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UK in deadlock over Brexit 'Plan B' as May and Corbyn tussle


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16 minutes ago, vogie said:

The politicians by voting for article 50 were saying they wanted to leave the EU, it is law now, all parliamentary MPs agreed to leave accept the SNP. You cannot get pregnant and decide 6 months later you don't want to be.

 

I know you have trouble with the word democracy, but more voters voted out than voted in, I hope that clears this matter up, but somehow I doubt it.

 

Below is a typical remainers idea of what democracy is, but have no fear Nigel Farage soon corrected her.

 

 

Says a man arguing against a second vote.

 

I note you are keen to quote Farage but not so keen on Farage’s statement on a 52/48 vote.

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8 minutes ago, Chomper Higgot said:

Says a man arguing against a second vote.

 

I note you are keen to quote Farage but not so keen on Farage’s statement on a 52/48 vote.

Me too but I have no fear of a 2nd vote as the result will be the same with a much bigger margin. That is my honest opinion, as is the belief that we won't be having one.

Edited by evadgib
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3 minutes ago, tomacht8 said:

For some Brexiteers, leaving the EU is the same as when they have in their local pub

quarreled with the owner. Then they look for a new pub. Easy. That is their entire economic knowledge and business experience.

 

Can it be that the brexit is a bit more complicated? Considering that in over 40 years, 28 countries have made millions of treaties, laws, agreements, most of which are interconnected and interwoven.

 

May had agreed an exit plan with the EU and all 27 members had agreed.

I think that now also the EU has no desire for this UK parlament monkey circus anymore.

 

 

 

 

I don't think that using a pub in your analogy is a wise move when you have Jean Claude Juncker in charge of the EU.????????????

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18 minutes ago, tomacht8 said:

For some Brexiteers, leaving the EU is the same as when they have in their local pub

quarreled with the owner. Then they look for a new pub. Easy. That is their entire economic knowledge and business experience.

 

Can it be that the brexit is a bit more complicated? Considering that in over 40 years, 28 countries have made millions of treaties, laws, agreements, most of which are interconnected and interwoven.

 

May had agreed an exit plan with the EU and all 27 members had agreed.

I think that now also the EU has no desire for this UK parlament monkey circus anymore.

The post to which you and a dozen or more others replied or otherwise reacted to is a plant and did the trick despite the obvious flaws. It's in the interests of both sides to work out who did it & what their ultimate goal is.

I sussed the practice out years ago and it's high time the rest of you caught on.

I'll give this thread a miss.

Edited by evadgib
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17 minutes ago, Jonnapat said:

The good thing that a fresh people's vote would bring would be a vote based on the now known facts rather than the lies and fantasies that were brought before the British people before the 2016 vote.

This is why the latest poll on public opinion backs Remain by 12 percentage points and why delaying Brexit would be in everyone's best interests. 

Time for some common sense if that's at all possible.

In principle you are right.

But it seems some people do everything to not look at facts. They want to believe whatever they believe. It's like religion, facts don't matter to many of these people. Believing is everything.

 

Many of us still think when people look at all the facts it should be obvious that leaving the EU is a bad idea - even if the EU is not perfect. But many people ignore facts. You can't win rational arguments with people like that.

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1 minute ago, vogie said:

I don't think that using a pub in your analogy is a wise move when you have Jean Claude Juncker in charge of the EU.????????????

555.

It is better to have an alcoholic with a clear negotiation plan than 100th of anti alcoholics who are in a pub complaining about serving beer.

 

And if Junker really drinks regularly?

Could also be part of a defamation campaign. Proved there is nothing.

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12 minutes ago, tomacht8 said:

555.

It is better to have an alcoholic with a clear negotiation plan than 100th of anti alcoholics who are in a pub complaining about serving beer.

 

And if Junker really drinks regularly?

Could also be part of a defamation campaign. Proved there is nothing.

Do you honestly believe that JCJ doesn't have an alcohol problem, sources say he has cognac for breakfast and even tried to get the law changed so he could smoke in the buildings in Brussels.

 

 

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17 minutes ago, evadgib said:

The post to which you and a dozen or more others replied or otherwise reacted to is a plant and did the trick despite the obvious flaws. It's in the interests of both sides to work out who did it & what their ultimate goal is.

I sussed the practice out years ago and it's high time the rest of you caught on.

Or maybe, after months and months of relentless incompetence and mendacity oozing from Westminster, many of us are simply sick to the back teeth of Brexit and what it has done to us all, and are having a grim laugh at this caricature?

