Howdy, Stranger!

It looks like you're new here. Sign in or register to get started.

politicalbetting.com » Blog Archive » The Bad Boys Of Brexit. A review

124

Comments

  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    edited September 2019

    Catching up on Cameron in The Times. It’s tragic. He had no idea of the country he led. And he knows he will be remembered for just one thing. His only consolation is that he did not, quite, mess up the Scottish independence referendum. One day we may get passed Brexit, but the break-up of the UK would have been forever. That will be Johnson’s legacy instead.

    Oh, he messed up the Scottish referendum with his lies - stay in the UK to remain in the EU - and his actions the morning after were all about kicking the Scots in the teeth with the EVEL business and saying they were second class within the UK. Plenty of unfinished business there ...

    He also made a major strategic error earlier in refusing full devolution other than defence and foreign affairs, which would have defeated the status quo but also independence hands down.
  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,332

    Easy. We stop wasting all this money on ghost ferry contracts, medicine stockpiling, charter flights, etc. and spend it on making this country better such as NHS and infrastructure investments.
    While also sending a billion pounds a month to Brussels?
  • Carnyx said:

    Oh, he messed up the Scottish referendum with his lies - stay in the UK to remain in the EU - and his actions the morning after were all about kicking the Scots in the teeth with the EVEL business and saying they were second class within the UK. Plenty of unfinished business there ...

    He also made a major strategic error earlier in refusing full devolution other than defence and foreign affairs, which would have defeated the status quo but also independence hands down.

    Yep, I agree. But he will not be remembered as the last PM of the UK. That will be Johnson.

  • CatManCatMan Posts: 3,183

    Catching up on Cameron in The Times. It’s tragic. He had no idea of the country he led. And he knows he will be remembered for just one thing. His only consolation is that he did not, quite, mess up the Scottish independence referendum. One day we may get passed Brexit, but the break-up of the UK would have been forever. That will be Johnson’s legacy instead.

    He believed his spin that austerity was popular and didn't really affect people (and if it did, well they were Labour voters so fuck 'em)
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,096

    Yep, I agree. But he will not be remembered as the last PM of the UK. That will be Johnson.

    Nah, I am sure that there will be a further PM before Scottish independence. Indeed BoZo may not make it to Christmas.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617

    Yep, I agree. But he will not be remembered as the last PM of the UK. That will be Johnson.

    Point taken - though I'd like to see the Supreme Court decision on prorogation first before |I felt as brave as you.
  • CatManCatMan Posts: 3,183
    RobD said:

    While also sending a billion pounds a month to Brussels?
    https://twitter.com/IanJespersen/status/1172801362251460608?s=20
  • NooNoo Posts: 2,380
    Anecdotes from today:

    Person1 (Labour voter, pro-EU): "I accepted the result, then the revelations made me want a second referendum, now I want revoke"
    Me: "So you'll be voting Lib Dem next time round then?"
    Person1: "Never. They're a bunch of Tories"
    Me: "But the Tories who've defected there are on the liberal wing..."
    Person1: "Doesn't matter. Still Tories. And so is Swinson. Coalition. Not voting for them"
    ---
    Person2 (Labour voter, very very mildly pro-Remain): "This revoke thing is a big mistake. It's not going to go down well. Plus the Lib Dems are splitting the remain vote"
    Me: "Splitting the Remain vote?"
    Person2: "Yes, they're trying to take votes from Labour"
    Me: "Is Labour in favour of Remain then?"
    Person2: "Yes"
    ---

    Conclusion: the Lib Dems are Tories and they're trying to steal votes from Labour by adopting a policy that's different from Labour and won't be popular anyway. The revoke policy is stealing votes from Labour even though it isn't what people want, except the person who does want it but won't vote for it.

    Both people say they will stick with Labour. I bit my tongue pretty hard today :wink:
  • Sir, what is anti-democratic about winning a GE with a central manifesto pledge of No Deal, and then doing it. Is it still "Nothing", Sir?
    No point wasting valuable thinking time on the possibility of the Faragists winning a GE.
  • Thanks.
    That NY Times article that said that "But while we found Dr. Ford’s allegations credible during a 10-month investigation..."?

    The mere fact the NYT even attempts to defend Ford Blasey's evidence shows what a joke they are given it was so full of holes.

