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  • AndyJS said:

    "At the end of the day it’s a no-deal Brexit or Jeremy Corbyn
    Daniel Finkelstein

    Leaving the EU without an agreement will damage the country but it’s still just about preferable to the alternative" (£)

    https://www.thetimes.co.uk/edition/news/at-the-end-of-the-day-its-no-deal-or-corbyn-k6wg69tzt

    Yep. That's the shit the electorate landed us with when they voted for Brexit by a narrow margin in 2016, when they crippled May's ability to implement their previous decision in 2017, and who knows what the fruits of their sublime genius will be in 2019?
  • Jesus. Fucking Ian Blackford.

    I know he's SNP but every time he stands up it's Scotland this.. Scotland that.. Pushing SNP propaganda and attack lines.

    Always divides the House rather than seeking to influence it to his greater advantage.

    We aim to dissolve the Union, not repair it.
  • kle4 said:

    I see no difference. Happily, it is a good time to live in a safe seat as my vote one way or the other won't contribute meaningfully to either outcome.
    Oh, there's very much certainly a difference.

    If you can't see one you're not looking or thinking hard enough, and falling back on whataboutism instead (because it's easier).
  • Danny565Danny565 Posts: 8,091
    Apparently, the latest wheeze is that, even if Parliament passes the No Deal Bill, Boris will just stop Her Maj from signing it anyway.
  • Number 10 would like an election. However, I think they’re going to be disappointed.
    How heavily have you laid it?
  • Not always inclined to give MPs the benefit of the doubt, but paraphrasing Gary Gibbons on C4, many of them on the edge and the whole place radiates (if depression can be radiated) clinical depression.

    Not the best atmosphere for clear headed decision making.
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795

    Remember JRM’s hissy fit when Mrs May won the VONC?

    JRM is a deeply unpleasant man.

    Odious. And, also, deeply unimpressive.
  • dyedwooliedyedwoolie Posts: 7,786
    Danny565 said:

    Apparently, the latest wheeze is that, even if Parliament passes the No Deal Bill, Boris will just stop Her Maj from signing it anyway.

    Anne was the last monarch to refuse assent iirc
  • TGOHFTGOHF Posts: 21,633

    Jesus. Fucking Ian Blackford.

    I know he's SNP but every time he stands up it's Scotland this.. Scotland that.. Pushing SNP propaganda and attack lines.

    Always divides the House rather than seeking to influence it to his greater advantage.

    Blackford happy to ignore referendums - won’t be so sanguine if that happens in the unlikely event he ever wins one.
  • How heavily have you laid it?
    I am laying but I’m being cautious. An election could happen more or less by accident.

    2020 looks likelier than 2019 now.
  • Danny565 said:

    Apparently, the latest wheeze is that, even if Parliament passes the No Deal Bill, Boris will just stop Her Maj from signing it anyway.

    That would be unprecedented and severely undermine the monarchy. I hope Liz tells him where to go.
  • Danny565 said:

    Apparently, the latest wheeze is that, even if Parliament passes the No Deal Bill, Boris will just stop Her Maj from signing it anyway.

    Quite reasonable for Boris to do that if he has the Confidence of the House.

    If he doesn't, MPs should say so.
  • dyedwooliedyedwoolie Posts: 7,786

    I am laying but I’m being cautious. An election could happen more or less by accident.

    2020 looks likelier than 2019 now.
    Boris will lose a VONC very soon especially if he sacks 16 mps from the party. It's likely someone will be put into bat with a one line QS, seek extension and call an election
  • Paul Masterton is not one of the rebels:

    https://twitter.com/pm4eastren/status/1168960672786472961?s=21
  • We aim to dissolve the Union, not repair it.
    Yes, but this vote is about stopping a No Deal Brexit.

