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politicalbetting.com » Blog Archive » A Very English Vice

SystemSystem Posts: 11,020
edited September 2019 in General

imagepoliticalbetting.com » Blog Archive » A Very English Vice

Where would we be without hypocrisy? It may have been described (by a Frenchman, unsurprisingly) as “the tribute vice pays to virtue” but a life of complete virtue would be, frankly, intolerable.

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    DavidLDavidL Posts: 51,282
    Another entertaining post @Cyclefree Many thanks
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    Bringing back the NI backstop is interesting to game through.

    Farage and the DUP would furiously denounce the betrayal, and I guess if Boris did the matter of confidence thing again he'd lose a bunch of Tory MPs and their otherwise safe seats to BXP.

    I think Corbyn would take that opportunity to VONC for a new election. I assume he'd whip against the WA again, he wouldn't want to hand Boris a victory like that going into the election.
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    noneoftheabovenoneoftheabove Posts: 20,736
    edited September 2019
    DavidL said:

    And there is yet more hypocrisy to come. Any deal that Boris manages to bring back from the EU will be voted down by the rampant remainer majority. They love to campaign against no deal but what they really mean is that we don't leave because literally no deal is acceptable to them.

    For me the Bercow resignation announcement was beyond hypocrisy and bordering on odious. Parliament supposedly being dissolved against its will and with insufficient time to debate even longer the agonies of Brexit spends 80 odd minutes of its last day praising someone who has done so much damage to the institution that he was appointed to as well as behaving disgracefully towards his staff. But some of the speeches were hypocrisy at its finest.

    "Literally" no deal is acceptable to them? You are clearly an intelligent poster, why post things you know not to be true?

    230 Labour MPs voted for Customs Union Brexit
    32 SNP MPs voted for Common Market 2.0
    Nearly all Conservative remainers, rebels and loyalists alike, voted for Mays deal

    All that leaves is a few stragglers, LDs, CUK and the ERG who will not vote for Brexit.

    The remainer majority of MPs have proven individually would accept their preferred type of Brexit. The issue is they cannot collectively agree on it because their party leaderships on both sides are more interested in playing games.
  • Options
    malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 41,962
    DavidL said:

    And there is yet more hypocrisy to come. Any deal that Boris manages to bring back from the EU will be voted down by the rampant remainer majority. They love to campaign against no deal but what they really mean is that we don't leave because literally no deal is acceptable to them.

    For me the Bercow resignation announcement was beyond hypocrisy and bordering on odious. Parliament supposedly being dissolved against its will and with insufficient time to debate even longer the agonies of Brexit spends 80 odd minutes of its last day praising someone who has done so much damage to the institution that he was appointed to as well as behaving disgracefully towards his staff. But some of the speeches were hypocrisy at its finest.

    How do you compare 80 minutes to Boris's unlawful 5 weeks. Bercow has tried his best to stop these evil Tories wrecking the country.
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    edmundintokyoedmundintokyo Posts: 17,150
    edited September 2019
    Maybe he does a dual track approach and say here's the WA + NI backstop, but if that fails, I'll run on No Deal and form a pact with Farage. But why would Farage trust him, unless he got lots of seats out of it to keep the Tories honest? Boris is already losing Tory Remainia to the LibDems, does he want to carve off a chunk for BXP at the other end too? I take it Farage wouldn't be satisfied with just a free run at Labour seats, since the most BXP-curious places are held by Con. And if you're going into a pact with BXP, that makes the threat to remove the whip from Tories in leaver seats singularly unterrifying...
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    CD13CD13 Posts: 6,351
    Mr noneoftheabove,

    "The issue is they cannot collectively agree on it because their party leaderships on both sides are more interested in playing games."

    But that can't be true. Surely MPs are sent as representatives not as delegates? That's has been their cry?

    Surely they're not just puppets of whoever is their leader at the time?

    If so, wouldn't it be better if they were puppets of the electorate?
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    moonshinemoonshine Posts: 5,244

    Bringing back the NI backstop is interesting to game through.

    Farage and the DUP would furiously denounce the betrayal, and I guess if Boris did the matter of confidence thing again he'd lose a bunch of Tory MPs and their otherwise safe seats to BXP.

    I think Corbyn would take that opportunity to VONC for a new election. I assume he'd whip against the WA again, he wouldn't want to hand Boris a victory like that going into the election.

    What politicians say and what they do and all that.

    But Boris used the Facebook q&a (preselected questions obvs) to specifically refute that he intends a Northern Ireland only backstop.

    Common agri rules on the island of Ireland makes obvious sense and maybe the DUP have now agreed to this. At a big picture level this is all you really need, unless you think Toyota and Apple are going to smuggle goods over the border to arbitrage tariff differentials. At a smaller scale, the IRA and other criminal gangs already make good business doing cross border VAT and duty smuggling. Adding tariffs to the game isn’t going to change much.

    It is such a solvable problem if there’s common goodwill that it’s actually become a crushingly tedious argument.
  • Options
    malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 41,962
    LOL, Tuba is well named. It does not safeguard 2500 jobs in Scotland, it will likely be a net loss more like.
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    GideonWiseGideonWise Posts: 1,123
    Remain MPs may have voted for a few hypothetical deals just as they voted for Article 50 to be triggered. But as soon as any real deal appears, they will pivot and vote it down no matter what.
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    MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 50,119
    edited September 2019
    DavidL said:

    And there is yet more hypocrisy to come. Any deal that Boris manages to bring back from the EU will be voted down by the rampant remainer majority. They love to campaign against no deal but what they really mean is that we don't leave because literally no deal is acceptable to them.

    For me the Bercow resignation announcement was beyond hypocrisy and bordering on odious. Parliament supposedly being dissolved against its will and with insufficient time to debate even longer the agonies of Brexit spends 80 odd minutes of its last day praising someone who has done so much damage to the institution that he was appointed to as well as behaving disgracefully towards his staff. But some of the speeches were hypocrisy at its finest.

    I say again. Boris gets a deal in October. It marks the point of maximum frustration of the EU. "This far - and no further" the EU will say. They back that up with a firm commitment - no more extensions. Piss or get off the pot, UK.

    So Boris comes back to Parliament with his Deal. It requires a NI-only backstop. The DUP will be grumpy, but bought off with Freeport status for the whole of NI together with a feasability study for a direct bridge/tunnel combo to Scotland (note: to be funded by the UK Govt. - so long as Scotland is still in the UK.)

    It willl then come to the Parliamentary showdown - Boris's Deal or No Deal. The ERG might be pissed. But this is where Boris plays the loyalty card: Boris's Deal is a confidence vote too - if they vote against it, they lose the Whip. They can join Grieve and all in the wilderness.

    The Benn Act is made irrelevent by the EU. But relevent to domestic politics, in terms of how all those who voted for Benn did so because they - supposedly - were railing against the horrors of No Deal. (And no, not that they wanted to kill Brexit. No sirree. Not at all....) The Benn Brigade MIGHT show their true colours and try to have a vote on revoke. It will fail. So now, after saying how No Deal is impossible to inflict on the people of the UK, they will have little option but to support the Boris Deal.

    Boris gets a big bounce for sorting Brexit. The Labour Party will try desperately to prevent an election. But by then, there will be little to stop the SNP and the LibDems going for one. Corbyn will be exposed as The Man Who Couldn't Stop Brexit. He gets hammered.

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    PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 75,926

    DavidL said:

    And there is yet more hypocrisy to come. Any deal that Boris manages to bring back from the EU will be voted down by the rampant remainer majority. They love to campaign against no deal but what they really mean is that we don't leave because literally no deal is acceptable to them.

    For me the Bercow resignation announcement was beyond hypocrisy and bordering on odious. Parliament supposedly being dissolved against its will and with insufficient time to debate even longer the agonies of Brexit spends 80 odd minutes of its last day praising someone who has done so much damage to the institution that he was appointed to as well as behaving disgracefully towards his staff. But some of the speeches were hypocrisy at its finest.

    I say again. Boris gets a deal in October. It marks the point of maximum frustration of the EU. "This far - and no further" the EU will say. They back that up with a firm commitment - no more extensions. Piss or get off the pot, UK.

    So Boris comes back to Parliament with his Deal. It requires a NI-only backstop. The DUP will be grumpy, but bought off with Freeport status for the whole of NI together with a feasability study for a direct bridge/tunnel combo to Scotland (note: to be funded by the UK Govt. - so long as Scotland is still in the UK.)

    It willl then come to the Parliamentary showdown - Boris's Deal or No Deal. The ERG might be pissed. But this is where Boris plays the loyalty card: Boris's Deal is a confidence vote too - if they vote against it, they lose the Whip. They can join Grieve and all in the wilderness.

    The Benn Act is made irrelevent by the EU. But relevent to domestic politics, in terms of how all those who voted for Benn did so because they - supposedly - were railing against the horrors of No Deal. (And no, not that they wanted to kill Brexit. No sirree. Not at all....) The Benn Brigade MIGHT show their true colours and try to have a vote on revoke. It will fail. So now, after saying how No Deal is impossible to inflict on the people of the UK, they will have little option but to support the Boris Deal.

    Boris gets a big bounce for sorting Brexit. The Labour Party will try desperately to prevent an election. But by then, there will be little to stop the SNP and the LibDems going for one. Corbyn will be exposed as The Man Who Couldn't Stop Brexit. He gets hammered.

