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politicalbetting.com » Blog Archive » Three Lions: just maybe

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  • Options
    SouthamObserverSouthamObserver Posts: 38,914
    I’ve had worst weeks.
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    CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758
    What price Brussels vs England in the final?
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    PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 75,899

    tlg86 said:

    England have been competent but Sweden must be a contender for the worst team ever to reach a WC QF.

    Ukraine were pretty poor in 2006.
    They were but had Shevchenko and Rebrov up front so had some quality.

    Sweden are utterly mediocre.
    Should have been favourites according to @Stodge
  • Options
    SouthamObserverSouthamObserver Posts: 38,914
    Absolutely wonderful. Just magnificent.
  • Options
    MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 50,095

    Pickford again - what a star

    Best goal-keeping performance of the Cup so far.
  • Options
    Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 60,247
    Charles said:

    What price Brussels vs England in the final?

    A good chance
  • Options
    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,937
    notme said:



    “If they reject this offer in totality there is nothing further really to negotiate without abandoning almost all the Leave campaign promises so we start preparing for No Deal”

    Leave campaign promises? No such thing. How can they promise anything? They weren’t a government. Or claiming to become one. The promise of the referendum was to leave the EU. That we are doing it. Two caveats though. May has tied herself with her own red lines. And stood for re election promising many of these in her manifesto. If for instance we opted for EEA single market. It isn’t the referendum, but the GE manifesto that’s been betrayed.

    If EU won’t accept the free movement restrictions I can’t see anything that rivals membership of the eea as an alternative that causes minimum disruption. Either as a short term or long term decision.

    This claim ”UK will also apply common rulebook to state aid; and maintain same standards for environment, climate change, social & employment and consumer protection” makes me sleep better at night. It will utterly prevent much of the ambitions of the more radical of Corbyn’s followers.

    The promise to leave the EU was only won on a promise to regain control of our borders and regain sovereignty that means free movement cannot stand as now whatever deal is done if any and as you confirm the Tory manifesto which won a majority on that platform in mainland Britain on that platform confirms that
  • Options
    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,937
    edited July 2018
    notme said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    It will most likely tell May she has to resign or face a no confidence vote and prepare for No Deal and a Mogg, Boris or Gove or Javid premiership.

    https://twitter.com/LordAshcroft/status/1015589171082219520
    On the basis it would be accepted by the EU, if the EU rejects it and demands even more concessions that is a totally different ball game
    At what point does the settlement money become in doubt? With the lack of a deal do we walk away without paying?
    We pay minimum legal obligations already committed to
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    dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 27,940

    Pickford again - what a star

    Best goal-keeping performance of the Cup so far.
    Where is @TSE, the Sage of South Yorkshire to tell me Mignolet is better?
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    another_richardanother_richard Posts: 25,046

    HYUFD said:

    Full time. England win and will go to their first world cup semi final in 28 years on Wednesday

    Wow, that seemed much easier than I feared at 3pm.
    They were highly competent (Sterling excepted) against very limited opponents and they had no bad luck either.

    But it looks like the France vs Belgium game should be the effective final.
  • Options
    dr_spyndr_spyn Posts: 11,287
    edited July 2018
  • Options
    ydoethurydoethur Posts: 67,108
    edited July 2018
    If anyone wants something surreal:

    Police investigate after cow seen in back of a car on M4 near Briton Ferry

    http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-44750013

    Reminds me of the time a farmer near Gloucester called Robin Hoare transported a steer in the back of his Mercedes as the axle had broken on his trailer. The police flagged him down and asked for proof that the cow [sic] was his.

    His unforgettable reply was, 'Proof? Proof? My dear young man, the word of a Hoare is binding!'
  • Options
    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,937
    RobD said:

    HYUFD said:

    Full time. England win and will go to their first world cup semi final in 28 years on Wednesday

    No pressure...
    They have already got further than I ever imagined they would so anything else is a bonus but obviously it would be great if they do win it
  • Options
    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,937

    HYUFD said:

    Full time. England win and will go to their first world cup semi final in 28 years on Wednesday

    Wow, that seemed much easier than I feared at 3pm.
    Very cool all round
  • Options
    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,937

    HYUFD said:

    Though I have to say the Swedes won the contest of most beautiful spectators!

    "You're shit
    But your birds are fit....."
    I expect a chant in the bank there
  • Options
    FoxyFoxy Posts: 44,503

    HYUFD said:

    Full time. England win and will go to their first world cup semi final in 28 years on Wednesday

    Wow, that seemed much easier than I feared at 3pm.
    They were highly competent (Sterling excepted) against very limited opponents and they had no bad luck either.

    But it looks like the France vs Belgium game should be the effective final.
    Will be at that one, but who knows? Maguire is a star.
  • Options
    CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758
    surby said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    It will most likely tell May she has to resign or face a no confidence vote and prepare for No Deal and a Mogg, Boris or Gove or Javid premiership.

    https://twitter.com/LordAshcroft/status/1015589171082219520
    On the basis it would be accepted by the EU, if the EU rejects it and demands even more concessions that is a totally different ball game
    The UK is still very much in the cherry picking state. The EU have all along shown their red lines.
    That’s the nature of a negotiation

    The Uk has said no to FoM

    The EU has said you can’t have anything without FoM

    So you either stop negotiating or look for a deal that is acceptable to both sides (aka “cherry picking”)
  • Options
    ydoethurydoethur Posts: 67,108
    HYUFD said:

    RobD said:

    HYUFD said:

    Full time. England win and will go to their first world cup semi final in 28 years on Wednesday

    No pressure...
    They have already got further than I ever imagined they would so anything else is a bonus but obviously it would be great if they do win it
    Particularly if they then boycotted the presentation ceremony in protest at Putin trying to murder five people in Wiltshire.

    That would be far more painful to him than a few diplomats being booted around the globe or everyone laughing at his fairy stories (to use a phrase from Russia Today).
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    Sunil_PrasannanSunil_Prasannan Posts: 49,200
    notme said:

    felix said:

    notme said:



    “If they reject this offer in totality there is nothing further really to negotiate without abandoning almost all the Leave campaign promises so we start preparing for No Deal”

    Leave campaign promises? No such thing. How can they promise anything? They weren’t a government. Or claiming to become one. The promise of the referendum was to leave the EU. That we are doing it. Two caveats though. May has tied herself with her own red lines. And stood for re election promising many of these in her manifesto. If for instance we opted for EEA single market. It isn’t the referendum, but the GE manifesto that’s been betrayed.

    If EU won’t accept the free movement restrictions I can’t see anything that rivals membership of the eea as an alternative that causes minimum disruption. Either as a short term or long term decision.

    This claim ”UK will also apply common rulebook to state aid; and maintain same standards for environment, climate change, social & employment and consumer protection” makes me sleep better at night. It will utterly prevent much of the ambitions of the more radical of Corbyn’s followers.

    Me too - Corbyn will not be a happy bunny today. The ultras on both sides of the divide got a kicking from May and it shows.
    May is also in prime position to call a referendum when the time comes in which she can be neutral.
    Do,you suspect the referendum will be on whether we accept the deal or not or whether we leave or not?

    No, on whether Three Lions or World in Motion is the better World Cup song :)
  • Options
    kle4kle4 Posts: 91,624
    Charles said:

    surby said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    It will most likely tell May she has to resign or face a no confidence vote and prepare for No Deal and a Mogg, Boris or Gove or Javid premiership.

    https://twitter.com/LordAshcroft/status/1015589171082219520
    On the basis it would be accepted by the EU, if the EU rejects it and demands even more concessions that is a totally different ball game
    The UK is still very much in the cherry picking state. The EU have all along shown their red lines.
    That’s the nature of a negotiation

    The Uk has said no to FoM

    The EU has said you can’t have anything without FoM

    So you either stop negotiating or look for a deal that is acceptable to both sides (aka “cherry picking”)
    Indeed. Whether that particular issue can be cracked to both sides' satisfaction or not (I think it will be doubtful), it seems notable that some people seem to think any pronouncements from the EU are cast iron, no point in discussing further, even as anything we say must be rolled back.
  • Options
    Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 60,247
    Foxy said:

    HYUFD said:

    Full time. England win and will go to their first world cup semi final in 28 years on Wednesday

    Wow, that seemed much easier than I feared at 3pm.
    They were highly competent (Sterling excepted) against very limited opponents and they had no bad luck either.

    But it looks like the France vs Belgium game should be the effective final.
    Will be at that one, but who knows? Maguire is a star.
    You have hit the jackpot with your tickets. Have a great time and every England player, apart from Sterling, were stars
  • Options
    MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 50,095
    Charles said:

    What price Brussels vs England in the final?

    Remainers supporting Brussels?
  • Options
    ydoethurydoethur Posts: 67,108
    edited July 2018
    Charles said:

    surby said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    It will most likely tell May she has to resign or face a no confidence vote and prepare for No Deal and a Mogg, Boris or Gove or Javid premiership.

    https://twitter.com/LordAshcroft/status/1015589171082219520
    On the basis it would be accepted by the EU, if the EU rejects it and demands even more concessions that is a totally different ball game
    The UK is still very much in the cherry picking state. The EU have all along shown their red lines.
    That’s the nature of a negotiation

    The Uk has said no to FoM

    The EU has said you can’t have anything without FoM

    So you either stop negotiating or look for a deal that is acceptable to both sides (aka “cherry picking”)
    I would have said the EU are cherry-picking as well actually, particularly on things like regulatory alignment, the ECJ and security co-operation. Money could come into that - all debts included but no joint assets.