    Are the SNP interested in reaching out to stop that across party lines,or not?
  • SquareRootSquareRoot Posts: 7,095
    blueblue said:

    Yep. That's the shit the electorate landed us with when they voted for Brexit by a narrow margin in 2016, when they crippled May's ability to implement their previous decision in 2017, and who knows what the fruits of their sublime genius will be in 2019?
    The fruits will be endless future threads arguing about Brexit.
  • dyedwooliedyedwoolie Posts: 7,786

    That would be unprecedented and severely undermine the monarchy. I hope Liz tells him where to go.
    Refusal of royal assent would be the end of monarchy, or the catalyst that begins that ending
  • Boris will lose a VONC very soon especially if he sacks 16 mps from the party. It's likely someone will be put into bat with a one line QS, seek extension and call an election
    No one will want to launch a vote of no confidence till his credibility is shot. So not before November.
  • That would be unprecedented and severely undermine the monarchy. I hope Liz tells him where to go.
    She is a puppet, she shouldn't tell him anything.

    The Commons has consented to Boris as PM and if it rejects an election will have confirmed its desire to keep him as PM. He is entitled to exercise the monarch's veto powers.

    It would be unprecedented but I can't think of any precedent of the Commons passing a bill directly against the PM's ambitions. If the House acts in an unprecedented manner, the PM can reply in kind.
  • dyedwooliedyedwoolie Posts: 7,786
    Cummings plan c is stealing the mace
  • Congratulations to Philip on his debut piece
  • Do you buy this argument?

    https://twitter.com/MariosRichards/status/1168931527226482688
    https://twitter.com/MariosRichards/status/1168932148109295616
    No. It could happen without No Deal as a temporary caretaker role for Corbyn legitimises him prior to calling his own election.

    And I think a longer Parliament following a new election (which he lost) would result in his removal.
  • ChrisChris Posts: 11,917

    Speaker determines if a bill requires royal consent. If it does the PM advises HMQ whether to grant consent or not.

    If this bill requires consent and Bercow says so then Boris can veto it via withholding consent. If it should require consent but Bercow claims it doesn't, it is hard to see how that can be remedied.
    No, that's not right. Whether a bill requires royal consent is decided by the Clerk, not the Speaker.
  • Congratulations to Philip on his debut piece

    Thank you :)
  • stodge said:

    Brexit won't die if your man fails to deliver it on 31/10. You seem to assume everyone who is opposed to a No Deal Brexit is opposed to Brexit but that simply isn't the case.

    There are plenty who reject No Deal and want to leave with something approaching a reasonable WA which May's clearly wasn't.

    The diehard Leave fanatics will froth on Facebook and will flock to BP which will take over the Leave mantle from the failed Conservatives but ther eis an opportunity to strike a sensible deal which works for the country once the Tories are out of the way.

    I disagree. Remember I have always favoured the EFTA route out of the EU and the idea of a long, slow process with safeguards to make sure it could not be undermined. I supported May's deal in spite of its flaws.

    But I genuinely believe the aim of the majority of the House is to somehow reverse the referendum result whikst avoiding getting blamed for it. Indeed plenty of those who once dishonestly claimed to support the result of the referendum are now quite open in their support for cancelling it.

    What reason should anyone have to trust any if these people voting against No Deal tonight when so many of them have already broken their promises to their own electorates.
  • Chris said:

    No, that's not right. Whether a bill requires royal consent is decided by the Clerk, not the Speaker.
    Are you sure? Everyone said Speaker earlier.

    And what happens if the Speaker overrules the Clerk as he did in January?
  • There's nothing that would satisfy Steve Baker. Just as I worked out some time ago the same about Peter Hitchens.

    He's disappeared up his own arsehole.
  • dyedwooliedyedwoolie Posts: 7,786

    No one will want to launch a vote of no confidence till his credibility is shot. So not before November.
    Everything will be decided before prorogation imo
  • DougSealDougSeal Posts: 12,746

    Quite reasonable for Boris to do that if he has the Confidence of the House.

    If he doesn't, MPs should say so.
    Is there a precedent for a Prime Minister advising the Queen not to give assent to a bill passed by the legislature? To my knowledge there is none, the issue has never arisen, and those in the know are deeply divided as to whether it could happen. You want to pour petrol on the flames of a constitutional crisis? That’s how you do it.
  • There's nothing that would satisfy Steve Baker. Just as I worked out some time ago the same about Peter Hitchens.

    He's disappeared up his own arsehole.
    What's sauce for the goose is sauce for the gander.