    Do you write fiction too ?
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    FPT
    eristdoof said:

    You often hear in the UK news: "In an anouncement today xxx will say yyy"
    I find this really bizarre, and I have never heard this in Germany.
    They might say that "xxx is making an anouncemant later" or speculate what yyy might be, but this prereporting is a bit silly.

    If Boris Johnson’s speech last week had been accurately prereported, instead of the quotes that were published, it would have been: “Boris Johnson will today ramble on about the police caution.”
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    DavidL said:

    And there is yet more hypocrisy to come. Any deal that Boris manages to bring back from the EU will be voted down by the rampant remainer majority. They love to campaign against no deal but what they really mean is that we don't leave because literally no deal is acceptable to them.

    For me the Bercow resignation announcement was beyond hypocrisy and bordering on odious. Parliament supposedly being dissolved against its will and with insufficient time to debate even longer the agonies of Brexit spends 80 odd minutes of its last day praising someone who has done so much damage to the institution that he was appointed to as well as behaving disgracefully towards his staff. But some of the speeches were hypocrisy at its finest.

    "Literally" no deal is acceptable to them? You are clearly an intelligent poster, why post things you know not to be true?

    230 Labour MPs voted for Customs Union Brexit
    32 SNP MPs voted for Common Market 2.0
    Nearly all Conservative remainers, rebels and loyalists alike, voted for Mays deal

    All that leaves is a few stragglers, LDs, CUK and the ERG who will not vote for Brexit.

    The remainer majority of MPs have proven individually would accept their preferred type of Brexit. The issue is they cannot collectively agree on it because their party leaderships on both sides are more interested in playing games.
    The ERG is the problem because in all their years campaigning for Brexit, they have never developed a consensus view of what it might look like. Ditto Farage. This is why Cameron, and then May, should first have set up a commission to establish a proper Brexit. Not as a device to dish the Leavers but simply to force them to think about what they were asking for. Each ERG member has their own unicorn.
  • Options
    MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 50,119
    Pulpstar said:

    DavidL said:

    And there is yet more hypocrisy to come. Any deal that Boris manages to bring back from the EU will be voted down by the rampant remainer majority. They love to campaign against no deal but what they really mean is that we don't leave because literally no deal is acceptable to them.

    For me the Bercow resignation announcement was beyond hypocrisy and bordering on odious. Parliament supposedly being dissolved against its will and with insufficient time to debate even longer the agonies of Brexit spends 80 odd minutes of its last day praising someone who has done so much damage to the institution that he was appointed to as well as behaving disgracefully towards his staff. But some of the speeches were hypocrisy at its finest.

    I say again. Boris gets a deal in October. It marks the point of maximum frustration of the EU. "This far - and no further" the EU will say. They back that up with a firm commitment - no more extensions. Piss or get off the pot, UK.

    So Boris comes back to Parliament with his Deal. It requires a NI-only backstop. The DUP will be grumpy, but bought off with Freeport status for the whole of NI together with a feasability study for a direct bridge/tunnel combo to Scotland (note: to be funded by the UK Govt. - so long as Scotland is still in the UK.)

    It willl then come to the Parliamentary showdown - Boris's Deal or No Deal. The ERG might be pissed. But this is where Boris plays the loyalty card: Boris's Deal is a confidence vote too - if they vote against it, they lose the Whip. They can join Grieve and all in the wilderness.

    The Benn Act is made irrelevent by the EU. But relevent to domestic politics, in terms of how all those who voted for Benn did so because they - supposedly - were railing against the horrors of No Deal. (And no, not that they wanted to kill Brexit. No sirree. Not at all....) The Benn Brigade MIGHT show their true colours and try to have a vote on revoke. It will fail. So now, after saying how No Deal is impossible to inflict on the people of the UK, they will have little option but to support the Boris Deal.

    Boris gets a big bounce for sorting Brexit. The Labour Party will try desperately to prevent an election. But by then, there will be little to stop the SNP and the LibDems going for one. Corbyn will be exposed as The Man Who Couldn't Stop Brexit. He gets hammered.

    Do you write fiction too ?
    Yes. But this is how Brexit plays out.
  • Options
    TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 41,298
    DavidL said:

    And there is yet more hypocrisy to come. Any deal that Boris manages to bring back from the EU will be voted down by the rampant remainer majority. They love to campaign against no deal but what they really mean is that we don't leave because literally no deal is acceptable to them.

    For me the Bercow resignation announcement was beyond hypocrisy and bordering on odious. Parliament supposedly being dissolved against its will and with insufficient time to debate even longer the agonies of Brexit spends 80 odd minutes of its last day praising someone who has done so much damage to the institution that he was appointed to as well as behaving disgracefully towards his staff. But some of the speeches were hypocrisy at its finest.

    "rampant remainer majority"

    Listen to yourself.
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    CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 39,729
    edited September 2019
    malcolmg said:

    LOL, Tuba is well named. It does not safeguard 2500 jobs in Scotland, it will likely be a net loss more like.
    Hmm, too early to judge, despite the apparent attempt to get people to draw the conclusion that all the jobs will be in Fife. The Grauniad news report doesn't say where the jobs are, and given the prefabrication techniques likely to be involved, they could be all over the UK. Moreover, wherever the hulls are fabricated, much of the value will reside in engineering and electronics equipment produced elsewhere than Rosyth and possibly even overseas. We had similar announcements of £xm of destroyers and frigates being promised for the Clyde in indyref 1 but a lot of the value was elsewhere - and they were mostly cancelled after 2014. What is proposed today is nothing like as much, and I see it is being hinted that BAe who did the Daring class on the Clyde didn't get the contract.

    Edit: BBC confirms (a) to be produced across the UK (which is entirely to be expected in the nature of such things) and (b) very cheap - at least at present - compared to the sort of thing that was to hjave been built before.
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    DavidL said:

    And there is yet more hypocrisy to come. Any deal that Boris manages to bring back from the EU will be voted down by the rampant remainer majority. They love to campaign against no deal but what they really mean is that we don't leave because literally no deal is acceptable to them.

    For me the Bercow resignation announcement was beyond hypocrisy and bordering on odious. Parliament supposedly being dissolved against its will and with insufficient time to debate even longer the agonies of Brexit spends 80 odd minutes of its last day praising someone who has done so much damage to the institution that he was appointed to as well as behaving disgracefully towards his staff. But some of the speeches were hypocrisy at its finest.

    "Literally" no deal is acceptable to them? You are clearly an intelligent poster, why post things you know not to be true?

    230 Labour MPs voted for Customs Union Brexit
    32 SNP MPs voted for Common Market 2.0
    Nearly all Conservative remainers, rebels and loyalists alike, voted for Mays deal

    All that leaves is a few stragglers, LDs, CUK and the ERG who will not vote for Brexit.

    The remainer majority of MPs have proven individually would accept their preferred type of Brexit. The issue is they cannot collectively agree on it because their party leaderships on both sides are more interested in playing games.
    The ERG is the problem because in all their years campaigning for Brexit, they have never developed a consensus view of what it might look like. Ditto Farage. This is why Cameron, and then May, should first have set up a commission to establish a proper Brexit. Not as a device to dish the Leavers but simply to force them to think about what they were asking for. Each ERG member has their own unicorn.
    The ERG have an oxymoronic name. they are not European, they don't do much research and they have varying ideas, so not really a group. Actually, let's just remove the oxy bit!
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    DavidL said:

    And there is yet more hypocrisy to come. Any deal that Boris manages to bring back from the EU will be voted down by the rampant remainer majority. They love to campaign against no deal but what they really mean is that we don't leave because literally no deal is acceptable to them.

    For me the Bercow resignation announcement was beyond hypocrisy and bordering on odious. Parliament supposedly being dissolved against its will and with insufficient time to debate even longer the agonies of Brexit spends 80 odd minutes of its last day praising someone who has done so much damage to the institution that he was appointed to as well as behaving disgracefully towards his staff. But some of the speeches were hypocrisy at its finest.

    "Literally" no deal is acceptable to them? You are clearly an intelligent poster, why post things you know not to be true?

    230 Labour MPs voted for Customs Union Brexit
    32 SNP MPs voted for Common Market 2.0
    Nearly all Conservative remainers, rebels and loyalists alike, voted for Mays deal

    All that leaves is a few stragglers, LDs, CUK and the ERG who will not vote for Brexit.

    The remainer majority of MPs have proven individually would accept their preferred type of Brexit. The issue is they cannot collectively agree on it because their party leaderships on both sides are more interested in playing games.
    You’re missing the point. Leavers are allowed opinions. Remainers are not.
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    MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 50,119
    edited September 2019

    DavidL said:

    And there is yet more hypocrisy to come. Any deal that Boris manages to bring back from the EU will be voted down by the rampant remainer majority. They love to campaign against no deal but what they really mean is that we don't leave because literally no deal is acceptable to them.

    For me the Bercow resignation announcement was beyond hypocrisy and bordering on odious. Parliament supposedly being dissolved against its will and with insufficient time to debate even longer the agonies of Brexit spends 80 odd minutes of its last day praising someone who has done so much damage to the institution that he was appointed to as well as behaving disgracefully towards his staff. But some of the speeches were hypocrisy at its finest.

    "Literally" no deal is acceptable to them? You are clearly an intelligent poster, why post things you know not to be true?

