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politicalbetting.com » Blog Archive » How an anti-Brexit party could be created without the need to

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    Danny565Danny565 Posts: 8,091
    GIN1138 said:
    Very petty, but more than a little funny.
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    MP_SE2MP_SE2 Posts: 77
    edited August 2017
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    GIN1138GIN1138 Posts: 20,793
    Yesterday James Chapman was claiming the aim was to have another referendum in 2019 to overturn Brexit.

    Now he is saying they want to overturn Brexit without another referendum...

    https://twitter.com/jameschappers/status/895989690725130240


    Clearly he is just making all this up as he goes along.

    Journalists taking this seriously are being sold a pup... There is no "plan" being hatched on a Greek Island just a loner who has got too much time on his hands and had too much sun and Sangria...
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    It depends which period of Maggies career. For most of her political life she was pro EU, and actively campaigned for single market inc FOM, and EU expansion to the East.

    My first guiding principle is this: willing and active cooperation between independent sovereign states is the best way to build a successful European Community.

    To try to suppress nationhood and concentrate power at the centre of a European conglomerate would be highly damaging and would jeopardise the objectives we seek to achieve.

    Europe will be stronger precisely because it has France as France, Spain as Spain, Britain as Britain, each with its own customs, traditions and identity. It would be folly to try to fit them into some sort of identikit European personality.

    Some of the founding fathers of the Community thought that the United States of America might be its model.

    But the whole history of America is quite different from Europe.

    People went there to get away from the intolerance and constraints of life in Europe.

    They sought liberty and opportunity; and their strong sense of purpose has, over two centuries, helped to create a new unity and pride in being American, just as our pride lies in being British or Belgian or Dutch or German.

    I am the first to say that on many great issues the countries of Europe should try to speak with a single voice.

    I want to see us work more closely on the things we can do better together than alone.

    Europe is stronger when we do so, whether it be in trade, in defence or in our relations with the rest of the world.

    But working more closely together does not require power to be centralised in Brussels or decisions to be taken by an appointed bureaucracy.

    Indeed, it is ironic that just when those countries such as the Soviet Union, which have tried to run everything from the centre, are learning that success depends on dispersing power and decisions away from the centre, there are some in the Community who seem to want to move in the opposite direction.

    We have not successfully rolled back the frontiers of the state in Britain, only to see them re-imposed at a European level with a European super-state exercising a new dominance from Brussels.

    Certainly we want to see Europe more united and with a greater sense of common purpose.

    But it must be in a way which preserves the different traditions, parliamentary powers and sense of national pride in one's own country; for these have been the source of Europe's vitality through the centuries.

    - M. H. Thatcher, The Bruges Speech, 20/9/1988.
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    GIN1138GIN1138 Posts: 20,793
    edited August 2017
    This in relation to Stuart Jackson (EX-MP) formally of this Parish?

    https://twitter.com/jameschappers/status/895978929093259264
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    MortimerMortimer Posts: 13,936
    edited August 2017
    @MP_SE2 - This chapman chap sounds unplesant. As well as being full of more political hot air than most of the Japanese Jungle Remainers on here...

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    NickPalmerNickPalmer Posts: 21,319
    edited August 2017

    Democracy requires that the decisions taken by the people are implemented by the politicians.

    The idea that the politicians can say to the people "you got it wrong, vote again" is as anti-democratic as Maduro saying "you got it wrong in the 2015 National Assembly election" and following it as he has.

    I think the comparison trivialises Maduro's actions. Calling a fresh election because he didn't like the last result is not especially dictatorial behaviour - it's entirely clear that the Conservatives would do exactly that tomorrow if they were confident they'd win. Tsk, one might say, but it's not unprecedented. Arresting and shooting opponents is what makes most of us on all sides turn against Maduro.

    Saying "There are new facts, does this change your view?" is a not unreasonable question. But premature at this stage.
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    foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548


    It depends which period of Maggies career. For most of her political life she was pro EU, and actively campaigned for single market inc FOM, and EU expansion to the East.

    My first guiding principle is this: willing and active cooperation between independent sovereign states is the best way to build a successful European Community.

    To try to suppress nationhood and concentrate power at the centre of a European conglomerate would be highly damaging and would jeopardise the objectives we seek to achieve.

    Europe will be stronger precisely because it has France as France, Spain as Spain, Britain as Britain, each with its own customs, traditions and identity. It would be folly to try to fit them into some sort of identikit European personality.

    Some of the founding fathers of the Community thought that the United States of America might be its model.

    But the whole history of America is quite different from Europe.

    People went there to get away from the intolerance and constraints of life in Europe.

    They sought liberty and opportunity; and their strong sense of purpose has, over two centuries, helped to create a new unity and pride in being American, just as our pride lies in being British or Belgian or Dutch or German.

    I am the first to say that on many great issues the countries of Europe should try to speak with a single voice.

    I want to see us work more closely on the things we can do better together than alone.

    Europe is stronger when we do so, whether it be in trade, in defence or in our relations with the rest of the world.

    But working more closely together does not require power to be centralised in Brussels or decisions to be taken by an appointed bureaucracy.

    Indeed, it is ironic that just when those countries such as the Soviet Union, which have tried to run everything from the centre, are learning that success depends on dispersing power and decisions away from the centre, there are some in the Community who seem to want to move in the opposite direction.

    We have not successfully rolled back the frontiers of the state in Britain, only to see them re-imposed at a European level with a European super-state exercising a new dominance from Brussels.

    Certainly we want to see Europe more united and with a greater sense of common purpose.

    But it must be in a way which preserves the different traditions, parliamentary powers and sense of national pride in one's own country; for these have been the source of Europe's vitality through the centuries.

    - M. H. Thatcher, The Bruges Speech, 20/9/1988.
    Yeah, after she lost her marbles and political nous she went Eurosceptic. In her prime she was pro EU.

    Cracking start to the PL...
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    It depends which period of Maggies career. For most of her political life she was pro EU, and actively campaigned for single market inc FOM, and EU expansion to the East.

    My first guiding principle is this: willing and active cooperation between independent sovereign states is the best way to build a successful European Community.

    To try to suppress nationhood and concentrate power at the centre of a European conglomerate would be highly damaging and would jeopardise the objectives we seek to achieve.

    Europe will be stronger precisely because it has France as France, Spain as Spain, Britain as Britain, each with its own customs, traditions and identity. It would be folly to try to fit them into some sort of identikit European personality.

    Some of the founding fathers of the Community thought that the United States of America might be its model.

    But the whole history of America is quite different from Europe.

    People went there to get away from the intolerance and constraints of life in Europe.

    They sought liberty and opportunity; and their strong sense of purpose has, over two centuries, helped to create a new unity and pride in being American, just as our pride lies in being British or Belgian or Dutch or German.

    I am the first to say that on many great issues the countries of Europe should try to speak with a single voice.

    I want to see us work more closely on the things we can do better together than alone.

    Europe is stronger when we do so, whether it be in trade, in defence or in our relations with the rest of the world.

    But working more closely together does not require power to be centralised in Brussels or decisions to be taken by an appointed bureaucracy.

    Indeed, it is ironic that just when those countries such as the Soviet Union, which have tried to run everything from the centre, are learning that success depends on dispersing power and decisions away from the centre, there are some in the Community who seem to want to move in the opposite direction.

    We have not successfully rolled back the frontiers of the state in Britain, only to see them re-imposed at a European level with a European super-state exercising a new dominance from Brussels.

    Certainly we want to see Europe more united and with a greater sense of common purpose.

    But it must be in a way which preserves the different traditions, parliamentary powers and sense of national pride in one's own country; for these have been the source of Europe's vitality through the centuries.

    - M. H. Thatcher, The Bruges Speech, 20/9/1988.
    Yeah, after she lost her marbles and political nous she went Eurosceptic. In her prime she was pro EU.

    She was still PM in '88 :)
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    foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548


    It depends which period of Maggies career. For most of her political life she was pro EU, and actively campaigned for single market inc FOM, and EU expansion to the East.

    My first guiding principle is this: willing and active cooperation between independent sovereign states is the best way to build a successful European Community.

    To try to suppress nationhood and concentrate power at the centre of a European conglomerate would be highly damaging and would jeopardise the objectives we seek to achieve.

    Europe will be stronger precisely because it has France as France, Spain as Spain, Britain as Britain, each with its own customs, traditions and identity. It would be folly to try to fit them into some sort of identikit European personality.

    Some of the founding fathers of the Community thought that the United States of America might be its model.

    But the whole history of America

    People went there to get away from the intolerance and constraints of life in Europe.

    They sought liberty and opportunity; and their strong sense of purpose has, over two centuries, helped to create a new unity and pride in being American, just as our pride lies in being British or Belgian or Dutch or German.

    I am the first to say that on many great issues the countries of Europe should try to speak with a single voice.

    I want to see us work more closely on the things we can do better together than alone.

    Europe is stronger when we do so, whether it be in trade, in defence or in our relations with the rest of the world.

    But working more closely together does not require power to be centralised in Brussels or decisions to be taken by an appointed bureaucracy.

    Indeed, it is ironic that just when those countries such as the Soviet Union, which have tried to run everything from the centre, are learning that success depends on dispersing power and decisions away from the centre, there are some in the Community who seem to want to move in the opposite direction.

    We have not successfully rolled back the frontiers of the state in Britain, only to see them re-imposed at a European level with a European super-state exercising a new dominance from Brussels.

    Certainly we want to see Europe more united and with a greater sense of common purpose.

    But it must be in a way which preserves the different traditions, parliamentary powers and sense of national pride in one's own country; for these have been the source of Europe's vitality through the centuries.

    - M. H. Thatcher, The Bruges Speech, 20/9/1988.
    Yeah, after she lost her marbles and political nous she went Eurosceptic. In her prime she was pro EU.

    She was still PM in '88 :)
    Shortly to be fragged by her own side :)
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    Sunil_PrasannanSunil_Prasannan Posts: 49,200
    edited August 2017

    surbiton said:

    I suppose what Trump is really doing is piling pressure on China to make Kim back down, or get rid of him. He is actually quite well-positioned in every possible outcome of this situation (provided he has a good bunker for the 'nuclear armageddon' scenario.

    From the Chinese viewpoint, why should they remove Kim ? They don't want a pro Western country with a land border. The nukes are inconvenient but Kim would not be hitting China with those.
    I think that's a really poor analysis of the situation. NK threatens China as well: Earlier in the year they threatened China with 'grave consequences' over their lack of recent support. Then there's the fear China has of millions of refugees crossing the border if NK were to fail, and the other risks of having NK next door.

