier
    Margaret Hodges
    Darren Jones
    Graham Jones
    Kevan Jones
    Susan Jones
    Liz Kendall
    Ged Killen
    Kerry McCarthy
    Catherine McKinnell
    Madeline Moon
    Toby Perkins
    Bridget Philipson
    Ellie Reeves
    Marie Rimmer
    Tulip Siddiq
    Dennis Skinner
    Wes Streeting
    Anna Turley
    Thelma Walker
    Catherine West
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 77,769
    Jonathan said:

    Sean_F said:

    MaxPB said:

    Jonathan said:

    May, once again, caused this by forcing her cabinet to abstain and not using the whip to back a compromise.

    Rubbish, she gave the party a free vote. More than can be said for Labour MPs when the PM's deal comes to the house. Labour are cowards who want no deal.
    May can be criticised for many things, but allowing her junior ministers and MP's to vote as they wish is not one of them.
    Exactly, it's absolutely hilarious as a criticism. Previously @Jonathan has been blaming her for not listening and trying to force her view of things on MPs. Now he's criticising her for letting MPs say what they want rather than telling them what to do.
    She ain’t listening. It’s just more brinkmanship in pursuit of her lousy deal. She could end this at any time, by whipping either of today’s top options. She doesn’t because she would lose her right wing. It’s carefully constructed.
    Corbyn could have whipped for the WA too.
  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 37,068
    kle4 said:

    BBC site seems to be pushing that the referendum option got the most support. Not sure how relevant that is when another option came closer, and another option other than tonight got more support. If the government option is derided compared to a referendum because it got defeated by more, than that makes the CU close call more relevant than the referendum vote.

    On a whipped vote, a 2nd referendum will be comfortably defeated, as 10 DUP, and 30 Opposition will vote with the government.
  • I'm feeling a lot like Nick Boles at the moment.

    Who’s the Tory MP who appealed to Nick not to go?
    Pass.

    Gove's going to be gutted.
  • Boles leaving will mean Gove has one less leadership vote.
  • Pulpstar said:

    I'm feeling a lot like Nick Boles at the moment.

    Who’s the Tory MP who appealed to Nick not to go?
    Was it Huw Merriman ?
    Twitter view is that it was Merriman.
  • JonathanJonathan Posts: 21,471
    FF43 said:

    Jonathan said:

    May, once again, caused this by forcing her cabinet to abstain and not using the whip to back a compromise.

    May certainly holds a degree of (ir)responsibility by trying to undermine the process, rather than attempting to find a consensus and a way forward.
    She needs to adopt a compromise position for the govt. it’s quite straightforward really.
  • TheValiantTheValiant Posts: 1,872
    CON seats total at 313. They're not going to survive much longer if a VoNC is introduced.
  • SouthamObserverSouthamObserver Posts: 39,582
    MaxPB said:

    Sean_F said:

    MaxPB said:

    Jonathan said:

    May, once again, caused this by forcing her cabinet to abstain and not using the whip to back a compromise.

    Rubbish, she gave the party a free vote. More than can be said for Labour MPs when the PM's deal comes to the house. Labour are cowards who want no deal.
    May can be criticised for many things, but allowing her junior ministers and MP's to vote as they wish is not one of them.
    Indeed. It's a completely stupid argument from Labour supporters. Asking the government to whip in favour of positions it opposes whilst similarly offering nothing close to that on the government's position.

    Labour MPs are signing the no deal paperwork along with the ERG, they will get the blame. Especially now that Parliament has rejected all other options.

    Labour will get next to no blame. They should do, but the Tories will own No Deal.

  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 38,518
    Jonathan said:

    Sean_F said:

    MaxPB said:

    Jonathan said:

    May, once again, caused this by forcing her cabinet to abstain and not using the whip to back a compromise.