    It may be of course that their negotiating team are too drunk to realise this (we are talking about Barnier, Juncker and Selmayr after all) but they definitely want a lot from us while giving almost nothing in return. The problem is we're in such a weak position there's not much we can do about it in the short term.
  • Options
    Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 55,258
    Charles said:

    What price Brussels vs England in the final?

    I have a strong feeling about that.
  • Options
    david_herdsondavid_herdson Posts: 17,419

    notme said:

    felix said:

    notme said:



    “If they reject this offer in totality there is nothing further really to negotiate without abandoning almost all the Leave campaign promises so we start preparing for No Deal”

    Leave campaign promises? No such thing. How can they promise anything? They weren’t a government. Or claiming to become one. The promise of the referendum was to leave the EU. That we are doing it. Two caveats though. May has tied herself with her own red lines. And stood for re election promising many of these in her manifesto. If for instance we opted for EEA single market. It isn’t the referendum, but the GE manifesto that’s been betrayed.

    If EU won’t accept the free movement restrictions I can’t see anything that rivals membership of the eea as an alternative that causes minimum disruption. Either as a short term or long term decision.

    This claim ”UK will also apply common rulebook to state aid; and maintain same standards for environment, climate change, social & employment and consumer protection” makes me sleep better at night. It will utterly prevent much of the ambitions of the more radical of Corbyn’s followers.

    Me too - Corbyn will not be a happy bunny today. The ultras on both sides of the divide got a kicking from May and it shows.
    May is also in prime position to call a referendum when the time comes in which she can be neutral.
    Do,you suspect the referendum will be on whether we accept the deal or not or whether we leave or not?

    No, on whether Three Lions or World in Motion is the better World Cup song :)
    Three Lions, obviously. No-one remembers anything about World In Motion apart from that it was good and that John Barnes does a rap.

    Mike linked to the most recent version in the header, which is fine but I thought I'd put the original up too, partly because that's what I wrote about but partly because - well, you know.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RJqimlFcJsM
  • Options
    GIN1138GIN1138 Posts: 20,793
    Theresa May is one lucky mother-trucker... :D
  • Options
    OblitusSumMeOblitusSumMe Posts: 9,143

    Foxy said:

    HYUFD said:

    Full time. England win and will go to their first world cup semi final in 28 years on Wednesday

    Wow, that seemed much easier than I feared at 3pm.
    They were highly competent (Sterling excepted) against very limited opponents and they had no bad luck either.

    But it looks like the France vs Belgium game should be the effective final.
    Will be at that one, but who knows? Maguire is a star.
    You have hit the jackpot with your tickets. Have a great time and every England player, apart from Sterling, were stars
    Sterling played well. Maybe he should have scored, but he played well.

    England played better than I thought they were capable. Would love them to wallop Russia in the semi-final.
  • Options
    anothernickanothernick Posts: 3,578
    HYUFD said:

    notme said:



    “If they reject this offer in totality there is nothing further really to negotiate without abandoning almost all the Leave campaign promises so we start preparing for No Deal”

    Leave campaign promises? No such thing. How can they promise anything? They weren’t a government. Or claiming to become one. The promise of the referendum was to leave the EU. That we are doing it. Two caveats though. May has tied herself with her own red lines. And stood for re election promising many of these in her manifesto. If for instance we opted for EEA single market. It isn’t the referendum, but the GE manifesto that’s been betrayed.

    If EU won’t accept the free movement restrictions I can’t see anything that rivals membership of the eea as an alternative that causes minimum disruption. Either as a short term or long term decision.

    This claim ”UK will also apply common rulebook to state aid; and maintain same standards for environment, climate change, social & employment and consumer protection” makes me sleep better at night. It will utterly prevent much of the ambitions of the more radical of Corbyn’s followers.

    The promise to leave the EU was only won on a promise to regain control of our borders and regain sovereignty that means free movement cannot stand as now whatever deal is done if any and as you confirm the Tory manifesto which won a majority on that platform in mainland Britain on that platform confirms that
    The Tory manifesto did not win a majority.
  • Options
    CD13CD13 Posts: 6,351
    A bit of an anti-climax. It looked about as difficult as beating Stevie Wonder at darts!
  • Options
    Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 60,247

    Foxy said:

    HYUFD said:

    Full time. England win and will go to their first world cup semi final in 28 years on Wednesday

    Wow, that seemed much easier than I feared at 3pm.
    They were highly competent (Sterling excepted) against very limited opponents and they had no bad luck either.

    But it looks like the France vs Belgium game should be the effective final.
    Will be at that one, but who knows? Maguire is a star.
    You have hit the jackpot with your tickets. Have a great time and every England player, apart from Sterling, were stars
    Sterling played well. Maybe he should have scored, but he played well.

    England played better than I thought they were capable. Would love them to wallop Russia in the semi-final.
    Not as well as Rashford would have
  • Options
    archer101auarcher101au Posts: 1,612
    HYUFD said:

    surby said:




    The EU will definitely reject this offer [ in totality ]. The real question is whether they would accept this as a basis for negotiations.

    If they reject this offer in totality there is nothing further really to negotiate without abandoning almost all the Leave campaign promises so we start preparing for No Deal
    No, we just get prepared for May to abandon all the Leave campaign promises. She is a Remainer and the only thing she cares about is hanging on to power. Since the majority of her party and Cabinet are Remainers, that is what she will do. She will NEVER agree to no deal if she has any choice at all.

    They will definitely reject the offer in totality, but will agree to negotiate to extract more compromises from May.
  • Options
    CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758
    ydoethur said:

    If anyone wants something surreal:

    Police investigate after cow seen in back of a car on M4 near Briton Ferry

    http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-44750013

    Reminds me of the time a farmer near Gloucester called Robin Hoare transported a steer in the back of his Mercedes as the axle had broken on his trailer. The police flagged him down and asked for proof that the cow [sic] was his.

    His unforgettable reply was, 'Proof? Proof? My dear young man, the word of a Hoare is binding!'

    Shame his father didn’t live up to that standard
  • Options
    MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 50,095

    HYUFD said:

    notme said:



    “If they reject this offer in totality there is nothing further really to negotiate without abandoning almost all the Leave campaign promises so we start preparing for No Deal”

    Leave campaign promises? No such thing. How can they promise anything? They weren’t a government. Or claiming to become one. The promise of the referendum was to leave the EU. That we are doing it. Two caveats though. May has tied herself with her own red lines. And stood for re election promising many of these in her manifesto. If for instance we opted for EEA single market. It isn’t the referendum, but the GE manifesto that’s been betrayed.

    If EU won’t accept the free movement restrictions I can’t see anything that rivals membership of the eea as an alternative that causes minimum disruption. Either as a short term or long term decision.

    This claim ”UK will also apply common rulebook to state aid; and maintain same standards for environment, climate change, social & employment and consumer protection” makes me sleep better at night. It will utterly prevent much of the ambitions of the more radical of Corbyn’s followers.

    The promise to leave the EU was only won on a promise to regain control of our borders and regain sovereignty that means free movement cannot stand as now whatever deal is done if any and as you confirm the Tory manifesto which won a majority on that platform in mainland Britain on that platform confirms that
    The Tory manifesto did not win a majority.
    The Tory manifesto is the one being implemented by the Government though.

    How's Prime Minister Jeremy Corbyn doing, implementing Labour's?
  • Options
    ydoethurydoethur Posts: 67,108

    HYUFD said:

    notme said:



    “If they reject this offer in totality there is nothing further really to negotiate without abandoning almost all the Leave campaign promises so we start preparing for No Deal”

    Leave campaign promises? No such thing. How can they promise anything? They weren’t a government. Or claiming to become one. The promise of the referendum was to leave the EU. That we are doing it. Two caveats though. May has tied herself with her own red lines. And stood for re election promising many of these in her manifesto. If for instance we opted for EEA single market. It isn’t the referendum, but the GE manifesto that’s been betrayed.

    If EU won’t accept the free movement restrictions I can’t see anything that rivals membership of the eea as an alternative that causes minimum disruption. Either as a short term or long term decision.

    This claim ”UK will also apply common rulebook to state aid; and maintain same standards for environment, climate change, social & employment and consumer protection” makes me sleep better at night. It will utterly prevent much of the ambitions of the more radical of Corbyn’s followers.

    The promise to leave the EU was only won on a promise to regain control of our borders and regain sovereignty that means free movement cannot stand as now whatever deal is done if any and as you confirm the Tory manifesto which won a majority on that platform in mainland Britain on that platform confirms that
    The Tory manifesto did not win a majority.
    He did in fairness say 'on the mainland' which it just about did (317 of 632).

    Although that's a bit like saying 'Napoleon did really well in all his battles in 1815 apart from that cock-up at Waterloo.'
  • Options
    OblitusSumMeOblitusSumMe Posts: 9,143

    Foxy said:

    HYUFD said:

    Full time. England win and will go to their first world cup semi final in 28 years on Wednesday

    Wow, that seemed much easier than I feared at 3pm.
    They were highly competent (Sterling excepted) against very limited opponents and they had no bad luck either.

