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politicalbetting.com » Blog Archive » Why we should look closely at the precise wording of second re

SystemSystem Posts: 11,002
edited April 2018 in General

imagepoliticalbetting.com » Blog Archive » Why we should look closely at the precise wording of second referendum polling questions

VERSION ONE:Once the negotiations between Britain and the European Union over a Brexit deal have been completed, do you think there should or should not be a public vote on whether Britain accepts the deal or remains in the EU after all?

Read the full story here


«13

Comments

  • FF43FF43 Posts: 15,543
    First. My final say on the matter.
  • MortimerMortimer Posts: 13,921
    Second, like Remain. 'Nuff said.
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 39,748
    edited April 2018
    Número tres.

    Doesn't this just show the UK electorate's (probably increasing) distaste for actually voting?
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 66,739
    edited April 2018
    Mortimer said:

    Second, like Remain. 'Nuff said.

    Third.

    And in more interesting news, that bit of paint over on the north wall is drying.

    Edit - bugger, didn't even get bronze.
  • AlastairMeeksAlastairMeeks Posts: 30,340
    There's only one way I can see a way to a fresh referendum and that's if tertiaryreferendite MPs execute an ambush on a bill on the transitional deal. It's possible, but unlikely.
  • FF43FF43 Posts: 15,543
    edited April 2018
    On Brexit polling this result doesn't surprise me at all on the Irish border issue.

    https://twitter.com/SamuelMarcLowe/status/983287241157079040

    The whole report is worth a read. My main takeaway on the Irish Border question is that people still cling to the myth that the UK will have an independent trade policy pre or post Brexit. If it's not going to happen, it's not worth trading off for.

    The problem with Brexit polling generally, and indeed with the referendum itself, is that there is no evaluation of costs for each option. If you ask the question, "Would you prefer you and your family potentially to lose their jobs, or would you prefer a soft Irish border", you would probably get a different answer. It would be seen as a leading question of course.
  • TGOHFTGOHF Posts: 21,633
    There will be no referendum with a binary question of take deal or stay in as now.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 61,569

    There's only one way I can see a way to a fresh referendum and that's if tertiaryreferendite MPs execute an ambush on a bill on the transitional deal. It's possible, but unlikely.

    Or a massive shift in public opinion - though that is, of course, extremely unlikely.
  • CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 59,540
    Remainers: The public should have a final say
    The Public: How?
    Remainers: .....er, a vote...
    The Public:
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d3PKE8uTSp8
  • TGOHFTGOHF Posts: 21,633
    FF43 said:

    On Brexit polling this result doesn't surprise me at all on the Irish border issue.

    https://twitter.com/SamuelMarcLowe/status/983287241157079040

    The whole report is worth a read. My main takeaway on the Irish Border question is that people still cling to the myth that the UK will have an independent trade policy pre or post Brexit. If it's not going to happen, it's not worth trading off for.

    The problem with Brexit polling generally, and indeed with the referendum itself, is that there is no evaluation of costs for each option. If you ask the question, "Would you prefer you and your family potentially to lose their jobs, or would you prefer a soft Irish border", you would probably get a different answer. It would be seen as a leading question of course.

    Has it been decided if it's the EU or ROI that will pay to build their border ?

  • CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 59,540
    Nigelb said:

    There's only one way I can see a way to a fresh referendum and that's if tertiaryreferendite MPs execute an ambush on a bill on the transitional deal. It's possible, but unlikely.

    Or a massive shift in public opinion - though that is, of course, extremely unlikely.
    https://whatukthinks.org/eu/questions/should-there-be-a-second-referendum-on-britains-membership-of-the-eu-once-we-know-the-terms-the-government-has-negotiated/?removed
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 60,933
    Mr. Flashman (deceased), probably not. But it's not impossible.
  • David_EvershedDavid_Evershed Posts: 6,506
    Clearly there should be a referendum about whether or not to have a second referendum. :)

    However, given the first referendum result was to leave, any second referendum can only be between different sorts of leave ie on the terms agreed in negotiations or on WTO terms.

  • David_EvershedDavid_Evershed Posts: 6,506
    FF43 said:

    On Brexit polling this result doesn't surprise me at all on the Irish border issue.

    https://twitter.com/SamuelMarcLowe/status/983287241157079040

    The whole report is worth a read. My main takeaway on the Irish Border question is that people still cling to the myth that the UK will have an independent trade policy pre or post Brexit. If it's not going to happen, it's not worth trading off for.

    The problem with Brexit polling generally, and indeed with the referendum itself, is that there is no evaluation of costs for each option. If you ask the question, "Would you prefer you and your family potentially to lose their jobs, or would you prefer a soft Irish border", you would probably get a different answer. It would be seen as a leading question of course.

    The Irish issue survey question is puzzling. I don't understand it.

    What does an independent trade policy look like?

    What does a soft Irish border look like?

    How can I evaluate the variables?

    At least I could decide the Leave/Remain issue on emotions.

  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 58,038
  • Stark_DawningStark_Dawning Posts: 9,232
    If there was a second referendum then two questions arise. What would the government's recommended position be? Would Theresa allow ministers to campaign against that recommended position? (If Theresa recommended staying in, then watching the Tory neo-Leavers turn on a sixpence would be a hoot.)
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 60,933
    Mr. Dawning, if it were In/Out, the Government could not, I suspect, have a settled view. May herself was/is for staying in but if she recommends that then it looks like she may not respect the first vote and/or is not committed to negotiating in good faith.

    If it's just Deal/No Deal, obviously they'd recommend the Deal.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 76,274
    Fits the stereotype, marxist, SWP, sends kids to top private school so must have more than a few Bob....
  • David_EvershedDavid_Evershed Posts: 6,506

    There's only one way I can see a way to a fresh referendum and that's if tertiaryreferendite MPs execute an ambush on a bill on the transitional deal. It's possible, but unlikely.


    What would a tertiary referendum be about? Best of three?
  • david_herdsondavid_herdson Posts: 17,401

    If there was a second referendum then two questions arise. What would the government's recommended position be? Would Theresa allow ministers to campaign against that recommended position? (If Theresa recommended staying in, then watching the Tory neo-Leavers turn on a sixpence would be a hoot.)

    She wouldn't recommend staying in - or if she did, she'd be No Confidenced.

    But it's all hypothetical: there won't be a second referendum.

    The interesting question politically is not what would happen if one is granted; it's what will the fallout be when one isn't.
  • Andy_CookeAndy_Cooke Posts: 4,793
    This might be a cynical way of seeing this, but given that Conservative voters of 2017 split 21/63 against even the "final say" version, and in an adversarial democracy, the Government first keeps its own voters sweet (if it wants to get re-elected), it ain't happening.
    Not unless that number shifted to a great degree, and the overall figure was strongly pro-final say. And we're running out of time for that very rapidly.
  • David_EvershedDavid_Evershed Posts: 6,506
    FF43 said:

    First. My final say on the matter.

    Surely 43rd?
  • Carolus_RexCarolus_Rex Posts: 1,414

    There's only one way I can see a way to a fresh referendum and that's if tertiaryreferendite MPs execute an ambush on a bill on the transitional deal. It's possible, but unlikely.


    What would a tertiary referendum be about? Best of three?
    The primary one was in 1975 I guess.
  • RhubarbRhubarb Posts: 359
    FF43 said:

    On Brexit polling this result doesn't surprise me at all on the Irish border issue.

    https://twitter.com/SamuelMarcLowe/status/983287241157079040

    The whole report is worth a read. My main takeaway on the Irish Border question is that people still cling to the myth that the UK will have an independent trade policy pre or post Brexit. If it's not going to happen, it's not worth trading off for.

    The problem with Brexit polling generally, and indeed with the referendum itself, is that there is no evaluation of costs for each option. If you ask the question, "Would you prefer you and your family potentially to lose their jobs, or would you prefer a soft Irish border", you would probably get a different answer. It would be seen as a leading question of course.

    Most mainland Brits don't care about NI at all. Any future border is just a detail of that.
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 58,038

    Fits the stereotype, marxist, SWP, sends kids to top private school so must have more than a few Bob....
    Hmm. Yet another believer in a total state, yet mysteriously sends her kids to a private school.
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 50,762
    I spent the weekend visiting my 20 year old daughter in Groningen in Holland where she is having an Erasmus year. It was delightful. What surprised me was that she volunteered that having studied EU law in some detail from a continental perspective, having been taught how it is made and what its objectives are she would now vote Leave. She voted remain at the time of the referendum and really had very little time for her dad's views (nothing wrong in that of course). Her view was that if people knew more about it they would like it less.

    Of course this is a classic PB anecdote and I don't doubt that many others could tell stories of fervent leavers who have now changed their mind. What I think is fairly clear is that there has been very little change in the overall position as found in both the referendum and the election where 43% voted for a party completely committed to delivering Brexit (even if they were seriously unclear as to how) and 41% to a party at least notionally committed to respecting the vote, even if many of the members were unhappy about it. 7% voted for a party wanting a second referendum. Its just not going to happen.