    The deal should be a confidence issue and if he rebels on a deal he should lose the whip. No ifs, no buts.
  • dyedwooliedyedwoolie Posts: 7,786

    Are you sure? Everyone said Speaker earlier.

    And what happens if the Speaker overrules the Clerk as he did in January?
    Speaker takes advice from the clerk, going against it would be grounds for court action I'd say
  • Yes, but this vote is about stopping a No Deal Brexit.

    Are the SNP interested in reaching out to stop that across party lines,or not?
    Hey, we were looking to the Ruth Davidson Party mps "to be standing up for Scotland's interests from within the Conservative party". Isn't that happening any more?
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,010
    edited September 2019

    Refusal of royal assent would be the end of monarchy, or the catalyst that begins that ending
    It wouldn't when voters opposed further extension by 47% to 41% with Survation at the weekend and backed the Queen asserting to proroguing Parliament by a 20% margin.

    Indeed Monarchists, the Queen's base, voted 56% Leave while republicans voted 65% Remain.


    https://yougov.co.uk/topics/politics/articles-reports/2018/05/18/who-are-monarchists

    The Queen rightly should not aid the Commons defy the will of the people
  • Richard_TyndallRichard_Tyndall Posts: 33,255
    edited September 2019

    It was a Tory who did the sowing: David Cameron.
    Nope. He just gave the electorate a choice. It is the Remainers who have chosen to ignore that choice and so undermine the basic principles of democracy. I assume ftom your comments a future Parliament should ignore any future Indy Referendum
  • Thank you :)
    Yes, thank you Philip, for an interesting piece. Might follow your advice, or at least take a sharper and better informed look at that market.
  • ChrisChris Posts: 11,917

    Are you sure? Everyone said Speaker earlier.

    And what happens if the Speaker overrules the Clerk as he did in January?
    See here:
    "... the final decision on whether Consent is needed is made by the Clerks of Legislation in both Houses."
    https://publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm201314/cmselect/cmpolcon/784/784.pdf
  • DougSeal said:

    Is there a precedent for a Prime Minister advising the Queen not to give assent to a bill passed by the legislature? To my knowledge there is none, the issue has never arisen, and those in the know are deeply divided as to whether it could happen. You want to pour petrol on the flames of a constitutional crisis? That’s how you do it.
    The only precedent (I think) is the Cooper Letwin Bill. The government allowed consent there and should do so again.
  • Yes, but this vote is about stopping a No Deal Brexit.

    Are the SNP interested in reaching out to stop that across party lines,or not?
    Stopping No Deal Brexit is merely a step on the journey. We have bigger, more important goals. Pursuing, always, the interests of the Scottish nation.
  • DougSealDougSeal Posts: 12,746

    What's sauce for the goose is sauce for the gander.

    The deal should be a confidence issue and if he rebels on a deal he should lose the whip. No ifs, no buts.
    I would say that since the FTPA there is no such thing as a confidence issue, as it used to be understood anyway, anymore
  • DruttDrutt Posts: 1,124

    Too many combos at work.

    Will he retire? If so, he's gone. 5% maybe?

    Will they stand against him? 50% maybe? Depends upon what triggers the election and how vitriolic it is.

    If they stand will they win? I'd make this 50/50 - Bercow has the name, Tories have the organisation.

    Overall then I'd say roughly 25% chance he's defeated at an election. Which is very high by historical terms.
    VoNC in speaker called, passes (or is so close that, like MM, he quits), Bercow doesn't fancy being a backbencher is another variable. At evens I'd still say he wins the next election.
  • DougSeal said:

    Is there a precedent for a Prime Minister advising the Queen not to give assent to a bill passed by the legislature? To my knowledge there is none, the issue has never arisen, and those in the know are deeply divided as to whether it could happen. You want to pour petrol on the flames of a constitutional crisis? That’s how you do it.
    AFAIK Queen Anne is the most recent precedent, which AFAIK is the most recent time that Parliament has passed a bill that the government then wanted to veto.