    But it looks like the France vs Belgium game should be the effective final.
    Will be at that one, but who knows? Maguire is a star.
    You have hit the jackpot with your tickets. Have a great time and every England player, apart from Sterling, were stars
    Sterling played well. Maybe he should have scored, but he played well.

    England played better than I thought they were capable. Would love them to wallop Russia in the semi-final.
    Not as well as Rashford would have
    Well I might have played Rashford from the start, but we'll never know now and I thought he earnt his placed in the team today.
  • Options
    Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 60,247

    HYUFD said:

    surby said:




    The EU will definitely reject this offer [ in totality ]. The real question is whether they would accept this as a basis for negotiations.

    If they reject this offer in totality there is nothing further really to negotiate without abandoning almost all the Leave campaign promises so we start preparing for No Deal
    No, we just get prepared for May to abandon all the Leave campaign promises. She is a Remainer and the only thing she cares about is hanging on to power. Since the majority of her party and Cabinet are Remainers, that is what she will do. She will NEVER agree to no deal if she has any choice at all.

    They will definitely reject the offer in totality, but will agree to negotiate to extract more compromises from May.
    Maybe she just cares about the economic interest of the Country
  • Options
    Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 60,247

    Foxy said:

    HYUFD said:

    Full time. England win and will go to their first world cup semi final in 28 years on Wednesday

    Wow, that seemed much easier than I feared at 3pm.
    They were highly competent (Sterling excepted) against very limited opponents and they had no bad luck either.

    But it looks like the France vs Belgium game should be the effective final.
    Will be at that one, but who knows? Maguire is a star.
    You have hit the jackpot with your tickets. Have a great time and every England player, apart from Sterling, were stars
    Sterling played well. Maybe he should have scored, but he played well.

    England played better than I thought they were capable. Would love them to wallop Russia in the semi-final.
    Not as well as Rashford would have
    Well I might have played Rashford from the start, but we'll never know now and I thought he earnt his placed in the team today.
    Fair comment
  • Options
    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,937
    edited July 2018

    HYUFD said:

    surby said:




    The EU will definitely reject this offer [ in totality ]. The real question is whether they would accept this as a basis for negotiations.

    If they reject this offer in totality there is nothing further really to negotiate without abandoning almost all the Leave campaign promises so we start preparing for No Deal
    No, we just get prepared for May to abandon all the Leave campaign promises. She is a Remainer and the only thing she cares about is hanging on to power. Since the majority of her party and Cabinet are Remainers, that is what she will do. She will NEVER agree to no deal if she has any choice at all.

    They will definitely reject the offer in totality, but will agree to negotiate to extract more compromises from May.
    No as there are no more compromises to be made. This is it. If the EU reject this deal Johnson and Gove would likely walk out of the Cabinet and maybe even Javid too and Mogg would order the ERG to initiate a no confidence vote in May if she offered any more concessions.

    Mogg has already said he will vote down this deal yet alone one with more concessions
  • Options
    archer101auarcher101au Posts: 1,612
    Gove will go down in history as the man who betrayed Brexit. His backstabbing of Boris led to a Remain PM and now his personal obsession with staying in the Cabinet is allowing May to sell out Brexit.

    His justification that we need to leave and we can sort out the details later totally lacks any sort of credibility or logic. There is zero chance that and future UK Government will ever re-address the withdrawal agreement. His position is totally self-serving.

    I always believed that Boris was honest about supporting Brexit. But the more I see Gove the more clear it is that he just supported Brexit to get his own back on Cameron. He never expected to win. Apparently he didn't even stay up to see the results.

    There is a special place in hell reserved for Michael Gove.
  • Options
    nunuonenunuone Posts: 1,138
    Charles said:

    surby said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    It will most likely tell May she has to resign or face a no confidence vote and prepare for No Deal and a Mogg, Boris or Gove or Javid premiership.

    https://twitter.com/LordAshcroft/status/1015589171082219520
    On the basis it would be accepted by the EU, if the EU rejects it and demands even more concessions that is a totally different ball game
    The UK is still very much in the cherry picking state. The EU have all along shown their red lines.
    That’s the nature of a negotiation

    The Uk has said no to FoM

    The EU has said you can’t have anything without FoM

    So you either stop negotiating or look for a deal that is acceptable to both sides (aka “cherry picking”)
    Isn't this "freedom of Labour mobility" basically freedom of movement tho?
  • Options
    nunuonenunuone Posts: 1,138
    Charles said:

    surby said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    It will most likely tell May she has to resign or face a no confidence vote and prepare for No Deal and a Mogg, Boris or Gove or Javid premiership.

    https://twitter.com/LordAshcroft/status/1015589171082219520
    On the basis it would be accepted by the EU, if the EU rejects it and demands even more concessions that is a totally different ball game
    The UK is still very much in the cherry picking state. The EU have all along shown their red lines.
    That’s the nature of a negotiation

    The Uk has said no to FoM

    The EU has said you can’t have anything without FoM

    So you either stop negotiating or look for a deal that is acceptable to both sides (aka “cherry picking”)
    Isn't this "freedom of Labour mobility" basically freedom of movement tho?
  • Options
    Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 60,247

    Gove will go down in history as the man who betrayed Brexit. His backstabbing of Boris led to a Remain PM and now his personal obsession with staying in the Cabinet is allowing May to sell out Brexit.

    His justification that we need to leave and we can sort out the details later totally lacks any sort of credibility or logic. There is zero chance that and future UK Government will ever re-address the withdrawal agreement. His position is totally self-serving.

    I always believed that Boris was honest about supporting Brexit. But the more I see Gove the more clear it is that he just supported Brexit to get his own back on Cameron. He never expected to win. Apparently he didn't even stay up to see the results.

    There is a special place in hell reserved for Michael Gove.
    Or Prime Minister some day
  • Options
    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,937
    edited July 2018

    HYUFD said:

    notme said:



    “If they reject this offer in totality there is nothing further really to negotiate without abandoning almost all the Leave campaign promises so we start preparing for No Deal”

    Leave campaign promises? No such thing. How can they promise anything? They weren’t a government. Or claiming to become one. The promise of the referendum was to leave the EU. That we are doing it. Two caveats though. May has tied herself with her own red lines. And stood for re election promising many of these in her manifesto. If for instance we opted for EEA single market. It isn’t the referendum, but the GE manifesto that’s been betrayed.

    If EU won’t accept the free movement restrictions I can’t see anything that rivals membership of the eea as an alternative that causes minimum disruption. Either as a short term or long term decision.

    This claim ”UK will also apply common rulebook to state aid; and maintain same standards for environment, climate change, social & employment and consumer protection” makes me sleep better at night. It will utterly prevent much of the ambitions of the more radical of Corbyn’s followers.

    The promise to leave the EU was only won on a promise to regain control of our borders and regain sovereignty that means free movement cannot stand as now whatever deal is done if any and as you confirm the Tory manifesto which won a majority on that platform in mainland Britain on that platform confirms that
    The Tory manifesto did not win a majority.
    It won a majority of English, Welsh and Scottish seats combined and in the UK after the DUP backed the Tories on confidence and supply
  • Options
    DecrepitJohnLDecrepitJohnL Posts: 13,300
    Charles said:

    What price Brussels vs England in the final?

    13/5 against a Belgium vs England final with Bet365.
  • Options
    PClippPClipp Posts: 2,138
    HYUFD said:

    PeterC said:

    HYUFD said:

    PeterC said:

    HYUFD said:

    surby said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    It will most likely tell May she has to resign or face a no confidence vote and prepare for No Deal and a Mogg, Boris or Gove or Javid premiership.

    https://twitter.com/LordAshcroft/status/1015589171082219520
    On the basis it would be accepted by the EU, if the EU rejects it and demands even more concessions that is a totally different ball game
    The UK is still very much in the cherry picking state. The EU have all along shown their red lines.
    May has gone as far as her red lines will allow her, she cannot go any further without the Tory Party overthrowing her and replacing her with a harder line Brexiteer
    Overthrowing May would imply a commitment to NO DEAL - that would be the only other Brexit available.
    Correct. If the EU reject this offer No Deal is almost inevitable
    HYUFD said:

    PeterC said:

    HYUFD said:

    surby said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    It will most likely tell May she has to resign or face a no confidence vote and prepare for No Deal and a Mogg, Boris or Gove or Javid premiership.

    https://twitter.com/LordAshcroft/status/1015589171082219520
    On the basis it would be accepted by the EU, if the EU rejects it and demands even more concessions that is a totally different ball game
    The UK is still very much in the cherry picking state. The EU have all along shown their red lines.
    May has gone as far as her red lines will allow her, she cannot go any further without the Tory Party overthrowing her and replacing her with a harder line Brexiteer
    Overthrowing May would imply a commitment to NO DEAL - that would be the only other Brexit available.
    Correct. If the EU reject this offer No Deal is almost inevitable
    There would be a huge political crisis in such circumstances, whether May is toppled or not. The wider debate would range around Norway, No Deal and Remain.
    It would end up being No Deal given the Tory and DUP majority plus a few Labour Leave MPs would back No Deal too if the EU reject this offer
    What percentage of Conservative donors in the business community do you reckon would switch to the Lib Dems?
  • Options
    archer101auarcher101au Posts: 1,612
    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    surby said:




    The EU will definitely reject this offer [ in totality ]. The real question is whether they would accept this as a basis for negotiations.