    230 Labour MPs voted for Customs Union Brexit
    32 SNP MPs voted for Common Market 2.0
    Nearly all Conservative remainers, rebels and loyalists alike, voted for Mays deal

    All that leaves is a few stragglers, LDs, CUK and the ERG who will not vote for Brexit.

    The remainer majority of MPs have proven individually would accept their preferred type of Brexit. The issue is they cannot collectively agree on it because their party leaderships on both sides are more interested in playing games.
    The ERG is the problem because in all their years campaigning for Brexit, they have never developed a consensus view of what it might look like. Ditto Farage. This is why Cameron, and then May, should first have set up a commission to establish a proper Brexit. Not as a device to dish the Leavers but simply to force them to think about what they were asking for. Each ERG member has their own unicorn.
    Baker will vote against a Boris deal. But not many more. They like their job as an MP too much to walk away. They will convince themselves they can best protect Brexit from inside the House, or some such self-serving stuff.
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    Remain MPs may have voted for a few hypothetical deals just as they voted for Article 50 to be triggered. But as soon as any real deal appears, they will pivot and vote it down no matter what.

    Mr Wise, not really an apt name, because you are talking crap. Large numbers of "remain MPs voted for the WA.
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    If Boris can get a deal (and it won't be a good one due to Parliament) it will be largely on the EUs terms.

    The EU should say "here's the deal but no further extension".
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    FF43FF43 Posts: 15,711
    DavidL said:

    And there is yet more hypocrisy to come. Any deal that Boris manages to bring back from the EU will be voted down by the rampant remainer majority. They love to campaign against no deal but what they really mean is that we don't leave because literally no deal is acceptable to them.

    ....

    A question of much more relevance to Boris Johnson. He voted against and continues to oppose an actual, if partial, deal with the EU. He is making no effort to negotiate a serious alternative. He is the government and therefore responsible for delivering a deal acceptable to all stakeholders. Furthermore as a leader of the Leave campaign it's reasonable to expect them to devise a workable plan for achieving their objective, which after nearly four years they have utterly failed to do.
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    Scott_PScott_P Posts: 51,453
    https://twitter.com/REWearmouth/status/1172048163752087553

    Expect a clarification from Dom Number 10 in 5, 4, 3, 2, ...
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    Scott_P said:

    https://twitter.com/REWearmouth/status/1172048163752087553

    Expect a clarification from Dom Number 10 in 5, 4, 3, 2, ...

    He’s referring to the government, not Britain.
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    DavidL said:

    And there is yet more hypocrisy to come. Any deal that Boris manages to bring back from the EU will be voted down by the rampant remainer majority. They love to campaign against no deal but what they really mean is that we don't leave because literally no deal is acceptable to them.

    For me the Bercow resignation announcement was beyond hypocrisy and bordering on odious. Parliament supposedly being dissolved against its will and with insufficient time to debate even longer the agonies of Brexit spends 80 odd minutes of its last day praising someone who has done so much damage to the institution that he was appointed to as well as behaving disgracefully towards his staff. But some of the speeches were hypocrisy at its finest.

    Mr L. I thought you had started to become sensible. Let us repeat again, a majority of "remain" MPs voted for WA. Boris The Incompetent did not, as did Lord Snooty Rees Mogg. Save your ire for the fuckwits who could have voted for that instead of criticising those that were prepared to compromise.
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    DavidL said:

    And there is yet more hypocrisy to come. Any deal that Boris manages to bring back from the EU will be voted down by the rampant remainer majority. They love to campaign against no deal but what they really mean is that we don't leave because literally no deal is acceptable to them.

    For me the Bercow resignation announcement was beyond hypocrisy and bordering on odious. Parliament supposedly being dissolved against its will and with insufficient time to debate even longer the agonies of Brexit spends 80 odd minutes of its last day praising someone who has done so much damage to the institution that he was appointed to as well as behaving disgracefully towards his staff. But some of the speeches were hypocrisy at its finest.

    "Literally" no deal is acceptable to them? You are clearly an intelligent poster, why post things you know not to be true?

    230 Labour MPs voted for Customs Union Brexit
    32 SNP MPs voted for Common Market 2.0
    Nearly all Conservative remainers, rebels and loyalists alike, voted for Mays deal

    All that leaves is a few stragglers, LDs, CUK and the ERG who will not vote for Brexit.

    The remainer majority of MPs have proven individually would accept their preferred type of Brexit. The issue is they cannot collectively agree on it because their party leaderships on both sides are more interested in playing games.
    The ERG is the problem because in all their years campaigning for Brexit, they have never developed a consensus view of what it might look like. Ditto Farage. This is why Cameron, and then May, should first have set up a commission to establish a proper Brexit. Not as a device to dish the Leavers but simply to force them to think about what they were asking for. Each ERG member has their own unicorn.
    Baker will vote against a Boris deal. But not many more. They like their job as an MP too much to walk away. They will convince themselves they can best protect Brexit from inside the House, or some such self-serving stuff.
    I keep making the point that when Major made Maastricht a confidence motion literally zero Tory "bastard" voted against.

    While many will not be the same MPs the Venn diagram intersect of Tory sceptics OK with Maastricht (with whip threat) but not ok with the deal (with the same threat) will be tiny.
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    DavidL said:

    And there is yet more hypocrisy to come. Any deal that Boris manages to bring back from the EU will be voted down by the rampant remainer majority. They love to campaign against no deal but what they really mean is that we don't leave because literally no deal is acceptable to them.

    For me the Bercow resignation announcement was beyond hypocrisy and bordering on odious. Parliament supposedly being dissolved against its will and with insufficient time to debate even longer the agonies of Brexit spends 80 odd minutes of its last day praising someone who has done so much damage to the institution that he was appointed to as well as behaving disgracefully towards his staff. But some of the speeches were hypocrisy at its finest.

    I say again. Boris gets a deal in October. It marks the point of maximum frustration of the EU. "This far - and no further" the EU will say. They back that up with a firm commitment - no more extensions. Piss or get off the pot, UK.

    So Boris comes back to Parliament with his Deal. It requires a NI-only backstop. The DUP will be grumpy, but bought off with Freeport status for the whole of NI together with a feasability study for a direct bridge/tunnel combo to Scotland (note: to be funded by the UK Govt. - so long as Scotland is still in the UK.)

    It willl then come to the Parliamentary showdown - Boris's Deal or No Deal. The ERG might be pissed. But this is where Boris plays the loyalty card: Boris's Deal is a confidence vote too - if they vote against it, they lose the Whip. They can join Grieve and all in the wilderness.

    The Benn Act is made irrelevent by the EU. But relevent to domestic politics, in terms of how all those who voted for Benn did so because they - supposedly - were railing against the horrors of No Deal. (And no, not that they wanted to kill Brexit. No sirree. Not at all....) The Benn Brigade MIGHT show their true colours and try to have a vote on revoke. It will fail. So now, after saying how No Deal is impossible to inflict on the people of the UK, they will have little option but to support the Boris Deal.

    Boris gets a big bounce for sorting Brexit. The Labour Party will try desperately to prevent an election. But by then, there will be little to stop the SNP and the LibDems going for one. Corbyn will be exposed as The Man Who Couldn't Stop Brexit. He gets hammered.

    22 of the 30 days have elapsed with the opposite of the evidence of progress. Your faith is touching.
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    kle4kle4 Posts: 91,745
    edited September 2019

    Pulpstar said:

    DavidL said:

    And there is yet more hypocrisy to come. Any deal that est.

    I say again. Boris gets a deal in October. It marks the point of maximum frustration of the EU. "This far - and no further" the EU will say. They back that up with a firm commitment - no more extensions. Piss or get off the pot, UK.

    So Boris comes back to Parliament with his Deal. It requires a NI-only backstop. The DUP will be grumpy, but bought off with Freeport status for the whole of NI together with a feasability study for a direct bridge/tunnel combo to Scotland (note: to be funded by the UK Govt. - so long as Scotland is still in the UK.)

    It willl then come to the Parliamentary showdown - Boris's Deal or No Deal. The ERG might be pissed. But this is where Boris plays the loyalty card: Boris's Deal is a confidence vote too - if they vote against it, they lose the Whip. They can join Grieve and all in the wilderness.

    The Benn Act is made irrelevent by the EU. But relevent to domestic politics, in terms of how all those who voted for Benn did so because they - supposedly - were railing against the horrors of No Deal. (And no, not that they wanted to kill Brexit. No sirree. Not at all....) The Benn Brigade MIGHT show their true colours and try to have a vote on revoke. It will fail. So now, after saying how No Deal is impossible to inflict on the people of the UK, they will have little option but to support the Boris Deal.

    Boris gets a big bounce for sorting Brexit. The Labour Party will try desperately to prevent an election. But by then, there will be little to stop the SNP and the LibDems going for one. Corbyn will be exposed as The Man Who Couldn't Stop Brexit. He gets hammered.

    Do you write fiction too ?
    Yes. But this is how Brexit plays out.
    Boris will not dare take a path which might lead to the ERG being kicked out. They are the BXP wing of the party and as the euros proved thats the largest chunk of the party.

    Hes totally trapped. Labour will never back a Boris deal, not the 40-50 who are needed. The EU might say no more extensions but they've talked tough before and backed down, they wont slam the door like that. Without an enforced choice between deal and no deal the votes just arent there - May and Boris have never been able to convince parliament there are no other options, remain or unicorn have always seemed viable.