    Petrol has been getting poured all year and neither side wants to be the side to lose.
  • dyedwooliedyedwoolie Posts: 7,786
    HYUFD said:

    It wouldn't when voters oppose further extension by 47% to 41% with Survation at the weekend and backed the Queen asserting to proroguing Parliament by a 20% margin.

    The Queen rightly should not aid the Commons defy the will of the people
    No, once that cat is out of the bag it's too late. It makes the monarchy unsustainable, how can you have am unelected hereditary monarch refusing to enact law passed by her subjects elected representatives? There a reason nobody since Anne has done so
  • GIN1138GIN1138 Posts: 22,841
    edited September 2019
    AndyJS said:
    I'm not sure Dunt was meant to be JRMs target audiance...

    Oh and has someone told him to down down the "Fs"? (Dunt that is not JRM ;) )
  • What's sauce for the goose is sauce for the gander.

    The deal should be a confidence issue and if he rebels on a deal he should lose the whip. No ifs, no buts.
    It's the nature of Parliamentary democracy that there are always ifs and buts.

    But it doesn't help the arithmetic when everyone has dug their trenches as deep as they will go and care nothing for the consequences.
  • ChrisChris Posts: 11,917
    HYUFD said:

    It wouldn't when voters oppose further extension by 47% to 41% with Survation at the weekend and backed the Queen asserting to proroguing Parliament by a 20% margin.

    Indeed Monarchists, the Queen's base, voted 56% Leave while republicans voted 65% Remain.


    https://yougov.co.uk/topics/politics/articles-reports/2018/05/18/who-are-monarchists

    The Queen rightly should not aid the Commons defy the will of the people
    You're right. By convention, the Queen always acts on the advice of Survation.
  • The only precedent (I think) is the Cooper Letwin Bill. The government allowed consent there and should do so again.
    I don't think Cooper-Letwin required consent (Speaker ruled it did not) but a subsequent legal ruling has cast doubt on whether that was technically correct.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,546

    Oh, there's very much certainly a difference.

    If you can't see one you're not looking or thinking hard enough, and falling back on whataboutism instead (because it's easier).
    Oh, they don't have the same effect, but the impact seems little different.

    I'm sorry, but reliant on 'Corbyn is a boogeyman' is just plain laziness. I cannot stand the man, I voted Tory for the first time in large part because of that, but the Tories no longer care about anything other than no deal Brexit in order to preserve their party, and no deal Brexit appears to me to have a high chance of unacceptable impacts which will not be mitigated even if they can be. Corbyn will, I am sure, be terrible, but I need a bit more than an appeal to fear of an incompetent old trot to back a no deal Brexit.
  • That's my view.

    No Deal Brexit is crazy but it's still better than putting Corbyn in charge of Britain for even 5 minutes.

    No Deal Brexit is major collateral damage in ideogically pursuing a single policy. Corbyn is a political, economic, security and social nuclear suicide weapon who'd actively seek to tear down as much as he could, rather than mitigate it.
    The only possible way this country will deliver a majority Corbyn govt is no deal.

    The choice is not no deal vs Corbyn but no deal followed by a Corbyn majority govt vs a Corbyn coalition govt.

    That is where the conservatives have led us. A triumphant achievements thinks the party cheerleader!
  • Nope. He just gave the electorate a choice. It is the Remainers who have chosen to ignore that choice and so undermine the basic principles of democracy. I assume ftom your comments a future Parliament should ignore any future Indy Referendum
    English constitutional principle: parliamentary sovereignty.

    Scottish constitutional principle: popular sovereignty.

    You stick to your principles. We’ll stick to ours.
  • dyedwooliedyedwoolie Posts: 7,786

    I don't think Cooper-Letwin required consent (Speaker ruled it did not) but a subsequent legal ruling has cast doubt on whether that was technically correct.
    It didn't as it mandated the PM to have to seek an extension, it did not state she had to accept, and was superceded by events. Its having to accept any extension offered that affects prerogative
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,546
    Scott_P said:
    Criticises threat to sack those who oppose a deal? That should be a fascinating read, given the elation he no doubt has toward sacking those who rebel tonight. It's always good for a laugh to see ideologues tie themselves in knotts trying to justify themselves.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,010

    I think we’ll hit the jackpot, No Deal followed by Corbyn.
    The only way we get Corbyn is if Boris extends again, so precisely the opposite.