    It's possible that China would see a unified, westernised Korea sans American troops more favourably than the status quo of an unstable NK and an SK with massive numbers of American forces near their borders.
    If China hadn't intervened across the Yalu River in Autumn 1950, Korea today would be a peaceful, united, democratic country.
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    surbiton said:

    HYUFD said:

    AndyJS said:

    Latest German poll:

    CDU: 40%
    SPD: 24%
    Greens: 8%
    Left: 8%
    FDP: 8%
    AfD: 8%
    Others: 4%

    http://www.wahlrecht.de/umfragen/

    Merkel needs the AfD as well as the FDP to get a right of centre coalition over 50% so a CDU SPD coalition is likely to continue
    No. She does not. The AfD and the SPD and the Left will not vote on the same side
    Indeed. There is virtually zero change of Merkel forming a coalition with the AfD.

    Anecdotal: I was visiting my elderly German mother-in-law last week when the conversation turned to politics. She normally votes CDU nationally and SPD locally, though she has occasionally voted Green and FDP. She thinks Merkel is wonderful and will definitely be voting CDU this time too. However, she views the AfD with something close to revulsion, and would be absolutely horrified if they were in government. She'd sooner see the Left in power than the AfD, and that's saying something for someone who absconded from the East in the 60s. She's hoping for a CDU/CSU/FDP coalition, but she'd be OK with a continuation of the grand coalition.
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    ydoethurydoethur Posts: 67,108

    surbiton said:

    I suppose what Trump is really doing is piling pressure on China to make Kim back down, or get rid of him. He is actually quite well-positioned in every possible outcome of this situation (provided he has a good bunker for the 'nuclear armageddon' scenario.

    From the Chinese viewpoint, why should they remove Kim ? They don't want a pro Western country with a land border. The nukes are inconvenient but Kim would not be hitting China with those.
    I think that's a really poor analysis of the situation. NK threatens China as well: Earlier in the year they threatened China with 'grave consequences' over their lack of recent support. Then there's the fear China has of millions of refugees crossing the border if NK were to fail, and the other risks of having NK next door.

    It's possible that China would see a unified, westernised Korea sans American troops more favourably than the status quo of an unstable NK and an SK with massive numbers of American forces near their borders.
    If China hadn't intervened across the Yalu River in Autumn 1950, Korea today would be a peaceful, united, democratic country.
    If the Americans hadn't intervened shortly beforehand, it would be a united People's Democratic country!
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    williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 48,011
    edited August 2017

    Shortly to be fragged by her own side :)

    Her Bruges speech is often misinterpreted and its anti-socialist message confused for anti-federalism.

    Brexiteers would do well to absorb the meaning of this passage from the same speech:

    Britain does not dream of some cosy, isolated existence on the fringes of the European Community. Our destiny is in Europe, as part of the Community.

    That is not to say that our future lies only in Europe, but nor does that of France or Spain or, indeed, of any other member.

    The Community is not an end in itself.

    Nor is it an institutional device to be constantly modified according to the dictates of some abstract intellectual concept.

    Nor must it be ossified by endless regulation.

    The European Community is a practical means by which Europe can ensure the future prosperity and security of its people in a world in which there are many other powerful nations and groups of nations.

    We Europeans cannot afford to waste our energies on internal disputes or arcane institutional debates.
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    ydoethurydoethur Posts: 67,108
    edited August 2017

    Her Bruges speech is often misinterpreted and its anti-socialist message confused for anti-federalism.

    Brexiteers would do well to absorb the meaning of this passage from the same speech:

    Britain does not dream of some cosy, isolated existence on the fringes of the European Community. Our destiny is in Europe, as part of the Community.

    That is not to say that our future lies only in Europe, but nor does that of France or Spain or, indeed, of any other member.

    The Community is not an end in itself.

    Nor is it an institutional device to be constantly modified according to the dictates of some abstract intellectual concept.

    Nor must it be ossified by endless regulation.

    The European Community is a practical means by which Europe can ensure the future prosperity and security of its people in a world in which there are many other powerful nations and groups of nations.

    We Europeans cannot afford to waste our energies on internal disputes or arcane institutional debates.

    While there is no doubt it was the increasingly social democrat stance of Europe allied to her personal dislike of many European officials - notably Delors - that informed her later attitude, I am very surprised you think that speech is not anti-federalist in tone. In fact, the only way it could have been more openly anti-federalist is if it had started, 'Listen, Napoleon Delors...'
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    MP_SE2MP_SE2 Posts: 77



    Yeah, after she lost her marbles and political nous she went Eurosceptic. In her prime she was pro EU.

    Cracking start to the PL...

    I would expect better from a medical professional.

    Thatcher was eurosceptic long before the onset of her dementia.
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    ThreeQuidderThreeQuidder Posts: 6,133
    surbiton said:

    surbiton said:

    One loony Leaver quoting another loony Leaver's tweets: Brexception.

    Even on an issue like this they play the man not the ball. Telling.

    https://twitter.com/jameschappers/status/896044435104051204
    They can't engage with his arguments so they threaten him with a doing-over by the Daily Mail and post nude pictures of him online.
    His argument, such as it is, is that the demands of the little people should be ignored. There's no engaging with that.
    That is not his argument at all.
    https://twitter.com/jameschappers/status/895014262804033536
    Yes, quite. Not arguing that the demands of the little people should be ignored. Arguing that Brexit is a catastrophe and the democratically elected representatives who have formed the same view should come together to seek to avert it.
    That is exactly saying that the demands of the little people should be ignored as the little people have demanded that we Leave the EU.
    No it's not exactly the same. The public decided to vote to sail down a river. If you see Niagara ahead, it is not ignoring the demands of the little people for the crew to take matters into their own hands.

    I should point out that personally I don't agree with James Chapman. But this idea that democracy stopped on 23 June 2016 is ridiculous.
    There is no such idea. But democracy requires that the decisions taken by the people are implemented by the politicians.

    The idea that the politicians can say to the people "you got it wrong, vote again" is as anti-democratic as Maduro saying "you got it wrong in the 2015 National Assembly election" and following it as he has.
    Absolutely. Democracy also means that the same people can change their minds through another legal referendum. The clock did not stop on 23rd June 2016.

    What is undemocratic about asking the people again ?
    Depends when you do it. After we have implemented the Leave vote, a Rejoin referendum will be democratically legitimate.
    You don't decide. Parliament does. Remember Parliament is sovereign. You lot told us that. If Parliament wants a referendum every week, that would be legal too ! After all, you don't have to vote.
    Parliament is subservient to the people.

    Or should be.
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    Shortly to be fragged by her own side :)

    Her Bruges speech is often misinterpreted and its anti-socialist message confused for anti-federalism.

    Brexiteers would do well to absorb the meaning of this passage from the same speech:

    Britain does not dream of some cosy, isolated existence on the fringes of the European Community. Our destiny is in Europe, as part of the Community.

    That is not to say that our future lies only in Europe, but nor does that of France or Spain or, indeed, of any other member.

    The Community is not an end in itself.

    Nor is it an institutional device to be constantly modified according to the dictates of some abstract intellectual concept.

    Nor must it be ossified by endless regulation.

    The European Community is a practical means by which Europe can ensure the future prosperity and security of its people in a world in which there are many other powerful nations and groups of nations.

    We Europeans cannot afford to waste our energies on internal disputes or arcane institutional debates.
    It is a good passage but unfortunately future Europhiles ensured that the Community was viewed as an end in itself. As such her vision became redundant as it was not available to us, we could either except that Community or choose our own future. I put faith in ourselves.
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    foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548
    MP_SE2 said:



    Yeah, after she lost her marbles and political nous she went Eurosceptic. In her prime she was pro EU.

    Cracking start to the PL...

    I would expect better from a medical professional.

    Thatcher was eurosceptic long before the onset of her dementia.
    I was referring to her megalomania after the 87 election, her dementia came later.
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    SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 20,578
    GIN1138 said:

    This in relation to Stuart Jackson (EX-MP) formally of this Parish?

    https://twitter.com/jameschappers/status/895978929093259264

    Wacko Chapo more like.
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    surbiton said:

    I suppose what Trump is really doing is piling pressure on China to make Kim back down, or get rid of him. He is actually quite well-positioned in every possible outcome of this situation (provided he has a good bunker for the 'nuclear armageddon' scenario.

    From the Chinese viewpoint, why should they remove Kim ? They don't want a pro Western country with a land border. The nukes are inconvenient but Kim would not be hitting China with those.
    I think that's a really poor analysis of the situation. NK threatens China as well: Earlier in the year they threatened China with 'grave consequences' over their lack of recent support. Then there's the fear China has of millions of refugees crossing the border if NK were to fail, and the other risks of having NK next door.

    It's possible that China would see a unified, westernised Korea sans American troops more favourably than the status quo of an unstable NK and an SK with massive numbers of American forces near their borders.
    If China hadn't intervened across the Yalu River in Autumn 1950, Korea today would be a peaceful, united, democratic country.
    Presumably it was to avert that horror that they did intervene.
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    PeterCPeterC Posts: 1,274
    GIN1138 said:

    James Chapman's Twitter is a complete car crash today...

    The man is totally unhinged! :open_mouth:

    What is on display is a total lack of judgement. He could have put forward his views in a measured and - dare I say it - statesmanlike fashion and have been given the chance of hearing. Instead he is just lashing out in all directions and in the process making his cause appear ridiculous.

    I expect serious Remoaners will want dissociate themselves from him. He is certainly the very last person you would want to launch a new party!
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    BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 31,560
    edited August 2017

    DavidL said:

    DavidL said:

    boulay said:

    FPT rottenborough mentioned that Chapman wanted to charge VAT on private school fees. This is illegal under EU rules as it bans the charging of VAT on education provision. Can't have it both ways....

    He can because it is not illegal under EU rules. The education exemption only applies to "bodies governed by public law having such as their aim or by other organisations recognised by the Member State concerned as having similar objects". Private schools are not governed by public law as they do not get most of their funding from the state. So all the government has to do is decide not to recognise private schools as having similar objects and they can charge VAT.
    Just to add, independent schools already pay VAT on supplies.
    All businesses pay VAT on their taxable purchases...
    As charities I think they can recoup that.
    No they can't. They repeatedly complain about that to the government. See https://www.isc.co.uk/about-isc/school-charities-and-tax/ (the section headed Independent Schools and Tax) for details.
    Didn't know that. Much obliged. Makes the argument that they should be denied chartable status even more bizarre when the benefits are so modest anyway. Surprised more schools have not just said fine and no, you will not have access to our facilities at all nor will we be sending any staff that we pay to other schools to help out.
    They should allow access to facilities, but charge the going rate for it.
    It's not just Chapman who has suggested applying VAT to private school fees - Gove and Corbyn too...

    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-4258440/Fury-Gove-s-calls-20-VAT-private-school-fees.html

    http://www.independent.co.uk/news/business/news/private-schools-pay-tax-michael-gove-vat-boost-state-education-charity-status-funding-mic-a7597126.html

    https://www.theguardian.com/education/2017/apr/05/fund-free-school-meals-jeremy-corbyn-add-vat-private-education-fees
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    RobDRobD Posts: 58,961
    Is the "Democrat" name supposed to be ironic?
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    RobDRobD Posts: 58,961

    MP_SE2 said:



    Yeah, after she lost her marbles and political nous she went Eurosceptic. In her prime she was pro EU.