    If they reject this offer in totality there is nothing further really to negotiate without abandoning almost all the Leave campaign promises so we start preparing for No Deal
    No, we just get prepared for May to abandon all the Leave campaign promises. She is a Remainer and the only thing she cares about is hanging on to power. Since the majority of her party and Cabinet are Remainers, that is what she will do. She will NEVER agree to no deal if she has any choice at all.

    They will definitely reject the offer in totality, but will agree to negotiate to extract more compromises from May.
    No as there are no more compromises to be made. This is it. If the EU reject this deal Johnson and Gove would likely walk out of the Cabinet and maybe even Javid too and Mogg would order the ERG to initiate a no confidence vote in May if she offered any more concessions
    I don't know whether to argue with you or just feel sorry for you. I get the impression that even you, as a Remainer, are shocked how much May has just conceded for nothing.

    The deal is very clear. We will get no actual ability to block future EU regulations (if we do, the NI backstop will automatically activate, so it will be impossible). We will have to pay billions for quasi-SM access. We will submit to ECJ jurisdiction. We will have freedom of movement for anyone with a job offer (eg virtually unchanged). We will pay 40bn in return for no actual link to any trade deal. The withdrawal agreement will be under ECJ jurisdiction. The NI backstop will be legally binding and the trade agreement will not. All red lines will be erased.
  • Options
    JackWJackW Posts: 14,787
  • Options
    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,937
    ydoethur said:

    HYUFD said:

    RobD said:

    HYUFD said:

    Full time. England win and will go to their first world cup semi final in 28 years on Wednesday

    No pressure...
    They have already got further than I ever imagined they would so anything else is a bonus but obviously it would be great if they do win it
    Particularly if they then boycotted the presentation ceremony in protest at Putin trying to murder five people in Wiltshire.

    That would be far more painful to him than a few diplomats being booted around the globe or everyone laughing at his fairy stories (to use a phrase from Russia Today).
    Think about that later, they have to win it first
  • Options
    CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758
    nunuone said:

    Charles said:

    surby said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    It will most likely tell May she has to resign or face a no confidence vote and prepare for No Deal and a Mogg, Boris or Gove or Javid premiership.

    https://twitter.com/LordAshcroft/status/1015589171082219520
    On the basis it would be accepted by the EU, if the EU rejects it and demands even more concessions that is a totally different ball game
    The UK is still very much in the cherry picking state. The EU have all along shown their red lines.
    That’s the nature of a negotiation

    The Uk has said no to FoM

    The EU has said you can’t have anything without FoM

    So you either stop negotiating or look for a deal that is acceptable to both sides (aka “cherry picking”)
    Isn't this "freedom of Labour mobility" basically freedom of movement tho?
    Haven’t seen the detail but shouldn’t be

    FoLM is effectively an automatic work permit

    FoM is the right to come to the UK to look for work *and* have the same access to benefits as a U.K. citizen
  • Options
    PClippPClipp Posts: 2,138
    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    notme said:



    “If they reject this offer in totality there is nothing further really to negotiate without abandoning almost all the Leave campaign promises so we start preparing for No Deal”

    Leave campaign promises? No such thing. How can they promise anything? They weren’t a government. Or claiming to become one. The promise of the referendum was to leave the EU. That we are doing it. Two caveats though. May has tied herself with her own red lines. And stood for re election promising many of these in her manifesto. If for instance we opted for EEA single market. It isn’t the referendum, but the GE manifesto that’s been betrayed.

    If EU won’t accept the free movement restrictions I can’t see anything that rivals membership of the eea as an alternative that causes minimum disruption. Either as a short term or long term decision.

    This claim ”UK will also apply common rulebook to state aid; and maintain same standards for environment, climate change, social & employment and consumer protection” makes me sleep better at night. It will utterly prevent much of the ambitions of the more radical of Corbyn’s followers.

    The promise to leave the EU was only won on a promise to regain control of our borders and regain sovereignty that means free movement cannot stand as now whatever deal is done if any and as you confirm the Tory manifesto which won a majority on that platform in mainland Britain on that platform confirms that
    The Tory manifesto did not win a majority.
    It won a majority of English, Welsh and Scottish seats combined and in the UK after the DUP backed the Tories on confidence and supply
    You mean "were bribed with taxpayers` money", surely...
  • Options
    CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758
    edited July 2018

    Charles said:

    What price Brussels vs England in the final?

    13/5 against a Belgium vs England final with Bet365.
    It was a joke...

    Edit: but thank you anyway
  • Options
    ydoethurydoethur Posts: 67,108
    edited July 2018

    HYUFD said:

    surby said:




    The EU will definitely reject this offer [ in totality ]. The real question is whether they would accept this as a basis for negotiations.

    If they reject this offer in totality there is nothing further really to negotiate without abandoning almost all the Leave campaign promises so we start preparing for No Deal
    No, we just get prepared for May to abandon all the Leave campaign promises. She is a Remainer and the only thing she cares about is hanging on to power. Since the majority of her party and Cabinet are Remainers, that is what she will do. She will NEVER agree to no deal if she has any choice at all.

    They will definitely reject the offer in totality, but will agree to negotiate to extract more compromises from May.
    Hmmm...

    There are some politicians who have been strongly Eurosceptic all the way through their careers but during the referendum mysteriously came down for Remain.

    Corbyn is one. May is another. Javid is a third.

    Hammond and Hague could be added to that list, although they seem to have genuinely drifted away from their earlier positions in advance of the referendum while at the Foreign Office (which says something about how strongly in favour of the EU that department is).

    May was the one who came up with the line 'Brexit means Brexit,' unprompted, at the moment she had thrashed three leaver candidates so hard they all withdrew. She didn't have to do that. Indeed she had a golden opportunity not to tie her hands, and instead start a conversation with the country about the next stage. She did it I think largely because she wanted to, as the fulfilment of an ambition she had always wanted but had decided was impossible - to get rid of the EU. (She has made other mistakes like this - cf dementia tax.)

    I do not think I would call her a Remainer on that basis. However, I do agree with your ultimate point - I'm pretty sure her primary concern is not what deal she can or can't get, but hanging on to power.
  • Options
    archer101auarcher101au Posts: 1,612

    Gove will go down in history as the man who betrayed Brexit. His backstabbing of Boris led to a Remain PM and now his personal obsession with staying in the Cabinet is allowing May to sell out Brexit.

    His justification that we need to leave and we can sort out the details later totally lacks any sort of credibility or logic. There is zero chance that and future UK Government will ever re-address the withdrawal agreement. His position is totally self-serving.

    I always believed that Boris was honest about supporting Brexit. But the more I see Gove the more clear it is that he just supported Brexit to get his own back on Cameron. He never expected to win. Apparently he didn't even stay up to see the results.

    There is a special place in hell reserved for Michael Gove.
    Or Prime Minister some day
    If he had resigned, he would have been PM by the end of the month. He will never be PM now. Watch his support collapse in the Tory polls.
  • Options
    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,937

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    surby said:




    The EU will definitely reject this offer [ in totality ]. The real question is whether they would accept this as a basis for negotiations.

    If they reject this offer in totality there is nothing further really to negotiate without abandoning almost all the Leave campaign promises so we start preparing for No Deal
    No, we just get prepared for May to abandon all the Leave campaign promises. She is a Remainer and the only thing she cares about is hanging on to power. Since the majority of her party and Cabinet are Remainers, that is what she will do. She will NEVER agree to no deal if she has any choice at all.

    They will definitely reject the offer in totality, but will agree to negotiate to extract more compromises from May.
    No as there are no more compromises to be made. This is it. If the EU reject this deal Johnson and Gove would likely walk out of the Cabinet and maybe even Javid too and Mogg would order the ERG to initiate a no confidence vote in May if she offered any more concessions
    I don't know whether to argue with you or just feel sorry for you. I get the impression that even you, as a Remainer, are shocked how much May has just conceded for nothing.

    The deal is very clear. We will get no actual ability to block future EU regulations (if we do, the NI backstop will automatically activate, so it will be impossible). We will have to pay billions for quasi-SM access. We will submit to ECJ jurisdiction. We will have freedom of movement for anyone with a job offer (eg virtually unchanged). We will pay 40bn in return for no actual link to any trade deal. The withdrawal agreement will be under ECJ jurisdiction. The NI backstop will be legally binding and the trade agreement will not. All red lines will be erased.
    As you point out May's offer has conceded a lot to the EU, while still technically leaving the single market and customs union and ending free movement. So this really is as far as May can go and stay in post as Tory leader and PM
  • Options
    Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 55,258

    notme said:

    felix said:

    notme said:



    “If they reject this offer in totality there is nothing further really to negotiate without abandoning almost all the Leave campaign promises so we start preparing for No Deal”

    Leave campaign promises? No such thing. How can they promise anything? They weren’t a government. Or claiming to become one. The promise of the referendum was to leave the EU. That we are doing it. Two caveats though. May has tied herself with her own red lines. And stood for re election promising many of these in her manifesto. If for instance we opted for EEA single market. It isn’t the referendum, but the GE manifesto that’s been betrayed.