    Rubbish, she gave the party a free vote. More than can be said for Labour MPs when the PM's deal comes to the house. Labour are cowards who want no deal.
    May can be criticised for many things, but allowing her junior ministers and MP's to vote as they wish is not one of them.
    Exactly, it's absolutely hilarious as a criticism. Previously @Jonathan has been blaming her for not listening and trying to force her view of things on MPs. Now he's criticising her for letting MPs say what they want rather than telling them what to do.
    She ain’t listening. It’s just more brinkmanship in pursuit of her lousy deal. She could end this at any time, by whipping either of today’s top options. She doesn’t because she would lose her right wing.
    But the customs union option requires parliament to pass the WA. It was just offered with no strings attached and Labour cosied up to the ERG and voted it down. The government's position is consistent at least. Labour's position is all over the place.
  • TheWhiteRabbitTheWhiteRabbit Posts: 12,442
    I think a general election is all but inevitable, deal or no deal. It is quite obvious that this whole parliament is exhausted and out of ideas.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 95,576
    Jonathan said:

    FF43 said:

    Jonathan said:

    May, once again, caused this by forcing her cabinet to abstain and not using the whip to back a compromise.

    May certainly holds a degree of (ir)responsibility by trying to undermine the process, rather than attempting to find a consensus and a way forward.
    She needs to adopt a compromise position for the govt. it’s quite straightforward really.
    But it's ok for others not to compromise, got it.
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 21,646

    viewcode said:

    Andrew said:


    The pro-EU fanatics and the ERG ultras are two cheeks of the same arse. They get their way or the world burns.
    Agreed.
    Absolutely. I'm a foolish old Remainer, but we need to exit in the least damaging way possible.

    They all need to grow the hell up.
    There's no incentive for them to do so. They will drive this thing into the ground and suffer not one jot for it.

  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 121,972
    edited April 2019

    And thus the Cameron project to modernise the Conservative Party finally dies. I don’t see how the “traditional” one in alliance with hard right English nationalism gets an electoral majority ever again.

    By losing Scotland, which is very likely if No Deal, England had a Tory majority of 60 at the last general election. Even England and Wales alone had a Tory majority of 36.

    Minus Remain voting Scotland, Wales and every region of England bar London voted Leave, fertile territory for English and hard Brexit nationalists especially until the left produces a better alternative than Corbyn.


    Remain voting NI may be lost too soon enough in the event of No Deal as a United Ireland looks more likely but in the meantime the hard right DUP majority will be ideal allies for English nationalism
  • FloaterFloater Posts: 14,207
    So - who reckons our mp's deserved that last pay rise?

    Bunch of donkeys led by donkeys

    As for the speaker........

    He could have a career as a merchant banker
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 48,356
    Andrew said:


    The pro-EU fanatics and the ERG ultras are two cheeks of the same arse. They get their way or the world burns.
    Personally I agree with both of them. MPs should note vote for outcomes that they do not want to happen.
  • Richard_NabaviRichard_Nabavi Posts: 30,821
    Jonathan said:

    Sean_F said:

    MaxPB said:

    Jonathan said:

    May, once again, caused this by forcing her cabinet to abstain and not using the whip to back a compromise.

    Rubbish, she gave the party a free vote. More than can be said for Labour MPs when the PM's deal comes to the house. Labour are cowards who want no deal.
    May can be criticised for many things, but allowing her junior ministers and MP's to vote as they wish is not one of them.
    Exactly, it's absolutely hilarious as a criticism. Previously @Jonathan has been blaming her for not listening and trying to force her view of things on MPs. Now he's criticising her for letting MPs say what they want rather than telling them what to do.
    She ain’t listening. It’s just more brinkmanship in pursuit of her lousy deal. She could end this at any time, by whipping either of today’s top options. She doesn’t because she would lose her right wing.
    Err, you don't seem to have quite taken into account the fact that Corbyn could have ended this at any time (since November) by whipping his MPs to back the deal which is actually on the table, or even giving them a free vote. After all the deal on the table is almost exactly consistent with Labour's stated policy. So I'd be interested in your justification for blaming her and not him for the impasse.
  • JonathanJonathan Posts: 21,471
    Pulpstar said:

    Jonathan said:

    Sean_F said:

    MaxPB said:

    Jonathan said:

    May, once again, caused this by forcing her cabinet to abstain and not using the whip to back a compromise.

