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Johnson's top aide says lawmakers can't stop no-deal Brexit - Sunday Telegraph


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3 hours ago, kingdong said:

remember the fiasco of the erm and how france and germany sneered at us when we were forced to leave,same thing happened when cameron went to the eu 3and a half years ago to beg them could we change our laws so eu dossers [not sure of correct terminology,but someone coming to uk with the intention of poncing off the welfare state as opposed to seeking employment] could be denied state benefit,they laughed in his face and gave him nothing.

1) What is the UK employment rate now ? So clearly your (and the 'they come over here and steal all our jobs brigade) fears have never stood up to scrutiny. 

 

2) If you don't show extensive proof you are actually looking for work in the UK now you are denied state benefits (and have been for some years)

 

Could you reiterate what your point was please ?

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18 minutes ago, smedly said:

the difference being - we will own it and not some unelected power grabbing ass wipe in Brussels, the whole thing is a farce and we need to get out of it ASAP

Still waiting on specifics to back that up, but you provide just endless meaningless soundbites even after being called out for doing it. 

 

……..what will you actually own ? by 'we' I assume you mean the UK population right ? so in what form will that ownership of whatever it is we 'own' take ? I'm intrigued now. will we have shares in this thing we own ? Can we sell it etc etc 

 

What are you talking about ?

 

 

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30 minutes ago, Handsome Gardener said:

all of them right ? Every survey being produced now (and you know you tried to find another leave survey bias) is incorrect, bias, not to be taken serious, blah blah blah correct ? The 1200 people would not have been selected at random but I see someone else has tried to get that through to you so I'll leave that.

 

Everything that doesn't tie in with your views is either bias, wrong, or a giant conspiracy.

 

If those surveys indicated another leave vote you would be all over it like a rash correct ?

 

However I do my own research - apart from the brexiteers who think Asians will have to leave after October 31st (can't help those ones) - many I speak to have now said they regret the whole thing and would vote differently. That's why brexiteers want this over the line so badly, the tide has turned significantly and the mind boggling stupidity is a very real threat. 

Really. You sound very much like an old poster from Yorkshire, who was named after a bird and poor Scottish whisky.

 

I never said this "Everything that doesn't tie in with your views is either bias, wrong, or a giant conspiracy."  You are making it up.

 

I did say that the sample surveys are small and have little significance. Even grammar schools children learn that.

 

As I mentioned the surveys were saying before the referendum that remain would win. Looked what happened there.

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34 minutes ago, Laughing Gravy said:

Really. You sound very much like an old poster from Yorkshire, who was named after a bird and poor Scottish whisky.

 

I never said this "Everything that doesn't tie in with your views is either bias, wrong, or a giant conspiracy."  You are making it up.

 

I did say that the sample surveys are small and have little significance. Even grammar schools children learn that.

 

As I mentioned the surveys were saying before the referendum that remain would win. Looked what happened there.

I don't think that's Grouse. I've been a bit concerned about his absence. Hope he is OK.

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It was mentioned in a (either Guardian or BBC) article that this would require the existing PM to step down after losing a no-confidence vote which legally he wouldn’t be obliged to. 
 
BBC it is: “However, Catherine Haddon, from the Institute for Government think tank, said that while [forming a government of national unity] was possible, it would rely on Mr Johnson resigning as PM after losing a no-confidence vote - something he is not legally bound to do.”
https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-politics-49225906



They would be on very tricky constitutional ground to pull that one. The core element of the U.K. constitutional system is the sovereignty of parliament and that the government serves with its confidence. For the PM/govt not to resign would be the same as to prorogue parliament and the Queen to take back power under her appointed PM.

The 14 day rule for parliament to put forward a new govt/pm is a new one in the Fixed Term Parliament Act from 2011 and has not been attempted before. Prior to that an election could have been called immediately. The last time that happened was 1979 when Mrs T came to power so using historical references is a bit dubious.


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But when have Brexiteers ever cared about the UK’s parliamentary representative democracy? 
 


If (and it is a very big if) a new govt/pm becomes apparent in the 14 day period that had the backing of the majority of MPs which could be done through a parliamentary motion or an open letter signed by MPs then, should the current PM refuse to resign, it would force the Queen to make a political decision which would be a massive escalation.