    So unless the EU play ball it just doesnt work and why would they do that? Frustration? I'm sure they are, but they too have played for time if they give a nice big extension this time the door is open to ref and remain, they can see the reports of any Boris plan. The Boris deal is already dead.
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    Pro_RataPro_Rata Posts: 4,811
    edited September 2019
    CD13 said:

    Mr noneoftheabove,

    "The issue is they cannot collectively agree on it because their party leaderships on both sides are more interested in playing games."

    But that can't be true. Surely MPs are sent as representatives not as delegates? That's has been their cry?

    Surely they're not just puppets of whoever is their leader at the time?

    If so, wouldn't it be better if they were puppets of the electorate?

    If you are a Labour MP, be you an unreconstructed remainer or a deliver the referendum result, the manifesto pledges you to oppose May style hard Brexit and No Deal. That manifesto counts for something.

    If you are a Conservative MP, a good deal was the aim, but the manifesto restating that No Deal is better than a Bad Deal expressedly legitimised the two way split. Many of the never No Dealers are also covered by continuing to think May's deal is a good deal and anti No Deal declarations in their own campaign literature.

    Overall, I would say, fewer than 10/650 MPs are voting unfaithfully to their party and personal manifesto positions at GE17.

    The Brexit impasse is thus extremely democratic and government should have recognised, respected and worked to square that impasse earlier, rather than try increasingly desperate attempt to bulldoze it out of the way, the exception being May's perfunctory attempt, made only after her authority to get such things through her party was shot.

    Yes, parliament has a majority of MPs who voted remain, but the @DavidL 2016 Remainer Majority is not the relevant barrier here, that is an untruth that has circled the world several times. There is a substantial majority of MPs who are sincerely pro-delivery of the base democratic mandate of the referendum , the problem is they do not carte blanche accept all forms of Brexit. It is this pro-delivery majority that has fractured, not 'Remainers'
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    Remain MPs may have voted for a few hypothetical deals just as they voted for Article 50 to be triggered. But as soon as any real deal appears, they will pivot and vote it down no matter what.

    Mr Wise, not really an apt name, because you are talking crap. Large numbers of "remain MPs voted for the WA.
    What percentage of non-Tory Remain MPs voted for the WA?

    Remain MPs either will vote down any deal or are putting party politics ahead of getting a deal. Which is it?
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    148grss148grss Posts: 3,679

    DavidL said:

    And there is yet more hypocrisy to come. Any deal that Boris manages to bring back from the EU will be voted down by the rampant remainer majority. They love to campaign against no deal but what they really mean is that we don't leave because literally no deal is acceptable to them.

    For me the Bercow resignation announcement was beyond hypocrisy and bordering on odious. Parliament supposedly being dissolved against its will and with insufficient time to debate even longer the agonies of Brexit spends 80 odd minutes of its last day praising someone who has done so much damage to the institution that he was appointed to as well as behaving disgracefully towards his staff. But some of the speeches were hypocrisy at its finest.

    I say again. Boris gets a deal in October. It marks the point of maximum frustration of the EU. "This far - and no further" the EU will say. They back that up with a firm commitment - no more extensions. Piss or get off the pot, UK.

    So Boris comes back to Parliament with his Deal. It requires a NI-only backstop. The DUP will be grumpy, but bought off with Freeport status for the whole of NI together with a feasability study for a direct bridge/tunnel combo to Scotland (note: to be funded by the UK Govt. - so long as Scotland is still in the UK.)

    It willl then come to the Parliamentary showdown - Boris's Deal or No Deal. The ERG might be pissed. But this is where Boris plays the loyalty card: Boris's Deal is a confidence vote too - if they vote against it, they lose the Whip. They can join Grieve and all in the wilderness.

    The Benn Act is made irrelevent by the EU. But relevent to domestic politics, in terms of how all those who voted for Benn did so because they - supposedly - were railing against the horrors of No Deal. (And no, not that they wanted to kill Brexit. No sirree. Not at all....) The Benn Brigade MIGHT show their true colours and try to have a vote on revoke. It will fail. So now, after saying how No Deal is impossible to inflict on the people of the UK, they will have little option but to support the Boris Deal.

    Boris gets a big bounce for sorting Brexit. The Labour Party will try desperately to prevent an election. But by then, there will be little to stop the SNP and the LibDems going for one. Corbyn will be exposed as The Man Who Couldn't Stop Brexit. He gets hammered.

    In a world where Johnson was competent, I could see that happening.

    Alas, all evidence suggests we do not live in that world.
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    If Boris can get a deal (and it won't be a good one due to Parliament) it will be largely on the EUs terms.

    The EU should say "here's the deal but no further extension".

    The best deal is the one we already have. The second best would be the WA, which large numbers of "remain" MPs (you know the ones with brains) voted for as a necessary compromise that reflected the tiny majority that Leave had (had -past tense)
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    DavidL said:

    And there is yet more hypocrisy to come. Any deal that Boris manages to bring back from the EU will be voted down by the rampant remainer majority. They love to campaign against no deal but what they really mean is that we don't leave because literally no deal is acceptable to them.

    For me the Bercow resignation announcement was beyond hypocrisy and bordering on odious. Parliament supposedly being dissolved against its will and with insufficient time to debate even longer the agonies of Brexit spends 80 odd minutes of its last day praising someone who has done so much damage to the institution that he was appointed to as well as behaving disgracefully towards his staff. But some of the speeches were hypocrisy at its finest.

    "Literally" no deal is acceptable to them? You are clearly an intelligent poster, why post things you know not to be true?

    230 Labour MPs voted for Customs Union Brexit
    32 SNP MPs voted for Common Market 2.0
    Nearly all Conservative remainers, rebels and loyalists alike, voted for Mays deal

    All that leaves is a few stragglers, LDs, CUK and the ERG who will not vote for Brexit.

    The remainer majority of MPs have proven individually would accept their preferred type of Brexit. The issue is they cannot collectively agree on it because their party leaderships on both sides are more interested in playing games.
    The ERG is the problem because in all their years campaigning for Brexit, they have never developed a consensus view of what it might look like. Ditto Farage. This is why Cameron, and then May, should first have set up a commission to establish a proper Brexit. Not as a device to dish the Leavers but simply to force them to think about what they were asking for. Each ERG member has their own unicorn.
    Baker will vote against a Boris deal. But not many more. They like their job as an MP too much to walk away. They will convince themselves they can best protect Brexit from inside the House, or some such self-serving stuff.
    I keep making the point that when Major made Maastricht a confidence motion literally zero Tory "bastard" voted against.

    While many will not be the same MPs the Venn diagram intersect of Tory sceptics OK with Maastricht (with whip threat) but not ok with the deal (with the same threat) will be tiny.
    If there had been a confidence motion, Boris Johnson would no longer be Prime Minister.
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    MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 50,119

    DavidL said:

    And there is yet more hypocrisy to come. Any deal that Boris manages to bring back from the EU will be voted down by the rampant remainer majority. They love to campaign against no deal but what they really mean is that we don't leave because literally no deal is acceptable to them.

    For me the Bercow resignation announcement was beyond hypocrisy and bordering on odious. Parliament supposedly being dissolved against its will and with insufficient time to debate even longer the agonies of Brexit spends 80 odd minutes of its last day praising someone who has done so much damage to the institution that he was appointed to as well as behaving disgracefully towards his staff. But some of the speeches were hypocrisy at its finest.

    I say again. Boris gets a deal in October. It marks the point of maximum frustration of the EU. "This far - and no further" the EU will say. They back that up with a firm commitment - no more extensions. Piss or get off the pot, UK.

    So Boris comes back to Parliament with his Deal. It requires a NI-only backstop. The DUP will be grumpy, but bought off with Freeport status for the whole of NI together with a feasability study for a direct bridge/tunnel combo to Scotland (note: to be funded by the UK Govt. - so long as Scotland is still in the UK.)

    It willl then come to the Parliamentary showdown - Boris's Deal or No Deal. The ERG might be pissed. But this is where Boris plays the loyalty card: Boris's Deal is a confidence vote too - if they vote against it, they lose the Whip. They can join Grieve and all in the wilderness.

    The Benn Act is made irrelevent by the EU. But relevent to domestic politics, in terms of how all those who voted for Benn did so because they - supposedly - were railing against the horrors of No Deal. (And no, not that they wanted to kill Brexit. No sirree. Not at all....) The Benn Brigade MIGHT show their true colours and try to have a vote on revoke. It will fail. So now, after saying how No Deal is impossible to inflict on the people of the UK, they will have little option but to support the Boris Deal.

    Boris gets a big bounce for sorting Brexit. The Labour Party will try desperately to prevent an election. But by then, there will be little to stop the SNP and the LibDems going for one. Corbyn will be exposed as The Man Who Couldn't Stop Brexit. He gets hammered.

    22 of the 30 days have elapsed with the opposite of the evidence of progress. Your faith is touching.
    When dealing with the EU, you only ever needed the last two.....
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    DavidL said:

    And there is yet more hypocrisy to come. Any deal that Boris manages to bring back from the EU will be voted down by the rampant remainer majority. They love to campaign against no deal but what they really mean is that we don't leave because literally no deal is acceptable to them.