    Remainers really need to accept this and focus on achieving as soft a Brexit as possible with continued regulatory alignment, a customs union that looks suspiciously like the Customs Union, priority for EU citizens in immigration, a FTA which looks very like Single Market membership, the UK opting in to various EU bodies and paying subscriptions for their maintenance etc. It seems to me that that is what May is offering but the devil will be in the detail and remainers should be engaged to tweak that deal rather than sitting on the sidelines in the huff. I don't think that there is any chance of us rejoining the EU in the next 20 years but if they get this sort of deal it really wouldn't be that difficult (apart from joining the Euro).

    But then, MRDA doesn't it?
  • Ishmael_ZIshmael_Z Posts: 8,981

    There's only one way I can see a way to a fresh referendum and that's if tertiaryreferendite MPs execute an ambush on a bill on the transitional deal. It's possible, but unlikely.


    What would a tertiary referendum be about? Best of three?
    Whether to have a referendum about whether to have a referendum about whether to have a referendum.
  • GIN1138GIN1138 Posts: 20,695
    As there's not going to be another referendum it doesn't matter.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,709
    So there is a plurality who oppose the public being given a fibal.vote on the deal but a plurality want the public to get the final say.

    The public will of course get the final say at the next general election anyway when they can vote Labour, LD, UKIP etc if they oppose the final deal the government has agreed with the EU. What is clear from this poll is there is no appetite for a second EU referendum
  • Nigelb said:

    There's only one way I can see a way to a fresh referendum and that's if tertiaryreferendite MPs execute an ambush on a bill on the transitional deal. It's possible, but unlikely.

    Or a massive shift in public opinion - though that is, of course, extremely unlikely.
    May I qualify that? A massive shift is in my opinion very likely, but only after we have left the EU.
  • PeterCPeterC Posts: 1,274
    DavidL said:

    I spent the weekend visiting my 20 year old daughter in Groningen in Holland where she is having an Erasmus year. It was delightful. What surprised me was that she volunteered that having studied EU law in some detail from a continental perspective, having been taught how it is made and what its objectives are she would now vote Leave. She voted remain at the time of the referendum and really had very little time for her dad's views (nothing wrong in that of course). Her view was that if people knew more about it they would like it less.

    Of course this is a classic PB anecdote and I don't doubt that many others could tell stories of fervent leavers who have now changed their mind. What I think is fairly clear is that there has been very little change in the overall position as found in both the referendum and the election where 43% voted for a party completely committed to delivering Brexit (even if they were seriously unclear as to how) and 41% to a party at least notionally committed to respecting the vote, even if many of the members were unhappy about it. 7% voted for a party wanting a second referendum. Its just not going to happen.

    Remainers really need to accept this and focus on achieving as soft a Brexit as possible with continued regulatory alignment, a customs union that looks suspiciously like the Customs Union, priority for EU citizens in immigration, a FTA which looks very like Single Market membership, the UK opting in to various EU bodies and paying subscriptions for their maintenance etc. It seems to me that that is what May is offering but the devil will be in the detail and remainers should be engaged to tweak that deal rather than sitting on the sidelines in the huff. I don't think that there is any chance of us rejoining the EU in the next 20 years but if they get this sort of deal it really wouldn't be that difficult (apart from joining the Euro).

    But then, MRDA doesn't it?

    Do you think that Mrs May would survive the uproar if her proposed deal amounts to a transparent BINO. It would sure then beg the question of what is the point in leaving at all?
  • david_herdsondavid_herdson Posts: 17,401

    This might be a cynical way of seeing this, but given that Conservative voters of 2017 split 21/63 against even the "final say" version, and in an adversarial democracy, the Government first keeps its own voters sweet (if it wants to get re-elected), it ain't happening.
    Not unless that number shifted to a great degree, and the overall figure was strongly pro-final say. And we're running out of time for that very rapidly.

    We're also running out to put the legal framework in place for a referendum. To hold one before March 29, you need the campaign to take place, which requires registered Yes and No (or whatever) campaigns, which requires them to be formed and approved by the Electoral Commission, which requires legislation to be in place to kick-start it all, which requires a Bill to be introduced and passed through parliament.

    Given that it'd be foolish to hold a referendum with no time to sort out the fallout should the people give the 'wrong' result, we're probably pretty close to the deadline for when a bill could reasonably be introduced to allow time for all the stages.

    Leave aside that were such legislation going through, it'd make negotiations with the EU much harder.
  • CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 59,540

    If there was a second referendum then two questions arise. What would the government's recommended position be? Would Theresa allow ministers to campaign against that recommended position? (If Theresa recommended staying in, then watching the Tory neo-Leavers turn on a sixpence would be a hoot.)

    She wouldn't recommend staying in - or if she did, she'd be No Confidenced.
    How could she? The deal we've negotiated is rubbish because the EU negotiated in bad faith. So we'd better stay'
  • Stark_DawningStark_Dawning Posts: 9,232

    Mr. Dawning, if it were In/Out, the Government could not, I suspect, have a settled view. May herself was/is for staying in but if she recommends that then it looks like she may not respect the first vote and/or is not committed to negotiating in good faith.

    If it's just Deal/No Deal, obviously they'd recommend the Deal.

    The only circumstances I can envisage there being a second referendum is if the whole EU deal collapsed in acrimony and we were left facing economic disarray. Surely no government would risk the leap-in-the-dark, buccaneering-spirit, it'll-all-turn-out-right-in-the-wash approach. The political consequences would be too awful and they'd wrangle a second referendum to get them off the hook.
  • RecidivistRecidivist Posts: 4,679
    HYUFD said:

    So there is a plurality who oppose the public being given a fibal.vote on the deal but a plurality want the public to get the final say.

    The public will of course get the final say at the next general election anyway when they can vote Labour, LD, UKIP etc if they oppose the final deal the government has agreed with the EU. What is clear from this poll is there is no appetite for a second EU referendum

    A lot of us didn't have any appetite for the first bloody one.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 55,008
    DavidL said:

    I spent the weekend visiting my 20 year old daughter in Groningen in Holland where she is having an Erasmus year. It was delightful. What surprised me was that she volunteered that having studied EU law in some detail from a continental perspective, having been taught how it is made and what its objectives are she would now vote Leave. She voted remain at the time of the referendum and really had very little time for her dad's views (nothing wrong in that of course). Her view was that if people knew more about it they would like it less.

    Of course this is a classic PB anecdote and I don't doubt that many others could tell stories of fervent leavers who have now changed their mind. What I think is fairly clear is that there has been very little change in the overall position as found in both the referendum and the election where 43% voted for a party completely committed to delivering Brexit (even if they were seriously unclear as to how) and 41% to a party at least notionally committed to respecting the vote, even if many of the members were unhappy about it. 7% voted for a party wanting a second referendum. Its just not going to happen.

    Remainers really need to accept this and focus on achieving as soft a Brexit as possible with continued regulatory alignment, a customs union that looks suspiciously like the Customs Union, priority for EU citizens in immigration, a FTA which looks very like Single Market membership, the UK opting in to various EU bodies and paying subscriptions for their maintenance etc. It seems to me that that is what May is offering but the devil will be in the detail and remainers should be engaged to tweak that deal rather than sitting on the sidelines in the huff. I don't think that there is any chance of us rejoining the EU in the next 20 years but if they get this sort of deal it really wouldn't be that difficult (apart from joining the Euro).

    But then, MRDA doesn't it?

    Your daughter is a wise woman.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 61,569

    Nigelb said:

    There's only one way I can see a way to a fresh referendum and that's if tertiaryreferendite MPs execute an ambush on a bill on the transitional deal. It's possible, but unlikely.

    Or a massive shift in public opinion - though that is, of course, extremely unlikely.
    May I qualify that? A massive shift is in my opinion very likely, but only after we have left the EU.
    I don't wildly disagree with that... bit too late, though.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,709

    HYUFD said:

    So there is a plurality who oppose the public being given a fibal.vote on the deal but a plurality want the public to get the final say.

    The public will of course get the final say at the next general election anyway when they can vote Labour, LD, UKIP etc if they oppose the final deal the government has agreed with the EU. What is clear from this poll is there is no appetite for a second EU referendum

    A lot of us didn't have any appetite for the first bloody one.
    The Tories won a majority in 2015 though on a promise to hold the first EU referendum
  • AndyJSAndyJS Posts: 29,395
    The Tories have racked up 6 consecutive poll leads according to Wikipedia, and have led in 8 of the last 10 surveys.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Opinion_polling_for_the_next_United_Kingdom_general_election#2018
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 44,055
    PeterC said:

    DavidL said:

    I spent the weekend visiting my 20 year old daughter in Groningen in Holland where she is having an Erasmus year. It was delightful. What surprised me was that she volunteered that having studied EU law in some detail from a continental perspective, having been taught how it is made and what its objectives are she would now vote Leave. She voted remain at the time of the referendum and really had very little time for her dad's views (nothing wrong in that of course). Her view was that if people knew more about it they would like it less.

    Of course this is a classic PB anecdote and I don't doubt that many others could tell stories of fervent leavers who have now changed their mind. What I think is fairly clear is that there has been very little change in the overall position as found in both the referendum and the election where 43% voted for a party completely committed to delivering Brexit (even if they were seriously unclear as to how) and 41% to a party at least notionally committed to respecting the vote, even if many of the members were unhappy about it. 7% voted for a party wanting a second referendum. Its just not going to happen.