    If EU won’t accept the free movement restrictions I can’t see anything that rivals membership of the eea as an alternative that causes minimum disruption. Either as a short term or long term decision.

    This claim ”UK will also apply common rulebook to state aid; and maintain same standards for environment, climate change, social & employment and consumer protection” makes me sleep better at night. It will utterly prevent much of the ambitions of the more radical of Corbyn’s followers.

    Me too - Corbyn will not be a happy bunny today. The ultras on both sides of the divide got a kicking from May and it shows.
    May is also in prime position to call a referendum when the time comes in which she can be neutral.
    Do,you suspect the referendum will be on whether we accept the deal or not or whether we leave or not?

    No, on whether Three Lions or World in Motion is the better World Cup song :)
    Three Lions, obviously. No-one remembers anything about World In Motion apart from that it was good and that John Barnes does a rap.

    Mike linked to the most recent version in the header, which is fine but I thought I'd put the original up too, partly because that's what I wrote about but partly because - well, you know.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RJqimlFcJsM
    Oi. Everyone remembers everything about World in Motion. "Express yourself!"

    Much better song!

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Re4aDJL3heA
  • Options
    Sunil_PrasannanSunil_Prasannan Posts: 49,200

    notme said:

    felix said:

    notme said:



    “If they reject this offer in totality there is nothing further really to negotiate without abandoning almost all the Leave campaign promises so we start preparing for No Deal”

    Leave campaign promises? No such thing. How can they promise anything? They weren’t a government. Or claiming to become one. The promise of the referendum was to leave the EU. That we are doing it. Two caveats though. May has tied herself with her own red lines. And stood for re election promising many of these in her manifesto. If for instance we opted for EEA single market. It isn’t the referendum, but the GE manifesto that’s been betrayed.

    If EU won’t accept the free movement restrictions I can’t see anything that rivals membership of the eea as an alternative that causes minimum disruption. Either as a short term or long term decision.

    This claim ”UK will also apply common rulebook to state aid; and maintain same standards for environment, climate change, social & employment and consumer protection” makes me sleep better at night. It will utterly prevent much of the ambitions of the more radical of Corbyn’s followers.

    Me too - Corbyn will not be a happy bunny today. The ultras on both sides of the divide got a kicking from May and it shows.
    May is also in prime position to call a referendum when the time comes in which she can be neutral.
    Do,you suspect the referendum will be on whether we accept the deal or not or whether we leave or not?

    No, on whether Three Lions or World in Motion is the better World Cup song :)
    Three Lions, obviously. No-one remembers anything about World In Motion apart from that it was good and that John Barnes does a rap.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Re4aDJL3heA
  • Options
    ydoethurydoethur Posts: 67,108

    Gove will go down in history as the man who betrayed Brexit. His backstabbing of Boris led to a Remain PM and now his personal obsession with staying in the Cabinet is allowing May to sell out Brexit.

    His justification that we need to leave and we can sort out the details later totally lacks any sort of credibility or logic. There is zero chance that and future UK Government will ever re-address the withdrawal agreement. His position is totally self-serving.

    I always believed that Boris was honest about supporting Brexit. But the more I see Gove the more clear it is that he just supported Brexit to get his own back on Cameron. He never expected to win. Apparently he didn't even stay up to see the results.

    There is a special place in hell reserved for Michael Gove.
    Or Prime Minister some day
    If he had resigned, he would have been PM by the end of the month. He will never be PM now. Watch his support collapse in the Tory polls.
    So even if there's no deal, there is some very good news.
  • Options
    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,937
    PClipp said:

    HYUFD said:

    PeterC said:

    HYUFD said:

    PeterC said:

    HYUFD said:

    surby said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    It will most likely tell May she has to resign or face a no confidence vote and prepare for No Deal and a Mogg, Boris or Gove or Javid premiership.

    https://twitter.com/LordAshcroft/status/1015589171082219520
    On the basis it would be accepted by the EU, if the EU rejects it and demands even more concessions that is a totally different ball game
    The UK is still very much in the cherry picking state. The EU have all along shown their red lines.
    May has gone as far as her red lines will allow her, she cannot go any further without the Tory Party overthrowing her and replacing her with a harder line Brexiteer
    Overthrowing May would imply a commitment to NO DEAL - that would be the only other Brexit available.
    Correct. If the EU reject this offer No Deal is almost inevitable
    HYUFD said:

    PeterC said:

    HYUFD said:

    surby said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    It will most likely tell May she has to resign or face a no confidence vote and prepare for No Deal and a Mogg, Boris or Gove or Javid premiership.

    https://twitter.com/LordAshcroft/status/1015589171082219520
    On the basis it would be accepted by the EU, if the EU ame
    The UK is still very much in the cherry picking state. The EU have all along shown their red lines.
    May has gone as far as her red lines will allow her, er line Brexiteer
    Overthrowing May would imply a commitment to NO DEAL - that would be the only other Brexit available.
    Correct. If the EU reject this offer No Deal is almost inevitable
    There would be a huge political crisis in such circumstances, whether May is toppled or not. The wider debate would range around Norway, No Deal and Remain.
    It would end up being No Deal this offer
    What percentage of Conservative donors in the business community do you reckon would switch to the Lib Dems?
    Far fewer I expect than the number of Leave voting Tory voters who would stay at home or vote UKIP at the next general election if May concedes anything more to the EU.

    Plus if the LDs have more money that means they can run more ads targeting Labour Remainers who think Corbyn has sold out to Brexiteers
  • Options
    Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 60,964
    Good evening, everyone.

    F1: wryly miffed that my Raikkonen bet was a tenth off winning outright and half a tenth off winning each way. Still, that's the way the cookie crumbles.

    Hope Croatia crush Russia.
  • Options
    FoxyFoxy Posts: 44,503
    dixiedean said:

    Pickford again - what a star

    Best goal-keeping performance of the Cup so far.
    Where is @TSE, the Sage of South Yorkshire to tell me Mignolet is better?
    Best man at a wedding. Sweating in his waistcoat and morning suit.
  • Options
    williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 48,011

    Gove will go down in history as the man who betrayed Brexit. His backstabbing of Boris led to a Remain PM and now his personal obsession with staying in the Cabinet is allowing May to sell out Brexit.

    His justification that we need to leave and we can sort out the details later totally lacks any sort of credibility or logic. There is zero chance that and future UK Government will ever re-address the withdrawal agreement. His position is totally self-serving.

    I always believed that Boris was honest about supporting Brexit. But the more I see Gove the more clear it is that he just supported Brexit to get his own back on Cameron. He never expected to win. Apparently he didn't even stay up to see the results.

    There is a special place in hell reserved for Michael Gove.
    I think this is very close to the truth. If you read Tim Shipman's account, Boris Johnson genuinely agonised about which way to go and while there was undoubtedly some personal political calculation there, I think he succeeded in fooling himself that Brexit was on the right side of history and he was doing the right thing. In comparison Gove seems to have been the one who was motivated by personal vengeance and narcissism.
  • Options
    MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 50,095
    Foxy said:

    dixiedean said:

    Pickford again - what a star

    Best goal-keeping performance of the Cup so far.
    Where is @TSE, the Sage of South Yorkshire to tell me Mignolet is better?
    Best man at a wedding. Sweating in his waistcoat and morning suit.
    Southgate shows how not to sweat in a waistcoat.....
  • Options
    CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758
    PClipp said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    notme said:



    “If they reject this offer in totality there is nothing further really to negotiate without abandoning almost all the Leave campaign promises so we start preparing for No Deal”

    Leave campaign promises? No such thing. How can they promise anything? They weren’t a government. Or claiming to become one. The promise of the referendum was to leave the EU. That we are doing it. Two caveats though. May has tied herself with her own red lines. And stood for re election promising many of these in her manifesto. If for instance we opted for EEA single market. It isn’t the referendum, but the GE manifesto that’s been betrayed.

    If EU won’t accept the free movement restrictions I can’t see anything that rivals membership of the eea as an alternative that causes minimum disruption. Either as a short term or long term decision.

    This claim ”UK will also apply common rulebook to state aid; and maintain same standards for environment, climate change, social & employment and consumer protection” makes me sleep better at night. It will utterly prevent much of the ambitions of the more radical of Corbyn’s followers.

    The promise to leave the EU was only won on a promise to regain control of our borders and regain sovereignty that means free movement cannot stand as now whatever deal is done if any and as you confirm the Tory manifesto which won a majority on that platform in mainland Britain on that platform confirms that
    The Tory manifesto did not win a majority.
    It won a majority of English, Welsh and Scottish seats combined and in the UK after the DUP backed the Tories on confidence and supply
    You mean "were bribed with taxpayers` money", surely...
    The DUP didn’t receive any money, tax payers or not.

    They simply proposed some changes to the governments spending plans and, on that basis, were willing to support it
  • Options
    OllyTOllyT Posts: 4,913

    Foxy said:

    HYUFD said:

    Full time. England win and will go to their first world cup semi final in 28 years on Wednesday

    Wow, that seemed much easier than I feared at 3pm.
    They were highly competent (Sterling excepted) against very limited opponents and they had no bad luck either.

    But it looks like the France vs Belgium game should be the effective final.
    Will be at that one, but who knows? Maguire is a star.
    You have hit the jackpot with your tickets. Have a great time and every England player, apart from Sterling, were stars
    Sterling played well. Maybe he should have scored, but he played well.