    On the other hand, I haven't seen the NYT doing too much digging recently into the rape allegations against the (Democratic) Lt Gov of Virginia...
  • kyf_100kyf_100 Posts: 4,953
    timple said:

    What is anti democratic about winning a GE with a central manifesto pledge of "Revoke" and then doing it?
    The mandate is questionable. Does the lib dems managing to form a government on 30-ish% of the vote abnd revoke morally overrule a referendum where over 50% of people voted to leave?

    If you're comfortable with that, then I also presume you're comfortable with Nigel Farage leading us out of the EU on a no referendum, no deal, no further negotiation policy at a future GE?
  • NooNoo Posts: 2,380
    egg said:

    It’s the perfect question to destroy the lib dems with from this moment on, so what exactly do you think happens after you revoke?
    We take back control of our country. In In In!
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,293
    Noo said:

    Anecdotes from today:

    Person1 (Labour voter, pro-EU): "I accepted the result, then the revelations made me want a second referendum, now I want revoke"
    Me: "So you'll be voting Lib Dem next time round then?"
    Person1: "Never. They're a bunch of Tories"
    Me: "But the Tories who've defected there are on the liberal wing..."
    Person1: "Doesn't matter. Still Tories. And so is Swinson. Coalition. Not voting for them"
    ---
    Person2 (Labour voter, very very mildly pro-Remain): "This revoke thing is a big mistake. It's not going to go down well. Plus the Lib Dems are splitting the remain vote"
    Me: "Splitting the Remain vote?"
    Person2: "Yes, they're trying to take votes from Labour"
    Me: "Is Labour in favour of Remain then?"
    Person2: "Yes"
    ---

    Conclusion: the Lib Dems are Tories and they're trying to steal votes from Labour by adopting a policy that's different from Labour and won't be popular anyway. The revoke policy is stealing votes from Labour even though it isn't what people want, except the person who does want it but won't vote for it.

    Both people say they will stick with Labour. I bit my tongue pretty hard today :wink:

    Blimey. Confirmatory evidence that the bulk of the remaining Labour vote has the intellect of a stuffed rabbit.
  • Streeter said:

    No point wasting valuable thinking time on the possibility of the Faragists winning a GE.
    Its very possible.
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 24,116
    TOPPING said:

    Just coming to this - great header thanks @viewcode.

    Buy the book now? Might just. (After The Testaments.)

    Thank you. If you want to check out the book before you buy, there's always the local library... :)
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,393
    ydoethur said:

    Blimey. Confirmatory evidence that the bulk of the remaining Labour vote has the intellect of a stuffed rabbit.
    I think assuming it is any different for the average voter of any party is optimistic.
  • The danger with the Lib Dems revoking without a Referendum is that its likely the Tories would then become a leave without one at a future GE and a majority Tory government could easily then after a future GE ram through a hard Brexit - and once we're out its impossible to just revoke, it becomes about rejoining.
  • You would have to pay me £250 to stay in a travelodge, more if it was in peckham.
    Bit rude. Peckham's alright, although it's not New Cross.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,293
    kle4 said:

    I think assuming it is any different for the average voter of any party is optimistic.
    Well, I dunno. I think an awful lot of Tories don't even measure up to that, starting with Johnson and Cummings.
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 24,116
    Scott_P said:
    Um...are we talking characters or actors? Because if we are talking Black Widow, Thor, Iron Man et al, I have some issues with that list... :)
  • Foxy said:

    Nah, I am sure that there will be a further PM before Scottish independence. Indeed BoZo may not make it to Christmas.

    There could be an inter-regnum, but we’ve got him for the next seven years, I reckon.

  • viewcode said:

    Um...are we talking characters or actors? Because if we are talking Black Widow, Thor, Iron Man et al, I have some issues with that list... :)
    Iron Man seems like a No Deal kind of guy. He's Marvel's Batman.
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 20,092
    RobD said:

    While also sending a billion pounds a month to Brussels?
    Not this fake news again.
  • nichomarnichomar Posts: 7,483
    Just been out with a group of pensioners who are going to cancel their donations to RNLI because of the daily mail article. Well done daily mail you really should have thought it through before putting the whole operation at risk. Don’t know if the RNLI were wrong to spend 2% overseas but it’s going to hit their financial viability.
  • Not this fake news again.
    Its not fake.
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 20,092

    Its not fake.
    Yes it is. Its designed to mislead people that we spend a ton of money on EU membership and get nothing back.