    Rubbish, she gave the party a free vote. More than can be said for Labour MPs when the PM's deal comes to the house. Labour are cowards who want no deal.
    May can be criticised for many things, but allowing her junior ministers and MP's to vote as they wish is not one of them.
    Exactly, it's absolutely hilarious as a criticism. Previously @Jonathan has been blaming her for not listening and trying to force her view of things on MPs. Now he's criticising her for letting MPs say what they want rather than telling them what to do.
    She ain’t listening. It’s just more brinkmanship in pursuit of her lousy deal. She could end this at any time, by whipping either of today’s top options. She doesn’t because she would lose her right wing. It’s carefully constructed.
    Corbyn could have whipped for the WA too.
    Sure, they have to find something that they can both whip for. That means the govt has to now change.
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 19,381
    Pulpstar said:

    Lab ex mining constituencies say "No" to a people's vote:

    Rother Valley, Blyth Valley, Rotherham, West Lancashire, Dagenham, Don Valley, Makerfield, North Tyneside, Jarrow, Vauxhall, Barnsley Central, Warrington North, North Durham, South Shields, Bassetlaw, Easington, Barnsley East, Stoke North, Crewe, Stoke Central, Blackley, Halton.

    Plenty of Lab ex mining constituencies also voted ‘Yes’ to peoples vote including mine (Newcastle upon Tyne North)
  • noneoftheabovenoneoftheabove Posts: 22,497
    viewcode said:

    Andrew said:


    The pro-EU fanatics and the ERG ultras are two cheeks of the same arse. They get their way or the world burns.
    Agreed.
    Very disappointing from the LibDems and TIGgers. None of the parties offering anything for pragmatists who just want to move on with anything that avoids no deal.
  • GIN1138GIN1138 Posts: 22,120
    Andrew said:




    The pro-EU fanatics and the ERG ultras are two cheeks of the same arse. They get their way or the world burns.


    I've noticed Farage and Ali Campbell seem to get on really well personally...
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 95,576

    Does this mean I need to head back to CostCo for a years supply of bog roll?

    You haven't already stocked up? Ooh boy, you will be shit out of luck I am afraid.
  • DruttDrutt Posts: 1,116
    I've a great deal of sympathy for Boles and I don't think you could doubt he's been trying to find compromise of sorts in reasonably good faith. Still, must be tough quitting to become an Independent only to find that the independent group all voted against you and you have to sit on your own.
  • Scott_PScott_P Posts: 51,453
    https://twitter.com/johndavidblake/status/1112831256423788544

    I am perpetually amazed that Tory leadership can't see that appeasing the headbangers might keep some members onside, but must be shedding voters wholesale
  • Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826

    Jonathan said:

    Sean_F said:

    MaxPB said:

    Jonathan said:

    May, once again, caused this by forcing her cabinet to abstain and not using the whip to back a compromise.

    Rubbish, she gave the party a free vote. More than can be said for Labour MPs when the PM's deal comes to the house. Labour are cowards who want no deal.
    May can be criticised for many things, but allowing her junior ministers and MP's to vote as they wish is not one of them.
    Exactly, it's absolutely hilarious as a criticism. Previously @Jonathan has been blaming her for not listening and trying to force her view of things on MPs. Now he's criticising her for letting MPs say what they want rather than telling them what to do.
    She ain’t listening. It’s just more brinkmanship in pursuit of her lousy deal. She could end this at any time, by whipping either of today’s top options. She doesn’t because she would lose her right wing.
    Err, you don't seem to have quite taken into account the fact that Corbyn could have ended this at any time (since November) by whipping his MPs to back the deal which is actually on the table, or even giving them a free vote. After all the deal on the table is almost exactly consistent with Labour's stated policy. So I'd be interested in your justification for blaming her and not him for the impasse.
    Partisanship.
  • brokenwheelbrokenwheel Posts: 3,352
    Well I for one am glad parliament finally took back control.
  • JonathanJonathan Posts: 21,471