    Though there is a small chance of PM Farage more likely the Brexit Party splits the Leave vote with the Tories and lets Corbyn through the middle (Though there is still a chance Swinson would veto a Corbyn Premiership).

  • I am laying but I’m being cautious. An election could happen more or less by accident.

    2020 looks likelier than 2019 now.
    Thanks. I've gone in fairly heavy (by my standards) against GE2019 and am about £100 underwater at present.

    Hoping my gamble (for it is very much one) pays off.
  • GIN1138GIN1138 Posts: 22,841
    edited September 2019

    Remember JRM’s hissy fit when Mrs May won the VONC?

    JRM is a deeply unpleasant man.

    Well from JRMs point of view, everything he said about May at the time of the VONC was right wasn't it?

    If she'd lost the VONC there's a very good chance we'd have left on 29th March.

    Everything that's happened this year stems from the Tories bottling removing May in December.
  • DougSealDougSeal Posts: 12,746
    HYUFD said:

    It wouldn't when voters opposed further extension by 47% to 41% with Survation at the weekend and backed the Queen asserting to proroguing Parliament by a 20% margin.

    Indeed Monarchists, the Queen's base, voted 56% Leave while republicans voted 65% Remain.


    https://yougov.co.uk/topics/politics/articles-reports/2018/05/18/who-are-monarchists

    The Queen rightly should not aid the Commons defy the will of the people
    That’s absurd. YouGov and Survation are fine organisation but are you seriously suggesting that the Queen should withold consent to a bill passed by the legislature based on an opinion poll? Seriously? That’s insane.
  • AFAIK Queen Anne is the most recent precedent, which AFAIK is the most recent time that Parliament has passed a bill that the government then wanted to veto.

    Petrol has been getting poured all year and neither side wants to be the side to lose.
    Queen Anne did not have a Prime Minister.
  • CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758
    HYUFD said:

    Well one thing the Corn Laws did was purge the Tory party of those who were really liberals not conservatives, if Brexit does the same thing so be it.

    The Peelites in the Tories ended up with the Whigs in the Liberals and if more diehard Remainers like Lee today join the LDs fair enough
    And most came back eventually
  • jayfdeejayfdee Posts: 618
    Busy on here tonight, I am normally just a lurker, but here goes.
    I am a pensioner, some would say well off, former MD of a successful company, I voted remain, and deplore the polarisation of both remainers and leavers, I am not an old thickie, or a Remoniac.
    I was a supporter of Boris, and a Con voter, but not any more, I now have nowhere to go, Corbyn, definitely not, Libdems, no. Greens absolutely not, despite the fact I spent my career in recycling and environmental matters.
    I mainly live in a marginal Con/Lab, but close to a Libdem hotspot, I could also vote for Rory as I also could have my main residence in his constituency. Think I will change my residence and vote Rory, as a likely independent.
  • nichomarnichomar Posts: 7,483

    It didn't as it mandated the PM to have to seek an extension, it did not state she had to accept, and was superceded by events. Its having to accept any extension offered that affects prerogative
    And that extension can be voted down by the HOC as included in the bill but deliberately left out by the loonies in their publicity
  • The only possible way this country will deliver a majority Corbyn govt is no deal.

    The choice is not no deal vs Corbyn but no deal followed by a Corbyn majority govt vs a Corbyn coalition govt.

    That is where the conservatives have led us. A triumphant achievements thinks the party cheerleader!
    What makes you think the dials will shift following No Deal?

    Views are so entrenched now that I wouldn't expect meaningful movement on it for months after a No Deal Brexit. Everyone has their pantomime villains to blame (which won't be them) and will be looking for evidence to validate their confirmation bias.
  • @Philip_Thompson

    Was that really your first piece, Philip? You should do more.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,010
    edited September 2019

    No, once that cat is out of the bag it's too late. It makes the monarchy unsustainable, how can you have am unelected hereditary monarch refusing to enact law passed by her subjects elected representatives? There a reason nobody since Anne has done so
    How can you have a monarchy defying the will of the people and 17 million people and aiding a coup by die hard Remainers to refuse to implement the will of the people?