    Remainers really need to accept this and focus on achieving as soft a Brexit as possible with continued regulatory alignment, a customs union that looks suspiciously like the Customs Union, priority for EU citizens in immigration, a FTA which looks very like Single Market membership, the UK opting in to various EU bodies and paying subscriptions for their maintenance etc. It seems to me that that is what May is offering but the devil will be in the detail and remainers should be engaged to tweak that deal rather than sitting on the sidelines in the huff. I don't think that there is any chance of us rejoining the EU in the next 20 years but if they get this sort of deal it really wouldn't be that difficult (apart from joining the Euro).

    But then, MRDA doesn't it?

    Do you think that Mrs May would survive the uproar if her proposed deal amounts to a transparent BINO. It would sure then beg the question of what is the point in leaving at all?
    I suspect @DavidL is correct, but the Deal is very likely to not be agreed pre Brexit, and most likely not before the end of Transition, as 2.5 years for such a complex trade deal is a very tall order. So any vote, whether Parliamentary or plebiscite is both a long way off, and most significantly post Brexit.

  • FF43FF43 Posts: 15,543
    PeterC said:

    Do you think that Mrs May would survive the uproar if her proposed deal amounts to a transparent BINO. It would sure then beg the question of what is the point in leaving at all?

    We voted to leave. Suck it up, losers and get over it.

    There isn't any other real reason to leave the EU, but as far as it goes it's a good one. "Suck it up losers" isn't policy, nor is it helpful in determining what actually replaces EU membership. Given Brexit will definitely damage the UK, damage limitation would seem to be the way to go.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 49,614
    Interesting to see the huge difference a small change in language can make to a poll, and a perfect illustration of why they shouldn’t be taken too seriously at this stage. It will be more useful to see polling once we have a deal outlined, with more straightforward questions.

    I can’t see a second referendum unless the deal is appalingly one-sided in the EU’s favour, and the government either don’t think they can sell it or defeat an amendment forcing a plebiscite on the Noel Edmonds question.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 44,055

    DavidL said:

    I spent the weekend visiting my 20 year old daughter in Groningen in Holland where she is having an Erasmus year. It was delightful. What surprised me was that she volunteered that having studied EU law in some detail from a continental perspective, having been taught how it is made and what its objectives are she would now vote Leave. She voted remain at the time of the referendum and really had very little time for her dad's views (nothing wrong in that of course). Her view was that if people knew more about it they would like it less.

    Of course this is a classic PB anecdote and I don't doubt that many others could tell stories of fervent leavers who have now changed their mind. What I think is fairly clear is that there has been very little change in the overall position as found in both the referendum and the election where 43% voted for a party completely committed to delivering Brexit (even if they were seriously unclear as to how) and 41% to a party at least notionally committed to respecting the vote, even if many of the members were unhappy about it. 7% voted for a party wanting a second referendum. Its just not going to happen.

    Remainers really need to accept this and focus on achieving as soft a Brexit as possible with continued regulatory alignment, a customs union that looks suspiciously like the Customs Union, priority for EU citizens in immigration, a FTA which looks very like Single Market membership, the UK opting in to various EU bodies and paying subscriptions for their maintenance etc. It seems to me that that is what May is offering but the devil will be in the detail and remainers should be engaged to tweak that deal rather than sitting on the sidelines in the huff. I don't think that there is any chance of us rejoining the EU in the next 20 years but if they get this sort of deal it really wouldn't be that difficult (apart from joining the Euro).

    But then, MRDA doesn't it?

    Your daughter is a wise woman.
    Though in practice, under @DavidL's scenario, we will be tied into EU Law in many aspects because of Pseudo CU and SM, while no longer having a say via Commission or EP in drafting those laws.
  • PClippPClipp Posts: 2,138
    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    So there is a plurality who oppose the public being given a fibal.vote on the deal but a plurality want the public to get the final say.
    The public will of course get the final say at the next general election anyway when they can vote Labour, LD, UKIP etc if they oppose the final deal the government has agreed with the EU. What is clear from this poll is there is no appetite for a second EU referendum

    A lot of us didn't have any appetite for the first bloody one.
    The Tories won a majority in 2015 though on a promise to hold the first EU referendum
    The Tories won the 2015 on the record of the Coalition Government, in particular on the popular Lib Dem policies which they appropriated to themselves, even though they opposed them in government. The promise to hold a referendum was popular only among Tory chauvinists.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,709
    PeterC said:

    DavidL said:

    I spent the weekend visiting my 20 year old daughter in Groningen in Holland where she is having an Erasmus year. It was delightful. What surprised me was that she volunteered that having studied EU law in some detail from a continental perspective, having been taught how it is made and what its objectives are she would now vote Leave. She voted remain at the time of the referendum and really had very little time for her dad's views (nothing wrong in that of course). Her view was that if people knew more about it they would like it less.

    Of course this is a classic PB anecdote and I don't doubt that many others could tell stories of fervent leavers who have now changed their mind. What I think is fairly clear is that there has been very little change in the overall position as found in both the referendum and the election where 43% voted for a party completely committed to delivering Brexit (even if they were seriously unclear as to how) and 41% to a party at least notionally committed to respecting the vote, even if many of the members were unhappy about it. 7% voted for a party wanting a second referendum. Its just not going to happen.

    Remainers really need to accept this and focus on achieving as soft a Brexit as possible with continued regulatory alignment, a customs union that looks suspiciously like the Customs Union, priority for EU citizens in immigration, a FTA which looks very like Single Market membership, the UK opting in to various EU bodies and paying subscriptions for their maintenance etc. It seems to me that that is what May is offering but the devil will be in the detail and remainers should be engaged to tweak that deal rather than sitting on the sidelines in the huff. I don't think that there is any chance of us rejoining the EU in the next 20 years but if they get this sort of deal it really wouldn't be that difficult (apart from joining the Euro).

    But then, MRDA doesn't it?

    Do you think that Mrs May would survive the uproar if her proposed deal amounts to a transparent BINO. It would sure then beg the question of what is the point in leaving at all?
    It won't be BINO, that requires staying in the single market and customs union and leaving free movement in place.

    Though it may well not be WTO terms either given May's commitment to a Canada style FTA with the EU
  • tlg86tlg86 Posts: 25,164
    AndyJS said:

    The Tories have racked up 6 consecutive poll leads according to Wikipedia, and have led in 8 of the last 10 surveys.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Opinion_polling_for_the_next_United_Kingdom_general_election#2018

    I'll be very interested to see the next Survation and Ipsos MORI polls.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,709
    edited April 2018
    FF43 said:

    On Brexit polling this result doesn't surprise me at all on the Irish border issue.

    https://twitter.com/SamuelMarcLowe/status/983287241157079040

    The whole report is worth a read. My main takeaway on the Irish Border question is that people still cling to the myth that the UK will have an independent trade policy pre or post Brexit. If it's not going to happen, it's not worth trading off for.

    The problem with Brexit polling generally, and indeed with the referendum itself, is that there is no evaluation of costs for each option. If you ask the question, "Would you prefer you and your family potentially to lose their jobs, or would you prefer a soft Irish border", you would probably get a different answer. It would be seen as a leading question of course.

    That poll is a false choice given May agreed in December the UK would ensure enough regulatory alignment with the EU to avoid a hard border in Ireland while still leaving the Customs Union
  • Nigelb said:

    Nigelb said:

    There's only one way I can see a way to a fresh referendum and that's if tertiaryreferendite MPs execute an ambush on a bill on the transitional deal. It's possible, but unlikely.

    Or a massive shift in public opinion - though that is, of course, extremely unlikely.
    May I qualify that? A massive shift is in my opinion very likely, but only after we have left the EU.
    I don't wildly disagree with that... bit too late, though.
    Yes, of course, and it illustrates the folly of Government by referendum. Public Opinion is volatile, sound government requires steadiness and consistency.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 44,055
    AndyJS said:

    The Tories have racked up 6 consecutive poll leads according to Wikipedia, and have led in 8 of the last 10 surveys.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Opinion_polling_for_the_next_United_Kingdom_general_election#2018

    Theresa should call a surprise election so she can Crush the Saboteurs!
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,709
    PClipp said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    So there is a plurality who oppose the public being given a fibal.vote on the deal but a plurality want the public to get the final say.
    The public will of course get the final say at the next general election anyway when they can vote Labour, LD, UKIP etc if they oppose the final deal the government has agreed with the EU. What is clear from this poll is there is no appetite for a second EU referendum

    A lot of us didn't have any appetite for the first bloody one.
    The Tories won a majority in 2015 though on a promise to hold the first EU referendum
    The Tories won the 2015 on the record of the Coalition Government, in particular on the popular Lib Dem policies which they appropriated to themselves, even though they opposed them in government. The promise to hold a referendum was popular only among Tory chauvinists.
    It was in the Tory manifesto and kept a number of Tory voters from defecting to UKIP
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,709
    Foxy said:

    AndyJS said:

    The Tories have racked up 6 consecutive poll leads according to Wikipedia, and have led in 8 of the last 10 surveys.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Opinion_polling_for_the_next_United_Kingdom_general_election#2018

    Theresa should call a surprise election so she can Crush the Saboteurs!
    Given the poll lead is roughly the same as the 2017 general election result of course she won't as there would be no change
  • PeterCPeterC Posts: 1,274
    Foxy said:

    PeterC said:

    DavidL said:

    I spent the weekend visiting my 20 year old daughter in Groningen in Holland where she is having an Erasmus year. It was delightful. What surprised me was that she volunteered that having studied EU law in some detail from a continental perspective, having been taught how it is made and what its objectives are she would now vote Leave. She voted remain at the time of the referendum and really had very little time for her dad's views (nothing wrong in that of course). Her view was that if people knew more about it they would like it less.