    It’s misleading. It’s pathetic. It’s dangerous.
  • On topic, thanks for the review but might give this one a miss.
  • NooNoo Posts: 2,380
    kyf_100 said:


    The mandate is questionable. Does the lib dems managing to form a government on 30-ish% of the vote abnd revoke morally overrule a referendum where over 50% of people voted to leave?

    The irony of the Lib Dems winning a majority on 35% and then implementing a program of government that isn't liked by a good proportion of the country would not be an irony. It would be a rich, fruity layer cake of irony, with irony icing, served with the most iron-y cutlery, washed down the finest glass of Chateau de Leave d'Tears.
    All those years the Tories have benefited from FPTP, and all this time people like me have been campaigning for PR, it would be the most exquisite of pleasures to see this happen.
  • eekeek Posts: 29,687

    Its not fake.
    And it’s cheap for what we get out of it.
  • Yes it is. Its designed to mislead people that we spend a ton of money on EU membership and get nothing back.

    It’s misleading. It’s pathetic. It’s dangerous.
    We do spend a ton of money on EU membership.

    We may get a fraction of our own money back on priorities not chosen by our representatives but that doesn't change that we spend a ton of money on EU membership.
  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,332
    CatMan said:

    https://twitter.com/IanJespersen/status/1172801362251460608?s=20
    It's 1.4%, assuming £1bn a month. Hardly a fraction of a percent.
  • eek said:

    And it’s cheap for what we get out of it.
    Make that case if you want to justify it, not dismiss it as Gallowgate did with a lie about it being fake. The truth is never fake.
  • NooNoo Posts: 2,380

    On topic, thanks for the review but might give this one a miss.

    This is not a novel to be tossed aside lightly. It should be thrown with great force.
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 20,092
    edited September 2019

    We do spend a ton of money on EU membership.

    We may get a fraction of our own money back on priorities not chosen by our representatives but that doesn't change that we spend a ton of money on EU membership.
    Considering we are having to spend MORE replicating what we already get - I think that says it all.
    As I said, misleading, dangerous, pathetic.
  • Noo said:

    Anecdotes from today:

    Person1 (Labour voter, pro-EU): "I accepted the result, then the revelations made me want a second referendum, now I want revoke"
    Me: "So you'll be voting Lib Dem next time round then?"
    Person1: "Never. They're a bunch of Tories"
    Me: "But the Tories who've defected there are on the liberal wing..."
    Person1: "Doesn't matter. Still Tories. And so is Swinson. Coalition. Not voting for them"
    ---
    Person2 (Labour voter, very very mildly pro-Remain): "This revoke thing is a big mistake. It's not going to go down well. Plus the Lib Dems are splitting the remain vote"
    Me: "Splitting the Remain vote?"
    Person2: "Yes, they're trying to take votes from Labour"
    Me: "Is Labour in favour of Remain then?"
    Person2: "Yes"
    ---

    Conclusion: the Lib Dems are Tories and they're trying to steal votes from Labour by adopting a policy that's different from Labour and won't be popular anyway. The revoke policy is stealing votes from Labour even though it isn't what people want, except the person who does want it but won't vote for it.

    Both people say they will stick with Labour. I bit my tongue pretty hard today :wink:

    All seems pretty reasonable to me. The Labour vote is more solid than people think because a lot of voters understand that if you want to keep the Tories out there is only one game in town, at least in England. I think Labour would get around 25% of the vote and win about 245 seats to the Tories' 290 if an election were held now.
  • RobD said:

    It's 1.4%, assuming £1bn a month. Hardly a fraction of a percent.
    So extremely close to being rounded to 2% then. Which it probably would be before long if we stay.

    Money I'd rather spend on our own priorities, though spending 25% on Welfare excluding pensions is a ton of money. What austerity?
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 20,092

    Make that case if you want to justify it, not dismiss it as Gallowgate did with a lie about it being fake. The truth is never fake.
    It is not the truth. It is a dangerous half-truth.