    In the civil war we are now beginning most Monarchists are on the Leave side, most Republicans on the die hard Remainer side and it will now continue in that vein
  • ByronicByronic Posts: 3,578
    Thornberry on BBC apparently saying that Labour will never trust a Boris request for a GE. As he might shift the date.

    How does that work? Labour will never go for an election, ever?
  • dyedwooliedyedwoolie Posts: 7,786
    Anne refused assent to the scottish militia bill of 1708 on advice of her ministers as she feared the Scots may be disloyal. Prior to that William of orange vetoed 6 times and before that Charles and James 2nd tried rule by decree
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,010
    edited September 2019

    English constitutional principle: parliamentary sovereignty.

    Scottish constitutional principle: popular sovereignty.

    You stick to your principles. We’ll stick to ours.
    The people of Scotland voted to stay in the UK in 2014 using that popular sovereignty principle
  • AlistairAlistair Posts: 23,670
    As I said, lining up to be a good boy and nod No Deal through whilst trying to pin the blame on others.
  • Cummings plan c is stealing the mace

    Cumming's Plan 9 from Outer Space is to have Brexit supporting aliens inhabiting the skins of politicians...

    https://youtu.be/unORPOtavqM?t=47
  • What makes you think the dials will shift following No Deal?

    Views are so entrenched now that I wouldn't expect meaningful movement on it for months after a No Deal Brexit. Everyone has their pantomime villains to blame (which won't be them) and will be looking for evidence to validate their confirmation bias.
    Because no deal is shit.
  • ChrisChris Posts: 11,917

    Anne refused assent to the scottish militia bill of 1708 on advice of her ministers as she feared the Scots may be disloyal. Prior to that William of orange vetoed 6 times and before that Charles and James 2nd tried rule by decree

    Please don't put ideas into people's heads.
  • I don't think Cooper-Letwin required consent (Speaker ruled it did not) but a subsequent legal ruling has cast doubt on whether that was technically correct.
    Interesting. Thanks.

    I have, maybe naively, always thought that the giving of royal consent is one of the sole prerogatives reserved to the monarch acting independently of government. But perhaps I’m wrong and the advice of government always overrides. Would be a complete clusterf**k of epic proportions though, I can’t see the palace being happy at all if they’re dragged into this particular quagmire.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,546
    HYUFD said:

    How can you have a monarchy defying the will of the people and 17 million people and aiding a coup by die hard Remainers to refuse to implement the will of the people?

    In the civil war we are now beginning most Monarchists are on the Leave side, most Republicans on the die hard Remainer side and it will now continue in that vein
    I see you've decided to respond to hyperbolic references to a coup by trying to use it yourself. How very adult of you.
  • rpjsrpjs Posts: 3,787
    HYUFD said:

    The people of Scotland voted to stay in the UK in 2014 using that popular sovereignty principle
    And voted to stay in the EU in 2016...
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 62,283
    edited September 2019
    kle4 said:

    Oh, they don't have the same effect, but the impact seems little different.

    I'm sorry, but reliant on 'Corbyn is a boogeyman' is just plain laziness. I cannot stand the man, I voted Tory for the first time in large part because of that, but the Tories no longer care about anything other than no deal Brexit in order to preserve their party, and no deal Brexit appears to me to have a high chance of unacceptable impacts which will not be mitigated even if they can be. Corbyn will, I am sure, be terrible, but I need a bit more than an appeal to fear of an incompetent old trot to back a no deal Brexit.
    One example: Corbyn would do his utmost (for ideological reasons) to inhibit aspects of the work of our security services from day one, and start to dismantle parts of our military. He would ignore advice and warnings that conflicted with his worldview. He'd share confidential advice with our enemies. He'd undermine NATO. He could easily get people killed.

    He would quickly move to nationalisations and currency controls. He would try an emergency budget and confiscate whatever assets he could. Including your pension. He would tax your income heavily and your house.