    Of course this is a classic PB anecdote and I don't doubt that many others could tell stories of fervent leavers who have now changed their mind. What I think is fairly clear is that there has been very little change in the overall position as found in both the referendum and the election where 43% voted for a party completely committed to delivering Brexit (even if they were seriously unclear as to how) and 41% to a party at least notionally committed to respecting the vote, even if many of the members were unhappy about it. 7% voted for a party wanting a second referendum. Its just not going to happen.

    Remainers really need to accept this and focus on achieving as soft a Brexit as possible with continued regulatory alignment, a customs union that looks suspiciously like the Customs Union, priority for EU citizens in immigration, a FTA which looks very like Single Market membership, the UK opting in to various EU bodies and paying subscriptions for their maintenance etc. It seems to me that that is what May is offering but the devil will be in the detail and remainers should be engaged to tweak that deal rather than sitting on the sidelines in the huff. I don't think that there is any chance of us rejoining the EU in the next 20 years but if they get this sort of deal it really wouldn't be that difficult (apart from joining the Euro).

    But then, MRDA doesn't it?

    Do you think that Mrs May would survive the uproar if her proposed deal amounts to a transparent BINO. It would sure then beg the question of what is the point in leaving at all?
    I suspect @DavidL is correct, but the Deal is very likely to not be agreed pre Brexit, and most likely not before the end of Transition, as 2.5 years for such a complex trade deal is a very tall order. So any vote, whether Parliamentary or plebiscite is both a long way off, and most significantly post Brexit.

    Once we are in transition there will be no way back. Remain will be out of the picture and the choice will only be Deal or No Deal. Perhaps anti-Brexit campaigners would be better off advocating an extension to A50 (n preference to transition) rather than shouting from the sidelines as they are at present.
  • Sweet baby Jesus, is there nobody in the Department for Exiting the European Union who can give David Davis a briefing on Irish politics? Not a full, in-depth, Donegal-to-Kerry briefing; just the basics will do. And if there isn’t anyone at DEXEU who could do this, perhaps some kind soul at the Northern Ireland office could pop over to give Davis a quick tutorial?

    The Times reports this morning that this kind of briefing is urgently needed. Of course the paper doesn’t quite put it like that but this is the inescapable conclusion to be drawn from Davis’s own remarks at a conference in London yesterday. According to our gallant bulldog, the question of Brexit and the Irish border is being complicated by the Irish government. You see:

    “We had a change of government, south of the border, and with quite a strong influence from Sinn Féin, and that had an impact in terms of the approach”

    This, an audience member pointed out helpfully, was not actually true. There has been no change of government, merely a change of Taoiseach. Undeterred by mere facts, Davis blustered on:

    “Well you had a change of leader or a change in taoiseach. They’ve [Sinn Féin] been playing a strong political role which they haven’t done historically, that I hadn’t foreseen”

    https://blogs.spectator.co.uk/2018/04/how-dare-david-davis-blame-sinn-fein-for-the-irish-border-mess/
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 113,957
    edited April 2018
    He doesn't know what he's talking about, he writes Mandates from referendums (correct plural…)

    If he can talk such arrant nonsense we can ignore the rest of his piece.
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 50,762
    PeterC said:

    DavidL said:

    I spent the weekend visiting my 20 year old daughter in Groningen in Holland where she is having an Erasmus year. It was delightful. What surprised me was that she volunteered that having studied EU law in some detail from a continental perspective, having been taught how it is made and what its objectives are she would now vote Leave. She voted remain at the time of the referendum and really had very little time for her dad's views (nothing wrong in that of course). Her view was that if people knew more about it they would like it less.

    Of course this is a classic PB anecdote and I don't doubt that many others could tell stories of fervent leavers who have now changed their mind. What I think is fairly clear is that there has been very little change in the overall position as found in both the referendum and the election where 43% voted for a party completely committed to delivering Brexit (even if they were seriously unclear as to how) and 41% to a party at least notionally committed to respecting the vote, even if many of the members were unhappy about it. 7% voted for a party wanting a second referendum. Its just not going to happen.

    Remainers really need to accept this and focus on achieving as soft a Brexit as possible with continued regulatory alignment, a customs union that looks suspiciously like the Customs Union, priority for EU citizens in immigration, a FTA which looks very like Single Market membership, the UK opting in to various EU bodies and paying subscriptions for their maintenance etc. It seems to me that that is what May is offering but the devil will be in the detail and remainers should be engaged to tweak that deal rather than sitting on the sidelines in the huff. I don't think that there is any chance of us rejoining the EU in the next 20 years but if they get this sort of deal it really wouldn't be that difficult (apart from joining the Euro).

    But then, MRDA doesn't it?

    Do you think that Mrs May would survive the uproar if her proposed deal amounts to a transparent BINO. It would sure then beg the question of what is the point in leaving at all?
    Yes, particularly if the remainers get behind her and support her. The vast majority of people don't know or care about the details. They want an out and leave it to the government to work out what the best out is. Some Brexiteers will be unhappy but then, that's their natural state isn't it?
  • GIN1138GIN1138 Posts: 20,695
    edited April 2018
    TGOHF said:
    Will Bazza have resigned/been sacked by the end of the day? :D
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 50,762
    Foxy said:

    DavidL said:

    I spent the weekend visiting my 20 year old daughter in Groningen in Holland where she is having an Erasmus year. It was delightful. What surprised me was that she volunteered that having studied EU law in some detail from a continental perspective, having been taught how it is made and what its objectives are she would now vote Leave. She voted remain at the time of the referendum and really had very little time for her dad's views (nothing wrong in that of course). Her view was that if people knew more about it they would like it less.

    Of course this is a classic PB anecdote and I don't doubt that many others could tell stories of fervent leavers who have now changed their mind. What I think is fairly clear is that there has been very little change in the overall position as found in both the referendum and the election where 43% voted for a party completely committed to delivering Brexit (even if they were seriously unclear as to how) and 41% to a party at least notionally committed to respecting the vote, even if many of the members were unhappy about it. 7% voted for a party wanting a second referendum. Its just not going to happen.

    Remainers really need to accept this and focus on achieving as soft a Brexit as possible with continued regulatory alignment, a customs union that looks suspiciously like the Customs Union, priority for EU citizens in immigration, a FTA which looks very like Single Market membership, the UK opting in to various EU bodies and paying subscriptions for their maintenance etc. It seems to me that that is what May is offering but the devil will be in the detail and remainers should be engaged to tweak that deal rather than sitting on the sidelines in the huff. I don't think that there is any chance of us rejoining the EU in the next 20 years but if they get this sort of deal it really wouldn't be that difficult (apart from joining the Euro).

    But then, MRDA doesn't it?

    Your daughter is a wise woman.
    Though in practice, under @DavidL's scenario, we will be tied into EU Law in many aspects because of Pseudo CU and SM, while no longer having a say via Commission or EP in drafting those laws.
    True. I don't think that will be sustainable in the long run but I think it is a sensible first step out the door.
  • TGOHFTGOHF Posts: 21,633

    Sweet baby Jesus, is there nobody in the Department for Exiting the European Union who can give David Davis a briefing on Irish politics? Not a full, in-depth, Donegal-to-Kerry briefing; just the basics will do. And if there isn’t anyone at DEXEU who could do this, perhaps some kind soul at the Northern Ireland office could pop over to give Davis a quick tutorial?

    The Times reports this morning that this kind of briefing is urgently needed. Of course the paper doesn’t quite put it like that but this is the inescapable conclusion to be drawn from Davis’s own remarks at a conference in London yesterday. According to our gallant bulldog, the question of Brexit and the Irish border is being complicated by the Irish government. You see:

    “We had a change of government, south of the border, and with quite a strong influence from Sinn Féin, and that had an impact in terms of the approach”

    This, an audience member pointed out helpfully, was not actually true. There has been no change of government, merely a change of Taoiseach. Undeterred by mere facts, Davis blustered on:

    “Well you had a change of leader or a change in taoiseach. They’ve [Sinn Féin] been playing a strong political role which they haven’t done historically, that I hadn’t foreseen”

    https://blogs.spectator.co.uk/2018/04/how-dare-david-davis-blame-sinn-fein-for-the-irish-border-mess/

    Top trolling from DD - LV now has to be seen to either stand up to SF or capitulate to them.