    For me the Bercow resignation announcement was beyond hypocrisy and bordering on odious. Parliament supposedly being dissolved against its will and with insufficient time to debate even longer the agonies of Brexit spends 80 odd minutes of its last day praising someone who has done so much damage to the institution that he was appointed to as well as behaving disgracefully towards his staff. But some of the speeches were hypocrisy at its finest.

    "Literally" no deal is acceptable to them? You are clearly an intelligent poster, why post things you know not to be true?

    230 Labour MPs voted for Customs Union Brexit
    32 SNP MPs voted for Common Market 2.0
    Nearly all Conservative remainers, rebels and loyalists alike, voted for Mays deal

    All that leaves is a few stragglers, LDs, CUK and the ERG who will not vote for Brexit.

    The remainer majority of MPs have proven individually would accept their preferred type of Brexit. The issue is they cannot collectively agree on it because their party leaderships on both sides are more interested in playing games.
    The ERG is the problem because in all their years campaigning for Brexit, they have never developed a consensus view of what it might look like. Ditto Farage. This is why Cameron, and then May, should first have set up a commission to establish a proper Brexit. Not as a device to dish the Leavers but simply to force them to think about what they were asking for. Each ERG member has their own unicorn.
    Baker will vote against a Boris deal. But not many more. They like their job as an MP too much to walk away. They will convince themselves they can best protect Brexit from inside the House, or some such self-serving stuff.
    I keep making the point that when Major made Maastricht a confidence motion literally zero Tory "bastard" voted against.

    While many will not be the same MPs the Venn diagram intersect of Tory sceptics OK with Maastricht (with whip threat) but not ok with the deal (with the same threat) will be tiny.
    If there had been a confidence motion, Boris Johnson would no longer be Prime Minister.
    I am not convinced even Boris Johnson's family have his confidence. It is possible that even he does, in himself!
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    Mr. Foremain, is that accurate (most Remain MPs backing May's deal)?

    Labour didn't. The Lib Dems didn't. The SNP didn't. The DUP didn't.

    Most of the Conservative MPs did. The vast majority of the rest opposed.
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    Dura_AceDura_Ace Posts: 12,997
    A very European solution. Dutch combat management system, Danish hull and German CODAD propulsion.

    The decision was made after a thorough examination of the Navy's needs which boiled down to, "Which ship is the biggest job creation scheme for Scotland?"
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    DavidL said:

    And there is yet more hypocrisy to come. Any deal that Boris manages to bring back from the EU will be voted down by the rampant remainer majority. They love to campaign against no deal but what they really mean is that we don't leave because literally no deal is acceptable to them.

    For me the Bercow resignation announcement was beyond hypocrisy and bordering on odious. Parliament supposedly being dissolved against its will and with insufficient time to debate even longer the agonies of Brexit spends 80 odd minutes of its last day praising someone who has done so much damage to the institution that he was appointed to as well as behaving disgracefully towards his staff. But some of the speeches were hypocrisy at its finest.

    Bercow has subsumed the role of Speaker into the partisan political fray, and has only continued that by the manner of his resignation. With Harman quite content to continue in his footsteps, I think that the post is now going to transition into the overtly political roles that the speakers represent in the US Congress. It will soon be normal behaviour for parties to routinely stand candidates against a partisan speaker at a GE and to put in place 3 line whips when voting to appoint the speaker. It is a toxic legacy which all will eventually regret once the immediate political issues of today are put to one side.
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    kle4kle4 Posts: 91,745

    DavidL said:

    And there is yet more hypocrisy to come. Any deal that Boris manages to bring back from the EU will be voted down by the rampant remainer majority. They love to campaign against no deal but what they really mean is that we don't leave because literally no deal is acceptable to them.

    For me the Bercow resignation announcement was beyond hypocrisy and bordering on odious. Parliament supposedly being dissolved against its will and with insufficient time to debate even longer the agonies of Brexit spends 80 odd minutes of its last day praising someone who has done so much damage to the institution that he was appointed to as well as behaving disgracefully towards his staff. But some of the speeches were hypocrisy at its finest.

    I say again. Boris gets a deal in October. It marks the point of maximum frustration of the EU. "This far - and no further" the EU will say. They back that up with a firm commitment - no more extensions. Piss or get off the pot, UK.

    So Boris comes back to Parliament with his Deal. It requires a NI-only backstop. The DUP will be grumpy, but bought off with Freeport status for the whole of NI together with a feasability study for a direct bridge/tunnel combo to Scotland (note: to be funded by the UK Govt. - so long as Scotland is still in the UK.)

    It willl then come to the Parliamentary showdown - Boris's Deal or No Deal. The ERG might be pissed. But this is where Boris plays the loyalty card: Boris's Deal is a confidence vote too - if they vote against it, they lose the Whip. They can join Grieve and all in the wilderness.

    The Benn Act is made irrelevent by the EU. But relevent to domestic politics, in terms of how all those who voted for Benn did so because they - supposedly - were railing against the horrors of No Deal. (And no, not that they wanted to kill Brexit. No sirree. Not at all....) The Benn Brigade MIGHT show their true colours and try to have a vote on revoke. It will fail. So now, after saying how No Deal is impossible to inflict on the people of the UK, they will have little option but to support the Boris Deal.

    Boris gets a big bounce for sorting Brexit. The Labour Party will try desperately to prevent an election. But by then, there will be little to stop the SNP and the LibDems going for one. Corbyn will be exposed as The Man Who Couldn't Stop Brexit. He gets hammered.

    22 of the 30 days have elapsed with the opposite of the evidence of progress. Your faith is touching.
    When dealing with the EU, you only ever needed the last two.....
    Not useful though if they keep offering bolt on days. And brexiteer plans relying on the EU doing what we want are for the birds.
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    Dura_AceDura_Ace Posts: 12,997

    DavidL said:

    And there is yet more hypocrisy to come. Any deal that Boris manages to bring back from the EU will be voted down by the rampant remainer majority. They love to campaign against no deal but what they really mean is that we don't leave because literally no deal is acceptable to them.

    For me the Bercow resignation announcement was beyond hypocrisy and bordering on odious. Parliament supposedly being dissolved against its will and with insufficient time to debate even longer the agonies of Brexit spends 80 odd minutes of its last day praising someone who has done so much damage to the institution that he was appointed to as well as behaving disgracefully towards his staff. But some of the speeches were hypocrisy at its finest.

    I say again. Boris gets a deal in October. It marks the point of maximum frustration of the EU. "This far - and no further" the EU will say. They back that up with a firm commitment - no more extensions. Piss or get off the pot, UK.

    So Boris comes back to Parliament with his Deal. It requires a NI-only backstop. The DUP will be grumpy, but bought off with Freeport status for the whole of NI together with a feasability study for a direct bridge/tunnel combo to Scotland (note: to be funded by the UK Govt. - so long as Scotland is still in the UK.)

    It willl then come to the Parliamentary showdown - Boris's Deal or No Deal. The ERG might be pissed. But this is where Boris plays the loyalty card: Boris's Deal is a confidence vote too - if they vote against it, they lose the Whip. They can join Grieve and all in the wilderness.

    The Benn Act is made irrelevent by the EU. But relevent to domestic politics, in terms of how all those who voted for Benn did so because they - supposedly - were railing against the horrors of No Deal. (And no, not that they wanted to kill Brexit. No sirree. Not at all....) The Benn Brigade MIGHT show their true colours and try to have a vote on revoke. It will fail. So now, after saying how No Deal is impossible to inflict on the people of the UK, they will have little option but to support the Boris Deal.

    Boris gets a big bounce for sorting Brexit. The Labour Party will try desperately to prevent an election. But by then, there will be little to stop the SNP and the LibDems going for one. Corbyn will be exposed as The Man Who Couldn't Stop Brexit. He gets hammered.

    You've been wrong about everything so far in the Brexit process. This Boris fanfic will be no different.
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    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,999
    The Withdrawal Agreement with a NI only backstop until a technical solution for the Irish border might be the likeliest Brexit Deal but unless at least 30 Labour MPs vote for it to counteract DUP and ERG hardliner opposition it will not happen without a Tory majority after the next general election
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    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,999

    DavidL said:

    And there is yet more hypocrisy to come. Any deal that Boris manages to bring back from the EU will be voted down by the rampant remainer majority. They love to campaign against no deal but what they really mean is that we don't leave because literally no deal is acceptable to them.

    For me the Bercow resignation announcement was beyond hypocrisy and bordering on odious. Parliament supposedly being dissolved against its will and with insufficient time to debate even longer the agonies of Brexit spends 80 odd minutes of its last day praising someone who has done so much damage to the institution that he was appointed to as well as behaving disgracefully towards his staff. But some of the speeches were hypocrisy at its finest.

    Bercow has subsumed the role of Speaker into the partisan political fray, and has only continued that by the manner of his resignation. With Harman quite content to continue in his footsteps, I think that the post is now going to transition into the overtly political roles that the speakers represent in the US Congress. It will soon be normal behaviour for parties to routinely stand candidates against a partisan speaker at a GE and to put in place 3 line whips when voting to appoint the speaker. It is a toxic legacy which all will eventually regret once the immediate political issues of today are put to one side.
    Don't rule out my MP Dame Eleanor Laing, she is already Deputy Speaker, a Leaver but backed the Withdrawal Agreement, tough and probably brighter than Harman and a former lawyer, she is also the top Tory candidate.