    Something you are so full of glee about but if Labour do the same, you’d be frothing at the mouth.
  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,332

    Considering we are having to spend MORE replicating what we already get - I think that says it all.
    As I said, misleading, dangerous, pathetic.
    Feel free to counter these facts with other facts regarding the net contribution. Dismissing them as dangerous is not helpful.
  • Considering we are having to spend MORE replicating what we already get - I think that says it all.
    As I said, misleading, dangerous, pathetic.
    No we're not, that's fake news.
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 20,092
    RobD said:

    Feel free to counter these facts with other facts regarding the net contribution. Dismissing them as dangerous is not helpful.
    Exactly. It isn’t helpful.
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 20,092

    No we're not, that's fake news.
    See what I mean?
  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,332

    Exactly. It isn’t helpful.
    Exactly? What are you on about.
  • It is not the truth. It is a dangerous half-truth.

    Something you are so full of glee about but if Labour do the same, you’d be frothing at the mouth.
    Quite the opposite, if Labour claimed they weren't taxing us while boasting about how much they're spending like you're trying to do then I'd call that out too.
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 20,092

    Quite the opposite, if Labour claimed they weren't taxing us while boasting about how much they're spending like you're trying to do then I'd call that out too.
    And I’m calling you out.
  • See what I mean?
    That you just made up bulls**t?

    Have a source for that claim?
  • And I’m calling you out.
    On what?
  • All seems pretty reasonable to me. The Labour vote is more solid than people think because a lot of voters understand that if you want to keep the Tories out there is only one game in town, at least in England. I think Labour would get around 25% of the vote and win about 245 seats to the Tories' 290 if an election were held now.
    I think they could easily get more.

    Labour succeeds in spite of Corbyn, whereas the Conservative score is more dependent on the opinion of its leader.

    Brand.
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 20,092

    That you just made up bulls**t?

    Have a source for that claim?
    If you can make up bullsh**t so can I.
  • There could be an inter-regnum, but we’ve got him for the next seven years, I reckon.

    That's almost certainly not the case.
  • If you can make up bullsh**t so can I.
    I quoted facts.
  • That's almost certainly not the case.
    Yeah probably be more like ten.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,293

    If you can make up bullsh**t so can I.
    Nah, only bulls can do that. Unicorns have a cow of a job to make anything.
  • kyf_100kyf_100 Posts: 4,953
    Noo said:

    The irony of the Lib Dems winning a majority on 35% and then implementing a program of government that isn't liked by a good proportion of the country would not be an irony. It would be a rich, fruity layer cake of irony, with irony icing, served with the most iron-y cutlery, washed down the finest glass of Chateau de Leave d'Tears.
    All those years the Tories have benefited from FPTP, and all this time people like me have been campaigning for PR, it would be the most exquisite of pleasures to see this happen.
    Until the Brexit Party wins a majority next time around...
  • NooNoo Posts: 2,380

    On what?
    The proper answer to this should be "pretty much everything you ever say". You are an abject fantasist on even good days.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,293
    kyf_100 said:

    Until the Brexit Party wins a majority next time around...
    That's a one-man ego trip, not a party. Its chances of winning a majority are the same as the chances of Joe Root scoring a century at No. 3.
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 20,092
    ydoethur said:

    Nah, only bulls can do that. Unicorns have a cow of a job to make anything.
    Touché
  • eekeek Posts: 29,687

    Make that case if you want to justify it, not dismiss it as Gallowgate did with a lie about it being fake. The truth is never fake.
    Why would I bother doing that when you would simply dismiss it as fake/.

    We get more out of it from the access to markets it provides us than we loss. As I won’t be effected and would likely profit from it personally I’m happy for Boris to have his experiment. If it gets really bad I’ll watch it from the beachside villa I’m looking at tomorrow a
  • NooNoo Posts: 2,380
    kyf_100 said:

    Until the Brexit Party wins a majority next time around...
    I was talking about a program of government, not a pogrom.
  • I'm not sure what my wife put in my supper but I'm tripping out here.

    Either that or this Pet Shop Boys concert is really happening like this.
  • Carnyx said:

    Oh, he messed up the Scottish referendum with his lies - stay in the UK to remain in the EU - and his actions the morning after were all about kicking the Scots in the teeth with the EVEL business and saying they were second class within the UK. Plenty of unfinished business there ...

    He also made a major strategic error earlier in refusing full devolution other than defence and foreign affairs, which would have defeated the status quo but also independence hands down.
    I must say, I'm increasingly unconvinced by this argument. No matter how many powers Westminster devolves to Holyrood support for independence remains very high and the demands keep coming.