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12 minutes ago, RuamRudy said:

Or maybe, after months and months of relentless incompetence and mendacity oozing from Westminster, many of us are simply sick to the back teeth of Brexit and what it has done to us all, and are having a grim laugh at this caricature?

Well, you keep posting RR.

 

TVFmembers are having their say.

 

Everyone's a winner.

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42 minutes ago, rixalex said:

By a "people's vote" do you mean a referendum?

 

What are the "known facts"

The pink unicorn that Boris and Jacob promised doesn’t exist. There’s only no-deal, no-Brexit and May’s deal on the table. 

 

42 minutes ago, rixalex said:

and who told you them?

Something called reality. 

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22 minutes ago, vogie said:

Do you honestly believe that JCJ doesn't have an alcohol problem, sources say he has cognac for breakfast and even tried to get the law changed so he could smoke in the buildings in Brussels.

 

 

He is just a sociable guy and maybe drinks sometimes. But if Junker bothers you so much, his term ends in november 2019.

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1 hour ago, OneMoreFarang said:

No. A huge part of the voters voted leave because they were fed-up with their situation. UK politicians told them since many years that the EU is to blame for almost anything. So it's no surprise that many people didn't want to be part of that EU which made life so difficult.

But that was over two years ago when people had little real and lots of wrong information. If they followed the news and events in the last two years many learned that the problem are mostly the UK politicians and not the EU. And leaving the EU in any way won't improve the situation in the UK. The UK politicians could improve it, if they wanted to do that.

Sure, the UK will survive even if they crash out. But at what price? By now people should see reality and they should see that the USA, China and other big nations won't make deals with the UK which are better than what they have now. And the UK will continue to do lots of business with the EU. The question is how? The easy way or the hard way?

Make another referendum and see if still 52% support leave. I have my doubts. At least some people listened and learned...

No they didn't.

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Cameron was a blithering idiot not to ensure his referendum to introduce a new law/treaty or amend and existinglaw/treaty required a minimum 60/40 vote (to avoid the obvious division a closer result has caused, regardless of talk of democracy 50% of actual voters +1 is not a sensible majority) or stick to the fact that it was non binding for parliament, so that he got his way. And what did he do, blabber on TV before the event that it was binding, then slink away from the mess.

 

Brave and dutiful Theresa has sadly made a mess of the negotiations - instead of "here's Article 50, see you at the negotiations" we had the infantile and limiting red lines within the departure letter! Then we, the British media et al played out the negotiations in public whilst the EU smiled to themselves, and kept theirs simple and under wraps. Brexiters appeared to have no feasible plan of attack. Then May interferes and overrides her team. Fatal, without that plan.

 

Now with parliament locked we need LEADERSHIP, not dogged dead-end intransigence!! Extend Article 50, and devise a plan by end of year, and put to the people - as parliament is undecided (except for those who voted against the no-confidence vote to keep their jobs) - order of preference on vote form: 1) Accept plan to leave, 2) GE leave or 3) GE remain. There, simple.

 

 

 

 

 

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14 minutes ago, Disaantri said:

Cameron was a blithering idiot not to ensure his referendum to introduce a new law/treaty or amend and existinglaw/treaty required a minimum 60/40 vote (to avoid the obvious division a closer result has caused, regardless of talk of democracy 50% of actual voters +1 is not a sensible majority) or stick to the fact that it was non binding for parliament, so that he got his way. And what did he do, blabber on TV before the event that it was binding, then slink away from the mess.

 

Brave and dutiful Theresa has sadly made a mess of the negotiations - instead of "here's Article 50, see you at the negotiations" we had the infantile and limiting red lines within the departure letter! Then we, the British media et al played out the negotiations in public whilst the EU smiled to themselves, and kept theirs simple and under wraps. Brexiters appeared to have no feasible plan of attack. Then May interferes and overrides her team. Fatal, without that plan.

 

Now with parliament locked we need LEADERSHIP, not dogged dead-end intransigence!! Extend Article 50, and devise a plan by end of year, and put to the people - as parliament is undecided (except for those who voted against the no-confidence vote to keep their jobs) - order of preference on vote form: 1) Accept plan to leave, 2) GE leave or 3) GE remain. There, simple.

 

 

 

 

 

"Cameron was a blithering idiot not to ensure his referendum to introduce a new law/treaty or amend and existinglaw/treaty required a minimum 60/40 vote (to avoid the obvious division a closer result has caused"

 

I agree with this point.  It should have been stated that, on such an important issue, a majority of 60% was required.  He made the mistake of thinking that remain would easily win the referendum result.....