    After Bercow (a Labour Speaker in all but name who himself followed Labour's Michael Martin and Betty Boothroyd) Tory and DUP MPs might feel they are due a Speaker of their own
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    HYUFD said:

    The Withdrawal Agreement with a NI only backstop until a technical solution for the Irish border might be the likeliest Brexit Deal but unless at least 30 Labour MPs vote for it to counteract DUP and ERG hardliner opposition it will not happen without a Tory majority after the next general election

    The next general election cannot now be before October 31st, so are you saying Boris Johnson will break his “do or die” promise?
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    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,999
    edited September 2019

    Remain MPs may have voted for a few hypothetical deals just as they voted for Article 50 to be triggered. But as soon as any real deal appears, they will pivot and vote it down no matter what.

    Mr Wise, not really an apt name, because you are talking crap. Large numbers of "remain MPs voted for the WA.
    What percentage of non-Tory Remain MPs voted for the WA?

    Remain MPs either will vote down any deal or are putting party politics ahead of getting a deal. Which is it?
    Lady Hermnmon and less than 10 Labour and Independent MPs I think (including ex LD Stephen Lloyd)
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    MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 50,119
    edited September 2019
    Why would the EU play ball?

    1. It gives a way to avoid an EU-wide recession.
    2. There is a new team coming in. They don't want to be dealing with this shit months and maybe years into their new term. The outgoing team can own the deal.
    3. The EU is pragmatic enough to know that Brexit delayed is not Brexit killed. It will poison UK politics and likely lead to a hard No Deal Brexit party being elected in the next couple of years. Our membership is only temporary. We might as well leave now.
    4. A grumpy UK "member" still in, with a veto over budgets etc. is too much of a pain to want to live with.
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    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,999
    edited September 2019

    Maybe he does a dual track approach and say here's the WA + NI backstop, but if that fails, I'll run on No Deal and form a pact with Farage. But why would Farage trust him, unless he got lots of seats out of it to keep the Tories honest? Boris is already losing Tory Remainia to the LibDems, does he want to carve off a chunk for BXP at the other end too? I take it Farage wouldn't be satisfied with just a free run at Labour seats, since the most BXP-curious places are held by Con. And if you're going into a pact with BXP, that makes the threat to remove the whip from Tories in leaver seats singularly unterrifying...

    Boris will keep going for Deal minus the backstop until he wins a majority plus No Deal as a last resort to ensure Brexit, if Boris wins a majority he will switch only then officially to Withdrawal Agreement and NI backstop only.

    He will not do a pact with Farage and as Yougov and Opinium and Kantar shows can win a Tory majority even with the Brexit Party on about 12 to 13% as Cameron did in 2015 with UKIP on 12% (remember Farage is taking Labour votes too now as he did in 2015)
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    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,999

    HYUFD said:

    The Withdrawal Agreement with a NI only backstop until a technical solution for the Irish border might be the likeliest Brexit Deal but unless at least 30 Labour MPs vote for it to counteract DUP and ERG hardliner opposition it will not happen without a Tory majority after the next general election

    The next general election cannot now be before October 31st, so are you saying Boris Johnson will break his “do or die” promise?
    As I have said Boris will resign as PM before October 31st and take the Tories into opposition on a Brexit with a Deal or No Deal platform rather than extend beyond 31st himself
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    stodgestodge Posts: 12,854
    Morning all :)

    Hypocrisy is indeed one of those interesting things - as you say, Boris Johnson, like all populists, says only what he thinks the audience in front of him (or behind him if in the Commons) want to hear. It's inconsistently consistent but it's so much easier to have a crowd like you than loathe you.

    The other aspect of hypocrisy is ploughing through years of an individual's social media output for the slightest hint of scandal or deviation from the Party line. It's as though we want our politicians to be like us except not to have the slightest indiscretion nor to have ever changed their mind about anything. That's how you end up with Theresa May and Jeremy Corbyn.

    People change their minds all the time yet it seems we yearn for politicians who never do. People make mistakes and say things they shouldn't all the time yet we yearn for politicians who are paragons of virtue.

    I suppose it comes down to the politics of yourself (arguing for policies from which you would personally benefit) versus the politics of everyone (arguing for policies which you believe would benefit society as a whole). I'd like better schools, better roads, better care for the elderly and strong armed forces and I'll find that pledge in every manifesto but I know that costs and we end up arguing over priorities (and other Greek philosophers).

    Is it hypocritical to want a better world and expect someone else to pay for it or is it hypocritical to want a better world and expect everyone else to pay for it?
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    nico67nico67 Posts: 4,502
    The EU have to make up their minds .

    And I’m sure some countries are realizing that Brexit could be put out of its misery if Bozo can’t get a deal through .

    So what do they do ?

    Bizarely imo we’ve never been closer to a deal but also never been closer to stopping Brexit .

    If Bozo comes back with anything the pressure on MPs will be massive .
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    From TSE's previous piece:

    As a bona fide Northerner I still see and hear references from Labour voters to what they see as the evil perpetrated by Lady Thatcher. The miners’ strike is still mentioned more than 35 years after the event, usually as a reason not to vote Tory.

    Mentioned by whom ?

    We're in an era where Hallam is Labour and Derbyshire NE is Conservative.

    Just as there are differences between regions there are differences within regions.
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    FF43FF43 Posts: 15,711

    If Boris can get a deal (and it won't be a good one due to Parliament) it will be largely on the EUs terms.

    The EU should say "here's the deal but no further extension".

    Ultimately I think a rule taking deal on EU's terms is what will happen. Not because of parliament, but because the central contradiction of Brexit dictates this outcome.
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    MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 50,119
    nico67 said:



    If Bozo comes back with anything the pressure on MPs will be massive .

    Indeed it will.

    All those who think that nothing can be achieved by Boris in the way of a deal, I'd just remind them these same voices were saying that May would never get an initial WA deal either.....

    Stuff goes on in the background.
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    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,999
    US Supreme Court upholds President Trump's asylum curbs, requiring migrants to seek asylum in a third country of arrival first

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-49669811
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    FF43FF43 Posts: 15,711

    Why would the EU play ball?

    1. It gives a way to avoid an EU-wide recession.
    2. There is a new team coming in. They don't want to be dealing with this shit months and maybe years into their new term. The outgoing team can own the deal.
    3. The EU is pragmatic enough to know that Brexit delayed is not Brexit killed. It will poison UK politics and likely lead to a hard No Deal Brexit party being elected in the next couple of years. Our membership is only temporary. We might as well leave now.
    4. A grumpy UK "member" still in, with a veto over budgets etc. is too much of a pain to want to live with.

    The EU wants a deal on its terms. If Johnson accepts the current WA including original NI backstop and level playing field, they will be happy.
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    ChrisChris Posts: 11,122
    edited September 2019
    Chris said:

    "In a reasonable worst case scenario, HGVs could face maximum delays of 1.5-2.5 days before being able to cross the [UK/France] border... significant disruption lasting up to six months. Unmitigated, this will have an impact on the supply of medicines and medical supplies... three-quarters of medicines come via the short straits... it will not be practical to stockpile products to cover expected delays of up to six months."

    Does anyone remember an interview in which Boris Johnson said he could guarantee that supplies of medicines would not be disrupted?
    I managed to find it.

    This is how the Express reported the interview, on 26 August:
    The Prime Minister also promised that in the event of a no deal Brexit citizens would still be able to get their medication.
    After numerous scare stories appeared alleging that Brits could be in danger of not receiving their medicines due to customs problems at ports, Mr Johnson “guaranteed” that would not be the case.
    He said: "That is certainly a guarantee that we can make."

    https://www.express.co.uk/news/world/1170094/melania-trump-news-latest-FLOTUS-G7-summit-2019-president-donald-trump-boris-johnson

    This is what the government's assessment really says:

    "The BDG/DfT planning assumption on reduced flow rates describes a pre-mitigation reasonable worst case flow rate that could be as low as 40% D1ND via the short Channel Straits, with significant disruption lasting up to six months. Unmitigated, this will have an impact on the supply of medicines and medical supplies.

    The reliance of medicines and medical products' supply chains on the short straits crossing make them particularly vulnerable to severe extended delays; three-quarters of medicines come via the short straits. Supply chains are also highly regulated and require transportation that meets strict Good Distribution Practices. This can include limits on time of transit, or mean product must be transported under temperature controlled conditions. Whilst some products can be stockpiled, others cannot due to short shelf lives - it will also not be practical to stockpile products to cover expected delays of up to six months. DHSC is developing a multi-layered approach to mitigate these risks. (DHSC)"


    So in this assessment, the flow of goods along the supply route by which three quarters of medicines are imported could be reduced by more than half for a period of more than six months.

    Some products are impossible to stockpile anyway because of their shelf life. And the expected duration of the disruption will make it impractical to stockpile even medicines with a long shelf life.

    I am thankful that I don't rely on medication myself.
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    nico67 said:



    If Bozo comes back with anything the pressure on MPs will be massive .

    Indeed it will.

    All those who think that nothing can be achieved by Boris in the way of a deal, I'd just remind them these same voices were saying that May would never get an initial WA deal either.....

    Stuff goes on in the background.
    May didn't get a deal.

    She signed up to what the EU put before her and got rebuffed with the two largest rejections by Parliament in modern history.

    A deal is not a deal unless all parties can ratify it.
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    CD13 said:

    Mr noneoftheabove,

    "The issue is they cannot collectively agree on it because their party leaderships on both sides are more interested in playing games."