    Jonathan said:

    Sean_F said:

    MaxPB said:

    Jonathan said:

    May, once again, caused this by forcing her cabinet to abstain and not using the whip to back a compromise.

    Rubbish, she gave the party a free vote. More than can be said for Labour MPs when the PM's deal comes to the house. Labour are cowards who want no deal.
    May can be criticised for many things, but allowing her junior ministers and MP's to vote as they wish is not one of them.
    Exactly, it's absolutely hilarious as a criticism. Previously @Jonathan has been blaming her for not listening and trying to force her view of things on MPs. Now he's criticising her for letting MPs say what they want rather than telling them what to do.
    She ain’t listening. It’s just more brinkmanship in pursuit of her lousy deal. She could end this at any time, by whipping either of today’s top options. She doesn’t because she would lose her right wing.
    Err, you don't seem to have quite taken into account the fact that Corbyn could have ended this at any time (since November) by whipping his MPs to back the deal which is actually on the table, or even giving them a free vote. After all the deal on the table is almost exactly consistent with Labour's stated policy. So I'd be interested in your justification for blaming her and not him for the impasse.
    They both need to find a position they can agree. May takes the blame because she has not moved a millimetre. Corbyn has moved.
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 38,518

    MaxPB said:

    Sean_F said:

    MaxPB said:

    Jonathan said:

    May, once again, caused this by forcing her cabinet to abstain and not using the whip to back a compromise.

    Rubbish, she gave the party a free vote. More than can be said for Labour MPs when the PM's deal comes to the house. Labour are cowards who want no deal.
    May can be criticised for many things, but allowing her junior ministers and MP's to vote as they wish is not one of them.
    Indeed. It's a completely stupid argument from Labour supporters. Asking the government to whip in favour of positions it opposes whilst similarly offering nothing close to that on the government's position.

    Labour MPs are signing the no deal paperwork along with the ERG, they will get the blame. Especially now that Parliament has rejected all other options.

    Labour will get next to no blame. They should do, but the Tories will own No Deal.

    We won't, our party has tried to ram it through parliament three times, our PM offered her resignation to get it done. We've done our part. Labour will take the hit, especially given that it's their voters that oppose no deal the most and they have consistently voted against the deal on offer which avoids no deal.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 51,179

    viewcode said:

    Andrew said:


    The pro-EU fanatics and the ERG ultras are two cheeks of the same arse. They get their way or the world burns.
    Agreed.
    Very disappointing from the LibDems and TIGgers. None of the parties offering anything for pragmatists who just want to move on with anything that avoids no deal.
    These votes are indicative so it should be for the government to analyse the results and work out how they can craft a majority. The only viable option is to put their deal to a people's vote.
  • FloaterFloater Posts: 14,207

    I think a general election is all but inevitable, deal or no deal. It is quite obvious that this whole parliament is exhausted and out of ideas.

    Exhausted?

    FFS - they are wankers seriously

    wtf have they actually achieved - sack the lot of them

    If anyone thinks Labour have the answers I have a bridge to sell them

    We are so screwed.
  • We now have the massive splits in direction showing in all parties (bar DUP and SNP). Impossible to pull a party together never mind parties.

    So we'll have increased rowing. More resignations. We'll crash out with no deal. And then a general election where both major parties are lead by useless deadweight idiots most MPs want shut of with a policy platform of Fuck Knows
  • Everybody blaming the House of Commons, wrongly in my view.