    Many nationalist voters want independence precisely so they can control foreign affairs and defence policy.
  • NooNoo Posts: 2,380

    I must say, I'm increasingly unconvinced by this argument. No matter how many powers Westminster devolves to Holyrood support for independence remains very high and the demands keep coming.

    Many nationalist voters want independence precisely so they can control foreign affairs and defence policy.
    Serious question: what powers have been devolved to Scotland since the indyref?
  • Noo said:

    Serious question: what powers have been devolved to Scotland since the indyref?
    Power to set the rates and bands of income tax on non-savings and non-dividend income
    half the share of VAT receipts in Scotland being assigned to the Scottish government's budget
    and power over Air Passenger Duty and Aggregates Levy.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,293
    Noo said:

    Serious question: what powers have been devolved to Scotland since the indyref?
    I'm pretty sure the answer's 'none.' That said, I'm not sure whether the tax powers they have were transferred before but never used, or after.
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,263
    Late, I know, but enjoyable header, thanks @viewcode and well done!
  • The danger with the Lib Dems revoking without a Referendum is that its likely the Tories would then become a leave without one at a future GE and a majority Tory government could easily then after a future GE ram through a hard Brexit - and once we're out its impossible to just revoke, it becomes about rejoining.

    But that would involve the Tories taking ownership of Brexit and its consequences. They want to leave EU but with other people's fingerprints on the decision
  • kyf_100kyf_100 Posts: 4,953
    ydoethur said:

    That's a one-man ego trip, not a party. Its chances of winning a majority are the same as the chances of Joe Root scoring a century at No. 3.
    I'd say its chances become quite good if we end up in a revoke situation. Revoke, followed by five years of simmering resentment and possibly a recession during that time? Nailed on.

    Which is why revoke is the dumbest idea ever. It turns every election into a referendum on the EU. To keep us in indefinitely remainers would have to win every election, to drag us out without a deal brexiteers only have to win once.
  • NooNoo Posts: 2,380

    Power to set the rates and bands of income tax on non-savings and non-dividend income
    half the share of VAT receipts in Scotland being assigned to the Scottish government's budget
    and power over Air Passenger Duty and Aggregates Levy.
    Excellent work, thanks! Is that a complete list?
  • FrankBoothFrankBooth Posts: 10,022

    I made that precise argument on here in the weeks leading up to the vote. That that is exactly what the British electorate were intending to achieve.

    And I was complemented on it by....SeanT.
    One of the things that most angered me about Boris Johnson was when he claimed we should vote leave to get the EU to offer us a much better deal. It was as if the entire political class had no idea what they were dealing with. Referendums are not half-hearted matters and parliament's integrity was already fraying. It was an unbelievably reckless thing to say.

  • ralphmalphralphmalph Posts: 2,201
    O/T - I know there are other cricket fans on here and on Amazon Prime at the moment the film The Edge is free, Details with how England from 2009 to 2013 became the No 1 team in the world, Also deals with KP and his texts and why the rest ganged up on him. very good reviews and worth a watch,
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    edited September 2019

    I must say, I'm increasingly unconvinced by this argument. No matter how many powers Westminster devolves to Holyrood support for independence remains very high and the demands keep coming.

    Many nationalist voters want independence precisely so they can control foreign affairs and defence policy.
    Quite so. I wasn't too clear admittedly. I was thinking specifically about the context of the runup to the referendum and the lack of a max devo option in the referendum which Mr Cameron ruled out, I think, about a year before the vote. As I recall, he was decoyed into it by Mr Salmond. This was despite polling showing it would be the runaway winner in the context of the time. (And I should have added fiscal policy/the £ to defence and foreign policy BTW). That really would have secured the Union for some years. (How many years is a good question in view of what has happened since with Brexit, so perhaps it wouldn't have made that much difference on reflection. But it looked like that at the time, I can assure you.)

    But Mr Cameron's destroying the middle ground like that was a major contribution to the jump in the independence vote from about 22-25% at the Edinburgh Agreement to about 52% at the time of the great panic and the Vow by Mr Cameron et aliis.

    The failure to offer such a positive option nearly lost Scotland in 2014, and it was only saved at the price of some serious breaches of good faith.

    That reflects, arguably, on Mr Cameron's strategic thinking ...
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,263
    kyf_100 said:

    Until the Brexit Party wins a majority next time around...
    Well of course that majority LD government would first Revoke A50 and then introduce PR to prevent anyone else winning a majority on less than 50% of the vote.