    But that can't be true. Surely MPs are sent as representatives not as delegates? That's has been their cry?

    Surely they're not just puppets of whoever is their leader at the time?

    If so, wouldn't it be better if they were puppets of the electorate?

    MPs have three main competing tensions influencing their voting, party, self and constituents. I think a typical modern MP is driven by roughly 70% party, 20% self, 10% constituents. It is hard to know where might be optimum, but I think something like 40% party, 40% self, 20% constituents would lead to significantly better debate and outcomes. No idea how you can make that change across parliament though.
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    " — A quarter of all adults in Britain take prescription medication for pain, anxiety, depression or insomnia " https://nyti.ms/2LIEvBL
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    Yellow_SubmarineYellow_Submarine Posts: 647
    edited September 2019
    Deleted duplicate post.
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    Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826
    edited September 2019
    CatMan said:
    Liam Fox never said that. Idiots keep quoting it but it's complete and utter bullshit.

    That's like me saying Parliament should ratify any deal to avoid no deal but won't because of party politics ... then you quote me claiming I said Parliament would ratify any deal.
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    OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 31,986
    Five council by-elections today; two LD defences, two Cons and an Independent, where the result will probably be a Con win, since neither the LD's nor the Greens have stood before.
    Info from Britain Elects.
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    stodgestodge Posts: 12,854
    HYUFD said:


    Don't rule out my MP Dame Eleanor Laing, she is already Deputy Speaker, a Leaver but backed the Withdrawal Agreement, tough and probably brighter than Harman and a former lawyer, she is also the top Tory candidate.

    After Bercow (a Labour Speaker in all but name who himself followed Labour's Michael Martin and Betty Boothroyd) Tory and DUP MPs might feel they are due a Speaker of their own

    On a technicality, were Eleanor Laing to become Speaker, you wouldn't be able to canvass for her as a Conservative because she would be Speaker. I recall those who supported Bernard Weatherill when he was Croydon South MP in the 1980s wore white rosettes when they went out and at the polling station.

    Is this still a convention to your knowledge?
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    Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826
    edited September 2019
    Chris said:


    I managed to find it.

    This is how the Express reported the interview, on 26 August:
    The Prime Minister also promised that in the event of a no deal Brexit citizens would still be able to get their medication.
    After numerous scare stories appeared alleging that Brits could be in danger of not receiving their medicines due to customs problems at ports, Mr Johnson “guaranteed” that would not be the case.
    He said: "That is certainly a guarantee that we can make."

    https://www.express.co.uk/news/world/1170094/melania-trump-news-latest-FLOTUS-G7-summit-2019-president-donald-trump-boris-johnson

    This is what the government's assessment really says:

    "The BDG/DfT planning assumption on reduced flow rates describes a pre-mitigation reasonable worst case flow rate that could be as low as 40% D1ND via the short Channel Straits, with significant disruption lasting up to six months. Unmitigated, this will have an impact on the supply of medicines and medical supplies.

    The reliance of medicines and medical products' supply chains on the short straits crossing make them particularly vulnerable to severe extended delays; three-quarters of medicines come via the short straits. Supply chains are also highly regulated and require transportation that meets strict Good Distribution Practices. This can include limits on time of transit, or mean product must be transported under temperature controlled conditions. Whilst some products can be stockpiled, others cannot due to short shelf lives - it will also not be practical to stockpile products to cover expected delays of up to six months. DHSC is developing a multi-layered approach to mitigate these risks. (DHSC)"


    So in this assessment, the flow of goods along the supply route by which three quarters of medicines are imported could be reduced by more than half for a period of more than six months.

    Some products are impossible to stockpile anyway because of their shelf life. And the expected duration of the disruption will make it impractical to stockpile even medicines with a long shelf life.

    I am thankful that I don't rely on medication myself.

    Well done you highlighted the word unmitigated. Great job.

    Solution is to mitigate then it isn't unmitigated.

    Funnily enough you forgot to highlight the mitigation plans mentioned after the what would happen if it was unmitigated.
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    stodgestodge Posts: 12,854

    Indeed it will.

    All those who think that nothing can be achieved by Boris in the way of a deal, I'd just remind them these same voices were saying that May would never get an initial WA deal either.....

    Stuff goes on in the background.

    Indeed and the EU itself is the past master of the last minute compromise so it's always possible.

    Let me ask you based on your previous - which is more important, defeating Jeremy Corbyn or leaving the European Union?

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    CatManCatMan Posts: 2,770

    CatMan said:
    Liam Fox never said that. Idiots keep quoting it but it's complete and utter bullshit.
    Yes I know, but plenty of Leavers did say it would be easy, so Ben Wallace is indeed a lying piece of shit.
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    noneoftheabovenoneoftheabove Posts: 20,736
    edited September 2019

    Remain MPs may have voted for a few hypothetical deals just as they voted for Article 50 to be triggered. But as soon as any real deal appears, they will pivot and vote it down no matter what.

    Mr Wise, not really an apt name, because you are talking crap. Large numbers of "remain MPs voted for the WA.
    What percentage of non-Tory Remain MPs voted for the WA?

    Remain MPs either will vote down any deal or are putting party politics ahead of getting a deal. Which is it?
    MPs put party politics ahead of getting a deal. Not just remain MPs, MPs on all sides.
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    nico67 said:

    The EU have to make up their minds .

    And I’m sure some countries are realizing that Brexit could be put out of its misery if Bozo can’t get a deal through .

    So what do they do ?

    Bizarely imo we’ve never been closer to a deal but also never been closer to stopping Brexit .

    If Bozo comes back with anything the pressure on MPs will be massive .

    Regardless of its merits, I do not think there would be any chance of a NI only backstop plan getting through parliament for all sorts of reasons.

    It is a huge one way gamble for Johnson if he tries that course. Failing to get a deal not that dissimilar to Mays through parliament will mean that Johnson will be anything but triumphant, and will have lived up to all those Brexiteer suspicions of betrayal. The Conservatives will suffer a significant reversal in the polls, losing votes to a Brexit Party still unlikely to win any significant number of seats, at which point the opposition parties will be very content for there to be a GE asap.
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    TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 114,432
    edited September 2019

    From TSE's previous piece:

    As a bona fide Northerner I still see and hear references from Labour voters to what they see as the evil perpetrated by Lady Thatcher. The miners’ strike is still mentioned more than 35 years after the event, usually as a reason not to vote Tory.

    Mentioned by whom ?

    We're in an era where Hallam is Labour and Derbyshire NE is Conservative.

    Just as there are differences between regions there are differences within regions.

    Some voters we canvassed in 2015 in Pudsey and other West Yorkshire marginals.

    One of them couldn't have been more than 25 years old and he said his Dad would chuck him out of the house if he voted Tory because of the miners' strike.

    I heard the same from a friend who was canvassing in Stocksbridge in 2017.

    The Extinction Rebellion protest in Sheffield on Monday had an anti Thatcher banner which was ironic as she was supposed to have destroyed the coal industry, something I thought the Extinction Rebellion would have supported.
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    FF43 said:

    If Boris can get a deal (and it won't be a good one due to Parliament) it will be largely on the EUs terms.

    The EU should say "here's the deal but no further extension".

    Ultimately I think a rule taking deal on EU's terms is what will happen. Not because of parliament, but because the central contradiction of Brexit dictates this outcome.
    The central contradiction of Brexit is that many Brexiteers would rather have no Brexit than face up to what Brexit means.
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    Scott_PScott_P Posts: 51,453

    Liam Fox never said that.

    Speaking to BBC Radio 4’s Today programme on Thursday, the international trade secretary said: “The free trade agreement that we will have to do with the European Union should be one of the easiest in human history.

    https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2017/jul/20/liam-fox-uk-eu-trade-deal-after-brexit-easiest-human-history
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    CatManCatMan Posts: 2,770
    "I write fiction, love cats and a huge fan of Trump & Bozza"

    Hmmmmm. Well at least he loves cats. Russian cats probably.
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    stodgestodge Posts: 12,854

    " — A quarter of all adults in Britain take prescription medication for pain, anxiety, depression or insomnia " https://nyti.ms/2LIEvBL

    Among everything that has happened this week that is truly the most frightening statistic.

    We need to ask ourselves some pretty difficult questions about the kind of society we want to live in. As a generalisation, we work too long and sleep too little. Perhaps it would be no bad thing to slow down the tread mill and take some time out.

    I see them at East Ham tube station at 7am every morning when I go into the office - if you want to paralyse modern Britain, don't cut off fuel or food, just cut off energy drinks and most people will be asleep within a few hours.

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    Remain MPs may have voted for a few hypothetical deals just as they voted for Article 50 to be triggered. But as soon as any real deal appears, they will pivot and vote it down no matter what.

    Mr Wise, not really an apt name, because you are talking crap. Large numbers of "remain MPs voted for the WA.
    What percentage of non-Tory Remain MPs voted for the WA?

    Remain MPs either will vote down any deal or are putting party politics ahead of getting a deal. Which is it?
    MPs put party politics ahead of getting a deal. Not just remain MPs, MPs on all sides.
    Please explain how the Tories did.

    Theresa May signed an agreement going against her parties original plans and closer to her opponents plans originally. If we'd left on her Deal we would still be trading as if we were in the Single Market and customs union still.