    The Conservatives would never do any of that (even for a No Deal Brexit, which you're assuming Corbyn also secretly doesn't want) so I wouldn't put the man anywhere near Downing Street under any circumstances.
  • HYUFD said:

    The people of Scotland voted to stay in the UK in 2014 using that popular sovereignty principle
    Nothing is forever.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,010

    The only possible way this country will deliver a majority Corbyn govt is no deal.

    The choice is not no deal vs Corbyn but no deal followed by a Corbyn majority govt vs a Corbyn coalition govt.

    That is where the conservatives have led us. A triumphant achievements thinks the party cheerleader!
    Nope, Corbyn will never get a majority Government, indeed Swinson now leads Corbyn as preferred PM.

    The only way Corbyn becomes PM is by listening to diehard Remainers like you, splitting the Leave vote between the Brexit Party and the Tories under FPTP and allowing Corbyn in the back door
  • Stopping No Deal Brexit is merely a step on the journey. We have bigger, more important goals. Pursuing, always, the interests of the Scottish nation.
    A step on the journey you will fail to take unless you can bury your myopic isolationist ideology.
  • Queen Anne did not have a Prime Minister.
    Hence why I used the word government. She did have a government did she not?
  • AlistairAlistair Posts: 23,670

    Nope. He just gave the electorate a choice. It is the Remainers who have chosen to ignore that choice and so undermine the basic principles of democracy. I assume ftom your comments a future Parliament should ignore any future Indy Referendum
    The referendum was advisory. If it had been binding the result would have been annulled by the courts. Due to Leave cheating.
  • dr_spyndr_spyn Posts: 11,307
    Speculation that O'Mara is still in Sheffield.

    https://twitter.com/dinosofos/status/1168966162060849153
  • DougSealDougSeal Posts: 12,746

    AFAIK Queen Anne is the most recent precedent, which AFAIK is the most recent time that Parliament has passed a bill that the government then wanted to veto.

    Petrol has been getting poured all year and neither side wants to be the side to lose.

    Yes but Queen Anne didn’t have a Prime Minister in the modern sense. Walpole was the first under George I. A Government used to resign when bills were passed they wanted to veto and request a dissolution of Parliament. The FTPA put a stop to that. These are uncharted waters.
  • DruttDrutt Posts: 1,124

    Speaker determines if a bill requires royal consent. If it does the PM advises HMQ whether to grant consent or not.

    If this bill requires consent and Bercow says so then Boris can veto it via withholding consent. If it should require consent but Bercow claims it doesn't, it is hard to see how that can be remedied.
    If it doesn't require Queen's Consent then the prerogative power is unaffected by the legislation. The PM could say he'd ignore it in so far as prerogative power was being exercised. That's why he said he'd uphold the constitution and the law when asked earlier. The only constitutional remedy would be a VoNC.
  • Hence why I used the word government. She did have a government did she not?
    The point being that a veto on the advice of a Prime Minister is literally without precedent.
  • @Philip_Thompson

    Was that really your first piece, Philip? You should do more.

    Thank you, that's high praise :)
  • XtrainXtrain Posts: 341
    edited September 2019
    jayfdee said:

    Busy on here tonight, I am normally just a lurker, but here goes.
    I am a pensioner, some would say well off, former MD of a successful company, I voted remain, and deplore the polarisation of both remainers and leavers, I am not an old thickie, or a Remoniac.
    I was a supporter of Boris, and a Con voter, but not any more, I now have nowhere to go, Corbyn, definitely not, Libdems, no. Greens absolutely not, despite the fact I spent my career in recycling and environmental matters.
    I mainly live in a marginal Con/Lab, but close to a Libdem hotspot, I could also vote for Rory as I also could have my main residence in his constituency. Think I will change my residence and vote Rory, as a likely independent.

    You can register to vote at both properties. You can vote in only one at a GE but both in locals. As far as I'm aware you don't have to nominate one.
    Please someone correct me if I'm wrong.
  • A step on the journey you will fail to take unless you can bury your myopic isolationist ideology.
    A Tory calling someone else myopic, isolationist and an ideologue. Folk in glass houses...
  • A step on the journey you will fail to take unless you can bury your myopic isolationist ideology.
    Why is Brexit not a myopic isolationist ideology?
  • Byronic said:

    Thornberry on BBC apparently saying that Labour will never trust a Boris request for a GE. As he might shift the date.