    Cracking start to the PL...

    I would expect better from a medical professional.

    Thatcher was eurosceptic long before the onset of her dementia.
    I was referring to her megalomania after the 87 election, her dementia came later.
    I suppose the PC rules go out the window when it comes to Thatcher :p
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    JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 38,880

    Democracy requires that the decisions taken by the people are implemented by the politicians.

    The idea that the politicians can say to the people "you got it wrong, vote again" is as anti-democratic as Maduro saying "you got it wrong in the 2015 National Assembly election" and following it as he has.

    I think the comparison trivialises Maduro's actions. Calling a fresh election because he didn't like the last result is not especially dictatorial behaviour - it's entirely clear that the Conservatives would do exactly that tomorrow if they were confident they'd win. Tsk, one might say, but it's not unprecedented. Arresting and shooting opponents is what makes most of us on all sides turn against Maduro.

    Saying "There are new facts, does this change your view?" is a not unreasonable question. But premature at this stage.
    Hasn't Maduro done something much worse than just call another election? He called another election to create a new legislative body, which will essentially grab many of the powers of the opposition-led National Assembly.

    Before this, the government-led Supreme Court (apparently part of the most corrupt judicial system in the world) tried to strip the National Assembly of all its powers.

    That seems remarkably dictatorial.
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    PeterCPeterC Posts: 1,274
    RobD said:

    Is the "Democrat" name supposed to be ironic?

    The whole concept is warmly to be welcomed. It's comedic value will be tremendous and it's contribution to the gaiety of the nation invaluable.
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    BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 31,560
    PeterC said:

    GIN1138 said:

    James Chapman's Twitter is a complete car crash today...

    The man is totally unhinged! :open_mouth:

    What is on display is a total lack of judgement. He could have put forward his views in a measured and - dare I say it - statesmanlike fashion and have been given the chance of hearing. Instead he is just lashing out in all directions and in the process making his cause appear ridiculous.

    I expect serious Remoaners will want dissociate themselves from him. He is certainly the very last person you would want to launch a new party!
    I think you are right PeterC. As someone who would be open to a new 3rd party I cannot think of any reason why Chapman should be the instigator of it. I had never heard of him before this week. His Wikipedia summary says it all really: "James Chapman is a British PR executive, a former UK Government adviser, and former political editor of the Daily Mail."

    I assume the only reason he is getting such publicity now is because of his former role as Davis's Chief of Staff at the DEEU.

    It's going to need someone with a bit more gravitas and depth to kick this off properly I think. David Miliband maybe?
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    QuincelQuincel Posts: 3,949
    I struggle to see any reason for either main party to agree to this. They have the tools (deselection, etc) to require 'Our way or the highway', why wouldn't they?
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    williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 48,011
    RobD said:

    Is the "Democrat" name supposed to be ironic?

    As Liam Fox said in the debate on the referendum bill:

    "Some of us still bear the scars of 1992. That is why we must not rush into the referendum. We must ensure that we have adequate debate and that people do not feel that they have been bounced, or the result will not be as binding as we would like it to be."

    He then joined a campaign committee that pushed out messaging like this. Can he be surprised that the result is not as binding as he would have liked it to be?

    https://twitter.com/vote_leave/status/744612259603816448
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    Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 55,258
    GIN1138 said:

    This in relation to Stuart Jackson (EX-MP) formally of this Parish?

    https://twitter.com/jameschappers/status/895978929093259264

    I'd do a better job than both for £115k.

    That's way more than the civil servants at DexEU get paid.
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    Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 55,258

    Democracy requires that the decisions taken by the people are implemented by the politicians.

    The idea that the politicians can say to the people "you got it wrong, vote again" is as anti-democratic as Maduro saying "you got it wrong in the 2015 National Assembly election" and following it as he has.

    I think the comparison trivialises Maduro's actions. Calling a fresh election because he didn't like the last result is not especially dictatorial behaviour - it's entirely clear that the Conservatives would do exactly that tomorrow if they were confident they'd win. Tsk, one might say, but it's not unprecedented. Arresting and shooting opponents is what makes most of us on all sides turn against Maduro.

    Saying "There are new facts, does this change your view?" is a not unreasonable question. But premature at this stage.
    Bollocks. The election was a lesson in that.

    The Tories wouldn't call an election tomorrow if they were on 55% and Labour on 20%, now.
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    Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 55,258
    GIN1138 said:

    James Chapman's Twitter is a complete car crash today...

    The man is totally unhinged! :open_mouth:

    The deeply personal attacks he's launching on those with whom he has political disagreements speak far more about him than them.
  • Options

    Democracy requires that the decisions taken by the people are implemented by the politicians.

    The idea that the politicians can say to the people "you got it wrong, vote again" is as anti-democratic as Maduro saying "you got it wrong in the 2015 National Assembly election" and following it as he has.

    I think the comparison trivialises Maduro's actions. Calling a fresh election because he didn't like the last result is not especially dictatorial behaviour - it's entirely clear that the Conservatives would do exactly that tomorrow if they were confident they'd win. Tsk, one might say, but it's not unprecedented. Arresting and shooting opponents is what makes most of us on all sides turn against Maduro.

    Saying "There are new facts, does this change your view?" is a not unreasonable question. But premature at this stage.
    Bollocks. The election was a lesson in that.

    The Tories wouldn't call an election tomorrow if they were on 55% and Labour on 20%, now.
    They might. What they wouldn't do is assume those figures could be counted on and run an entirely negative campaign.

    With a more positive campaign, more positive manifesto and a party leader that bothered to show up to the debates the rsulr would have been different.
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    PeterCPeterC Posts: 1,274
    edited August 2017

    PeterC said:

    GIN1138 said:

    James Chapman's Twitter is a complete car crash today...

    The man is totally unhinged! :open_mouth:

    What is on display is a total lack of judgement. He could have put forward his views in a measured and - dare I say it - statesmanlike fashion and have been given the chance of hearing. Instead he is just lashing out in all directions and in the process making his cause appear ridiculous.

    I expect serious Remoaners will want dissociate themselves from him. He is certainly the very last person you would want to launch a new party!
    I think you are right PeterC. As someone who would be open to a new 3rd party I cannot think of any reason why Chapman should be the instigator of it. I had never heard of him before this week. His Wikipedia summary says it all really: "James Chapman is a British PR executive, a former UK Government adviser, and former political editor of the Daily Mail."

    I assume the only reason he is getting such publicity now is because of his former role as Davis's Chief of Staff at the DEEU.

    It's going to need someone with a bit more gravitas and depth to kick this off properly I think. David Miliband maybe?
    The obstacles are formiddable, and that is without there being much evidence of any popular demand for a new centre party, or any taking account of the fact that there already is one in the form of the LibDems.

    In 1981 four heavyweight politicians took the plunge to launch the SDP. The stars were aligned much better then, yet even in alliance with the Liberals the venture was brutally treated by FPTP. This time there will need to be a lot more than ex-SPADs on twitter. Several heavyweights from both main parties will be essential to attact any sustained attention. The only problem is that I'm not sure that we do political heavyweights anymore.
  • Options
    viewcodeviewcode Posts: 18,618

    ..attacks he's launching on those with whom he has political disagreements speak far more about him than them...

    PeterC said:

    ...Remoaners...


  • Options
    Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 55,258

    Democracy requires that the decisions taken by the people are implemented by the politicians.

    The idea that the politicians can say to the people "you got it wrong, vote again" is as anti-democratic as Maduro saying "you got it wrong in the 2015 National Assembly election" and following it as he has.

    I think the comparison trivialises Maduro's actions. Calling a fresh election because he didn't like the last result is not especially dictatorial behaviour - it's entirely clear that the Conservatives would do exactly that tomorrow if they were confident they'd win. Tsk, one might say, but it's not unprecedented. Arresting and shooting opponents is what makes most of us on all sides turn against Maduro.

    Saying "There are new facts, does this change your view?" is a not unreasonable question. But premature at this stage.
    Bollocks. The election was a lesson in that.

    The Tories wouldn't call an election tomorrow if they were on 55% and Labour on 20%, now.
    They might. What they wouldn't do is assume those figures could be counted on and run an entirely negative campaign.

    With a more positive campaign, more positive manifesto and a party leader that bothered to show up to the debates the rsulr would have been different.
    Forget it. The Tories won't call an election now until the Parliament times out.
  • Options
    BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 31,560

    Democracy requires that the decisions taken by the people are implemented by the politicians.

    The idea that the politicians can say to the people "you got it wrong, vote again" is as anti-democratic as Maduro saying "you got it wrong in the 2015 National Assembly election" and following it as he has.

    I think the comparison trivialises Maduro's actions. Calling a fresh election because he didn't like the last result is not especially dictatorial behaviour - it's entirely clear that the Conservatives would do exactly that tomorrow if they were confident they'd win. Tsk, one might say, but it's not unprecedented. Arresting and shooting opponents is what makes most of us on all sides turn against Maduro.

    Saying "There are new facts, does this change your view?" is a not unreasonable question. But premature at this stage.
    Bollocks. The election was a lesson in that.

    The Tories wouldn't call an election tomorrow if they were on 55% and Labour on 20%, now.
    No, they absolutely would - but with a new leader and a proper campaign: attend the leader debates, publish a costed manifesto, no stupid fox-hunting type ideas, etc.
  • Options
    williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 48,011

    Democracy requires that the decisions taken by the people are implemented by the politicians.

    The idea that the politicians can say to the people "you got it wrong, vote again" is as anti-democratic as Maduro saying "you got it wrong in the 2015 National Assembly election" and following it as he has.

    I think the comparison trivialises Maduro's actions. Calling a fresh election because he didn't like the last result is not especially dictatorial behaviour - it's entirely clear that the Conservatives would do exactly that tomorrow if they were confident they'd win. Tsk, one might say, but it's not unprecedented. Arresting and shooting opponents is what makes most of us on all sides turn against Maduro.

    Saying "There are new facts, does this change your view?" is a not unreasonable question. But premature at this stage.
    Bollocks. The election was a lesson in that.

    The Tories wouldn't call an election tomorrow if they were on 55% and Labour on 20%, now.
    They might. What they wouldn't do is assume those figures could be counted on and run an entirely negative campaign.

    With a more positive campaign, more positive manifesto and a party leader that bothered to show up to the debates the rsulr would have been different.
    Forget it. The Tories won't call an election now until the Parliament times out.
    That's assuming that people like Jacob Rees-Mogg and Anna Soubry can coexist in the same party for the length of a parliament in the current circumstances. Things will get very heated in British politics over the next year...
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    BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 31,560
    PeterC said:

    PeterC said:

    GIN1138 said:

    James Chapman's Twitter is a complete car crash today...