    England played better than I thought they were capable. Would love them to wallop Russia in the semi-final.
    Not as well as Rashford would have

    Clearly not a view shared by the England manager. Maybe you should take your Man United colour specs off.
  • Options
    FoxyFoxy Posts: 44,503

    Gove will go down in history as the man who betrayed Brexit. His backstabbing of Boris led to a Remain PM and now his personal obsession with staying in the Cabinet is allowing May to sell out Brexit.

    His justification that we need to leave and we can sort out the details later totally lacks any sort of credibility or logic. There is zero chance that and future UK Government will ever re-address the withdrawal agreement. His position is totally self-serving.

    I always believed that Boris was honest about supporting Brexit. But the more I see Gove the more clear it is that he just supported Brexit to get his own back on Cameron. He never expected to win. Apparently he didn't even stay up to see the results.

    There is a special place in hell reserved for Michael Gove.
    I think this is very close to the truth. If you read Tim Shipman's account, Boris Johnson genuinely agonised about which way to go and while there was undoubtedly some personal political calculation there, I think he succeeded in fooling himself that Brexit was on the right side of history and he was doing the right thing. In comparison Gove seems to have been the one who was motivated by personal vengeance and narcissism.
    I don't think so. Gove is a loyalist, not a rebel. He let Dave move him from education, where he was making enemies. I reckon he is a genuine Leaver, not too worried by details.
  • Options
    OllyTOllyT Posts: 4,913

    Gove will go down in history as the man who betrayed Brexit. His backstabbing of Boris led to a Remain PM and now his personal obsession with staying in the Cabinet is allowing May to sell out Brexit.

    His justification that we need to leave and we can sort out the details later totally lacks any sort of credibility or logic. There is zero chance that and future UK Government will ever re-address the withdrawal agreement. His position is totally self-serving.

    I always believed that Boris was honest about supporting Brexit. But the more I see Gove the more clear it is that he just supported Brexit to get his own back on Cameron. He never expected to win. Apparently he didn't even stay up to see the results.

    There is a special place in hell reserved for Michael Gove.
    The Brexiteer list of who betrayed Brexit is likely to be nearly as long as the Brexiteer list of excuses as to why Brexit failed
  • Options
    williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 48,011
    Foxy said:

    Gove will go down in history as the man who betrayed Brexit. His backstabbing of Boris led to a Remain PM and now his personal obsession with staying in the Cabinet is allowing May to sell out Brexit.

    His justification that we need to leave and we can sort out the details later totally lacks any sort of credibility or logic. There is zero chance that and future UK Government will ever re-address the withdrawal agreement. His position is totally self-serving.

    I always believed that Boris was honest about supporting Brexit. But the more I see Gove the more clear it is that he just supported Brexit to get his own back on Cameron. He never expected to win. Apparently he didn't even stay up to see the results.

    There is a special place in hell reserved for Michael Gove.
    I think this is very close to the truth. If you read Tim Shipman's account, Boris Johnson genuinely agonised about which way to go and while there was undoubtedly some personal political calculation there, I think he succeeded in fooling himself that Brexit was on the right side of history and he was doing the right thing. In comparison Gove seems to have been the one who was motivated by personal vengeance and narcissism.
    I don't think so. Gove is a loyalist, not a rebel. He let Dave move him from education, where he was making enemies. I reckon he is a genuine Leaver, not too worried by details.
    He's an idealogical leaver because he's a British nationalist who believes in undiluted Westminster power, but he didn't need to debase the campaign in the way he did nor play such a prominent role. He enjoyed being a crowd-pleaser for once in his life a bit too much.
  • Options
    FoxyFoxy Posts: 44,503

    notme said:

    felix said:

    notme said:



    “If they reject this offer in totality there is nothing further really to negotiate without abandoning almost all the Leave campaign promises so we start preparing for No Deal”

    Leave campaign promises? No such thing. How can they promise anything? They weren’t a government. Or claiming to become one. The promise of the referendum was to leave the EU. That we are doing it. Two caveats though. May has tied herself with her own red lines. And stood for re election promising many of these in her manifesto. If for instance we opted for EEA single market. It isn’t the referendum, but the GE manifesto that’s been betrayed.

    If EU won’t accept the free movement restrictions I can’t see anything that rivals membership of the eea as an alternative that causes minimum disruption. Either as a short term or long term decision.

    This claim ”UK will also apply common rulebook to state aid; and maintain same standards for environment, climate change, social & employment and consumer protection” makes me sleep better at night. It will utterly prevent much of the ambitions of the more radical of Corbyn’s followers.

    Me too - Corbyn will not be a happy bunny today. The ultras on both sides of the divide got a kicking from May and it shows.
    May is also in prime position to call a referendum when the time comes in which she can be neutral.
    Do,you suspect the referendum will be on whether we accept the deal or not or whether we leave or not?

    No, on whether Three Lions or World in Motion is the better World Cup song :)
    Three Lions, obviously. No-one remembers anything about World In Motion apart from that it was good and that John Barnes does a rap.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Re4aDJL3heA
    Vindaloo!

    https://youtu.be/KaBdajHOsSM
  • Options
    SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 20,578
    Tezzie: 'We take every game at a time.'

    She can't even get football clichés right, ffs.
  • Options
    OblitusSumMeOblitusSumMe Posts: 9,143
    ydoethur said:

    May was the one who came up with the line 'Brexit means Brexit,' unprompted, at the moment she had thrashed three leaver candidates so hard they all withdrew. She didn't have to do that. Indeed she had a golden opportunity not to tie her hands, and instead start a conversation with the country about the next stage. She did it I think largely because she wanted to, as the fulfilment of an ambition she had always wanted but had decided was impossible - to get rid of the EU.

    I don't pretend to know Theresa May's fundamental political philosophy, but a more parsimonious explanation is that she saw in hard Brexit an opportunity to break the mould of British politics, by winning the votes of working-class Labour voters on the basis of a hard, anti-immigrant Brexit.

    The opinion polls before the 2017 general election was called suggested that she was succeeding. If the election had broadly reflected those polls then the electoral motivation would have been obvious.
  • Options
    FoxyFoxy Posts: 44,503

    Foxy said:

    Gove will go down in history as the man who betrayed Brexit. His backstabbing of Boris led to a Remain PM and now his personal obsession with staying in the Cabinet is allowing May to sell out Brexit.

    His justification that we need to leave and we can sort out the details later totally lacks any sort of credibility or logic. There is zero chance that and future UK Government will ever re-address the withdrawal agreement. His position is totally self-serving.

    I always believed that Boris was honest about supporting Brexit. But the more I see Gove the more clear it is that he just supported Brexit to get his own back on Cameron. He never expected to win. Apparently he didn't even stay up to see the results.

    There is a special place in hell reserved for Michael Gove.
    I think this is very close to the truth. If you read Tim Shipman's account, Boris Johnson genuinely agonised about which way to go and while there was undoubtedly some personal political calculation there, I think he succeeded in fooling himself that Brexit was on the right side of history and he was doing the right thing. In comparison Gove seems to have been the one who was motivated by personal vengeance and narcissism.
    I don't think so. Gove is a loyalist, not a rebel. He let Dave move him from education, where he was making enemies. I reckon he is a genuine Leaver, not too worried by details.
    He's an idealogical leaver because he's a British nationalist who believes in undiluted Westminster power, but he didn't need to debase the campaign in the way he did nor play such a prominent role. He enjoyed being a crowd-pleaser for once in his life a bit too much.
    Gove much less so than most of the Leavers. He is a Sovereigntist rather than anti immigration etc.
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    NormNorm Posts: 1,251
    I notice Clegg thinks the proposed deal is rubbish and hardline brexiters are right to oppose it. Is this something he genuinely believes or is the truth that he really wants a second referendum where the option to remain in is on the ballot paper - more likely perhaps if May's deal fails.
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    williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 48,011
    Foxy said:

    Foxy said:

    Gove will go down in history as the man who betrayed Brexit. His backstabbing of Boris led to a Remain PM and now his personal obsession with staying in the Cabinet is allowing May to sell out Brexit.

    His justification that we need to leave and we can sort out the details later totally lacks any sort of credibility or logic. There is zero chance that and future UK Government will ever re-address the withdrawal agreement. His position is totally self-serving.

    I always believed that Boris was honest about supporting Brexit. But the more I see Gove the more clear it is that he just supported Brexit to get his own back on Cameron. He never expected to win. Apparently he didn't even stay up to see the results.

