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British PM May resigns, paving way for Brexit confrontation with EU


Jonathan Fairfield

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11 minutes ago, dick dasterdly said:

I too think that it is more than likely that MPs will decide to gamble on another referendum.

 

What other choice do they have?

 

They know that revoking article 50 is likely to be political suicide at the next GE/they're not prepared to support leaving with no deal/the eu has said that it is not prepared to move on the laughable May/eu 'deal'.

I don't agree. I think it is far more likely that Corbyn would wake up and force through a no confidence vote in the government, as soon as a new PM is elected - as he has already stated. And if he succeeds parliament would be dissolved, and a GE would be the outcome. If that's the case, a peoples vote would determine what party manifesto wins, and that would be that. 

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3 hours ago, dick dasterdly said:

I too think that it is more than likely that MPs will decide to gamble on another referendum.

 

What other choice do they have?

 

They know that revoking article 50 is likely to be political suicide at the next GE/they're not prepared to support leaving with no deal/the eu has said that it is not prepared to move on the laughable May/eu 'deal'.

 

Well thank you, something we agree on! I didn't say that to wind up leavers, though it might. 

 

I can't see a path to "no deal" that doesn't involve a vote of some kind.

 

 

 

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3 hours ago, stephenterry said:

I don't agree. I think it is far more likely that Corbyn would wake up and force through a no confidence vote in the government, as soon as a new PM is elected - as he has already stated. And if he succeeds parliament would be dissolved, and a GE would be the outcome. If that's the case, a peoples vote would determine what party manifesto wins, and that would be that. 

 

The thing is that Corbyn needs Tory rebels for that to happen, and many of them are as reluctant to go into a GE than Johnson would be (presuming he wins). I think initially Johnson will try to broker some kind of agreement with the EU, but will fail. He'll then announce that he's going for "no deal" or "managed deal" ... or some other term that means chaos ... and that is when members of his own party will cross the line. Corbyn would then call for a vote of no confidence. To avoid this Johnson might just gamble with a referendum. He might think he can win that and then keep power.

 

 

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20 minutes ago, AlexRich said:

 

Well thank you, something we agree on! I didn't say that to wind up leavers, though it might. 

 

I can't see a path to "no deal" that doesn't involve a vote of some kind.

 

 

 

I agree.

 

MPs are mostly remainers - so their only possible hope is that another referendum may possibly give them the result for which they are looking...

Edited by dick dasterdly
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I think by Halloween the " crying May face mask" will be on the top buying list by remainders  & leavers both :whistling:  

Edited by david555
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19 minutes ago, AlexRich said:

The thing is that Corbyn needs Tory rebels for that to happen,

Not necessarily, mathematically if every other party where to vote with Corbyn on a NCV he would win, but I think there would be a lot of abstainers in his own party who would really make the result unpredictable. 

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35 minutes ago, AlexRich said:

 

The thing is that Corbyn needs Tory rebels for that to happen, and many of them are as reluctant to go into a GE than Johnson would be (presuming he wins). I think initially Johnson will try to broker some kind of agreement with the EU, but will fail. He'll then announce that he's going for "no deal" or "managed deal" ... or some other term that means chaos ... and that is when members of his own party will cross the line. Corbyn would then call for a vote of no confidence. To avoid this Johnson might just gamble with a referendum. He might think he can win that and then keep power.

 

 

 

What would losing a no confidence require in terms of numbers? Assuming the Brexit party and the Tories form a coalition to keep the government in power, how many Tory defectors would be required to flip a no confidence vote?  Forgive me because I don't know the specific composition of the legislature, so it is hard to estimate the likelihood of any particular outcome.

 

Seems to me that the Tory party was beaten handily by Brexit in the recent EU election, which would seem to be a proxy for what could happen in a General election. Tory MPs may not be so quick to cross the line, given that they have a real fear being voted out by a Brexit competitor, their personal preferences not withstanding.

 

So ultimately crossing the line comes down to the specific voter composition of their district. Which then begs the question of how many would need to vote against their own party in order to flip the scale, and is this number reasonable given the circumstances?

 

 

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4 hours ago, stephenterry said:

I don't agree. I think it is far more likely that Corbyn would wake up and force through a no confidence vote in the government, as soon as a new PM is elected - as he has already stated. And if he succeeds parliament would be dissolved, and a GE would be the outcome. If that's the case, a peoples vote would determine what party manifesto wins, and that would be that. 

If the Brexit party becomes a player and the Lib-dems have a revival because the electorate see them as the only real pro EU party a General election may throw up coalitions as the only way governments can be formed!

It's not a given that the Tory's and labour will be the winners in any election.

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1 hour ago, Basil B said:

Not necessarily, mathematically if every other party where to vote with Corbyn on a NCV he would win, but I think there would be a lot of abstainers in his own party who would really make the result unpredictable. 