    The Irish border issue is only an issue for the Irish govt - wish they would hurry up and decide if they will build their border or not. The Uk isn’t interested in building one whatever they decide.
  • FF43FF43 Posts: 15,543
    edited April 2018
    DavidL said:

    Foxy said:

    DavidL said:

    I spent the weekend visiting my 20 year old daughter in Groningen in Holland where she is having an Erasmus year. It was delightful. What surprised me was that she volunteered that having studied EU law in some detail from a continental perspective, having been taught how it is made and what its objectives are she would now vote Leave. She voted remain at the time of the referendum and really had very little time for her dad's views (nothing wrong in that of course). Her view was that if people knew more about it they would like it less.

    Of course this is a classic PB anecdote and I don't doubt that many others could tell stories of fervent leavers who have now changed their mind. What I think is fairly clear is that there has been very little change in the overall position as found in both the referendum and the election where 43% voted for a party completely committed to delivering Brexit (even if they were seriously unclear as to how) and 41% to a party at least notionally committed to respecting the vote, even if many of the members were unhappy about it. 7% voted for a party wanting a second referendum. Its just not going to happen.

    Remainers really need to accept this and focus on achieving as soft a Brexit as possible with continued regulatory alignment, a customs union that looks suspiciously like the Customs Union, priority for EU citizens in immigration, a FTA which looks very like Single Market membership, the UK opting in to various EU bodies and paying subscriptions for their maintenance etc. It seems to me that that is what May is offering but the devil will be in the detail and remainers should be engaged to tweak that deal rather than sitting on the sidelines in the huff. I don't think that there is any chance of us rejoining the EU in the next 20 years but if they get this sort of deal it really wouldn't be that difficult (apart from joining the Euro).

    But then, MRDA doesn't it?

    Your daughter is a wise woman.
    Though in practice, under @DavidL's scenario, we will be tied into EU Law in many aspects because of Pseudo CU and SM, while no longer having a say via Commission or EP in drafting those laws.
    True. I don't think that will be sustainable in the long run but I think it is a sensible first step out the door.
    I agree with your comment that it is unsustainable, which is why none of this is sensible. But there we go ....
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 66,739
    GIN1138 said:

    TGOHF said:
    Will Bazza have resigned/been sacked by the end of the day? :D
    Can't have people telling the truth in the shadow cabinet. Where would the Dear Leader be if that happened?
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 49,614
    TGOHF said:

    Sweet baby Jesus, is there nobody in the Department for Exiting the European Union who can give David Davis a briefing on Irish politics? Not a full, in-depth, Donegal-to-Kerry briefing; just the basics will do. And if there isn’t anyone at DEXEU who could do this, perhaps some kind soul at the Northern Ireland office could pop over to give Davis a quick tutorial?

    The Times reports this morning that this kind of briefing is urgently needed. Of course the paper doesn’t quite put it like that but this is the inescapable conclusion to be drawn from Davis’s own remarks at a conference in London yesterday. According to our gallant bulldog, the question of Brexit and the Irish border is being complicated by the Irish government. You see:

    “We had a change of government, south of the border, and with quite a strong influence from Sinn Féin, and that had an impact in terms of the approach”

    This, an audience member pointed out helpfully, was not actually true. There has been no change of government, merely a change of Taoiseach. Undeterred by mere facts, Davis blustered on:

    “Well you had a change of leader or a change in taoiseach. They’ve [Sinn Féin] been playing a strong political role which they haven’t done historically, that I hadn’t foreseen”

    https://blogs.spectator.co.uk/2018/04/how-dare-david-davis-blame-sinn-fein-for-the-irish-border-mess/

    Top trolling from DD - LV now has to be seen to either stand up to SF or capitulate to them.

    The Irish border issue is only an issue for the Irish govt - wish they would hurry up and decide if they will build their border or not. The Uk isn’t interested in building one whatever they decide.
    Yup, that’s why the issue is annoying the hell out of the EU - we have no intention of doing anything with regard to a border, but their rules insist on a proper hard border with fences, checkpoints and customs as there are with every other EU/non-EU land border.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 40,950
    edited April 2018
    There will be no second referendum.

    There will be two intra-transitional deal manifestos outlining what Out will look like under Cons or Lab.

    It will be very messy and likely irrelevant what Lab’s vision is if Jeremy still leads the party.
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 50,762
    FF43 said:

    DavidL said:

    Foxy said:

    DavidL said:

    Your daughter is a wise woman.
    Though in practice, under @DavidL's scenario, we will be tied into EU Law in many aspects because of Pseudo CU and SM, while no longer having a say via Commission or EP in drafting those laws.
    True. I don't think that will be sustainable in the long run but I think it is a sensible first step out the door.
    I agree with your comment that it is unsustainable, which is why none of this is sensible. But there we go ....
    Once we are out we can decide and redecide how close we want to be to the EU. That will depend on things completely out of our control such as how it develops without our involvement. This deal that people are obsessing on will be no more than a staging post. There will continue to be many of these as there have been over the last 26 years.
  • Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826
    Question regarding tonight's clash between Man City and Liverpool, with Liverpool going to City with a 3-0 lead.

    I believe the Away Goals rule applies both after 90 minutes and after extra time is that correct?

    EG if after 90 minutes City win 4-1 (4-4 on aggregate) then Liverpool progress, there is no extra time.
    If after 90 minutes City win 3-0 then it goes to extra time. If both teams score 1 each in extra time (4-4 AET on aggregate) then Liverpool progress.

    Penalties only if tie still 3-3 on aggregate after extra time.

    So essentially if Liverpool score at all tonight then there won't be penalties, and if they score in 90 minutes there won't be extra time. Is that correct?
  • FF43FF43 Posts: 15,543
    Rhubarb said:

    FF43 said:

    On Brexit polling this result doesn't surprise me at all on the Irish border issue.

    https://twitter.com/SamuelMarcLowe/status/983287241157079040

    The whole report is worth a read. My main takeaway on the Irish Border question is that people still cling to the myth that the UK will have an independent trade policy pre or post Brexit. If it's not going to happen, it's not worth trading off for.

    The problem with Brexit polling generally, and indeed with the referendum itself, is that there is no evaluation of costs for each option. If you ask the question, "Would you prefer you and your family potentially to lose their jobs, or would you prefer a soft Irish border", you would probably get a different answer. It would be seen as a leading question of course.

    Most mainland Brits don't care about NI at all. Any future border is just a detail of that.
    Exactly so. But Irish problems have a habit of feeding into tensions that exist elsewhere in the British Isles. I suspect this one will too.
  • Scrapheap_as_wasScrapheap_as_was Posts: 10,059
    edited April 2018
    I see Barry Gardiner has come over all Roger Mellie.
  • TGOHFTGOHF Posts: 21,633
    FF43 said:

    Rhubarb said:

    FF43 said:

    On Brexit polling this result doesn't surprise me at all on the Irish border issue.

    https://twitter.com/SamuelMarcLowe/status/983287241157079040

    The whole report is worth a read. My main takeaway on the Irish Border question is that people still cling to the myth that the UK will have an independent trade policy pre or post Brexit. If it's not going to happen, it's not worth trading off for.

    The problem with Brexit polling generally, and indeed with the referendum itself, is that there is no evaluation of costs for each option. If you ask the question, "Would you prefer you and your family potentially to lose their jobs, or would you prefer a soft Irish border", you would probably get a different answer. It would be seen as a leading question of course.

    Most mainland Brits don't care about NI at all. Any future border is just a detail of that.
    Exactly so. But Irish problems have a habit of feeding into tensions that exist elsewhere in the British Isles. I suspect this one will too.
    Welsh Independence Party set to sweep the board at next GE ?

    LV is dithering - DD right to call him out.
  • YorkcityYorkcity Posts: 4,382
    ydoethur said:

    GIN1138 said:

    TGOHF said:
    Will Bazza have resigned/been sacked by the end of the day? :D
    Can't have people telling the truth in the shadow cabinet. Where would the Dear Leader be if that happened?
    Please tell us , I am sure you will give a balanced summary.
  • tpfkartpfkar Posts: 1,545
    PeterC said:

    DavidL said:

    I spent the weekend visiting my 20 year old daughter in Groningen in Holland where she is having an Erasmus year. It was delightful. What surprised me was that she volunteered that having studied EU law in some detail from a continental perspective, having been taught how it is made and what its objectives are she would now vote Leave. She voted remain at the time of the referendum and really had very little time for her dad's views (nothing wrong in that of course). Her view was that if people knew more about it they would like it less.

    Of course this is a classic PB anecdote and I don't doubt that many others could tell stories of fervent leavers who have now changed their mind. What I think is fairly clear is that there has been very little change in the overall position as found in both the referendum and the election where 43% voted for a party completely committed to delivering Brexit (even if they were seriously unclear as to how) and 41% to a party at least notionally committed to respecting the vote, even if many of the members were unhappy about it. 7% voted for a party wanting a second referendum. Its just not going to happen.

    Remainers really need to accept this and focus on achieving as soft a Brexit as possible with continued regulatory alignment, a customs union that looks suspiciously like the Customs Union, priority for EU citizens in immigration, a FTA which looks very like Single Market membership, the UK opting in to various EU bodies and paying subscriptions for their maintenance etc. It seems to me that that is what May is offering but the devil will be in the detail and remainers should be engaged to tweak that deal rather than sitting on the sidelines in the huff. I don't think that there is any chance of us rejoining the EU in the next 20 years but if they get this sort of deal it really wouldn't be that difficult (apart from joining the Euro).