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bojo can do the exit when he likes Oct31 is flexible and can be moved where he likes ..he can call an election when he likes if hes forced to but labour rebels will keep him going in power .many labour MPs want the exit .better than kicking the can down the road and causing paralysis to uk and pound for more years

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3 hours ago, Laughing Gravy said:

The result was leave. Get over it and move on.

Brxiteer mantra, people just do not get the chance to change their minds, unless of course you are a politician speaking to the media.

 

Matt Hancock has also claimed a no-deal Brexit cannot be blocked by MPs in parliament before 31 October. He said he had changed his mind on the matter during the Tory leadership contest. “When facts change people can change their minds,” he said.

https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/boris-johnson-brexit-live-general-election-labour-corbyn-nhs-tories-swinson-latest-today-a9039351.html

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All going to plan - well someone's plan.

 

Diplomats from the other EU member states have been told the UK will leave without a deal unless major changes are made to Theresa May's deal, but that these changes - such as abolishing the Irish backstop - were unacceptable.

One negotiator said: "We are back where we were three years ago."

Downing Street said it hoped the EU would rethink its refusal of changes.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-49240809

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“The bigger question is why is Dominic Cummings, the de facto deputy prime minister, so keen to spend yet more taxpayers’ money on something that his boss insists has only a ‘one in a million chance’ of happening?”

https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/brexit-no-deal-dominic-cummings-philip-hammond-boris-johnson-a9040546.html

 

An even bigger question is why an unelected bureaucrat is referred to as deputy PM and dictating government policy.

David Cameron, who says no wrong according to brexiteers, has criticised Cummings as a "career psychopath".

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49 minutes ago, smedly said:

that is your opinion - I do not agree, we (the UK) have been held back for years through EU membershit, we have been strangled by rules that were not in our interests, yes we have been idling along but never able to unleash our full potential - something I believe was intentional by EU masters

"we have been strangled by rules that were not in our interests,"

The most ridiculous comment that has appeared on here for a long time. The EU directives pushed the UK government into changes that if left to their own devices would still be under review. Only a warped mind would think that Consumer Protection, Health & Safety and many more were not in peoples interests.

 

"UK potential" will be highlighted shortly with a round the world flight by a Spitfire. Of course it was an EU decision that the UK no longer develop and manufacture aircraft.

Time to wake up and smell the coffee, successive UK governments removed all potential the UK ever had. It's always too late when trying to catch up.

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3 hours ago, sandyf said:

"we have been strangled by rules that were not in our interests,"

The most ridiculous comment that has appeared on here for a long time. The EU directives pushed the UK government into changes that if left to their own devices would still be under review. Only a warped mind would think that Consumer Protection, Health & Safety and many more were not in peoples interests.

 

"UK potential" will be highlighted shortly with a round the world flight by a Spitfire. Of course it was an EU decision that the UK no longer develop and manufacture aircraft.

Time to wake up and smell the coffee, successive UK governments removed all potential the UK ever had. It's always too late when trying to catch up.

Your warped post makes out like HSE is the proprietary domain of the EU, when it was the UK that was way ahead on this. 

Edited by nauseus
+ ahead
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21 hours ago, sandyf said:

"The referendum result in 2016 blows your theory away as the majority voted to leave." again you making assumptions, that the referendum result was not influenced by 8 years of austerity. You also refuse to accept that there may no longer be a majority in favour of leaving. The surveyors report shows the foundations are collapsing but you ignore the advice and buy the house anyway.

 

As I said, the concept of identity seems to be a problem for many. My identity document says British Citizen, I did not put that there, I was born in Scotland so a citizen of Scotland but you will probably dispute that. A friend of mine, born and bred in Belfast has Irish Citizen in his identity document, he has chosen to be a citizen of Ireland.

Great Britain is not a country, it is a political entity, as is the EU and USA, countries are England, Scotland, Wales and a divided Ireland. Leaving the EU has been a nationalist ambition for years but certainly not Scottish or Irish.

 

Like it or not the UK is a presently sovereign nation comprised of the union of four countries, with bonny Scotland being one of them. The EU is a political and economic union, it is not a sovereign nation, so therefore should not be compared to the UK or the US. 

Edited by nauseus
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