    Sweet justice.

  • power over Air Passenger Duty and Aggregates Levy.

    It's virtually Devo Max by any other name.
  • nichomar said:

    Just been out with a group of pensioners who are going to cancel their donations to RNLI because of the daily mail article. Well done daily mail you really should have thought it through before putting the whole operation at risk. Don’t know if the RNLI were wrong to spend 2% overseas but it’s going to hit their financial viability.

    The Daily Mail know that nothing makes their readership angry quite like the thought of their money helping to stop brown kids from drowning.
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,263

    I'm not sure what my wife put in my supper but I'm tripping out here.

    Either that or this Pet Shop Boys concert is really happening like this.

    It's even affected your avatar!
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,096
    kyf_100 said:

    Until the Brexit Party wins a majority next time around...
    Nah, having Revoked, next law is electoral reform, and the end of FPTP.
  • Noo said:

    Excellent work, thanks! Is that a complete list?
    I cheated and copied from the BBC website.

    I'm not sure but it chimes with my understanding.
  • It's even affected your avatar!
    It's been like that for some time!
  • The Daily Mail know that nothing makes their readership angry quite like the thought of their money helping to stop brown kids from drowning.
    Aka 'cockroaches', ™Katie Hopkins.
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,263

    It's been like that for some time!
    Uh ok, I hadn't noticed before. Still - seems appropriate somehow.
  • nico67nico67 Posts: 5,042
    Looking ahead to the Supreme Court this week.

    A very complicated situation because the court could rule the prorogation was lawful in England and unlawful in Scotland .

    The court will be desperate to avoid that situation because that would mean it would have to rule it unlawful for the whole UK.

    They will try and come to a decision that can rule the same on both counts but of course that might not happen .
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,263
    Foxy said:

    Nah, having Revoked, next law is electoral reform, and the end of FPTP.
    Snap - see 9:13pm
  • Carnyx said:

    Quite so. I wasn't too clear admittedly. I was thinking specifically about the context of the runup to the referendum and the lack of a max devo option in the referendum which Mr Cameron ruled out, I think, about a year before the vote. As I recall, he was decoyed into it by Mr Salmond. This was despite polling showing it would be the runaway winner in the context of the time. (And I should have added fiscal policy/the £ to defence and foreign policy BTW). That really would have secured the Union for some years. (How many years is a good question in view of what has happened since with Brexit, so perhaps it wouldn't have made that much difference on reflection. But it looked like that at the time, I can assure you.)

    But Mr Cameron's destroying the middle ground like that was a major contribution to the jump in the independence vote from about 22-25% at the Edinburgh Agreement to about 52% at the time of the great panic and the Vow by Mr Cameron et aliis.

    The failure to offer such a positive option nearly lost Scotland in 2014, and it was only saved at the price of some serious breaches of good faith.

    That reflects, arguably, on Mr Cameron's strategic thinking ...
    Devo Max is something which we can (largely) all agree on in the abstract is a good idea but actually probably wouldn't move the dial either which way if it actually happened.

    I expect a constitutional convention leading to so co-federal decision making powers (weighted) across Westminster, Holyrood, Stormont and Cardiff Bay on foreign and trade policy matters might provide a better answer.
  • NooNoo Posts: 2,380
    Foxy said:

    Nah, having Revoked, next law is electoral reform, and the end of FPTP.
    It's important to weight up that some people will be unhappy about this.

    On the one hand, revoke and then PR would make me very happy, so that's a reason to do the above.
    On the other hand, it would make some Conservatives extremely unhappy. So that's also a reason to do it.
  • nichomarnichomar Posts: 7,483

    Aka 'cockroaches', ™Katie Hopkins.
    But by this short sighted desire for headlines they could actually ‘sink’ the whole operation
  • RogerRoger Posts: 20,386
    HYUFD said:

    This policy will split the Remainer vote though, revoke with the LDs for die hard Remainers is a better option than referendum on a Labour Brexit with Corbyn.

    While the Leaver vote was split between Deal with May or No Deal with the Brexit Party, Boris has largely united it behind the Tories on a Brexit with a Deal or No Deal platform.