    The country is very divided, and many on both sides are deeply entrenched in their opinion. Moreover the tectonic plates of opinion are no longer reflected by the political parties. Given Given the curve ball the electorate threw them, they could have made a better job , but it was never going to be easy. In retrospect something like this was almost inevitable. Gina Miller is possibly the one to blame. Prophets of doom should lighten up

    We have these periodic convulsions when the system re-aligns to changes in the country - Fox-North Coalition and Pitt in the 1780's, Liberal split in the 1880's, Labour replacing the Liberals in the 20's. This is just another. They are messy but 10 years later we will be asking "What was all that stuff and nonsense about?"

    FWIW I just can't see the logical steps that need to be gone through to meet the FTPA and so bring about a fresh election. Not least because of how it interacts with the timings for a Tory leadership election

  • Richard_NabaviRichard_Nabavi Posts: 30,821
    Jonathan said:

    Jonathan said:

    Sean_F said:

    MaxPB said:

    Jonathan said:

    May, once again, caused this by forcing her cabinet to abstain and not using the whip to back a compromise.

    Rubbish, she gave the party a free vote. More than can be said for Labour MPs when the PM's deal comes to the house. Labour are cowards who want no deal.
    May can be criticised for many things, but allowing her junior ministers and MP's to vote as they wish is not one of them.
    Exactly, it's absolutely hilarious as a criticism. Previously @Jonathan has been blaming her for not listening and trying to force her view of things on MPs. Now he's criticising her for letting MPs say what they want rather than telling them what to do.
    She ain’t listening. It’s just more brinkmanship in pursuit of her lousy deal. She could end this at any time, by whipping either of today’s top options. She doesn’t because she would lose her right wing.
    Err, you don't seem to have quite taken into account the fact that Corbyn could have ended this at any time (since November) by whipping his MPs to back the deal which is actually on the table, or even giving them a free vote. After all the deal on the table is almost exactly consistent with Labour's stated policy. So I'd be interested in your justification for blaming her and not him for the impasse.
    They both need to find a position they can agree. May takes the blame because she has not moved a millimetre. Corbyn has moved.
    He's moved towards her position? Really?
  • bigjohnowlsbigjohnowls Posts: 22,625
    Pulpstar said:

    Lab ex mining constituencies say "No" to a people's vote:

    Rother Valley, Blyth Valley, Rotherham, West Lancashire, Dagenham, Don Valley, Makerfield, North Tyneside, Jarrow, Vauxhall, Barnsley Central, Warrington North, North Durham, South Shields, Bassetlaw, Easington, Barnsley East, Stoke North, Crewe, Stoke Central, Blackley, Halton.

    Not Bolsover??
  • Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826
    Scott_P said:

    https://twitter.com/johndavidblake/status/1112831256423788544

    I am perpetually amazed that Tory leadership can't see that appeasing the headbangers might keep some members onside, but must be shedding voters wholesale

    Yeah the Tories should just abandon the 52% and just seek to become yet another party seeking the 48% like the other 6 parties doing so.
  • Danny565Danny565 Posts: 8,091
    Foxy said:

    Andrew said:


    The pro-EU fanatics and the ERG ultras are two cheeks of the same arse. They get their way or the world burns.
    Personally I agree with both of them. MPs should note vote for outcomes that they do not want to happen.
    Even when their refusal to compromise is increasing the chances of the worst outcome of all??
  • FloaterFloater Posts: 14,207

    We now have the massive splits in direction showing in all parties (bar DUP and SNP). Impossible to pull a party together never mind parties.

    So we'll have increased rowing. More resignations. We'll crash out with no deal. And then a general election where both major parties are lead by useless deadweight idiots most MPs want shut of with a policy platform of Fuck Knows

    Can we vote for Cyclefree instead?
  • ralphmalphralphmalph Posts: 2,201

    I'm feeling a lot like Nick Boles at the moment.