    The man is totally unhinged! :open_mouth:

    What is on display is a total lack of judgement. He could have put forward his views in a measured and - dare I say it - statesmanlike fashion and have been given the chance of hearing. Instead he is just lashing out in all directions and in the process making his cause appear ridiculous.

    I expect serious Remoaners will want dissociate themselves from him. He is certainly the very last person you would want to launch a new party!
    I think you are right PeterC. As someone who would be open to a new 3rd party I cannot think of any reason why Chapman should be the instigator of it. I had never heard of him before this week. His Wikipedia summary says it all really: "James Chapman is a British PR executive, a former UK Government adviser, and former political editor of the Daily Mail."

    I assume the only reason he is getting such publicity now is because of his former role as Davis's Chief of Staff at the DEEU.

    It's going to need someone with a bit more gravitas and depth to kick this off properly I think. David Miliband maybe?
    The obstacles are formiddable, and that is without there being much evidence of any popular demand for a new centre party, or any taking account of the fact that there already is one in the form of the LibDems.

    In 1981 four heavyweight politicians took the plunge to launch the SDP. The stars were aligned much better then, yet even in alliance with the Liberals the venture was brutally treated by FPTP. This time there will need to be a lot more than ex-SPADs on twitter. Several heavyweights from both main parties will be essential to attact any sustained attention. The only problem is that I'm not sure that we do political heavyweights anymore.
    Yes - all very good points. In the absence of a major Labour or Tory split I can't see a new centre party happening.
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    RobDRobD Posts: 58,961

    RobD said:

    Is the "Democrat" name supposed to be ironic?

    As Liam Fox said in the debate on the referendum bill:

    "Some of us still bear the scars of 1992. That is why we must not rush into the referendum. We must ensure that we have adequate debate and that people do not feel that they have been bounced, or the result will not be as binding as we would like it to be."

    He then joined a campaign committee that pushed out messaging like this. Can he be surprised that the result is not as binding as he would have liked it to be?

    twitter.com/vote_leave/status/744612259603816448
    I've not seen that one before. Is the amount incorrect, or is it the whole "turkey will never join" thing?
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    GIN1138GIN1138 Posts: 20,793

    GIN1138 said:

    This in relation to Stuart Jackson (EX-MP) formally of this Parish?

    https://twitter.com/jameschappers/status/895978929093259264

    I'd do a better job than both for £115k.

    That's way more than the civil servants at DexEU get paid.
    Plato's Pussy could do a better job than those two clowns! ;)
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    BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 31,560
    RobD said:

    RobD said:

    Is the "Democrat" name supposed to be ironic?

    As Liam Fox said in the debate on the referendum bill:

    "Some of us still bear the scars of 1992. That is why we must not rush into the referendum. We must ensure that we have adequate debate and that people do not feel that they have been bounced, or the result will not be as binding as we would like it to be."

    He then joined a campaign committee that pushed out messaging like this. Can he be surprised that the result is not as binding as he would have liked it to be?

    twitter.com/vote_leave/status/744612259603816448
    I've not seen that one before. Is the amount incorrect, or is it the whole "turkey will never join" thing?
    Poster also implies Syria and Iraq to join the EU. Scaremongering at it's most Daily Mail-esque.
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    MortimerMortimer Posts: 13,936

    RobD said:

    RobD said:

    Is the "Democrat" name supposed to be ironic?

    As Liam Fox said in the debate on the referendum bill:

    "Some of us still bear the scars of 1992. That is why we must not rush into the referendum. We must ensure that we have adequate debate and that people do not feel that they have been bounced, or the result will not be as binding as we would like it to be."

    He then joined a campaign committee that pushed out messaging like this. Can he be surprised that the result is not as binding as he would have liked it to be?

    twitter.com/vote_leave/status/744612259603816448
    I've not seen that one before. Is the amount incorrect, or is it the whole "turkey will never join" thing?
    Poster also implies Syria and Iraq to join the EU. Scaremongering at it's most Daily Mail-esque.
    Still find it bizarre that Remain didn't come out and say they'd veto Turkish accession.
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    Has anyone mentioned tonight's report in the Telegraph on line that the majority of remain voters now agree that Britain should take control of it's borders after Brexit, end the jurisdiction of the ECJ and pay little or nothing to leave.

    It is a major survey of 20,000 people who now prefer a hard brexit.

    Almost 70% of people said they preferred a deal with the EU which ends membership of the single market, ongoing payments and continued freedom of movement

    A similar percentage prefer a 'no deal' to a soft Brexit.

    Maybe opinion is moving away from the EU and those fighting to remain may be losing the argument.

    But note I have said 'maybe'
  • Options
    nielhnielh Posts: 1,307
    PeterC said:

    PeterC said:

    GIN1138 said:

    James Chapman's Twitter is a complete car crash today...

    The man is totally unhinged! :open_mouth:

    What is on display is a total lack of judgement. He could have put forward his views in a measured and - dare I say it - statesmanlike fashion and have been given the chance of hearing. Instead he is just lashing out in all directions and in the process making his cause appear ridiculous.

    I expect serious Remoaners will want dissociate themselves from him. He is certainly the very last person you would want to launch a new party!
    I think you are right PeterC. As someone who would be open to a new 3rd party I cannot think of any reason why Chapman should be the instigator of it. I had never heard of him before this week. His Wikipedia summary says it all really: "James Chapman is a British PR executive, a former UK Government adviser, and former political editor of the Daily Mail."

    I assume the only reason he is getting such publicity now is because of his former role as Davis's Chief of Staff at the DEEU.

    It's going to need someone with a bit more gravitas and depth to kick this off properly I think. David Miliband maybe?
    any sustained attention. The only problem is that I'm not sure that we do political heavyweights anymore.
    People should stop assuming that a new party would automatically suffer the same fate as the SDP. History does not automatically repeat itself, as evidenced by Corbyn's success in the 2017 election against the backdrop of 30 years of thinking the labour party could never win on a left wing platform.

    FPTP is a major barrier to entry, but a new party could work. If labour hold the line that they are taking on Brexit at the moment, then the Brexit vote just gets split between labour and the conservatives and there is an opportunity for a pro european party to mop up. Then the new party effectively forces Labour in to a grand brexit coalition with the conservatives, because neither of them can win a majority. Can you really see that happening?

    If you believe in remaining you should go for it because what have you got to lose? What Chapman is ranting about makes quite a lot of sense. If a new party gets 20 seats, it has the balance of power.
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    williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 48,011

    Has anyone mentioned tonight's report in the Telegraph on line that the majority of remain voters now agree that Britain should take control of it's borders after Brexit, end the jurisdiction of the ECJ and pay little or nothing to leave.

    It is a major survey of 20,000 people who now prefer a hard brexit.

    Almost 70% of people said they preferred a deal with the EU which ends membership of the single market, ongoing payments and continued freedom of movement

    A similar percentage prefer a 'no deal' to a soft Brexit.

    Maybe opinion is moving away from the EU and those fighting to remain may be losing the argument.

    But note I have said 'maybe'

    Did any of the people they surveyed have a workable solution for the Irish border?
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    RobDRobD Posts: 58,961
    nielh said:



    People should stop assuming that a new party would automatically suffer the same fate as the SDP. History does not automatically repeat itself, as evidenced by Corbyn's success in the 2017 election against the backdrop of 30 years of thinking the labour party could never win on a left wing platform.

    So nothing changed? :D
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    Richard_NabaviRichard_Nabavi Posts: 30,820
    edited August 2017
    Mortimer said:

    Still find it bizarre that Remain didn't come out and say they'd veto Turkish accession.

    That was David Cameron's fault - one of the few legitimate criticisms of him. He'd tied himself in knots by supporting Turkish accession. In itself, that originally wasn't a bad idea - roping Turkey into the European sphere of influence as a democracy was a noble aim - but as an idea it had already gone pear-shaped well before the referendum.
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    Ishmael_ZIshmael_Z Posts: 8,981

    Has anyone mentioned tonight's report in the Telegraph on line that the majority of remain voters now agree that Britain should take control of it's borders after Brexit, end the jurisdiction of the ECJ and pay little or nothing to leave.

    It is a major survey of 20,000 people who now prefer a hard brexit.

    Almost 70% of people said they preferred a deal with the EU which ends membership of the single market, ongoing payments and continued freedom of movement

    A similar percentage prefer a 'no deal' to a soft Brexit.

    Maybe opinion is moving away from the EU and those fighting to remain may be losing the argument.

    But note I have said 'maybe'

    You sure you didn't dream that? All I am seeing is possibly he best Matt ever, and a photo of Hillary which makes me think Trump isn't all that bad after all.
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    rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 53,919
    HYUFD said:

    AndyJS said:

    Latest German poll:

    CDU: 40%
    SPD: 24%
    Greens: 8%
    Left: 8%
    FDP: 8%
    AfD: 8%
    Others: 4%

    http://www.wahlrecht.de/umfragen/

    Merkel needs the AfD as well as the FDP to get a right of centre coalition over 50% so a CDU SPD coalition is likely to continue
    Others are on 4%, so you only need 50% of the 96% (as the 4% won't be represented).

    I would note that the AfD has outperformed its poll scores in most of the local German elections in the last couple of years, so they may well be understated here.

    However, I would also note that the current AfD leadership is much closer to the FN than the old AfD leadership was. So, I would be very surprised if the CDU got into bed with them. CDU+FDP+Greens seems a more likely coalition.
  • Options

    Has anyone mentioned tonight's report in the Telegraph on line that the majority of remain voters now agree that Britain should take control of it's borders after Brexit, end the jurisdiction of the ECJ and pay little or nothing to leave.

    It is a major survey of 20,000 people who now prefer a hard brexit.

    Almost 70% of people said they preferred a deal with the EU which ends membership of the single market, ongoing payments and continued freedom of movement

    A similar percentage prefer a 'no deal' to a soft Brexit.

    Maybe opinion is moving away from the EU and those fighting to remain may be losing the argument.

    But note I have said 'maybe'

    Did any of the people they surveyed have a workable solution for the Irish border?
    I have no idea William but it is much against the majority opinion on here. It may also be that many just want out no matter what the consequences
  • Options
    MortimerMortimer Posts: 13,936

    Mortimer said:

    Still find it bizarre that Remain didn't come out and say they'd veto Turkish accession.

    That was David Cameron's fault - one of the few legitimate criticisms of him. He'd tied himself in knots by supporting Turkish accession. In itself, that originally wasn't a bad idea - roping Turkey into the European sphere of influence as a democracy was a noble aim - but as an idea it had already gone pear-shaped well before the referendum.
    It was bizarre. It would have cut off a strong attack line. Presumably polling suggested they didn't need to.