    Tory rebels put what they see as the national interest above the party political interest of following the party whip.
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    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,999
    edited September 2019
    stodge said:

    HYUFD said:


    Don't rule out my MP Dame Eleanor Laing, she is already Deputy Speaker, a Leaver but backed the Withdrawal Agreement, tough and probably brighter than Harman and a former lawyer, she is also the top Tory candidate.

    After Bercow (a Labour Speaker in all but name who himself followed Labour's Michael Martin and Betty Boothroyd) Tory and DUP MPs might feel they are due a Speaker of their own

    On a technicality, were Eleanor Laing to become Speaker, you wouldn't be able to canvass for her as a Conservative because she would be Speaker. I recall those who supported Bernard Weatherill when he was Croydon South MP in the 1980s wore white rosettes when they went out and at the polling station.

    Is this still a convention to your knowledge?
    It is and by convention the main parties do not stand against the Speaker, we can just do more general election canvassing in nearby marginal seats instead like Chingford, Thurrock, Colchester and Enfield Southgate
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    OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 31,986
    CatMan said:
    Liam Fox isn't in government any more, of course.
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    CatMan said:
    Liam Fox never said that. Idiots keep quoting it but it's complete and utter bullshit.
    Here. 28 seconds in. https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/av/uk-40667879/eu-trade-deal-easiest-in-human-history

    Signed, an idiot.
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    Scott_PScott_P Posts: 51,453

    Liam Fox isn't in government any more, of course.

    Since he started telling the truth about Brexit.
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    Harris_TweedHarris_Tweed Posts: 1,300
    edited September 2019

    nico67 said:



    If Bozo comes back with anything the pressure on MPs will be massive .

    Indeed it will.

    All those who think that nothing can be achieved by Boris in the way of a deal, I'd just remind them these same voices were saying that May would never get an initial WA deal either.....

    Stuff goes on in the background.
    The temptation for Labour to keep whipping against a 'wicked baby-eating Tory Brexit' or whatever they call it will be quite strong. Will Boris's new-found keenness for a GE extend to one after such a deal? If so, and Lab would have a chance to fight for their version of a final trade deal, I guess they might. But the starting expectation should be that "opposition's gonna oppose". Add to that several Tory ultras, the DUP (with an Irish Sea border) and possibly ex-Tory rebels not feeling inclined to dig him out of a hole, I'd hesitate to bet on Deal2.

    The other current trickiness is that the planned end of transition (Dec 2020) is now rapidly approaching, and given our performance so far, I'm not convinced we'd conclude that relationship by then. So we'll be up against another cliff-edge then if Boris relies on the vim and vigour of his newly-enfeebled four-man team in Brussels, or he and JRM will have to troop through the lobby for a deal with an even longer period of vassalage attached. Which would be a sight to behold.
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    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,999
    edited September 2019
    Yet 9% of 2017 Labour voters now voting Tory with Yougov yesterday and only 2% of 2017 Tory voters now voting Labour.

    The 18% of 2017 Labour voters now voting LD and the 8% of Labour voters now voting Brexit Party also boosts the Tories under FPTP in Labour held marginal seats
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    FF43FF43 Posts: 15,711

    nico67 said:

    The EU have to make up their minds .

    And I’m sure some countries are realizing that Brexit could be put out of its misery if Bozo can’t get a deal through .

    So what do they do ?

    Bizarely imo we’ve never been closer to a deal but also never been closer to stopping Brexit .

    If Bozo comes back with anything the pressure on MPs will be massive .

    Regardless of its merits, I do not think there would be any chance of a NI only backstop plan getting through parliament for all sorts of reasons.

    It is a huge one way gamble for Johnson if he tries that course. Failing to get a deal not that dissimilar to Mays through parliament will mean that Johnson will be anything but triumphant, and will have lived up to all those Brexiteer suspicions of betrayal. The Conservatives will suffer a significant reversal in the polls, losing votes to a Brexit Party still unlikely to win any significant number of seats, at which point the opposition parties will be very content for there to be a GE asap.
    Yes. Which is why Johnson wants a deal but not any deal he will actually get.
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    HYUFD said:

    Yet 9% of 2017 Labour voters now voting Tory with Yougov yesterday and only 2% of 2017 Tory voters now voting Labour.

    The 18% of 2017 Labour voters now voting LD and the 8% of Labour voters now voting Brexit Party also boosts the Tories under FPTP in Labpur held marginal seats
    Back in April 2017 13% of GE2015 Labour voters were planning to vote Tory in the 2017GE.

    Spoiler alert - They did not.
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    Remain MPs may have voted for a few hypothetical deals just as they voted for Article 50 to be triggered. But as soon as any real deal appears, they will pivot and vote it down no matter what.

    Mr Wise, not really an apt name, because you are talking crap. Large numbers of "remain MPs voted for the WA.
    What percentage of non-Tory Remain MPs voted for the WA?

    Remain MPs either will vote down any deal or are putting party politics ahead of getting a deal. Which is it?
    MPs put party politics ahead of getting a deal. Not just remain MPs, MPs on all sides.
    Please explain how the Tories did.

    Theresa May signed an agreement going against her parties original plans and closer to her opponents plans originally. If we'd left on her Deal we would still be trading as if we were in the Single Market and customs union still.

    Tory rebels put what they see as the national interest above the party political interest of following the party whip.
    May refused to negotiate or even involve other parties until her own party had deserted her.
    She came up with red lines unilaterally that limited the options and blocked out the preferred Labour/SNP brexits.
    The instability in the tory party from her poor leadership put Labour in a position of having to choose a blind Brexit where the Tories could be hijacked by the ERG post WA to create a different outcome to that which May proposed.
    Tone - With us or against us, enemies of the people, no deal is better than a bad deal when she doesnt believe any of those statements, just thought it made her look tough for her electorate.
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    CatMan said:

    "I write fiction, love cats and a huge fan of Trump & Bozza"

    Hmmmmm. Well at least he loves cats. Russian cats probably.
    "I also proudly voted to leave the EU and am a blunt speaking Lancastrian whom doesn’t pull punches."

    Good old Lancastrians, they always call a spade a spadem.
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    If Dominic Grieve isn't standing as an MP again due to infiltration by UKIP, he deserves a job of that status.
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    OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 31,986
    edited September 2019
    stodge said:

    " — A quarter of all adults in Britain take prescription medication for pain, anxiety, depression or insomnia " https://nyti.ms/2LIEvBL

    Among everything that has happened this week that is truly the most frightening statistic.

    We need to ask ourselves some pretty difficult questions about the kind of society we want to live in. As a generalisation, we work too long and sleep too little. Perhaps it would be no bad thing to slow down the tread mill and take some time out.

    I see them at East Ham tube station at 7am every morning when I go into the office - if you want to paralyse modern Britain, don't cut off fuel or food, just cut off energy drinks and most people will be asleep within a few hours.

    Interestingly, when I was still working ........ and that's at least ten years ago ........ as a pharmacist reviewing medication use I was expected to encourage GP's to reduce their prescribing of opiate-type analgesic medications.
    Prior to retirement I'd been doing that sort of work for a dozen or so years, as had many colleagues.

    Depressing to find we obviously weren't very good at what we were supposed to do! Either that or, as with Lansley's NHS reforms 'doctors knew better".
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    MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 50,119
    stodge said:

    Indeed it will.

    All those who think that nothing can be achieved by Boris in the way of a deal, I'd just remind them these same voices were saying that May would never get an initial WA deal either.....

    Stuff goes on in the background.

    Indeed and the EU itself is the past master of the last minute compromise so it's always possible.

    Let me ask you based on your previous - which is more important, defeating Jeremy Corbyn or leaving the European Union?

    Leaving the EU and having Jeremy Corbyn as PM would both be the will of the people. It's up to them.
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    PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 75,926
    HYUFD said:

    US Supreme Court upholds President Trump's asylum curbs, requiring migrants to seek asylum in a third country of arrival first

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-49669811

    7-2 decision with Kagan and Breyer onside. So the law was clearly on Trump's side
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    CatManCatMan Posts: 2,770
    edited September 2019
    "The day after we vote to leave, we hold all the cards and we can choose the path we want" - Michael Gove

    "Getting out of the EU can be quick and easy – the UK holds most of the cards" - John Redwood

    "There will be no downside to Brexit, only a considerable upside" - David Davis

    "I believe that we can get a free trade and customs agreement concluded before March 2019" - David Davis again

    "Within two years, before negotiations with the EU is likely to be complete, and therefore before anything material has changed, we can negotiate a free trade area massively larger than the EU" - David Davis one more time
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    malcolmg said:

    LOL, Tuba is well named. It does not safeguard 2500 jobs in Scotland, it will likely be a net loss more like.
    McDougall is suffering from an inflated sense of relevance, that his only purpose in life now seems to be trolling twitter for angry cybernats says it all. He's never really recovered from coming third behind the SNP and the SCons in East Ren.
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    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,999

    HYUFD said:

    Yet 9% of 2017 Labour voters now voting Tory with Yougov yesterday and only 2% of 2017 Tory voters now voting Labour.

    The 18% of 2017 Labour voters now voting LD and the 8% of Labour voters now voting Brexit Party also boosts the Tories under FPTP in Labpur held marginal seats
    Back in April 2017 13% of GE2015 Labour voters were planning to vote Tory in the 2017GE.

    Spoiler alert - They did not.
    Spoiler alert there will be no dementia tax disasters etc under Boris
This discussion has been closed.