    Who’s the Tory MP who appealed to Nick not to go?
    Sounded like Rory to me.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 81,347
    kle4 said:

    Does this mean I need to head back to CostCo for a years supply of bog roll?

    You haven't already stocked up? Ooh boy, you will be shit out of luck I am afraid.
    Last time, after convincing myself that no-deal was off the table, I managed to distract Mrs U with some offers on booze rather than fill the car with boring stuff like bog-roll.

    I think I might have made a bit of a boo-boo....
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 38,518
    Jonathan said:

    Jonathan said:

    Sean_F said:

    MaxPB said:

    Jonathan said:

    May, once again, caused this by forcing her cabinet to abstain and not using the whip to back a compromise.

    Rubbish, she gave the party a free vote. More than can be said for Labour MPs when the PM's deal comes to the house. Labour are cowards who want no deal.
    May can be criticised for many things, but allowing her junior ministers and MP's to vote as they wish is not one of them.
    Exactly, it's absolutely hilarious as a criticism. Previously @Jonathan has been blaming her for not listening and trying to force her view of things on MPs. Now he's criticising her for letting MPs say what they want rather than telling them what to do.
    She ain’t listening. It’s just more brinkmanship in pursuit of her lousy deal. She could end this at any time, by whipping either of today’s top options. She doesn’t because she would lose her right wing.
    Err, you don't seem to have quite taken into account the fact that Corbyn could have ended this at any time (since November) by whipping his MPs to back the deal which is actually on the table, or even giving them a free vote. After all the deal on the table is almost exactly consistent with Labour's stated policy. So I'd be interested in your justification for blaming her and not him for the impasse.
    They both need to find a position they can agree. May takes the blame because she has not moved a millimetre. Corbyn has moved.
    She just offered the WA with no strings attached. How is that not movement?!
  • AndreaParma_82AndreaParma_82 Posts: 4,714
    Labour MPs against Clarke's motion

    Ronnie Campbell
    Stephen Hepburn
    Kate Hoey
    John Mann
    Siobhain McDonagh
    Anna McMorrin
    Owen Smith
    Jo Stevens
    Paul Williams

    Did not vote

    David Lammy
    Wes Streeting
    Daniel Zeichner

  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 62,160
    kle4 said:

    Does this mean I need to head back to CostCo for a years supply of bog roll?

    You haven't already stocked up? Ooh boy, you will be shit out of luck I am afraid.
    My mother, who is veteran stockpiler from the 1970s, when we last tried to burn our own country to the ground, informs me that the main toilet paper manufacturers have an enormous stockpile ready.

    Brie is another matter.
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 77,769
    SNP abstentions on PV:

    Wishart, Monaghan, Hosie

    MacNeil also but he really couldn't make it to the chamber.
  • JonathanJonathan Posts: 21,471
    kle4 said:

    Jonathan said:

    FF43 said:

    Jonathan said:

    May, once again, caused this by forcing her cabinet to abstain and not using the whip to back a compromise.

    May certainly holds a degree of (ir)responsibility by trying to undermine the process, rather than attempting to find a consensus and a way forward.
    She needs to adopt a compromise position for the govt. it’s quite straightforward really.
    But it's ok for others not to compromise, got it.
    Corbyn has moved. Hell, even half the ERG moved. The only person who has not moved is May.
  • AmpfieldAndyAmpfieldAndy Posts: 1,445
    edited April 2019
    I am left wondering what MPs can organise in a brewery. So much for MPs taking back control. Parliamentary and election procedures will have to be reformed root and branch after this. Not impressed with Boles spoilt brat temper tantrum either. At least Berow’s bias didn’t pay off.

    If we are not doing Norway, then it’s a straight choice between no deal and revocation. May might try and bring her deal back but with the backstop still there I doubt it will pass.



  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 52,207
    May's Deal brought back. 3-line Whip. Those who vote against will not be eligible as candidates in the GE that will follow if May's Shit Deal doesn't pass.