I doubt the DUP would vote with IRA sympathiser Corbyn, though stranger things have happened. But they are unlikely to join him in stopping a no deal exit.

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16 minutes ago, AlexRich said:

I doubt the DUP would vote with IRA sympathiser Corbyn, though stranger things have happened. But they are unlikely to join him in stopping a no deal exit.

I think the DUP will be more interested in stopping a Brexit that will create a hard border.

 

They have voted against TM's deal for that very reason.

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38 minutes ago, Loiner said:

The Cambridge By election could prove to be a decider in the next round of commons voting, with out even going to confidence motions or GE. The last 'No Deal' vote was only won by a single vote, when Remain wheeled in that lying lawyer jailbird and a Tory got stuck on a train somewhere.  When the Brexit Party candidate wins Peterborough on 6th June there's one less LAB MP and a new Leaver in the commons. When Boris brings some leadership to the CON party the impasse in the commons could easily swing towards Leave No Deal. 

Peterborough By Election 06 June 2019

Edited by evadgib
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1 hour ago, Loiner said:

The Cambridge By election could prove to be a decider in the next round of commons voting, with out even going to confidence motions or GE. The last 'No Deal' vote was only won by a single vote, when Remain wheeled in that lying lawyer jailbird and a Tory got stuck on a train somewhere.  When the Brexit Party candidate wins Peterborough on 6th June there's one less LAB MP and a new Leaver in the commons. When Boris brings some leadership to the CON party the impasse in the commons could easily swing towards Leave No Deal. 

 

LBJ said the first rule of politics was being able to count.

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30 minutes ago, tebee said:

What exactly are you on ? No deal was defeated by 400-160 votes 

 

https://commonslibrary.parliament.uk/brexit/indicative-votes-2-0-where-did-support-lie/

You're looking in all the wrong places. They were only the infamous indicative votes.

 

I stand corrected on the Amendment A vote - which was not 1 vote, it was a majority of just 4 (312 - 308) for No Deal. And even that is non-binding, under current law the UK could still leave without a deal, unless one is ratified by parliament.

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4 hours ago, Monomial said:

 

What would losing a no confidence require in terms of numbers? Assuming the Brexit party and the Tories form a coalition to keep the government in power, how many Tory defectors would be required to flip a no confidence vote?  Forgive me because I don't know the specific composition of the legislature, so it is hard to estimate the likelihood of any particular outcome.

 

Seems to me that the Tory party was beaten handily by Brexit in the recent EU election, which would seem to be a proxy for what could happen in a General election. Tory MPs may not be so quick to cross the line, given that they have a real fear being voted out by a Brexit competitor, their personal preferences not withstanding.

 

So ultimately crossing the line comes down to the specific voter composition of their district. Which then begs the question of how many would need to vote against their own party in order to flip the scale, and is this number reasonable given the circumstances?

 

 

For the confidence vote it would be on a knife edge. Dominic Grieve has already stated he'll vote against the government in a NCV if it means avoiding no deal. The DUP position is difficult to judge. They hated the EU's withdrawal agreement and voted against it every time. How much do they value having an element of power under the existing confidence and supply arrangements - enough for them to vote for keeping the Tories in power? 

We should also not forget there may be some passionate leavers among the other parties, particularly Labour who might abstain or even vote in favour of the government. 

 

But if they do manage to force a GE, then the Brexit Party would very much come into play. The two main parties would haemorrhage votes to the Brexit Party and the Lib Dems. Then it depends on which of them gets the highest amount of seats, and can form a government in coalition.

 

The Tories in coalition with Farage? Stranger things have happened! 

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9 hours ago, stephenterry said:

I don't agree. I think it is far more likely that Corbyn would wake up and force through a 

     

     Corbyn  would need to be constipated, to try and force anything through .

    He wont be labour leader much longer,if he ever was a leader.

Enter Keir,  a good socialist name , soon to be Prime Minister..

 

 

Edited by elliss
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3 minutes ago, elliss said:

     

     Corbyn  would need to be constipated, to try and force anything through .

    He wont be labour leader much longer,if he ever was a leader.

Enter Keir,  a good socialist name , soon to be Prime Minister..

 

 

Constipation generally makes forcing things through a lot tougher. ????

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2 hours ago, Loiner said:

You're looking in all the wrong places. They were only the infamous indicative votes.

 

I stand corrected on the Amendment A vote - which was not 1 vote, it was a majority of just 4 (312 - 308) for No Deal. And even that is non-binding, under current law the UK could still leave without a deal, unless one is ratified by parliament.

That was the customs union vote wasn't it ?

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2 hours ago, CG1 Blue said:

 

 

The Tories in coalition with Farage? Stranger things have happened! 

 

 What do both these parties  have in common, apart from etc.. 

 

 

Edited by elliss
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