    There is a special place in hell reserved for Michael Gove.
    I think this is very close to the truth. If you read Tim Shipman's account, Boris Johnson genuinely agonised about which way to go and while there was undoubtedly some personal political calculation there, I think he succeeded in fooling himself that Brexit was on the right side of history and he was doing the right thing. In comparison Gove seems to have been the one who was motivated by personal vengeance and narcissism.
    I don't think so. Gove is a loyalist, not a rebel. He let Dave move him from education, where he was making enemies. I reckon he is a genuine Leaver, not too worried by details.
    He's an idealogical leaver because he's a British nationalist who believes in undiluted Westminster power, but he didn't need to debase the campaign in the way he did nor play such a prominent role. He enjoyed being a crowd-pleaser for once in his life a bit too much.
    Gove much less so than most of the Leavers. He is a Sovereigntist rather than anti immigration etc.
    He compared himself to Einstein being denounced by scientists in the pay of the Nazis and said people had had enough of 'experts'. He may not have stood next to a "Breaking Point" poster but he's just as culpable for dragging the campaign into the gutter.
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    Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 60,964
    F1: ha. Just as I'm adjusting to the 'new normal' of sod all markets going up, there are 36 to look at. Huzzah!
  • Options
    brendan16brendan16 Posts: 2,315
    Surely what is best for the UK is to take the best and most qualified who have the skills we need wherever they are from in the world - not prioritising 27 nations passport holders over everyone else's?

    Of course the problem is her Home Secretary apparently seems to think the deal is as above - she it seems has a different interpretation.
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    kle4kle4 Posts: 91,624
    Norm said:

    I notice Clegg thinks the proposed deal is rubbish and hardline brexiters are right to oppose it. Is this something he genuinely believes or is the truth that he really wants a second referendum where the option to remain in is on the ballot paper - more likely perhaps if May's deal fails.

    There will be some odd alliances now, that's for sure, between those who hope this proposed deal can seem so bad we must remain, and those who think it is so bad we can get no deal instead.
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    another_richardanother_richard Posts: 25,046
    OllyT said:

    Foxy said:

    HYUFD said:

    Full time. England win and will go to their first world cup semi final in 28 years on Wednesday

    Wow, that seemed much easier than I feared at 3pm.
    They were highly competent (Sterling excepted) against very limited opponents and they had no bad luck either.

    But it looks like the France vs Belgium game should be the effective final.
    Will be at that one, but who knows? Maguire is a star.
    You have hit the jackpot with your tickets. Have a great time and every England player, apart from Sterling, were stars
    Sterling played well. Maybe he should have scored, but he played well.

    England played better than I thought they were capable. Would love them to wallop Russia in the semi-final.
    Not as well as Rashford would have

    Clearly not a view shared by the England manager. Maybe you should take your Man United colour specs off.
    What's Sterling's goal scoring record for England ?
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    MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 37,606
    I'm in dreamland.
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    FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 76,274
    edited July 2018
    I hear its coming home....according to my German mate in the pub during the game.
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    Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 60,247
    And Edmund takes first set v Djokovic
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    FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 76,274

    OllyT said:

    Foxy said:

    HYUFD said:

    Full time. England win and will go to their first world cup semi final in 28 years on Wednesday

    Wow, that seemed much easier than I feared at 3pm.
    They were highly competent (Sterling excepted) against very limited opponents and they had no bad luck either.

    But it looks like the France vs Belgium game should be the effective final.
    Will be at that one, but who knows? Maguire is a star.
    You have hit the jackpot with your tickets. Have a great time and every England player, apart from Sterling, were stars
    Sterling played well. Maybe he should have scored, but he played well.

    England played better than I thought they were capable. Would love them to wallop Russia in the semi-final.
    Not as well as Rashford would have

    Clearly not a view shared by the England manager. Maybe you should take your Man United colour specs off.
    What's Sterling's goal scoring record for England ?
    2 in 31 (I think)
  • Options
    another_richardanother_richard Posts: 25,046

    notme said:

    felix said:

    notme said:



    “If they reject this offer in totality there is nothing further really to negotiate without abandoning almost all the Leave campaign promises so we start preparing for No Deal”

    Leave campaign promises? No such thing. How can they promise anything? They weren’t a government. Or claiming to become one. The promise of the referendum was to leave the EU. That we are doing it. Two caveats though. May has tied herself with her own red lines. And stood for re election promising many of these in her manifesto. If for instance we opted for EEA single market. It isn’t the referendum, but the GE manifesto that’s been betrayed.

    If EU won’t accept the free movement restrictions I can’t see anything that rivals membership of the eea as an alternative that causes minimum disruption. Either as a short term or long term decision.

    This claim ”UK will also apply common rulebook to state aid; and maintain same standards for environment, climate change, social & employment and consumer protection” makes me sleep better at night. It will utterly prevent much of the ambitions of the more radical of Corbyn’s followers.

    Me too - Corbyn will not be a happy bunny today. The ultras on both sides of the divide got a kicking from May and it shows.
    May is also in prime position to call a referendum when the time comes in which she can be neutral.
    Do,you suspect the referendum will be on whether we accept the deal or not or whether we leave or not?

    No, on whether Three Lions or World in Motion is the better World Cup song :)
    Three Lions, obviously. No-one remembers anything about World In Motion apart from that it was good and that John Barnes does a rap.
    John Barnes did better at the rapping than at the football in the 1990 WC.

    His football career dwindled away rapidly afterwards.
  • Options
    CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758

    Foxy said:

    Foxy said:

    Gove will go down in history as the man who betrayed Brexit. His backstabbing of Boris led to a Remain PM and now his personal obsession with staying in the Cabinet is allowing May to sell out Brexit.

    His justification that we need to leave and we can sort out the details later totally lacks any sort of credibility or logic. There is zero chance that and future UK Government will ever re-address the withdrawal agreement. His position is totally self-serving.

    I always believed that Boris was honest about supporting Brexit. But the more I see Gove the more clear it is that he just supported Brexit to get his own back on Cameron. He never expected to win. Apparently he didn't even stay up to see the results.

    There is a special place in hell reserved for Michael Gove.
    I think this is very close to the truth. If you read Tim Shipman's account, Boris Johnson genuinely agonised about which way to go and while there was undoubtedly some personal political calculation there, I think he succeeded in fooling himself that Brexit was on the right side of history and he was doing the right thing. In comparison Gove seems to have been the one who was motivated by personal vengeance and narcissism.
    I don't think so. Gove is a loyalist, not a rebel. He let Dave move him from education, where he was making enemies. I reckon he is a genuine Leaver, not too worried by details.
    He's an idealogical leaver because he's a British nationalist who believes in undiluted Westminster power, but he didn't need to debase the campaign in the way he did nor play such a prominent role. He enjoyed being a crowd-pleaser for once in his life a bit too much.
    Gove much less so than most of the Leavers. He is a Sovereigntist rather than anti immigration etc.
    He compared himself to Einstein being denounced by scientists in the pay of the Nazis and said people had had enough of 'experts'. He may not have stood next to a "Breaking Point" poster but he's just as culpable for dragging the campaign into the gutter.
    You’re politically aware enough to know the the experts comment is not what he said but was deliberately manipulated

    And yet you still use it

    Shameful
  • Options
    FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 76,274
    Wonder what estate agent Gareth would make of this run by English national team?
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    williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 48,011
    Charles said:

    Foxy said:

    Foxy said:

    Gove will go down in history as the man who betrayed Brexit. His backstabbing of Boris led to a Remain PM and now his personal obsession with staying in the Cabinet is allowing May to sell out Brexit.

    His justification that we need to leave and we can sort out the details later totally lacks any sort of credibility or logic. There is zero chance that and future UK Government will ever re-address the withdrawal agreement. His position is totally self-serving.

    I always believed that Boris was honest about supporting Brexit. But the more I see Gove the more clear it is that he just supported Brexit to get his own back on Cameron. He never expected to win. Apparently he didn't even stay up to see the results.

    There is a special place in hell reserved for Michael Gove.
    I think this is very close to the truth. If you read Tim Shipman's account, Boris Johnson genuinely agonised about which way to go and while there was undoubtedly some personal political calculation there, I think he succeeded in fooling himself that Brexit was on the right side of history and he was doing the right thing. In comparison Gove seems to have been the one who was motivated by personal vengeance and narcissism.
    I don't think so. Gove is a loyalist, not a rebel. He let Dave move him from education, where he was making enemies. I reckon he is a genuine Leaver, not too worried by details.
    He's an idealogical leaver because he's a British nationalist who believes in undiluted Westminster power, but he didn't need to debase the campaign in the way he did nor play such a prominent role. He enjoyed being a crowd-pleaser for once in his life a bit too much.
    Gove much less so than most of the Leavers. He is a Sovereigntist rather than anti immigration etc.
    He compared himself to Einstein being denounced by scientists in the pay of the Nazis and said people had had enough of 'experts'. He may not have stood next to a "Breaking Point" poster but he's just as culpable for dragging the campaign into the gutter.
    You’re politically aware enough to know the the experts comment is not what he said but was deliberately manipulated

    And yet you still use it

    Shameful
    Words are a politician's tool and he chose those words very deliberately.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GGgiGtJk7MA
  • Options
    another_richardanother_richard Posts: 25,046

    OllyT said:

    Foxy said:

    HYUFD said:

    Full time. England win and will go to their first world cup semi final in 28 years on Wednesday

    Wow, that seemed much easier than I feared at 3pm.
    They were highly competent (Sterling excepted) against very limited opponents and they had no bad luck either.

    But it looks like the France vs Belgium game should be the effective final.
    Will be at that one, but who knows? Maguire is a star.
    You have hit the jackpot with your tickets. Have a great time and every England player, apart from Sterling, were stars
    Sterling played well. Maybe he should have scored, but he played well.