    Then a GE, where the Conservative Party candidates are required to unite behind passing May's Deal.

    Labour? Who knows what they will go with.... but no ifs, no buts, this will be a Brexit election.
  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 37,068
    Jonathan said:

    Sean_F said:

    MaxPB said:

    Jonathan said:

    May, once again, caused this by forcing her cabinet to abstain and not using the whip to back a compromise.

    Rubbish, she gave the party a free vote. More than can be said for Labour MPs when the PM's deal comes to the house. Labour are cowards who want no deal.
    May can be criticised for many things, but allowing her junior ministers and MP's to vote as they wish is not one of them.
    Exactly, it's absolutely hilarious as a criticism. Previously @Jonathan has been blaming her for not listening and trying to force her view of things on MPs. Now he's criticising her for letting MPs say what they want rather than telling them what to do.
    She ain’t listening. It’s just more brinkmanship in pursuit of her lousy deal. She could end this at any time, by whipping either of today’s top options. She doesn’t because she would lose her right wing. It’s carefully constructed.
    No, it's totally unreasonable to expect a government to whip against its own policy. Allowing a free vote is as much as one can reasonably expect.
  • Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826
    Scott_P said:
    You're quoting Parody Accounts now?

    Some April Fool.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 95,576
    edited April 2019
    Foxy said:

    Andrew said:


    The pro-EU fanatics and the ERG ultras are two cheeks of the same arse. They get their way or the world burns.
    Personally I agree with both of them. MPs should note vote for outcomes that they do not want to happen.
    I think that is a bit silly to be honest, meaning no disrespect. It's an argument that no one should ever have a plan B. Yes, most of the time MPs just do as they are told and that's bad, but if the options before them really are just A or B then it is not really principled to cry because you cannot get C. And if you say that option D is a calamity (be it remain or no deal) and by not voting for A or B then D happens, is it really better for them and their constituents?

    "Yes, I didn't want no deal/remain, that's a disaster. Oh, did I take action which could have prevented it? No of course not. That would have required compromise".

    What that says to me is that neither actually is concerned about no deal or remain respectively. They just signal their virtue about it.
  • SouthamObserverSouthamObserver Posts: 39,582
    HYUFD said:

    And thus the Cameron project to modernise the Conservative Party finally dies. I don’t see how the “traditional” one in alliance with hard right English nationalism gets an electoral majority ever again.

    By losing Scotland, which is very likely if No Deal, England had a Tory majority of 60 at the last general election. Even England and Wales alone had a Tory majority of 36.

    Fair point. The break-up of the UK could do the trick in the abstract, but the practical consequences of that happening are less predictable IMO.

  • FloaterFloater Posts: 14,207
    MaxPB said:

    Jonathan said:

    Jonathan said:

    Sean_F said:

    MaxPB said:

    Jonathan said:

    May, once again, caused this by forcing her cabinet to abstain and not using the whip to back a compromise.

    Rubbish, she gave the party a free vote. More than can be said for Labour MPs when the PM's deal comes to the house. Labour are cowards who want no deal.
    May can be criticised for many things, but allowing her junior ministers and MP's to vote as they wish is not one of them.
    Exactly, it's absolutely hilarious as a criticism. Previously @Jonathan has been blaming her for not listening and trying to force her view of things on MPs. Now he's criticising her for letting MPs say what they want rather than telling them what to do.
    She ain’t listening. It’s just more brinkmanship in pursuit of her lousy deal. She could end this at any time, by whipping either of today’s top options. She doesn’t because she would lose her right wing.
    Err, you don't seem to have quite taken into account the fact that Corbyn could have ended this at any time (since November) by whipping his MPs to back the deal which is actually on the table, or even giving them a free vote. After all the deal on the table is almost exactly consistent with Labour's stated policy. So I'd be interested in your justification for blaming her and not him for the impasse.
    They both need to find a position they can agree. May takes the blame because she has not moved a millimetre. Corbyn has moved.
    She just offered the WA with no strings attached. How is that not movement?!
    Jon is not exactly what I would call an impartial observer
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 19,381
    MaxPB said:

    MaxPB said:

    Sean_F said:

    MaxPB said:

    Jonathan said:

    May, once again, caused this by forcing her cabinet to abstain and not using the whip to back a compromise.