    But then, MRDA doesn't it?

    Do you think that Mrs May would survive the uproar if her proposed deal amounts to a transparent BINO. It would sure then beg the question of what is the point in leaving at all?
    Yes, easily. Look at what unpalatable compromises have been made so far - money being the biggest and now forgotten, but customs union NI border backstops, immigration registration in transition, fisheries etc. For Mrs May not to survive, there has to be a single point, and single concession where Jacob Rees Mogg decides to bring her down over it. And all that would risk is Corbyn in number 10 and Brexit totally derailed. So he can whinge about disappointment, modest deals all he likes, but the only way to secure Brexit is to vote for whatever deal the Government comes up with, however rubbish. And May knows it.

    It's been an object lesson in salami-slicing epic backsliding.
  • FF43FF43 Posts: 15,543
    edited April 2018

    Sweet baby Jesus, is there nobody in the Department for Exiting the European Union who can give David Davis a briefing on Irish politics? Not a full, in-depth, Donegal-to-Kerry briefing; just the basics will do. And if there isn’t anyone at DEXEU who could do this, perhaps some kind soul at the Northern Ireland office could pop over to give Davis a quick tutorial?

    The Times reports this morning that this kind of briefing is urgently needed. Of course the paper doesn’t quite put it like that but this is the inescapable conclusion to be drawn from Davis’s own remarks at a conference in London yesterday. According to our gallant bulldog, the question of Brexit and the Irish border is being complicated by the Irish government. You see:

    “We had a change of government, south of the border, and with quite a strong influence from Sinn Féin, and that had an impact in terms of the approach”

    This, an audience member pointed out helpfully, was not actually true. There has been no change of government, merely a change of Taoiseach. Undeterred by mere facts, Davis blustered on:

    “Well you had a change of leader or a change in taoiseach. They’ve [Sinn Féin] been playing a strong political role which they haven’t done historically, that I hadn’t foreseen”

    https://blogs.spectator.co.uk/2018/04/how-dare-david-davis-blame-sinn-fein-for-the-irish-border-mess/

    Apart from the ridiculousness of a Fine Gael politician ever taking instructions from Sinn Féin, I have yet to find an Irish person who chooses the UK line on the Irish border to that of their own government.The real question is why David Davis feels a political need to blame the Irish for the contradictions of their own policy. It's very similar to Tony Blair blaming the French for his decision to invade Iraq.
  • TGOHFTGOHF Posts: 21,633

    Question regarding tonight's clash between Man City and Liverpool, with Liverpool going to City with a 3-0 lead.

    I believe the Away Goals rule applies both after 90 minutes and after extra time is that correct?

    EG if after 90 minutes City win 4-1 (4-4 on aggregate) then Liverpool progress, there is no extra time.
    If after 90 minutes City win 3-0 then it goes to extra time. If both teams score 1 each in extra time (4-4 AET on aggregate) then Liverpool progress.

    Penalties only if tie still 3-3 on aggregate after extra time.

    So essentially if Liverpool score at all tonight then there won't be penalties, and if they score in 90 minutes there won't be extra time. Is that correct?

    Yes. 3-0 is only scoreline that gives extra time.

    I have £2 on 5-1 and also on 6-1.

  • TGOHFTGOHF Posts: 21,633
    FF43 said:

    Sweet baby Jesus, is there nobody in the Department for Exiting the European Union who can give David Davis a briefing on Irish politics? Not a full, in-depth, Donegal-to-Kerry briefing; just the basics will do. And if there isn’t anyone at DEXEU who could do this, perhaps some kind soul at the Northern Ireland office could pop over to give Davis a quick tutorial?

    The Times reports this morning that this kind of briefing is urgently needed. Of course the paper doesn’t quite put it like that but this is the inescapable conclusion to be drawn from Davis’s own remarks at a conference in London yesterday. According to our gallant bulldog, the question of Brexit and the Irish border is being complicated by the Irish government. You see:

    “We had a change of government, south of the border, and with quite a strong influence from Sinn Féin, and that had an impact in terms of the approach”

    This, an audience member pointed out helpfully, was not actually true. There has been no change of government, merely a change of Taoiseach. Undeterred by mere facts, Davis blustered on:

    “Well you had a change of leader or a change in taoiseach. They’ve [Sinn Féin] been playing a strong political role which they haven’t done historically, that I hadn’t foreseen”

    https://blogs.spectator.co.uk/2018/04/how-dare-david-davis-blame-sinn-fein-for-the-irish-border-mess/

    Apart from the ridiculousness of a Fine Gael politician ever taking instructions from Sinn Féin, I have yet to find an Irish person who chooses the UK line on the Irish border to that of their own government.The real question is why David Davis feels a political need to blame the Irish for the contradictions of their own policy. It's very similar to Tony Blair blaming the French for his decision to invade Iraq.
    It's not the Uk's fault that Ireland is continuing in a trade cartel - the ROI either need to find a solution or build a wall.
  • CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 59,540

    He doesn't know what he's talking about, he writes Mandates from referendums (correct plural…)

    If he can talk such arrant nonsense we can ignore the rest of his piece.
    He's writing in English not Latin....

    https://www.spectator.co.uk/2016/07/why-the-plural-of-referendum-must-be-referendums/
  • FF43FF43 Posts: 15,543
    edited April 2018
    DavidL said:

    FF43 said:

    DavidL said:

    Foxy said:

    DavidL said:

    Your daughter is a wise woman.
    Though in practice, under @DavidL's scenario, we will be tied into EU Law in many aspects because of Pseudo CU and SM, while no longer having a say via Commission or EP in drafting those laws.
    True. I don't think that will be sustainable in the long run but I think it is a sensible first step out the door.
    I agree with your comment that it is unsustainable, which is why none of this is sensible. But there we go ....
    Once we are out we can decide and redecide how close we want to be to the EU. That will depend on things completely out of our control such as how it develops without our involvement. This deal that people are obsessing on will be no more than a staging post. There will continue to be many of these as there have been over the last 26 years.
    The conundrum, though, is that any practical outcome for the UK involves the UK being plugged into the EU system on its terms. We can either be a member of that organisation helping to shape direction or we can be outside doing what we are told. The latter is unsustainable, as we have discussed. We could just sod off, but that isn't sustainable either.

    There is a massive contradiction here, which is why Brexit isn't sensible at all.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 66,739
    Yorkcity said:

    ydoethur said:

    GIN1138 said:

    TGOHF said:
    Will Bazza have resigned/been sacked by the end of the day? :D
    Can't have people telling the truth in the shadow cabinet. Where would the Dear Leader be if that happened?
    Please tell us , I am sure you will give a balanced summary.
    I don't give balanced summaries, only brutally accurate ones :smile:
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 55,008
    FF43 said:

    DavidL said:

    FF43 said:

    DavidL said:

    Foxy said:

    DavidL said:

    Your daughter is a wise woman.
    Though in practice, under @DavidL's scenario, we will be tied into EU Law in many aspects because of Pseudo CU and SM, while no longer having a say via Commission or EP in drafting those laws.
    True. I don't think that will be sustainable in the long run but I think it is a sensible first step out the door.
    I agree with your comment that it is unsustainable, which is why none of this is sensible. But there we go ....
    Once we are out we can decide and redecide how close we want to be to the EU. That will depend on things completely out of our control such as how it develops without our involvement. This deal that people are obsessing on will be no more than a staging post. There will continue to be many of these as there have been over the last 26 years.
    The conundrum, though, is that there is no practical outcome for the UK that doesn't involve the UK plugged into the EU on its terms. We can either be a member of that organisation helping to shape direction or we can be outside doing what we are told. The latter is unsustainable, as we have discussed. We could just sod off, but that isn't sustainable either we will need to come back to the EU.

    There is a massive contradiction here, which is why Brexit isn't sensible at all.
    It isn’t nearly as black and white as you make out, and you reveal your own biases in arguing it is so.

    The EU need to show there is no better deal than full membership. The UK need to achieve a meaningful repatriation of powers. In that there is a lot of wiggle room.
  • RhubarbRhubarb Posts: 359
    FF43 said:

    Rhubarb said:

    FF43 said:

    On Brexit polling this result doesn't surprise me at all on the Irish border issue.

    https://twitter.com/SamuelMarcLowe/status/983287241157079040

    The whole report is worth a read. My main takeaway on the Irish Border question is that people still cling to the myth that the UK will have an independent trade policy pre or post Brexit. If it's not going to happen, it's not worth trading off for.

    The problem with Brexit polling generally, and indeed with the referendum itself, is that there is no evaluation of costs for each option. If you ask the question, "Would you prefer you and your family potentially to lose their jobs, or would you prefer a soft Irish border", you would probably get a different answer. It would be seen as a leading question of course.

