Judging by today’s front pages the prospect for a deal on the UK’s withdrawal from the EU look better than ever. Certainly Johnson’s meeting with his Irish counterpart on the Wirral yesterday looks very promising but at the moment we do not know exactly what concessions have been made and whether that will be acceptable to the DUP.
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Nah, if the Irish are happy with it, that should do the EU too. No futher extensions and put the MPs' feet to the fire. Make them do what they pledged to their voters they'd do - deliver Brexit.
The issue here is how you get it through parliament. If the Tories and the DUP are solid they should easily be able to get enough ex-Cons and Lab leavers to pass what they want as is, but if not they'll need to compromise, and only known way to get a majority in those circumstances is to whip for a confirmatory referendum.
I Deal+Referendum is much easier for a GNU to pass than the Tories: Labour would be pretty solid if Corbyn whipped for it, and they'd also get LD and Nat and most of the ex-Cons which should get them over the edge on its own, added to which they'd get a few moderate Cons too.
So what can we deduce ? 1. Boris has made his big move 2. It's not implausible enough to have been instantly blown up. 2. It's implausible enough to have triggered 12 + hours of behind the scenes British hagling.
What does it look like ? We don't know but hidden in plain sight is Boris is hardening the future relationship to buy ERG support but softening the NI arrangements to buy EU support. Which leaves us with how far under the bus the DUP are prepared to be thrown. And hiw repelled Labour MPs are by the hardness of the PD compared to May's.
We talk of three dimensional Chess but this is three dimensional tight rope walking where you can fall up as well as down. Everything in the current House of Commons that buts extra support repels someone else. But it's slso Chemistry as well as Physics.
It's curious, most curious, that those now opposed to a confirmatory referendum are the ones who incessantly bleat on and on about respecting democracy. If it wasn't all so disastrous for the state of this country it might be funny.
Confirmatory referendum will settle it. We can decide if we want to leave on the agreed terms, or remain.
Theo Paphitis, who is a Leaver, explains this for the benefit of the likes of MM and the other anti-democratic headbangers on here:
https://twitter.com/RemainerNow/status/1182421985730682880?s=20
Deal / Remain or Deal / No Deal ?
Brexit was a stupid idea. Can it. But either way, the people need to decide on the t&c's of a deal. And if the people do decide to accept the deal, then as Theo Paphitis says, we leave the next day.
Deal vs Remain
I've thought about this a lot and you cannot offer to the people something so manifestly disastrous as No Deal. Leave that to the headbangers in the BXP who either don't care about stuffing up the country or who are too ignorant to realise it.
If there is a new proposal and it can pass here and in the EU then fine. I have my doubts, given the silence from our representatives in this but, as we all have, I’ve been wrong before. Let’s see what develops - I wouldn’t put it past Johnson that he told Varadkar any old bollocks just to make him more liked.
1) Leo Varadkar really cares about this stuff; and
2) Boris Johnson doesn't care at all about this stuff.
Possible compromises. 1. Rally behind Kyle/Wilson 2. Pass the deal but slowly forcing Boris to breach the 31/10 deadline.
So you are against our MPs implementing democracy?
Better to just deal, vote it through the HoC and frame any further discussions on the topic as headbangers from either side.
When Boris Johnson or Dominic Cummings eventually break cover, we will know much more.
and keep repeating until some Deal passes.
Johnson's intention was that this is hammered out in a Canada style FTA over a few months transition. This kind of FTA, including the Canada one, takes a decade to agree, if it ever reaches agreement at all. The only possible quick deals I think are:
1. Minimal change (Vassal State)
2. Minimal agreement (equivalent to No Deal)
3. Concede on every counterparty demand
Although people are desperate for resolution, I suspect this won't look like it.
Mr. Mark, the EU might want a referendum because it resolves matters one way or another.
Leaving it to Parliament greatly enhances the chances of things returning to endless procrastination.
The problem would be that Farage/Banks would almost certainly campaign against it/boycott it regardless so Boris would need all the moderate Leave vote with him (35-40%), narrow the extreme Leave <10% and then win over at least a quarter of previous Remainers (12-15%+) on a democratic “respect the vote” platform. Votes for 16 year olds and votes for EU citizens the other way probably won’t be decisive.
Do’able, but high stakes.