    Rubbish, she gave the party a free vote. More than can be said for Labour MPs when the PM's deal comes to the house. Labour are cowards who want no deal.
    May can be criticised for many things, but allowing her junior ministers and MP's to vote as they wish is not one of them.
    Indeed. It's a completely stupid argument from Labour supporters. Asking the government to whip in favour of positions it opposes whilst similarly offering nothing close to that on the government's position.

    Labour MPs are signing the no deal paperwork along with the ERG, they will get the blame. Especially now that Parliament has rejected all other options.

    Labour will get next to no blame. They should do, but the Tories will own No Deal.

    We won't, our party has tried to ram it through parliament three times, our PM offered her resignation to get it done. We've done our part. Labour will take the hit, especially given that it's their voters that oppose no deal the most and they have consistently voted against the deal on offer which avoids no deal.
    Total horsesh*t. Your party is in power and therefore has a responsibility to govern. It is not governing. It was clear at Christmas that the deal is no good and your party has wasted 3 f*cking months and for what?

    The government will go down in history, not the opposition.
  • FloaterFloater Posts: 14,207

    kle4 said:

    Does this mean I need to head back to CostCo for a years supply of bog roll?

    You haven't already stocked up? Ooh boy, you will be shit out of luck I am afraid.
    Last time, after convincing myself that no-deal was off the table, I managed to distract Mrs U with some offers on booze rather than fill the car with boring stuff like bog-roll.

    I think I might have made a bit of a boo-boo....
    Relax ffs - this isn't the end of the world.
  • MyBurningEarsMyBurningEars Posts: 3,651
    edited April 2019

    And thus the Cameron project to modernise the Conservative Party finally dies. I don’t see how the “traditional” one in alliance with hard right English nationalism gets an electoral majority ever again.

    Quite a few younger Tory MPs are fiercely anti-EU and pro-free market, often perceiving those two facets as going hand-in-hand, but at the same time are socially progressive from a liberal-to-libertarian perspective. If it was just Olde Style traditionalists and parochial English nationalism then it would be hard for the Tories to move with either the tempora or the mores, and I'm sure you're right they'd struggle to achieve a majority - though "ever" is a bigger word than its four meagre letters suggest.

    But I don't see that the remaining Cameroons are the key to Tory prospects in 10 or 20 years' time. The personnel from that political project will have largely left the stage by then and it's the next generation (part of Cameron's legacy but not part of his Project). Political tastes of the electorate wax and wane, and I wouldn't write off a sufficient chunk of some future electorate signing up to "we pay too much in taxes and I'm fed up with the government nannying us" while not being interested in rejoining the EU.
  • Labour MPs against Clarke's motion

    Ronnie Campbell
    Stephen Hepburn
    Kate Hoey
    John Mann
    Siobhain McDonagh
    Anna McMorrin
    Owen Smith
    Jo Stevens
    Paul Williams

    Did not vote

    David Lammy
    Wes Streeting
    Daniel Zeichner

    FFS. Have no idea what Paul was thinking there
  • kle4 said:

    Does this mean I need to head back to CostCo for a years supply of bog roll?

    You haven't already stocked up? Ooh boy, you will be shit out of luck I am afraid.
    My mother, who is veteran stockpiler from the 1970s, when we last tried to burn our own country to the ground, informs me that the main toilet paper manufacturers have an enormous stockpile ready.

    Brie is another matter.
    Might double up the Sainsbo's delivery again this week. Don't want to run low on pineapple.
This discussion has been closed.