    So the main winner today under FPTP is Boris
    lol!! Well you could have knocked me down with a feather!
  • One of the things that most angered me about Boris Johnson was when he claimed we should vote leave to get the EU to offer us a much better deal. It was as if the entire political class had no idea what they were dealing with. Referendums are not half-hearted matters and parliament's integrity was already fraying. It was an unbelievably reckless thing to say.

    He had a good precedent from the rejections of previous EU treaties from other member states.
  • BarnesianBarnesian Posts: 9,057
    edited September 2019
    kyf_100 said:

    Until the Brexit Party wins a majority next time around...
    IF the LibDems got a majority I hope they would implement PR asap for three reasons:

    1. It is the right thing to do.

    2. It has been LibDem policy forever and it would be extremely hypocritical to change it for party advantage.

    3. Most important. It would remove the possibility of a government with 35% support implementing policy that is opposed by 65% - including a Faragist party crashing us out of the EU. That would need at least 50% support in a PR parliament.

    In the meantime, the LibDems will play by the current FPTP rules including implementing policy on a majority obtained with a 35% vote share. That's what the other players do.

    EDIT Snaps 9:13 9:16 9:21
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 24,116

    Late, I know, but enjoyable header, thanks @viewcode and well done!

    Thank you... :)
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,263
    Out of interest, what were the odds of Macron becoming French president a year before he won the French election?
  • kyf_100kyf_100 Posts: 4,953
    Barnesian said:



    3. Most important. It would remove the possibility of a government with 35% support implementing policy that is opposed by 65% - including a Faragist party crashing us out of the EU. That would need at least 50% support in a PR parliament.

    At last, we're being honest.

    Let's abuse the system to make sure leavers never get anywhere near power.

    Let's overturn the result of a referendum in which over 50% of people voted to leave, using a mandate taken from just 35% of the population, then let's change the law to prevent anyone from ever doing the same thing again.

    Remainer "democracy" in action.
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,263
    Scott_P said:
    Great (as in awful) photo of Boris. :lol:
  • nichomar said:

    But by this short sighted desire for headlines they could actually ‘sink’ the whole operation
    Do you think they give a shit? They want the headlines and to spread a bit more of their hate.
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,263
    Barnesian said:

    IF the LibDems got a majority I hope they would implement PR asap for three reasons:

    1. It is the right thing to do.

    2. It has been LibDem policy forever and it would be extremely hypocritical to change it for party advantage.

    3. Most important. It would remove the possibility of a government with 35% support implementing policy that is opposed by 65% - including a Faragist party crashing us out of the EU. That would need at least 50% support in a PR parliament.

    In the meantime, the LibDems will play by the current FPTP rules including implementing policy on a majority obtained with a 35% vote share. That's what the other players do.

    EDIT Snaps 9:13 9:16 9:21
    Great minds!
  • To be honest, they're both dickheads and their rhetoric is as silly as the others.

    It takes one to know one.
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,263
    kyf_100 said:

    At last, we're being honest.

    Let's abuse the system to make sure leavers never get anywhere near power.

    Let's overturn the result of a referendum in which over 50% 37.5% of people voted to leave, using a mandate taken from just 35% of the population, then let's change the law to prevent anyone from ever doing the same thing again.

    Remainer "democracy" in action.
    FTFY
  • StereotomyStereotomy Posts: 4,092
    nichomar said:

    But by this short sighted desire for headlines they could actually ‘sink’ the whole operation
    You seriously think this is because they haven't "thought it through"? It's an entirely calculated decision
  • kyf_100kyf_100 Posts: 4,953
    Foxy said:

    Nah, having Revoked, next law is electoral reform, and the end of FPTP.
    Neatly ignoring the fact that Con+UKIP was 49.4% in 2015 and Con+BXP is still polling around the 50% mark. An amount I presume would be higher if the establishment stitch up you propose was allowed to happen.

  • I do hope Guy Verhofstad extends his stay, and continues to offer more humorous barbs on a frequent basis. Any photographs of him and Jo Swinson having a good chuckle about Britain's many inadequacies would be particularly good.
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,263
    edited September 2019

    To be honest, they're both dickheads and their rhetoric is as silly as the others.

    It takes one to know one.
    "It takes one to know one" is a ludicrously infantile expression and plainly not true (can only a criminal spot a criminal, a liar spot a liar or a dickhead spot a dickhead?)

    Guy Verohofstadt is a towering giant compared with most UK politicians.
This discussion has been closed.