This surely cant be happening....
Can it?
It’s there to prevent “no deal”. With no deal prevented by having a deal I’m afraid it’s back to fighting like ferrets in a sack over normal business.
http://www.asahi.com/ajw/articles/AJ201910100070.html
All noise from no 10 is for a reason - even if it is sometimes just to troll remainers.
I have no idea if the ERG will decide to cash in their chips and vote for the Johnson Deal (assuming the details are finalised with the EU). Some of them may still believe that they can win a general election on No Deal and therefore vote against.
However, if they all vote with Johnson I think he will have the numbers.
Remember, many Remainers, both on here and in parliament, are also / have also been pro-delivery of Brexit in line with the referendum. I cheered at the Draft Understanding, at May's deal, declared them a triumph, and still believe they sewed the eye of the needle very well on the negotiation track. I suspect Boris's new way has multiple fracture points and it looks bad to me, but let's have some details emerge first.
If there is a new agreement with the EU and it’s relatively palatable then a lot of soul searching has to happen in the extreme elements of this rebel alliance.
They’re there to prevent no deal. We ll have a deal. If they continue to frustrate and obstruct then it’ll devolve into simple party politics and it’ll lose any claims to virtue it may have had.
The ERG aren’t the ones calling for a deal, so can legitimately reject it (from their perspective). However most are realistic enough to appreciate no deal is exceedingly unlikely and maybe swallow it.
"I’d much prefer a workable deal."
I think you'd prefer to Remain, but I accept you'd prefer a deal to no-deal.
All I'd like to know is when do we stop paying the £10 billion or so annually. A comprehensive trade deal is an obvious advantage to all, but it's the gradual political union that makes me vote Leave. It is not an essential add-on, it is a political aim that is added.
Mutual co-operation between countries can have a cost, but a pick and mix which retains sovereignty would be my ideal.
This morning I am cautiously optimistic and slightly relieved.
What's this panic you speak of?
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/politics/2019/10/10/jeremy-corbyn-refuses-commit-immediate-election-boris-johnson/
https://twitter.com/TheViewFromLL2/status/1182450534004989952
Details legislation is for Parliament
Treaties are for the executive subject to parliamentary oversight
Maybe the lack of No Deal has forced Johnson to find a deal? He is perhaps less willing to resign to avoid asking for an extension than HYUFD has suggested.
"So it's simple: obey the law, take no-deal off the table and then let's have the election.""
https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-politics-49998384
Whether you win your bet or not, I don't know.
With all due respect you’re not a dispassionate observer.
Why compromise now, when they're so close to winning?
The overwhelming vibe I am getting this morning is "ERG. Don't Fuck this up. Again"
So we'll need the wonders in parliament to decide if they like Boris' detail or not.
Relatedly their memberships won't necessarily be supportive of Boris in this situation.
If they get a any type of Brexit they should be grateful and push for a fuller fat version if they think the electorate has the stomach for, or is gullible enough to swallow it.
Look on the bright side: at least we don't have bipedal nuclear-armed tanks and insane hyper-violent cyborg ninjas.
Either way, it was a shoddy way to run a referendum even if you ignore possible irregularities relating to hostile government interference, and the downright lies and disinformation that was propogated.
https://flavible.co.uk/userprediction/gb/32.1/23.9/20.6/13.4/3.7/4/0.3/1
http://britainelects.com/
This suggests tactical voting is going to be super important, and that any result based on national polls is going to be really difficult to predict. I can't find any constituency level polling atm, so maybe with some of that it would look different, but who knows.
All of my friends and acquaintances who voted leave are also none of these things.
Likewise my friends who voted Remian are not UK hating, federalist traitors.
I’m completely for compromise. But compromise has been torpedoed by extremists on both sides. Added to which the search for compromise is, well compromised, by those wearing such anti-Boris coloured spectacles they’re blinded in their hatred and fail to accept compromise when it comes along.
All leavers aren’t nutcases. And all remainers aren’t conspiring traitors. When we finally realise this and accept it then we might start to put this country back together.
Penistone & Stocksbridge: Remain 39.3%
You can see the attraction of the move.
Also worth noting that at GE2017 Brady lost vote share, against the national tide for the Conservatives. Clearly a Brexit effect involved.
Parliament is subservient to the voters not their master