    Most mainland Brits don't care about NI at all. Any future border is just a detail of that.
    Exactly so. But Irish problems have a habit of feeding into tensions that exist elsewhere in the British Isles. I suspect this one will too.
    Barnett, language, EVEL (tho' less so now) and devolution have been issues for decades. Mainland apathy to NI (and the other home nations slowly increasing apathy towards each other) is a reflection of that, not a cause.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,709
    tpfkar said:

    PeterC said:

    DavidL said:

    I spent the weekend visiting my 20 year old daughter in Groningen in Holland where she is having an Erasmus year. It was delightful. What surprised me was that she volunteered that having studied EU law in some detail from a continental perspective, having been taught how it is made and what its objectives are she would now vote Leave. She voted remain at the time of the referendum and really had very little time for her dad's views (nothing wrong in that of course). Her view was that if people knew more about it they would like it less.

    Of course this is a classic PB anecdote and I don't doubt that many others could tell stories of fervent leavers who have now changed their mind. What I think is fairly clear is that there has been very little change in the overall position as found in both the referendum and the election where 43% voted for a party completely committed to delivering Brexit (even if they were seriously unclear as to how) and 41% to a party at least notionally committed to respecting the vote, even if many of the members were unhappy about it. 7% voted for a party wanting a second referendum. Its just not going to happen.

    Remainers really need to accept this and focus on achieving as soft a Brexit as possible with continued regulatory alignment, a customs union that looks suspiciously like

    But then, MRDA doesn't it?

    Do you think that Mrs May would survive the uproar if her proposed deal amounts to a transparent BINO. It would sure then beg the question of what is the point in leaving at all?
    Yes, easily. Look at what unpalatable compromises have been made so far - money being the biggest and now forgotten, but customs union NI border backstops, immigration registration in transition, fisheries etc. For Mrs May not to survive, there has to be a single point, and single concession where Jacob Rees Mogg decides to bring her down over it. And all that would risk is Corbyn in number 10 and Brexit totally derailed. So he can whinge about disappointment, modest deals all he likes, but the only way to secure Brexit is to vote for whatever deal the Government comes up with, however rubbish. And May knows it.

    It's been an object lesson in salami-slicing epic backsliding.
    Perhaps it was May's 'very cunning' plan to call a general election to lose her majority but keep enough seats to stay PM so that Mogg et al could not rebel too much over the Brexit deal without risking a Corbyn government and so she can blame her limitations on giving concessions to the Republic of Ireland on the DUP!
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 55,008

    Sweet baby Jesus, is there nobody in the Department for Exiting the European Union who can give David Davis a briefing on Irish politics? Not a full, in-depth, Donegal-to-Kerry briefing; just the basics will do. And if there isn’t anyone at DEXEU who could do this, perhaps some kind soul at the Northern Ireland office could pop over to give Davis a quick tutorial?

    The Times reports this morning that this kind of briefing is urgently needed. Of course the paper doesn’t quite put it like that but this is the inescapable conclusion to be drawn from Davis’s own remarks at a conference in London yesterday. According to our gallant bulldog, the question of Brexit and the Irish border is being complicated by the Irish government. You see:

    “We had a change of government, south of the border, and with quite a strong influence from Sinn Féin, and that had an impact in terms of the approach”

    This, an audience member pointed out helpfully, was not actually true. There has been no change of government, merely a change of Taoiseach. Undeterred by mere facts, Davis blustered on:

    “Well you had a change of leader or a change in taoiseach. They’ve [Sinn Féin] been playing a strong political role which they haven’t done historically, that I hadn’t foreseen”

    https://blogs.spectator.co.uk/2018/04/how-dare-david-davis-blame-sinn-fein-for-the-irish-border-mess/

    It would be fair to say that Sinn Fein have been instrumental in exercising political pressure in Eire on the Taoiseach over NI & Brexit.
  • FF43FF43 Posts: 15,543

    FF43 said:

    DavidL said:

    FF43 said:

    DavidL said:

    Foxy said:

    DavidL said:

    Your daughter is a wise woman.
    Though in practice, under @DavidL's scenario, we will be tied into EU Law in many aspects because of Pseudo CU and SM, while no longer having a say via Commission or EP in drafting those laws.
    True. I don't think that will be sustainable in the long run but I think it is a sensible first step out the door.
    I agree with your comment that it is unsustainable, which is why none of this is sensible. But there we go ....
    Once we are out we can decide and redecide how close we want to be to the EU. That will depend on things completely out of our control such as how it develops without our involvement. This deal that people are obsessing on will be no more than a staging post. There will continue to be many of these as there have been over the last 26 years.
    The conundrum, though, is that there is no practical outcome for the UK that doesn't involve the UK plugged into the EU on its terms. We can either be a member of that organisation helping to shape direction or we can be outside doing what we are told. The latter is unsustainable, as we have discussed. We could just sod off, but that isn't sustainable either we will need to come back to the EU.

    There is a massive contradiction here, which is why Brexit isn't sensible at all.
    It isn’t nearly as black and white as you make out, and you reveal your own biases in arguing it is so.

    The EU need to show there is no better deal than full membership. The UK need to achieve a meaningful repatriation of powers. In that there is a lot of wiggle room.
    Fair enough. It's not black and white. I expect BINO to be sustained, precisely because of the contradiction I outlined. People will, I suspect, accept the EU telling the UK what to do over not having a viable set of trade relationships or the embarrassment of returning to the EU. If all three available options are "unsustainable" something has to give.

    It still isn't sensible however.
  • FF43FF43 Posts: 15,543

    Sweet baby Jesus, is there nobody in the Department for Exiting the European Union who can give David Davis a briefing on Irish politics? Not a full, in-depth, Donegal-to-Kerry briefing; just the basics will do. And if there isn’t anyone at DEXEU who could do this, perhaps some kind soul at the Northern Ireland office could pop over to give Davis a quick tutorial?

    The Times reports this morning that this kind of briefing is urgently needed. Of course the paper doesn’t quite put it like that but this is the inescapable conclusion to be drawn from Davis’s own remarks at a conference in London yesterday. According to our gallant bulldog, the question of Brexit and the Irish border is being complicated by the Irish government. You see:

    “We had a change of government, south of the border, and with quite a strong influence from Sinn Féin, and that had an impact in terms of the approach”

    This, an audience member pointed out helpfully, was not actually true. There has been no change of government, merely a change of Taoiseach. Undeterred by mere facts, Davis blustered on:

    “Well you had a change of leader or a change in taoiseach. They’ve [Sinn Féin] been playing a strong political role which they haven’t done historically, that I hadn’t foreseen”

    https://blogs.spectator.co.uk/2018/04/how-dare-david-davis-blame-sinn-fein-for-the-irish-border-mess/

    It would be fair to say that Sinn Fein have been instrumental in exercising political pressure in Eire on the Taoiseach over NI & Brexit.
    I am not sure. What is certainly the case is that Brexit is a gift for Sinn Féin. They reckon it's doing more for their cause than decades of violence.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,709
    FF43 said:

    FF43 said:

    DavidL said:

    FF43 said:

    DavidL said:

    Foxy said:

    DavidL said:

    Your daughter is a wise woman.
    Though in practice, under @DavidL's scenario, we will be tied into EU Law in many aspects because of Pseudo CU and SM, while no longer having a say via Commission or EP in drafting those laws.
    True. I don't think that will be sustainable in the long run but I think it is a sensible first step out the door.
    I agree with your comment that it is unsustainable, which is why none of this is sensible. But there we go ....
    Once we are out we can decide and redecide how close we want to be to the EU. That will depend on things completely out of our control such as how it develops without our involvement. This deal that people are obsessing on will be no more than a staging post. There will continue to be many of these as there have been over the last 26 years.
    The conundrum, though, is that there is no practical outcome for the UK that doesn't involve the UK plugged into the EU on its terms. We can either be a member of that organisation helping to shape direction or we can be outside doing what we are told. The latter is unsustainable, as we have discussed. We could just sod off, but that isn't sustainable either we will need to come back to the EU.

    There is a massive contradiction here, which is why Brexit isn't sensible at all.
    It isn’t nearly as black and white as you make out, and you reveal your own biases in arguing it is so.

    The EU need to show there is no better deal than full membership. The UK need to achieve a meaningful repatriation of powers. In that there is a lot of wiggle room.
    Fair enough. It's not black and white. I expect BINO to be sustained, precisely because of the contradiction I outlined. People will, I suspect, accept the EU telling the UK what to do over not having a viable set of trade relationships or the embarrassment of returning to the EU. If all three available options are "unsustainable" something has to give.

    It still isn't sensible however.
    A FTA will not be BINO, that requires permanent single market membership and customs union membership
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 55,008
    Foxy said:

    DavidL said:

    I spent the weekend visiting my 20 year old daughter in Groningen in Holland where she is having an Erasmus year. It was delightful. What surprised me was that she volunteered that having studied EU law in some detail from a continental perspective, having been taught how it is made and what its objectives are she would now vote Leave. She voted remain at the time of the referendum and really had very little time for her dad's views (nothing wrong in that of course). Her view was that if people knew more about it they would like it less.

    Of course this is a classic PB anecdote and I don't doubt that many others could tell stories of fervent leavers who have now changed their mind. What I think is fairly clear is that there has been very little change in the overall position as found in both the referendum and the election where 43% voted for a party completely committed to delivering Brexit (even if they were seriously unclear as to how) and 41% to a party at least notionally committed to respecting the vote, even if many of the members were unhappy about it. 7% voted for a party wanting a second referendum. Its just not going to happen.