    Btw you're quite right - wage bill etc is the largest part of school spending, but there is significant expenditure on computer equipment, consumables, cleaning products etc that obviously includes input VAT.
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    CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 59,572

    One loony Leaver quoting another loony Leaver's tweets: Brexception.

    Even on an issue like this they play the man not the ball. Telling.

    https://twitter.com/jameschappers/status/896044435104051204
    They can't engage with his arguments so they threaten him with a doing-over by the Daily Mail and post nude pictures of him online.
    His argument, such as it is, is that the demands of the little people should be ignored. There's no engaging with that.
    That is not his argument at all.
    https://twitter.com/jameschappers/status/895014262804033536
    Yes, quite. Not arguing that the demands of the little people should be ignored. Arguing that Brexit is a catastrophe and the democratically elected representatives who have formed the same view should come together to seek to avert it.
    That is exactly saying that the demands of the little people should be ignored as the little people have demanded that we Leave the EU.
    No it's not exactly the same. The public decided to vote to sail down a river. If you see Niagara ahead, it is not ignoring the demands of the little people for the crew to take matters into their own hands.

    I should point out that personally I don't agree with James Chapman. But this idea that democracy stopped on 23 June 2016 is ridiculous.
    There is no such idea. But democracy requires that the decisions taken by the people are implemented by the politicians.
    So what's your solution for the Irish border?
    Depends on the Trade agreement with the EU.

    Which the EU won't discuss until there is a solution for the Irish border........
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    The EU egg scandal seems to be extending to chicken meat. But no problem the EU are meeting on the 26th September to discuss the issue.

    Clear demonstration that they are too cumbersome an organisation to deal with it now as an emergency
  • Options
    Ishmael_Z said:
    It really should worry those in the remain camp. This is a 20,000 people survey
  • Options
    williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 48,011
    edited August 2017

    One loony Leaver quoting another loony Leaver's tweets: Brexception.

    Even on an issue like this they play the man not the ball. Telling.

    https://twitter.com/jameschappers/status/896044435104051204
    They can't engage with his arguments so they threaten him with a doing-over by the Daily Mail and post nude pictures of him online.
    His argument, such as it is, is that the demands of the little people should be ignored. There's no engaging with that.
    That is not his argument at all.
    https://twitter.com/jameschappers/status/895014262804033536
    Yes, quite. Not arguing that the demands of the little people should be ignored. Arguing that Brexit is a catastrophe and the democratically elected representatives who have formed the same view should come together to seek to avert it.
    That is exactly saying that the demands of the little people should be ignored as the little people have demanded that we Leave the EU.
    No it's not exactly the same. The public decided to vote to sail down a river. If you see Niagara ahead, it is not ignoring the demands of the little people for the crew to take matters into their own hands.

    I should point out that personally I don't agree with James Chapman. But this idea that democracy stopped on 23 June 2016 is ridiculous.
    There is no such idea. But democracy requires that the decisions taken by the people are implemented by the politicians.
    So what's your solution for the Irish border?
    Depends on the Trade agreement with the EU.

    Which the EU won't discuss until there is a solution for the Irish border........
    In other words you don't have an answer but you know who to blame. That's the Brexit strategy.
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    CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 59,572
    Ishmael_Z said:

    Has anyone mentioned tonight's report in the Telegraph on line that the majority of remain voters now agree that Britain should take control of it's borders after Brexit, end the jurisdiction of the ECJ and pay little or nothing to leave.

    It is a major survey of 20,000 people who now prefer a hard brexit.

    Almost 70% of people said they preferred a deal with the EU which ends membership of the single market, ongoing payments and continued freedom of movement

    A similar percentage prefer a 'no deal' to a soft Brexit.

    Maybe opinion is moving away from the EU and those fighting to remain may be losing the argument.

    But note I have said 'maybe'

    You sure you didn't dream that? All I am seeing is possibly he best Matt ever, and a photo of Hillary which makes me think Trump isn't all that bad after all.
    Sounds like a reprint of this Buzzfeed scoop:

    https://www.buzzfeed.com/jamesball/remain-and-leave-voters-are-surprisingly-united-on-backing?utm_term=.oj8dL0dY2w#.nhJ70O7gm3

    Which looks legit.....
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    Ishmael_ZIshmael_Z Posts: 8,981

    The EU egg scandal seems to be extending to chicken meat. But no problem the EU are meeting on the 26th September to discuss the issue.

    Clear demonstration that they are too cumbersome an organisation to deal with it now as an emergency

    Really not going Remoan's way at the moment, is it? They may almost be about to regret making the import of chicken from the US into such a front and centre issue...
  • Options
    CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 59,572

    One loony Leaver quoting another loony Leaver's tweets: Brexception.

    Even on an issue like this they play the man not the ball. Telling.

    https://twitter.com/jameschappers/status/896044435104051204
    They can't engage with his arguments so they threaten him with a doing-over by the Daily Mail and post nude pictures of him online.
    His argument, such as it is, is that the demands of the little people should be ignored. There's no engaging with that.
    That is not his argument at all.
    https://twitter.com/jameschappers/status/895014262804033536
    Yes, quite. Not arguing that the demands of the little people should be ignored. Arguing that Brexit is a catastrophe and the democratically elected representatives who have formed the same view should come together to seek to avert it.
    That is exactly saying that the demands of the little people should be ignored as the little people have demanded that we Leave the EU.
    No it's not exactly the same. The public decided to vote to sail down a river. If you see Niagara ahead, it is not ignoring the demands of the little people for the crew to take matters into their own hands.

    I should point out that personally I don't agree with James Chapman. But this idea that democracy stopped on 23 June 2016 is ridiculous.
    There is no such idea. But democracy requires that the decisions taken by the people are implemented by the politicians.
    So what's your solution for the Irish border?
    Depends on the Trade agreement with the EU.

    Which the EU won't discuss until there is a solution for the Irish border........
    In other words you don't have an answer but you know who to blame. That's the Brexit strategy.
    It depends on the Trade agreement with the EU

    Which part of that don't you understand?
  • Options
    foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548

    Has anyone mentioned tonight's report in the Telegraph on line that the majority of remain voters now agree that Britain should take control of it's borders after Brexit, end the jurisdiction of the ECJ and pay little or nothing to leave.

    It is a major survey of 20,000 people who now prefer a hard brexit.

    Almost 70% of people said they preferred a deal with the EU which ends membership of the single market, ongoing payments and continued freedom of movement

    A similar percentage prefer a 'no deal' to a soft Brexit.

    Maybe opinion is moving away from the EU and those fighting to remain may be losing the argument.

    But note I have said 'maybe'

    I think that I am not alone in being a Remainer turned Hard Brexiteer.

    Either we stay in and fully participate, or walkaway completely. A half in / half out Brexit is not tenable.
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    Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 60,247
    edited August 2017
    Ishmael_Z said:

    The EU egg scandal seems to be extending to chicken meat. But no problem the EU are meeting on the 26th September to discuss the issue.

    Clear demonstration that they are too cumbersome an organisation to deal with it now as an emergency

    Really not going Remoan's way at the moment, is it? They may almost be about to regret making the import of chicken from the US into such a front and centre issue...
    Also business report today that Switzerland wants to join the UK, Singapore and Hong Kong in a new banking and financial arrangement post Brexit. And the EU are furious apparently
  • Options
    CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 59,572

    Ishmael_Z said:
    It really should worry those in the remain camp. This is a 20,000 people survey

    It also shows how out of touch they are.

    No wonder Chapman doesn't want another referendum.....they'd get the wrong answer, again.....
  • Options
    williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 48,011

    One loony Leaver quoting another loony Leaver's tweets: Brexception.

    Even on an issue like this they play the man not the ball. Telling.

    https://twitter.com/jameschappers/status/896044435104051204
    They can't engage with his arguments so they threaten him with a doing-over by the Daily Mail and post nude pictures of him online.
    His argument, such as it is, is that the demands of the little people should be ignored. There's no engaging with that.
    That is not his argument at all.
    https://twitter.com/jameschappers/status/895014262804033536
    Yes, quite. Not arguing that the demands of the little people should be ignored. Arguing that Brexit is a catastrophe and the democratically elected representatives who have formed the same view should come together to seek to avert it.
    That is exactly saying that the demands of the little people should be ignored as the little people have demanded that we Leave the EU.
    No it's not exactly the same. The public decided to vote to sail down a river. If you see Niagara ahead, it is not ignoring the demands of the little people for the crew to take matters into their own hands.

    I should point out that personally I don't agree with James Chapman. But this idea that democracy stopped on 23 June 2016 is ridiculous.
    There is no such idea. But democracy requires that the decisions taken by the people are implemented by the politicians.
    So what's your solution for the Irish border?
    Depends on the Trade agreement with the EU.

    Which the EU won't discuss until there is a solution for the Irish border........
    In other words you don't have an answer but you know who to blame. That's the Brexit strategy.
    It depends on the Trade agreement with the EU

    Which part of that don't you understand?
    So if the trade agreement is x, the border is y, but if the trade agreement is a, the border is b?

    That doesn't work I'm afraid. The border has some characteristics that are non-negotiable and they constrain the terms of trade, not vice versa.
  • Options

    Has anyone mentioned tonight's report in the Telegraph on line that the majority of remain voters now agree that Britain should take control of it's borders after Brexit, end the jurisdiction of the ECJ and pay little or nothing to leave.

    It is a major survey of 20,000 people who now prefer a hard brexit.

    Almost 70% of people said they preferred a deal with the EU which ends membership of the single market, ongoing payments and continued freedom of movement

    A similar percentage prefer a 'no deal' to a soft Brexit.

    Maybe opinion is moving away from the EU and those fighting to remain may be losing the argument.

    But note I have said 'maybe'

    I think that I am not alone in being a Remainer turned Hard Brexiteer.

    Either we stay in and fully participate, or walkaway completely. A half in / half out Brexit is not tenable.
    To be honest you are a supporter of Corbyn who cannot follow his Venezuela economics while tied to the EU. Great game against the Arsenal tonight and you deserved a point at least
  • Options
    BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 31,560
    edited August 2017
    Ishmael_Z said:
    The Telegraph seems to be reporting a Buzzfeed report of an as yet unpbulished survey by the LSE and Oxford Uni. See link...

    https://www.buzzfeed.com/jamesball/remain-and-leave-voters-are-surprisingly-united-on-backing

    Interestingly the Telegraph says it's a survey of 20,000 people, Buzzfeed says 3,000... What's the betting LSE and Oxford say they surveyed 300? lol! [See EDIT below]

    Feels like potentially fake news until we see the official survey.