    How does that work? Labour will never go for an election, ever?

    Byronic said:

    Thornberry on BBC apparently saying that Labour will never trust a Boris request for a GE. As he might shift the date.

    How does that work? Labour will never go for an election, ever?

    Byronic said:

    Thornberry on BBC apparently saying that Labour will never trust a Boris request for a GE. As he might shift the date.

    How does that work? Labour will never go for an election, ever?

    Byronic said:

    Thornberry on BBC apparently saying that Labour will never trust a Boris request for a GE. As he might shift the date.

    How does that work? Labour will never go for an election, ever?

    In most circumstances, it wouldn't matter if they trusted him on the precise date. But in this situation, it's crucial.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,010
    DougSeal said:

    That’s absurd. YouGov and Survation are fine organisation but are you seriously suggesting that the Queen should withold consent to a bill passed by the legislature based on an opinion poll? Seriously? That’s insane.
    I am saying the Queen should resist the coup to defy the Leave vote and deny the will of the people
  • ByronicByronic Posts: 3,578
    Dawn Foster’s TV career just ended.
  • TGOHFTGOHF Posts: 21,633

    A step on the journey you will fail to take unless you can bury your myopic isolationist ideology.
    The Nat say its ok to ignore referendums - precedent set. Twice.
  • Drutt said:

    If it doesn't require Queen's Consent then the prerogative power is unaffected by the legislation. The PM could say he'd ignore it in so far as prerogative power was being exercised. That's why he said he'd uphold the constitution and the law when asked earlier. The only constitutional remedy would be a VoNC.
    Another reason why FTPA is a ridiculous piece of legislation.
  • Because no deal is shit.
    Yes, and that disproves my point how?
  • nichomar said:

    And that extension can be voted down by the HOC as included in the bill but deliberately left out by the loonies in their publicity
    Just as the Iraq War bill that Blair vetoed consent to would have passed the vote to the HOC.

    Transferring the decision from HMG to HOC affects royal prerogative and requires consent.

    Would be hilarious if after all this the Clerk rules consent is required and Boris refuses to give it.
  • stodgestodge Posts: 14,471



    I disagree. Remember I have always favoured the EFTA route out of the EU and the idea of a long, slow process with safeguards to make sure it could not be undermined. I supported May's deal in spite of its flaws.

    But I genuinely believe the aim of the majority of the House is to somehow reverse the referendum result whikst avoiding getting blamed for it. Indeed plenty of those who once dishonestly claimed to support the result of the referendum are now quite open in their support for cancelling it.

    What reason should anyone have to trust any if these people voting against No Deal tonight when so many of them have already broken their promises to their own electorates.

    It's my turn to disagree. MPs are representatives not delegates. Within the remit is the key part about using their judgement in the interests of the safety of the UK. There are clearly those who view No Deal as contrary to the better interests of the UK - that doesn't mean they don't support leaving the EU, just not on this basis.

    It's this misunderstanding of an MP's role which poisons the debate. MPs can't be mandated - even if a majority of their constituents, for example, supported restoring the death penalty for the murder of a Police Officer, the MP isn't obliged to follow that if their conscience doesn't permit it.

    I still believe there is a deal to be done but it may require starting all over again and being a lot clearer about Ulster and what we want. Go back to Theresa May's Lancaster House speech and you realise it's all generalities and platitudes - the real hard work hadn't been done before we jumped into A50 and I think her supporters believed with a landslide she could get any Deal she dished up through Parliament.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,206

    Remember JRM’s hissy fit when Mrs May won the VONC?

    JRM is a deeply unpleasant man.

    Raffles the Gentleman Thug

    http://viz.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2015/04/Screen-Shot-2014-11-17-at-10.58.20.png
  • dyedwooliedyedwoolie Posts: 7,786
    Re VONC not being called before November. If consent is withheld it will be VONC the next day then the one line QS and election IF a candidate can be agreed in 14 days
This discussion has been closed.