    Remainers really need to accept this and focus on achieving as soft a Brexit as possible with continued regulatory alignment, a customs union that looks suspiciously like the Customs Union, priority for EU citizens in immigration, a FTA which looks very like Single Market membership, the UK opting in to various EU bodies and paying subscriptions for their maintenance etc. It seems to me that that is what May is offering but the devil will be in the detail and remainers should be engaged to tweak that deal rather than sitting on the sidelines in the huff. I don't think that there is any chance of us rejoining the EU in the next 20 years but if they get this sort of deal it really wouldn't be that difficult (apart from joining the Euro).

    But then, MRDA doesn't it?

    Your daughter is a wise woman.
    Though in practice, under @DavidL's scenario, we will be tied into EU Law in many aspects because of Pseudo CU and SM, while no longer having a say via Commission or EP in drafting those laws.
    In goods, yes, but the Government is going for more detachment on services.
  • AlastairMeeksAlastairMeeks Posts: 30,340
    DavidL said:

    I spent the weekend visiting my 20 year old daughter in Groningen in Holland where she is having an Erasmus year. It was delightful. What surprised me was that she volunteered that having studied EU law in some detail from a continental perspective, having been taught how it is made and what its objectives are she would now vote Leave. She voted remain at the time of the referendum and really had very little time for her dad's views (nothing wrong in that of course). Her view was that if people knew more about it they would like it less.

    Of course this is a classic PB anecdote and I don't doubt that many others could tell stories of fervent leavers who have now changed their mind. What I think is fairly clear is that there has been very little change in the overall position as found in both the referendum and the election where 43% voted for a party completely committed to delivering Brexit (even if they were seriously unclear as to how) and 41% to a party at least notionally committed to respecting the vote, even if many of the members were unhappy about it. 7% voted for a party wanting a second referendum. Its just not going to happen.

    Remainers really need to accept this and focus on achieving as soft a Brexit as possible with continued regulatory alignment, a customs union that looks suspiciously like the Customs Union, priority for EU citizens in immigration, a FTA which looks very like Single Market membership, the UK opting in to various EU bodies and paying subscriptions for their maintenance etc. It seems to me that that is what May is offering but the devil will be in the detail and remainers should be engaged to tweak that deal rather than sitting on the sidelines in the huff. I don't think that there is any chance of us rejoining the EU in the next 20 years but if they get this sort of deal it really wouldn't be that difficult (apart from joining the Euro).

    But then, MRDA doesn't it?

    Better to let the ship sink first then salvage what you can from the wreckage. There’s no point Remain supporters getting involved yet. Leave supporters are as yet unready to accept their own complicity in xenophobic lies and in any case would simply accuse Remain supporters of seeking to sabotage Brexit.
  • YorkcityYorkcity Posts: 4,382
    I would agree with that .FIFA , should reallocate the tournament in England banning Russia.That would send the correct signal.Will never happen though.
  • PClippPClipp Posts: 2,138
    HYUFD said:

    PClipp said:

    The Tories won the 2015 on the record of the Coalition Government, in particular on the popular Lib Dem policies which they appropriated to themselves, even though they opposed them in government. The promise to hold a referendum was popular only among Tory chauvinists.

    It was in the Tory manifesto and kept a number of Tory voters from defecting to UKIP
    Quite, Mr HYUDF. Which is why we now have a UKIP-DUP government.
  • The problem with a second referendum is there is simply no time. We are leaving next March. We don't hold elections and referenda over the winter so realistically it would have to be in October 2018. Will a deal even be ready to vote on by then? Parliament would need to be working on the enabling legislation now and I see no sign of that happening.

    Also May is never going to agree to a second referendum. If she lost, she would have to resign like Cameron did. Parliament cannot force the executive to hold a referendum.

    My view remains that there will be a deal "fudged brexit", which will go to parliament. While some of the hardcore brexiteers and remainers will moan, the deal will be comfortably approved and life will go on.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 55,008

    This might be a cynical way of seeing this, but given that Conservative voters of 2017 split 21/63 against even the "final say" version, and in an adversarial democracy, the Government first keeps its own voters sweet (if it wants to get re-elected), it ain't happening.
    Not unless that number shifted to a great degree, and the overall figure was strongly pro-final say. And we're running out of time for that very rapidly.

    We're also running out to put the legal framework in place for a referendum. To hold one before March 29, you need the campaign to take place, which requires registered Yes and No (or whatever) campaigns, which requires them to be formed and approved by the Electoral Commission, which requires legislation to be in place to kick-start it all, which requires a Bill to be introduced and passed through parliament.

    Given that it'd be foolish to hold a referendum with no time to sort out the fallout should the people give the 'wrong' result, we're probably pretty close to the deadline for when a bill could reasonably be introduced to allow time for all the stages.

    Leave aside that were such legislation going through, it'd make negotiations with the EU much harder.
    Isn’t that the point, though?

    Get the legislation going now, help deliver a crap deal from the EU then it’s much easier to sting Leave in the 2nd ref.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 55,008
    FF43 said:

    Sweet baby Jesus, is there nobody in the Department for Exiting the European Union who can give David Davis a briefing on Irish politics? Not a full, in-depth, Donegal-to-Kerry briefing; just the basics will do. And if there isn’t anyone at DEXEU who could do this, perhaps some kind soul at the Northern Ireland office could pop over to give Davis a quick tutorial?

    The Times reports this morning that this kind of briefing is urgently needed. Of course the paper doesn’t quite put it like that but this is the inescapable conclusion to be drawn from Davis’s own remarks at a conference in London yesterday. According to our gallant bulldog, the question of Brexit and the Irish border is being complicated by the Irish government. You see:

    “We had a change of government, south of the border, and with quite a strong influence from Sinn Féin, and that had an impact in terms of the approach”

    This, an audience member pointed out helpfully, was not actually true. There has been no change of government, merely a change of Taoiseach. Undeterred by mere facts, Davis blustered on:

    “Well you had a change of leader or a change in taoiseach. They’ve [Sinn Féin] been playing a strong political role which they haven’t done historically, that I hadn’t foreseen”

    https://blogs.spectator.co.uk/2018/04/how-dare-david-davis-blame-sinn-fein-for-the-irish-border-mess/

    It would be fair to say that Sinn Fein have been instrumental in exercising political pressure in Eire on the Taoiseach over NI & Brexit.
    I am not sure. What is certainly the case is that Brexit is a gift for Sinn Féin. They reckon it's doing more for their cause than decades of violence.
    If it is, it’s yet to show up in any border poll I’ve seen.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,709
    edited April 2018
    PClipp said:

    HYUFD said:

    PClipp said:

    The Tories won the 2015 on the record of the Coalition Government, in particular on the popular Lib Dem policies which they appropriated to themselves, even though they opposed them in government. The promise to hold a referendum was popular only among Tory chauvinists.

    It was in the Tory manifesto and kept a number of Tory voters from defecting to UKIP
    Quite, Mr HYUDF. Which is why we now have a UKIP-DUP government.
    Though May is not going straight to WTO terms either so it is more in between
  • TGOHFTGOHF Posts: 21,633
    Yorkcity said:

    I would agree with that .FIFA , should reallocate the tournament in England banning Russia.That would send the correct signal.Will never happen though.
    USA didn't qualify - can't see a boycott being brewed up by Germany, Spain and England (via the Uk)

    No chance.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 66,739
    The only reason I'm not going to quote David Cameron's famous dictum is that Trump was a twat long before Twitter was around.
  • FF43FF43 Posts: 15,543
    HYUFD said:

    FF43 said:

    FF43 said:



    The conundrum, though, is that there is no practical outcome for the UK that doesn't involve the UK plugged into the EU on its terms. We can either be a member of that organisation helping to shape direction or we can be outside doing what we are told. The latter is unsustainable, as we have discussed. We could just sod off, but that isn't sustainable either we will need to come back to the EU.

    There is a massive contradiction here, which is why Brexit isn't sensible at all.

    It isn’t nearly as black and white as you make out, and you reveal your own biases in arguing it is so.

    The EU need to show there is no better deal than full membership. The UK need to achieve a meaningful repatriation of powers. In that there is a lot of wiggle room.
    Fair enough. It's not black and white. I expect BINO to be sustained, precisely because of the contradiction I outlined. People will, I suspect, accept the EU telling the UK what to do over not having a viable set of trade relationships or the embarrassment of returning to the EU. If all three available options are "unsustainable" something has to give.

    It still isn't sensible however.
    A FTA will not be BINO, that requires permanent single market membership and customs union membership
    FTA isn't BINO. It's the "not having a viable set of trade relationships" option that I talked about. It's possible the UK government will aim to go down this route although it has done nothing to effect any of it so far. It's going to hit a lot of vested interests along the way and there will be some very undesirable consequences if it does. In my view if does attempt this route it will backtrack in time. I don't see we will end up there. The government needs to put this issue to bed without it being an outright disaster. Casino R would say my sense of realism is my "confirmation bias", I guess.
  • DecrepitJohnLDecrepitJohnL Posts: 13,300
    The question for, or about, the President is this. If the Russians really do have dirt on the Donald, and it's not just a series of unfortunate loans, then how does that affect Syria?
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