 

As things turned out, leave would not have won the necessary 60% of votes, and so UKIP would have continued (bearing in mind leave won more votes than remain) - and would likely have attracted even more voters?

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18 minutes ago, NanLaew said:

Maybe he was going through the motions; a formality?

 

Unfortunately, if Corbyn ever showed a scintilla of willingness to even smile across the floor at the PM, his feet wouldn't touch the ground as Labour's NEC run him out the door. He's sh!t scared of that. He's even more concerned that 71 Labour MP's have already signed a statement supporting a call for a second referendum and suggesting they have 25 more waiting for the shoe to drop. This despite their 'leader' saying only last month that it was not going to be an option if Labour won a snap election. Some of the radical party reforms currently being considered by the NEC includes regulations that, if implemented, would probably prevent Corbyn (and other dynosaurs) even being nominated.

 

Both Conservative and Labour leaderships have issues with what the media paints as a lack of confidence from their own MP's. Both leaders are aware of how quickly their political careers could end in or rise from these Brexit ashes, but so are the MP's. It's a pity that their focus isn't on what's good for the people and delivering the will of the people rather than the rather empty claims that they are doing just that. Philip Hammond's repeated, open subterfuges are all rather intriguing. In a similar vein as the 71 + 25 dangling over Corbyn's head, some 5 Tory cabinet minsters met with the PM to say they'd walk and suggest they too have +20 mid-ranking ministers ready to do the same.

 

UKIP is too much damaged goods and even Farage's own, very recent actions suggests he won't touch it with the proverbial. However, ...

 

Mr Farage, who enjoyed a warm welcome, appealed his supporters to get organised and prepare for a second referendum. He also hinted that he could be tempted to try to reclaim the title of Ukip leader yet again after quitting the party in December.

 

But I agree that something very, very similar would be resurgent with the proper leadership (come back Nige!) and thorough oversight and vetting of those that sign up to do the good work needed.

"Both Conservative and Labour leaderships have issues with what the media paints as a lack of confidence from their own MP's. Both leaders are aware of how quickly their political careers could end in or rise from these Brexit ashes, but so are the MP's. It's a pity that their focus isn't on what's good for the people and delivering the will of the people rather than the rather empty claims that they are doing just that. Philip Hammond's repeated, open subterfuges are all rather intriguing. In a similar vein as the 71 + 25 dangling over Corbyn's head, some 5 Tory cabinet minsters met with the PM to say they'd walk and suggest they too have +20 mid-ranking ministers ready to do the same."

 

Good points.

 

I posted an article from the Guardian earlier today re. the possibility of 'no deal'  brexit being stopped by soft-brexiteers.

 

This is a more up to date article from the same source.

 

https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2019/jan/17/hammond-tells-business-leaders-no-deal-brexit-will-be-stopped

 

It is now proven beyond doubt (?) that remainer MPs are not only determined to stop brexit, but apparently know that the plans are already in place to do so?

Edited by dick dasterdly
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9 minutes ago, dick dasterdly said:

"Both Conservative and Labour leaderships have issues with what the media paints as a lack of confidence from their own MP's. Both leaders are aware of how quickly their political careers could end in or rise from these Brexit ashes, but so are the MP's. It's a pity that their focus isn't on what's good for the people and delivering the will of the people rather than the rather empty claims that they are doing just that. Philip Hammond's repeated, open subterfuges are all rather intriguing. In a similar vein as the 71 + 25 dangling over Corbyn's head, some 5 Tory cabinet minsters met with the PM to say they'd walk and suggest they too have +20 mid-ranking ministers ready to do the same."

 

Good points.

 

I posted an article from the Guardian earlier today re. the possibility of 'no deal'  brexit being stopped by soft-brexiteers.

 

This is a more up to date article from the same source.

 

https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2019/jan/17/hammond-tells-business-leaders-no-deal-brexit-will-be-stopped

I am glad I am not the only Guardian reader here.

Or to say it in ColinCaserole's words: "The best Brexit of all, is no Brexit at all."

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5 hours ago, Lungstib said:

Britain has been in deadlock ever since the referendum. The politicians dont want what the people voted for and what Cameron promised. How is that fixed?

 

The politicians have chickened out of their responsibilities as elected MP's in a parliamentary democracy. They are all too scared to loose their privileged positions by upsetting their party and electorate. Their spineless betrayal of the UK Constitution, both Tory and Labor, has led to this massive mess.

 

Now they need someone with the bottle, honesty and not totally self interested to stand up and do the only sensible thins - just call Mr. Tusk, he's been brave enough to say so and will tell them what to do.

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