    EDIT: The Buzzfeed article states:
    The researchers collected six data points each from 3,293 people, resulting in a dataset of 19,758 choices. An earlier version of this story misstated that the researchers surveyed 20,000 people.
  • Options

    Ishmael_Z said:
    The Telegraph seems to be reporting a Buzzfeed report of an as yet unpbulished survey by the LSE and Oxford Uni. See link...

    https://www.buzzfeed.com/jamesball/remain-and-leave-voters-are-surprisingly-united-on-backing

    Interestingly the Telegraph says it's a survey of 20,000 people, Buzzfeed says 3,000... What's the betting LSE and Oxford say they surveyed 300 lol!

    Feels like potentially fake news until we see the official survey.

    EDIT: The Buzzfeed article states:

    The researchers collected six data points each from 3,293 people, resulting in a dataset of 19,758 choices. An earlier version of this story misstated that the researchers surveyed 20,000 people.
    To be fair it sounds as if you hope it is fake news
  • Options
    williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 48,011

    Ishmael_Z said:
    It really should worry those in the remain camp. This is a 20,000 people survey

    It also shows how out of touch they are.

    No wonder Chapman doesn't want another referendum.....they'd get the wrong answer, again.....
    The way the survey was set up was interesting in that it asked people to judge how much they would support or oppose a particular scenario with a neutral position as the default.

    A such you can gauge how strong their feelings are about a particular issue. Perhaps the most striking thing is that Leave voters are not particularly opposed to Brexit not happening until 2025. There is no sense of urgency about reaching the 'sunlit uplands'.
  • Options
    BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 31,560

    The EU egg scandal seems to be extending to chicken meat. But no problem the EU are meeting on the 26th September to discuss the issue.

    Clear demonstration that they are too cumbersome an organisation to deal with it now as an emergency

    Whereas the UK dealt with BSE in an exemplary manner of course!
  • Options

    The EU egg scandal seems to be extending to chicken meat. But no problem the EU are meeting on the 26th September to discuss the issue.

    Clear demonstration that they are too cumbersome an organisation to deal with it now as an emergency

    Whereas the UK dealt with BSE in an exemplary manner of course!
    Always ready to do down UK PLC
  • Options
    Ishmael_ZIshmael_Z Posts: 8,981

    Ishmael_Z said:
    The Telegraph seems to be reporting a Buzzfeed report of an as yet unpbulished survey by the LSE and Oxford Uni. See link...

    https://www.buzzfeed.com/jamesball/remain-and-leave-voters-are-surprisingly-united-on-backing

    Interestingly the Telegraph says it's a survey of 20,000 people, Buzzfeed says 3,000... What's the betting LSE and Oxford say they surveyed 300? lol! [See EDIT below]

    Feels like potentially fake news until we see the official survey.

    EDIT: The Buzzfeed article states:
    The researchers collected six data points each from 3,293 people, resulting in a dataset of 19,758 choices. An earlier version of this story misstated that the researchers surveyed 20,000 people.
    Bottom of buzzfeed page:

    CORRECTION
    August 11, 2017, at 5:17 p.m.
    The researchers collected six data points each from 3,293 people, resulting in a dataset of 19,758 choices. An earlier version of this story misstated that the researchers surveyed 20,000 people.

    The graphs in the article are really, really cool (in form as opposed to content)
  • Options
    foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548

    Has anyone mentioned tonight's report in the Telegraph on line that the majority of remain voters now agree that Britain should take control of it's borders after Brexit, end the jurisdiction of the ECJ and pay little or nothing to leave.

    It is a major survey of 20,000 people who now prefer a hard brexit.

    Almost 70% of people said they preferred a deal with the EU which ends membership of the single market, ongoing payments and continued freedom of movement

    A similar percentage prefer a 'no deal' to a soft Brexit.

    Maybe opinion is moving away from the EU and those fighting to remain may be losing the argument.

    But note I have said 'maybe'

    I think that I am not alone in being a Remainer turned Hard Brexiteer.

    Either we stay in and fully participate, or walkaway completely. A half in / half out Brexit is not tenable.
    To be honest you are a supporter of Corbyn who cannot follow his Venezuela economics while tied to the EU. Great game against the Arsenal tonight and you deserved a point at least
    We always get robbed at the Arsenal. Comedy defending at both ends and very poor subs by Shakey.

    I have never supported Corbyn's economics, though can understand why he is popular. I have always opposed borrowing. I hate debt in all its forms.
  • Options
    Sean_FSean_F Posts: 35,789

    Has anyone mentioned tonight's report in the Telegraph on line that the majority of remain voters now agree that Britain should take control of it's borders after Brexit, end the jurisdiction of the ECJ and pay little or nothing to leave.

    It is a major survey of 20,000 people who now prefer a hard brexit.

    Almost 70% of people said they preferred a deal with the EU which ends membership of the single market, ongoing payments and continued freedom of movement

    A similar percentage prefer a 'no deal' to a soft Brexit.

    Maybe opinion is moving away from the EU and those fighting to remain may be losing the argument.

    But note I have said 'maybe'

    Did any of the people they surveyed have a workable solution for the Irish border?
    Does it matter?
  • Options
    PeterCPeterC Posts: 1,274
    edited August 2017
    nielh said:

    PeterC said:

    PeterC said:

    GIN1138 said:

    James Chapman's Twitter is a complete car crash today...

    The man is totally unhinged! :open_mouth:

    What is on display is a total lack of judgement. He could have put forward his views in a measured and - dare I say it - statesmanlike fashion and have been given the chance of hearing. Instead he is just lashing out in all directions and in the process making his cause appear ridiculous.

    I expect serious Remoaners will want dissociate themselves from him. He is certainly the very last person you would want to launch a new party!
    Mail."

    I assume the only reas

    It's going to need someone with a bit more gravitas and depth to kick this off properly I think. David Miliband maybe?
    any sustained attention. The only problem is that I'm not sure that we do political heavyweights anymore.
    People should stop assuming that a new party would automatically suffer the same fate as the SDP. History does not automatically repeat itself, as evidenced by Corbyn's success in the 2017 election against the backdrop of 30 years of thinking the labour party could never win on a left wing platform.

    FPTP is a major barrier to entry, but a new party could work. If labour hold the line that they are taking on Brexit at the moment, then the Brexit vote just gets split between labour and the conservatives and there is an opportunity for a pro european party to mop up. Then the new party effectively forces Labour in to a grand brexit coalition with the conservatives, because neither of them can win a majority. Can you really see that happening?

    If you believe in remaining you should go for it because what have you got to lose? What Chapman is ranting about makes quite a lot of sense. If a new party gets 20 seats, it has the balance of power.
    I do not see why a new party would fare any better than the LibDems. In 2017 they were the ideal anti-Brexit choice, yet came nowhere, and that with about a quarter of voters being strongly opposed to Brexit. This is surely driven by the LibDems' lack of credibility as potential winners, the oldest of the obstacles faced by the Liberals. This in turn is driven by FPTP.

    A unified centre force would need close on 30pc of the poll even to begin to achieve lift-off.

    People should indeed stop thinking that a new party would automatically suffer the same fate as the SDP. It's fate could in fact be far worse. Even winning only a handful of seats it's influence could nonetheless be highly significant in the way it might alter the balance of support between the two main parties. This factor has been important if not critical in most of the elections since 1974.
  • Options

    Has anyone mentioned tonight's report in the Telegraph on line that the majority of remain voters now agree that Britain should take control of it's borders after Brexit, end the jurisdiction of the ECJ and pay little or nothing to leave.

    It is a major survey of 20,000 people who now prefer a hard brexit.

    Almost 70% of people said they preferred a deal with the EU which ends membership of the single market, ongoing payments and continued freedom of movement

    A similar percentage prefer a 'no deal' to a soft Brexit.

    Maybe opinion is moving away from the EU and those fighting to remain may be losing the argument.

    But note I have said 'maybe'

    I think that I am not alone in being a Remainer turned Hard Brexiteer.

    Either we stay in and fully participate, or walkaway completely. A half in / half out Brexit is not tenable.
    To be honest you are a supporter of Corbyn who cannot follow his Venezuela economics while tied to the EU. Great game against the Arsenal tonight and you deserved a point at least
    We always get robbed at the Arsenal. Comedy defending at both ends and very poor subs by Shakey.

    I have never supported Corbyn's economics, though can understand why he is popular. I have always opposed borrowing. I hate debt in all its forms.
    Fair comment - you did deserve a point
  • Options
    Sean_F said:

    Has anyone mentioned tonight's report in the Telegraph on line that the majority of remain voters now agree that Britain should take control of it's borders after Brexit, end the jurisdiction of the ECJ and pay little or nothing to leave.

    It is a major survey of 20,000 people who now prefer a hard brexit.

    Almost 70% of people said they preferred a deal with the EU which ends membership of the single market, ongoing payments and continued freedom of movement

    A similar percentage prefer a 'no deal' to a soft Brexit.

    Maybe opinion is moving away from the EU and those fighting to remain may be losing the argument.

    But note I have said 'maybe'

    Did any of the people they surveyed have a workable solution for the Irish border?
    Does it matter?
    Do they care. They just want out by the looks of it
  • Options
    BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 31,560

    The EU egg scandal seems to be extending to chicken meat. But no problem the EU are meeting on the 26th September to discuss the issue.

    Clear demonstration that they are too cumbersome an organisation to deal with it now as an emergency

    Whereas the UK dealt with BSE in an exemplary manner of course!
    Always ready to do down UK PLC
    No it's just foolish to think that UK bureaucracy is any better than EU bureacracy.

    Have you flip-flopped back to Leave again? I thought you'd changed to a reluctant Remainer last month?!
  • Options
    BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 31,560
    Sean_F said:

    Has anyone mentioned tonight's report in the Telegraph on line that the majority of remain voters now agree that Britain should take control of it's borders after Brexit, end the jurisdiction of the ECJ and pay little or nothing to leave.

    It is a major survey of 20,000 people who now prefer a hard brexit.

    Almost 70% of people said they preferred a deal with the EU which ends membership of the single market, ongoing payments and continued freedom of movement

    A similar percentage prefer a 'no deal' to a soft Brexit.

    Maybe opinion is moving away from the EU and those fighting to remain may be losing the argument.

    But note I have said 'maybe'

    Did any of the people they surveyed have a workable solution for the Irish border?
    Does it matter?
    No, probably not - it would be nice if Davis and co have a workable solution though!
  • Options
    williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 48,011

    Sean_F said:

    Has anyone mentioned tonight's report in the Telegraph on line that the majority of remain voters now agree that Britain should take control of it's borders after Brexit, end the jurisdiction of the ECJ and pay little or nothing to leave.

    It is a major survey of 20,000 people who now prefer a hard brexit.

    Almost 70% of people said they preferred a deal with the EU which ends membership of the single market, ongoing payments and continued freedom of movement

    A similar percentage prefer a 'no deal' to a soft Brexit.

    Maybe opinion is moving away from the EU and those fighting to remain may be losing the argument.

