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Collapse us if you can, government dares Brexit opponents


Jonathan Fairfield

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Collapse us if you can, government dares Brexit opponents

William James, Guy Faulconbridge

 

2019-08-29T082948Z_2_LYNXNPEF7S0GR_RTROPTP_4_BRITAIN-EU.JPG

Britain's Lord President of the Council and Leader of the House of Commons Jacob Rees-Mogg talks to the media as he leaves media studios in London, Britain August 29, 2019. REUTERS/Toby Melville

 

LONDON (Reuters) - Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s government on Thursday challenged opponents of Brexit in parliament to collapse the government or change the law if they wanted to thwart Britain’s exit from the European Union.

 

More than three years since the Brexit referendum, the United Kingdom is heading towards its gravest constitutional crisis in decades and a showdown with the EU over Brexit due in just 63 days time.

 

In his boldest step since becoming prime minister last month, Johnson enraged opponents of a no-deal Brexit on Wednesday by ordering the suspension of parliament for almost a month.

 

The speaker of the lower house of parliament, John Bercow, said that was a constitutional outrage as it limited the time the 800-year-old heart of English democracy has to debate and shape the course of British history.

 

But Jacob Rees-Mogg, the Brexit supporter who is in charge of managing government business in parliament, dared opponents to do their worst.

 

“All these people who are wailing and gnashing of teeth know that there are two ways of doing what they want to do,” Rees-Mogg told the BBC.

 

“One, is to change the government and the other is to change the law. If they do either of those that will then have an effect.

 

“If they don’t have either the courage or the gumption to do either of those then we will leave on the 31st of October in accordance with the referendum result.”

 

Johnson’s move to suspend parliament for longer than usual at one of the most crucial junctures in recent British history was cheered by U.S. President Donald Trump but provoked criticism from some British lawmakers and media.

Ruth Davidson quit as leader of the Conservative Party in Scotland on Thursday, saying she could no longer juggle the demands of being a mother with the balancing act of Brexit.

 

“I have attempted to chart a course for our party which recognises and respects the referendum result, while seeking to maximise opportunities and mitigate risks for key Scottish businesses and sectors,” she said.

 

TORTUOUS NEGOTIATIONS

 

After years of tortuous negotiations and a series of political crises since the United Kingdom voted 52% to 48% to leave the EU in the 2016 referendum, Brexit remains up in the air. Options range from an acrimonious divorce on Oct. 31 and an election to an amicable exit or even another referendum.

 

In effect, Johnson’s order to suspend parliament forces opponents of a no-deal Brexit in parliament to show their hand and act in as few as four days sitting next month. Parliament returns from its summer holiday on Sept. 3.

An election is likely.

 

“Boris is obviously preparing for an election,” said Conservative lawmaker Ken Clarke.

 

“He’s decided that he wants a people versus foreigners election, and a people versus parliament election, and he’s blustering away with ‘making this country the greatest country in the world’, patriotism, Donald Trump-style stuff.”

Johnson is also trying to convince the EU that his threat of a no-deal exit is real.

 

Britain’s opposition Labour Party will seek an emergency debate on Brexit next week, the party’s trade spokesman Barry Gardiner said, outlining plans which could give them an opening to pass legislation to block a no-deal Brexit.

“On Monday, we will introduce what is known as a Standing Order Section 24 Motion and that would be to try and have an emergency debate,” Gardiner told Sky News.

 

There is a small majority against a no-deal Brexit in the 650-seat House of Commons though it is unclear if opponents of Johnson within the Conservative Party would collapse his government in a vote of no confidence.

 

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-- © Copyright Reuters 2019-08-29

 

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2 hours ago, evadgib said:

The Mogg followed by a remainer on GMB today:

And here he is again on Sky:

 

Keep doffing that cap to the Lord of Manor. I have pity for Thais some who revel in their serfdom as they were brainwashed from birth and educated stupid and no freedom to rebel in thought and deed. For a Brit nothing but a degree of sadness and contempt.

 

Image result for george orwell proles 

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33 minutes ago, 7by7 said:

 What many leavers voted for was the pie in the sky "if we leave the EU will cave in and grant us all the benefits of membership with none of the obligations" pony that Cummings and his political puppets like Johnson fed us by the shovel full.

 

Cummings and his campaign were very careful to never mention the disaster of a no deal; except to simply repeat "Project Fear, Project Fear,......." ad nauseum whenever a remain campaigner brought the subject up.

In our remainer cliche that would be the unicorns. Brexiters are wetting themselves at the prospect of opening the gate to the promised land.

 

"Tell me about the rabbits. George."

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14 minutes ago, beautifulthailand99 said:

And easy to see why the proles worship them with their Eton-toff fetish.  BoJo and Mogg are behaving rationally and in their own self-interest - probably can't believe they can get an impoverished underclass to help them, in that project. Project Stupid is indeed anything but. 

the expression "lumpenproletariat" comes to mind.

link: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lumpenproletariat

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47 minutes ago, oldhippy said:

the expression "lumpenproletariat" comes to mind.

link: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lumpenproletariat

Soon they will have to make a choice follow Farage and his sell-out gang or back BoJo and his sleight of hand , rabbit out of the hat with WA Mark 2. Which along with guaranteeing EU citizens rights and their families for years to come amongst many other things gives us a 2 year transition period to fight back in. 

 

I'm Backing BoJo and WA Mark 2 - are you ?

 
 
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Downing Street will be happy with that Ruth Davidson press conference. Says she believed PM when he told her he wants to get a Brexit deal, and calls on other parties to commit to voting for it if he comes back with one.
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6 minutes ago, oldhippy said:

Sorry.

I am European.

I wish the British would <deleted> off.

The sooner the better.

Unfortunately, the EU is not democratic enough to give us a choice, so there will not be a referendum to vote British in or out.

My friend I'm European too and there is a certain amount of trolling leavers in my post. And not all Brits are the same. Please accept my hand of European friendship (no irony). I am ashamed of many of my fellow countrymen. 

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5 minutes ago, oldhippy said:

Sorry.

I am European.

I wish the British would <deleted> off.

The sooner the better.

Unfortunately, the EU is not democratic enough to give us a choice, so there will not be a referendum to vote British in or out.

This is an attitude that results from Europeans.
But it is to be noted that 48, XX% of the UK population do not want a hard break with their neighbors in Europe and want to stay in the EU.

 

It would be interesting to have current pro-contra brexit numbers.

 

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