    England played better than I thought they were capable. Would love them to wallop Russia in the semi-final.
    Not as well as Rashford would have

    Clearly not a view shared by the England manager. Maybe you should take your Man United colour specs off.
    What's Sterling's goal scoring record for England ?
    2 in 31 (I think)
    2 in 42

    Has any England forward who has played ten times or more had a worse scoring record ?
  • Options
    GIN1138GIN1138 Posts: 20,793
    edited July 2018
    OllyT said:

    Gove will go down in history as the man who betrayed Brexit. His backstabbing of Boris led to a Remain PM and now his personal obsession with staying in the Cabinet is allowing May to sell out Brexit.

    His justification that we need to leave and we can sort out the details later totally lacks any sort of credibility or logic. There is zero chance that and future UK Government will ever re-address the withdrawal agreement. His position is totally self-serving.

    I always believed that Boris was honest about supporting Brexit. But the more I see Gove the more clear it is that he just supported Brexit to get his own back on Cameron. He never expected to win. Apparently he didn't even stay up to see the results.

    There is a special place in hell reserved for Michael Gove.
    The Brexiteer list of who betrayed Brexit is likely to be nearly as long as the Brexiteer list of excuses as to why Brexit failed
    The reason Brexit failed is because the government and civil service ensured it failed because they are all pro-Remain and want to subvert democracy..

    Another reason why revenge will be a dish best served cold when Brexiteers either sit on the hands and refuse to vote for Con - Or vote for Corbyn which is what I'll be doing at the next available opportunity.
  • Options
    Sunil_PrasannanSunil_Prasannan Posts: 49,200

    Foxy said:

    Gove will go down in history as the man who betrayed Brexit. His backstabbing of Boris led to a Remain PM and now his personal obsession with staying in the Cabinet is allowing May to sell out Brexit.

    His justification that we need to leave and we can sort out the details later totally lacks any sort of credibility or logic. There is zero chance that and future UK Government will ever re-address the withdrawal agreement. His position is totally self-serving.

    I always believed that Boris was honest about supporting Brexit. But the more I see Gove the more clear it is that he just supported Brexit to get his own back on Cameron. He never expected to win. Apparently he didn't even stay up to see the results.

    There is a special place in hell reserved for Michael Gove.
    I think this is very close to the truth. If you read Tim Shipman's account, Boris Johnson genuinely agonised about which way to go and while there was undoubtedly some personal political calculation there, I think he succeeded in fooling himself that Brexit was on the right side of history and he was doing the right thing. In comparison Gove seems to have been the one who was motivated by personal vengeance and narcissism.
    I don't think so. Gove is a loyalist, not a rebel. He let Dave move him from education, where he was making enemies. I reckon he is a genuine Leaver, not too worried by details.
    He's an idealogical leaver because he's a British nationalist who believes in undiluted Westminster power,
    Williamglenn is an idealogical Remainer because he's an EU nationalist who believes in undiluted Brussels power
  • Options
    Sean_FSean_F Posts: 35,789

    Foxy said:

    Foxy said:

    Gove will go down in history as the man who betrayed Brexit. His backstabbing of Boris led to a Remain PM and now his personal obsession with staying in the Cabinet is allowing May to sell out Brexit.

    His justification that we need to leave and we can sort out the details later totally lacks any sort of credibility or logic. There is zero chance that and future UK Government will ever re-address the withdrawal agreement. His position is totally self-serving.

    I always believed that Boris was honest about supporting Brexit. But the more I see Gove the more clear it is that he just supported Brexit to get his own back on Cameron. He never expected to win. Apparently he didn't even stay up to see the results.

    There is a special place in hell reserved for Michael Gove.
    I think this is very close to the truth. If you read Tim Shipman's account, Boris Johnson genuinely agonised about which way to go and while there was undoubtedly some personal political calculation there, I think he succeeded in fooling himself that Brexit was on the right side of history and he was doing the right thing. In comparison Gove seems to have been the one who was motivated by personal vengeance and narcissism.
    I don't think so. Gove is a loyalist, not a rebel. He let Dave move him from education, where he was making enemies. I reckon he is a genuine Leaver, not too worried by details.
    He's an idealogical leaver because he's a British nationalist who believes in undiluted Westminster power, but he didn't need to debase the campaign in the way he did nor play such a prominent role. He enjoyed being a crowd-pleaser for once in his life a bit too much.
    Gove much less so than most of the Leavers. He is a Sovereigntist rather than anti immigration etc.
    He compared himself to Einstein being denounced by scientists in the pay of the Nazis and said people had had enough of 'experts'. He may not have stood next to a "Breaking Point" poster but he's just as culpable for dragging the campaign into the gutter.
    The point being that experts are as partisan as you or I.
  • Options
    FoxyFoxy Posts: 44,503

    OllyT said:

    Foxy said:

    HYUFD said:

    Full time. England win and will go to their first world cup semi final in 28 years on Wednesday

    Wow, that seemed much easier than I feared at 3pm.
    They were highly competent (Sterling excepted) against very limited opponents and they had no bad luck either.

    But it looks like the France vs Belgium game should be the effective final.
    Will be at that one, but who knows? Maguire is a star.
    You have hit the jackpot with your tickets. Have a great time and every England player, apart from Sterling, were stars
    Sterling played well. Maybe he should have scored, but he played well.

    England played better than I thought they were capable. Would love them to wallop Russia in the semi-final.
    Not as well as Rashford would have

    Clearly not a view shared by the England manager. Maybe you should take your Man United colour specs off.
    What's Sterling's goal scoring record for England ?
    2 in 31 (I think)
    His finishing was poor today, but he did well at Vardy's game of stretching defences via the ball over the top. Not as poor as Sweden's finishing though. That was truly awful.

    I see 538 is now giving us a 58% chance of making the final, 28% of winning it.

    https://projects.fivethirtyeight.com/2018-world-cup-predictions/

    Foxy is top of the FF league too :)
  • Options
    Sean_FSean_F Posts: 35,789
    GIN1138 said:

    OllyT said:

    Gove will go down in history as the man who betrayed Brexit. His backstabbing of Boris led to a Remain PM and now his personal obsession with staying in the Cabinet is allowing May to sell out Brexit.

    His justification that we need to leave and we can sort out the details later totally lacks any sort of credibility or logic. There is zero chance that and future UK Government will ever re-address the withdrawal agreement. His position is totally self-serving.

    I always believed that Boris was honest about supporting Brexit. But the more I see Gove the more clear it is that he just supported Brexit to get his own back on Cameron. He never expected to win. Apparently he didn't even stay up to see the results.

    There is a special place in hell reserved for Michael Gove.
    The Brexiteer list of who betrayed Brexit is likely to be nearly as long as the Brexiteer list of excuses as to why Brexit failed
    The reason Brexit failed is because the government and civil service ensured it failed because they are all pro-Remain and want to subvert democracy..

    Another reason why revenge will be a dish best served cold when Brexiteers either sit on the hands and refuse to vote for Con - Or vote for Corbyn which is what I'll be doing at the next available opportunity.
    Using your right hand to cut off your left.
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    PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 75,899
    On and on
    We will follow Edmund...
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    Sean_FSean_F Posts: 35,789
    Will the final be England v France.
  • Options
    williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 48,011
    Sean_F said:

    Foxy said:

    Foxy said:

    Gove will go down in history as the man who betrayed Brexit. His backstabbing of Boris led to a Remain PM and now his personal obsession with staying in the Cabinet is allowing May to sell out Brexit.

    His justification that we need to leave and we can sort out the details later totally lacks any sort of credibility or logic. There is zero chance that and future UK Government will ever re-address the withdrawal agreement. His position is totally self-serving.

    I always believed that Boris was honest about supporting Brexit. But the more I see Gove the more clear it is that he just supported Brexit to get his own back on Cameron. He never expected to win. Apparently he didn't even stay up to see the results.

    There is a special place in hell reserved for Michael Gove.
    I think this is very close to the truth. If you read Tim Shipman's account, Boris Johnson genuinely agonised about which way to go and while there was undoubtedly some personal political calculation there, I think he succeeded in fooling himself that Brexit was on the right side of history and he was doing the right thing. In comparison Gove seems to have been the one who was motivated by personal vengeance and narcissism.
    I don't think so. Gove is a loyalist, not a rebel. He let Dave move him from education, where he was making enemies. I reckon he is a genuine Leaver, not too worried by details.
    He's an idealogical leaver because he's a British nationalist who believes in undiluted Westminster power, but he didn't need to debase the campaign in the way he did nor play such a prominent role. He enjoyed being a crowd-pleaser for once in his life a bit too much.
    Gove much less so than most of the Leavers. He is a Sovereigntist rather than anti immigration etc.
    He compared himself to Einstein being denounced by scientists in the pay of the Nazis and said people had had enough of 'experts'. He may not have stood next to a "Breaking Point" poster but he's just as culpable for dragging the campaign into the gutter.
    The point being that experts are as partisan as you or I.
    To be honest I think his implication that democratic politics is like physics where he alone could be right was far more toxic than his 'experts' comment. He believes in the superiority of his own intellect without any justification.
  • Options
    Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 60,964
    Mr. Gin, I'd urge you not to do that. Vote Labour by all means when they aren't led by a socialist who describes himself as a friend of Hamas, but to actively vote for Corbyn would be to seek to revenge one injury by inflicting one still worse upon the nation.
This discussion has been closed.