    But note I have said 'maybe'

    Did any of the people they surveyed have a workable solution for the Irish border?
    Does it matter?
    Do they care. They just want out by the looks of it
    Check the Buzzfeed link. People are not too bothered if we don't leave until 2025. It doesn't really matter to them, however they define what they think 'Brexit' should mean.
  • Options
    BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 31,560

    Ishmael_Z said:
    The Telegraph seems to be reporting a Buzzfeed report of an as yet unpbulished survey by the LSE and Oxford Uni. See link...

    https://www.buzzfeed.com/jamesball/remain-and-leave-voters-are-surprisingly-united-on-backing

    Interestingly the Telegraph says it's a survey of 20,000 people, Buzzfeed says 3,000... What's the betting LSE and Oxford say they surveyed 300 lol!

    Feels like potentially fake news until we see the official survey.

    EDIT: The Buzzfeed article states:

    The researchers collected six data points each from 3,293 people, resulting in a dataset of 19,758 choices. An earlier version of this story misstated that the researchers surveyed 20,000 people.
    To be fair it sounds as if you hope it is fake news
    Well the "20,000 people surveyed" part was fake!
  • Options
    foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548

    Sean_F said:

    Has anyone mentioned tonight's report in the Telegraph on line that the majority of remain voters now agree that Britain should take control of it's borders after Brexit, end the jurisdiction of the ECJ and pay little or nothing to leave.

    It is a major survey of 20,000 people who now prefer a hard brexit.

    Almost 70% of people said they preferred a deal with the EU which ends membership of the single market, ongoing payments and continued freedom of movement

    A similar percentage prefer a 'no deal' to a soft Brexit.

    Maybe opinion is moving away from the EU and those fighting to remain may be losing the argument.

    But note I have said 'maybe'

    Did any of the people they surveyed have a workable solution for the Irish border?
    Does it matter?
    Do they care. They just want out by the looks of it
    It all makes me think that a car crash Brexit is nailed on. We are making no preparations for it, yet the voters will spit the dummy at soft Brexit. Interesting that both Remainders and Leavers were in no hurry, and quite happy to have Brexit postponed.

    Lord, make me virtuous, but not yet!
  • Options

    The EU egg scandal seems to be extending to chicken meat. But no problem the EU are meeting on the 26th September to discuss the issue.

    Clear demonstration that they are too cumbersome an organisation to deal with it now as an emergency

    Whereas the UK dealt with BSE in an exemplary manner of course!
    Always ready to do down UK PLC
    No it's just foolish to think that UK bureaucracy is any better than EU bureacracy.

    Have you flip-flopped back to Leave again? I thought you'd changed to a reluctant Remainer last month?!
    No - I am wanting out but not prepared to be up tight about it as the negotiations proceed. It does feel as if there is some indication that the EU does not have all the cards and it could be that the majority do not care too much about the negatives, they just want the deed done
  • Options
    rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 53,919

    Has anyone mentioned tonight's report in the Telegraph on line that the majority of remain voters now agree that Britain should take control of it's borders after Brexit, end the jurisdiction of the ECJ and pay little or nothing to leave.

    It is a major survey of 20,000 people who now prefer a hard brexit.

    Almost 70% of people said they preferred a deal with the EU which ends membership of the single market, ongoing payments and continued freedom of movement

    A similar percentage prefer a 'no deal' to a soft Brexit.

    Maybe opinion is moving away from the EU and those fighting to remain may be losing the argument.

    But note I have said 'maybe'

    I think that I am not alone in being a Remainer turned Hard Brexiteer.

    Either we stay in and fully participate, or walkaway completely. A half in / half out Brexit is not tenable.
    To be honest you are a supporter of Corbyn who cannot follow his Venezuela economics while tied to the EU. Great game against the Arsenal tonight and you deserved a point at least
    We always get robbed at the Arsenal. Comedy defending at both ends and very poor subs by Shakey.

    I have never supported Corbyn's economics, though can understand why he is popular. I have always opposed borrowing. I hate debt in all its forms.
    You hate people saving! Why?
  • Options
    BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 31,560
    Ishmael_Z said:

    Ishmael_Z said:
    The Telegraph seems to be reporting a Buzzfeed report of an as yet unpbulished survey by the LSE and Oxford Uni. See link...

    https://www.buzzfeed.com/jamesball/remain-and-leave-voters-are-surprisingly-united-on-backing

    Interestingly the Telegraph says it's a survey of 20,000 people, Buzzfeed says 3,000... What's the betting LSE and Oxford say they surveyed 300? lol! [See EDIT below]

    Feels like potentially fake news until we see the official survey.

    EDIT: The Buzzfeed article states:
    The researchers collected six data points each from 3,293 people, resulting in a dataset of 19,758 choices. An earlier version of this story misstated that the researchers surveyed 20,000 people.
    Bottom of buzzfeed page:

    CORRECTION
    August 11, 2017, at 5:17 p.m.
    The researchers collected six data points each from 3,293 people, resulting in a dataset of 19,758 choices. An earlier version of this story misstated that the researchers surveyed 20,000 people.

    The graphs in the article are really, really cool (in form as opposed to content)
    They may be really cool in Chrome - they are really blank in Safari! :disappointed:
  • Options

    The EU egg scandal seems to be extending to chicken meat. But no problem the EU are meeting on the 26th September to discuss the issue.

    Clear demonstration that they are too cumbersome an organisation to deal with it now as an emergency

    Whereas the UK dealt with BSE in an exemplary manner of course!
    Always ready to do down UK PLC
    No it's just foolish to think that UK bureaucracy is any better than EU bureacracy.

    Have you flip-flopped back to Leave again? I thought you'd changed to a reluctant Remainer last month?!
    No - I am wanting out but not prepared to be up tight about it as the negotiations proceed. It does feel as if there is some indication that the EU does not have all the cards and it could be that the majority do not care too much about the negatives, they just want the deed done
    I would add it does not help my attitude to the EU when Juncker pays £24,000 for a private flying taxi from Brussels to Rome when there are many direct flights between the two daily. But socialists always run out of other people's money
  • Options
    foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548

    The EU egg scandal seems to be extending to chicken meat. But no problem the EU are meeting on the 26th September to discuss the issue.

    Clear demonstration that they are too cumbersome an organisation to deal with it now as an emergency

    Whereas the UK dealt with BSE in an exemplary manner of course!
    Always ready to do down UK PLC
    No it's just foolish to think that UK bureaucracy is any better than EU bureacracy.

    Have you flip-flopped back to Leave again? I thought you'd changed to a reluctant Remainer last month?!
    Any action is by the regulatory authorities and well underway, a committee meeting is just a distraction at this stage. This is already illegal, it is primarily about enforcement.

    Incidentally, it does show how swiftly even ubiquitous, fragile goods with a short shelf life move around quickly in the Single Market. Post Brexit, they would all still be in a Calais lorry park.
  • Options
    CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 59,572

    Ishmael_Z said:

    Ishmael_Z said:
    The Telegraph seems to be reporting a Buzzfeed report of an as yet unpbulished survey by the LSE and Oxford Uni. See link...

    https://www.buzzfeed.com/jamesball/remain-and-leave-voters-are-surprisingly-united-on-backing

    Interestingly the Telegraph says it's a survey of 20,000 people, Buzzfeed says 3,000... What's the betting LSE and Oxford say they surveyed 300? lol! [See EDIT below]

    Feels like potentially fake news until we see the official survey.

    EDIT: The Buzzfeed article states:
    The researchers collected six data points each from 3,293 people, resulting in a dataset of 19,758 choices. An earlier version of this story misstated that the researchers surveyed 20,000 people.
    Bottom of buzzfeed page:

    CORRECTION
    August 11, 2017, at 5:17 p.m.
    The researchers collected six data points each from 3,293 people, resulting in a dataset of 19,758 choices. An earlier version of this story misstated that the researchers surveyed 20,000 people.

    The graphs in the article are really, really cool (in form as opposed to content)
    They may be really cool in Chrome - they are really blank in Safari! :disappointed:
    Scroll down - works in my Safari......
  • Options
    rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 53,919
    Sean_F said:

    Has anyone mentioned tonight's report in the Telegraph on line that the majority of remain voters now agree that Britain should take control of it's borders after Brexit, end the jurisdiction of the ECJ and pay little or nothing to leave.

    It is a major survey of 20,000 people who now prefer a hard brexit.

    Almost 70% of people said they preferred a deal with the EU which ends membership of the single market, ongoing payments and continued freedom of movement

    A similar percentage prefer a 'no deal' to a soft Brexit.

    Maybe opinion is moving away from the EU and those fighting to remain may be losing the argument.

    But note I have said 'maybe'

    Did any of the people they surveyed have a workable solution for the Irish border?
    Does it matter?
    It matters, I suspect, in that it makes the support of the DUP less certain. I suspect that there is a very large majority of people in Northern Ireland that wish the Common Travel Area to continue, including a majority of Unionists.

    If the deal were to result in a hard border with Ireland, you might see the DUP unable to support it. Given there will be a fair number of Tories who might vote against the government, and that Corbyn will be ruthless in his desire to see the Tories out of power, I do believe that there is a very real chance that the Brexit (Arrangements) Bill fails to pass the House of Commons.
  • Options
    williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 48,011

    The EU egg scandal seems to be extending to chicken meat. But no problem the EU are meeting on the 26th September to discuss the issue.

    Clear demonstration that they are too cumbersome an organisation to deal with it now as an emergency

    Whereas the UK dealt with BSE in an exemplary manner of course!
    Always ready to do down UK PLC
    No it's just foolish to think that UK bureaucracy is any better than EU bureacracy.

    Have you flip-flopped back to Leave again? I thought you'd changed to a reluctant Remainer last month?!
    No - I am wanting out but not prepared to be up tight about it as the negotiations proceed. It does feel as if there is some indication that the EU does not have all the cards and it could be that the majority do not care too much about the negatives, they just want the deed done
    I would add it does not help my attitude to the EU when Juncker pays £24,000 for a private flying taxi from Brussels to Rome when there are many direct flights between the two daily. But socialists always run out of other people's money
    Juncker and team. The cost per person was £2,650.
  • Options
    CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 59,572

    Sean_F said:

    Has anyone mentioned tonight's report in the Telegraph on line that the majority of remain voters now agree that Britain should take control of it's borders after Brexit, end the jurisdiction of the ECJ and pay little or nothing to leave.

    It is a major survey of 20,000 people who now prefer a hard brexit.

    Almost 70% of people said they preferred a deal with the EU which ends membership of the single market, ongoing payments and continued freedom of movement

    A similar percentage prefer a 'no deal' to a soft Brexit.

    Maybe opinion is moving away from the EU and those fighting to remain may be losing the argument.

    But note I have said 'maybe'

    Did any of the people they surveyed have a workable solution for the Irish border?
    Does it matter?
    Do they care. They just want out by the looks of it
    Check the Buzzfeed link. People are not too bothered if we don't leave until 2025. It doesn't really matter to them, however they define what they think 'Brexit' should mean.

    Overall, Leave voters would most prefer Brexit to be completed by 2019, but have no objection at all to a delay to 2021, and only by a slight margin oppose a delay as far as 2025 – a trend almost identical to that of Remainers.

    Majority Remain support is to leave by 2020.....
  • Options
    foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548
    rcs1000 said:

    Has anyone mentioned tonight's report in the Telegraph on line that the majority of remain voters now agree that Britain should take control of it's borders after Brexit, end the jurisdiction of the ECJ and pay little or nothing to leave.

    It is a major survey of 20,000 people who now prefer a hard brexit.

    Almost 70% of people said they preferred a deal with the EU which ends membership of the single market, ongoing payments and continued freedom of movement

    A similar percentage prefer a 'no deal' to a soft Brexit.

    Maybe opinion is moving away from the EU and those fighting to remain may be losing the argument.

    But note I have said 'maybe'

    I think that I am not alone in being a Remainer turned Hard Brexiteer.

    Either we stay in and fully participate, or walkaway completely. A half in / half out Brexit is not tenable.
    To be honest you are a supporter of Corbyn who cannot follow his Venezuela economics while tied to the EU. Great game against the Arsenal tonight and you deserved a point at least
    We always get robbed at the Arsenal. Comedy defending at both ends and very poor subs by Shakey.

    I have never supported Corbyn's economics, though can understand why he is popular. I have always opposed borrowing. I hate debt in all its forms.
    You hate people saving! Why?
    Debt shrinks horizons, and chains us to the yoke of the capitalists. It prevents us being free.

    I accept it as a nessecary evil when for investment, and provided there is a realistic plan to pay it back over a short timespan.
  • Options
    rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 53,919

    The EU egg scandal seems to be extending to chicken meat. But no problem the EU are meeting on the 26th September to discuss the issue.

    Clear demonstration that they are too cumbersome an organisation to deal with it now as an emergency

    Whereas the UK dealt with BSE in an exemplary manner of course!
    Always ready to do down UK PLC
    No it's just foolish to think that UK bureaucracy is any better than EU bureacracy.

    Have you flip-flopped back to Leave again? I thought you'd changed to a reluctant Remainer last month?!
    No - I am wanting out but not prepared to be up tight about it as the negotiations proceed. It does feel as if there is some indication that the EU does not have all the cards and it could be that the majority do not care too much about the negatives, they just want the deed done
    I would add it does not help my attitude to the EU when Juncker pays £24,000 for a private flying taxi from Brussels to Rome when there are many direct flights between the two daily. But socialists always run out of other people's money
    Google for "Blair Force One" if you want to see a truly spectacular waste of taxpayers money.
  • Options

    The EU egg scandal seems to be extending to chicken meat. But no problem the EU are meeting on the 26th September to discuss the issue.

    Clear demonstration that they are too cumbersome an organisation to deal with it now as an emergency

    Whereas the UK dealt with BSE in an exemplary manner of course!
    Always ready to do down UK PLC
    No it's just foolish to think that UK bureaucracy is any better than EU bureacracy.

    Have you flip-flopped back to Leave again? I thought you'd changed to a reluctant Remainer last month?!
    No - I am wanting out but not prepared to be up tight about it as the negotiations proceed. It does feel as if there is some indication that the EU does not have all the cards and it could be that the majority do not care too much about the negatives, they just want the deed done
    I would add it does not help my attitude to the EU when Juncker pays £24,000 for a private flying taxi from Brussels to Rome when there are many direct flights between the two daily. But socialists always run out of other people's money
    Juncker and team. The cost per person was £2,650.
    That is abject waste. No more than £400 each is justified. The Commission are just burning other peoples money for their own benefit
  • Options
    nielhnielh Posts: 1,307
    PeterC said:

    nielh said:

    PeterC said:

    PeterC said:

    GIN1138 said:

    James Chapman's Twitter is a complete car crash today...

    The man is totally unhinged! :open_mouth:

    What is on display is a total lack of judgement. He could have put forward his views in a measured and - dare I say it - statesmanlike fashion and have been given the chance of hearing. Instead he is just lashing out in all directions and in the process making his cause appear ridiculous.

    I expect serious Remoaners will want dissociate themselves from him. He is certainly the very last person you would want to launch a new party!
    Mail."

    I assume the only reas

    It's going to need someone with a bit more gravitas and depth to kick this off properly I think. David Miliband maybe?
    any sustained attention. The only problem is that I'm not sure that we do political heavyweights anymore.
    If you believe in remaining you should go for it because what have you got to lose? What Chapman is ranting about makes quite a lot of sense. If a new party gets 20 seats, it has the balance of power.
    I do not see why a new party would fare any better than the LibDems. In 2017 they were the ideal anti-Brexit choice, yet came nowhere, and that with about a quarter of voters being strongly opposed to Brexit. This is surely driven by the LibDems' lack of credibility as potential winners, the oldest of the obstacles faced by the Liberals. This in turn is driven by FPTP.

    A unified centre force would need close on 30pc of the poll even to begin to achieve lift-off.

    People should indeed stop thinking that a new party would automatically suffer the same fate as the SDP. It's fate could in fact be far worse. Even winning only a handful of seats it's influence could nonetheless be highly significant in the way it might alter the balance of support between the two main parties. This factor has been important if not critical in most of the elections since 1974.
    Fact is the lib dems are busted flush because of tuition fees and the coalition. They played the insurgent protest card for the 00's and the reality of being in power then caught up with them.
    Also, Farron?
  • Options
    williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 48,011

    Sean_F said:

    Has anyone mentioned tonight's report in the Telegraph on line that the majority of remain voters now agree that Britain should take control of it's borders after Brexit, end the jurisdiction of the ECJ and pay little or nothing to leave.

    It is a major survey of 20,000 people who now prefer a hard brexit.

    Almost 70% of people said they preferred a deal with the EU which ends membership of the single market, ongoing payments and continued freedom of movement

    A similar percentage prefer a 'no deal' to a soft Brexit.

    Maybe opinion is moving away from the EU and those fighting to remain may be losing the argument.

    But note I have said 'maybe'

    Did any of the people they surveyed have a workable solution for the Irish border?
    Does it matter?
    Do they care. They just want out by the looks of it
    Check the Buzzfeed link. People are not too bothered if we don't leave until 2025. It doesn't really matter to them, however they define what they think 'Brexit' should mean.

    Overall, Leave voters would most prefer Brexit to be completed by 2019, but have no objection at all to a delay to 2021, and only by a slight margin oppose a delay as far as 2025 – a trend almost identical to that of Remainers.

    Majority Remain support is to leave by 2020.....
    The needle barely shifts in either direction on any of the options. People just don't have a strong opinion about it.
  • Options
    foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548

    Ishmael_Z said:

    Ishmael_Z said:
    The Telegraph seems to be reporting a Buzzfeed report of an as yet unpbulished survey by the LSE and Oxford Uni. See link...

    https://www.buzzfeed.com/jamesball/remain-and-leave-voters-are-surprisingly-united-on-backing

    Interestingly the Telegraph says it's a survey of 20,000 people, Buzzfeed says 3,000... What's the betting LSE and Oxford say they surveyed 300? lol! [See EDIT below]

    Feels like potentially fake news until we see the official survey.

    EDIT: The Buzzfeed article states:
    The researchers collected six data points each from 3,293 people, resulting in a dataset of 19,758 choices. An earlier version of this story misstated that the researchers surveyed 20,000 people.
    Bottom of buzzfeed page:

    CORRECTION
    August 11, 2017, at 5:17 p.m.
    The researchers collected six data points each from 3,293 people, resulting in a dataset of 19,758 choices. An earlier version of this story misstated that the researchers surveyed 20,000 people.

    The graphs in the article are really, really cool (in form as opposed to content)
    They may be really cool in Chrome - they are really blank in Safari! :disappointed:
    They are seriously good graphs, though raising as many questions as answers.
  • Options
    CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 59,572
    rcs1000 said:

    Sean_F said:

    Has anyone mentioned tonight's report in the Telegraph on line that the majority of remain voters now agree that Britain should take control of it's borders after Brexit, end the jurisdiction of the ECJ and pay little or nothing to leave.

    It is a major survey of 20,000 people who now prefer a hard brexit.

    Almost 70% of people said they preferred a deal with the EU which ends membership of the single market, ongoing payments and continued freedom of movement

    A similar percentage prefer a 'no deal' to a soft Brexit.

    Maybe opinion is moving away from the EU and those fighting to remain may be losing the argument.

    But note I have said 'maybe'

    Did any of the people they surveyed have a workable solution for the Irish border?
    Does it matter?
    If the deal were to result in a hard border with Ireland
    Given thats what neither the UK or Ireland want that would be at the EU's insistence, surely?
  • Options

    The EU egg scandal seems to be extending to chicken meat. But no problem the EU are meeting on the 26th September to discuss the issue.

    Clear demonstration that they are too cumbersome an organisation to deal with it now as an emergency

    Whereas the UK dealt with BSE in an exemplary manner of course!
    Always ready to do down UK PLC
    No it's just foolish to think that UK bureaucracy is any better than EU bureacracy.

    Have you flip-flopped back to Leave again? I thought you'd changed to a reluctant Remainer last month?!
    No - I am wanting out but not prepared to be up tight about it as the negotiations proceed. It does feel as if there is some indication that the EU does not have all the cards and it could be that the majority do not care too much about the negatives, they just want the deed done
    I would add it does not help my attitude to the EU when Juncker pays £24,000 for a private flying taxi from Brussels to Rome when there are many direct flights between the two daily. But socialists always run out of other people's money
    Juncker and team. The cost per person was £2,650.
    Which airline charges £2,650 for a flight from Brussels to Rome?
  • Options

    The EU egg scandal seems to be extending to chicken meat. But no problem the EU are meeting on the 26th September to discuss the issue.

    Clear demonstration that they are too cumbersome an organisation to deal with it now as an emergency

    Whereas the UK dealt with BSE in an exemplary manner of course!
    Always ready to do down UK PLC
    No it's just foolish to think that UK bureaucracy is any better than EU bureacracy.

    Have you flip-flopped back to Leave again? I thought you'd changed to a reluctant Remainer last month?!
    No - I am wanting out but not prepared to be up tight about it as the negotiations proceed. It does feel as if there is some indication that the EU does not have all the cards and it could be that the majority do not care too much about the negatives, they just want the deed done
    I would add it does not help my attitude to the EU when Juncker pays £24,000 for a private flying taxi from Brussels to Rome when there are many direct flights between the two daily. But socialists always run out of other people's money
    Juncker and team. The cost per person was £2,650.
    That is abject waste. No more than £400 each is justified. The Commission are just burning other peoples money for their own benefit
    Correction - quick search is no more than £150 return
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