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Queen Elizabeth approves law seeking to block Oct. 31 no-deal Brexit


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Britain's Queen Elizabeth approves law seeking to block Oct. 31 no-deal Brexit

 

2019-09-09T165043Z_1_LYNXNPEF881GL_RTROPTP_4_BRITAIN-EU.JPG

FILE PHOTO: Britain's Queen Elizabeth II attends a special exhibition celebrating the 200th anniversary of the birth of Queen Victoria which marks this year's Summer Opening of Buckingham Palace in London, Britain, July 17, 2019. Victoria Jones/Pool via REUTERS/File Photo

 

LONDON (Reuters) - Britain's Queen Elizabeth on Monday gave final approval to a piece of legislation which seeks to prevent Prime Minister Boris Johnson from taking the country out of the European Union without an exit deal on Oct. 31.

 

The step, known as Royal Assent, is effectively a rubber-stamp from the monarch for the law which passed through parliament last week despite opposition from the government. The Royal Assent was announced in parliament's upper chamber, the House of Lords.

 

(Reporting by William James, Editing by Kylie MacLellan)

 

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-- © Copyright Reuters 2019-09-10
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1 hour ago, ezzra said:

So you're suggesting that the PM can trump the queens wishes and that the queen doesn't understand democracy and has no honor? and i say, you should more respect and check your facts sir...

The queen is a pretty nice girl but she hasn't got a lot to say

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1 hour ago, Mansell said:

Over an unelected Prime Minister. What irony.

Like any monarch the world over, royalty is not elected.

As far as Boris Johnson goes.  British prime ministers are elected as leader of the party by party members not the public.  Therefore you can say that all British prime ministers are unelected.

Edited by HHTel
correction
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5 minutes ago, HHTel said:
1 hour ago, Mansell said:

Over an unelected Prime Minister. What irony.

Like any monarch the world over, royalty is not elected.

As far as Boris Johnson goes.  British prime ministers are elected as leader of the party by party members not the public.  Therefore you can say that all British prime ministers are unelected.

In one way or another Prim Ministers are elected, but they are not by a general election, in actual fact in a general election the party with the most MP's leader may have lost their seat.

 

Most parties the leader is appointed by the members, IMHO this should be left to the MP's, in actual fact as I see it any MP can be PM if they have the support of enough MP's as happened in 1940 when Chamberlain lost a vote of confidence and Churchill was appointed to replace him.

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1 hour ago, vogie said:

It doesn't have to be that way, Boris knows the country cannot be run whilst parliament is in such disarray, but cowardly labour and the rest are just to scared to do the right thing and have an election, all they are doing is prolonging the agony with their own sense of survival. Drain the swamp that is parliament.

 

Boris, or rather Cummings, are doing all they can to engineer a no-deal Brexit on 31/10.

 

No one trusts the serial liar Boris. As PM, he decides when that election would be if parliament had approved an early one. The suspicion was he'd deliberately move the election till after 31/10 after saying it would be before and without a no-deal prevention law the UK would leave by default on 31/10 without a deal.

 

I agree drain the swamp, and that includes liars like Boris, Gove, the sinister R-Mogg and their cronies just as much as terrorist loving commie Corbyn and his Momentum subversives. 

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1 hour ago, welovesundaysatspace said:

There was an election. Maybe honor that election before asking for a new one. Or didn’t it go your way and you want people to vote until you like the result? 

 

Yes, there was an election in which May lost her majority. The results of that election are being respected. Boris, who has lost more MP's and therefore in a worse position than May wants to call an early election. Parliament doesn't. 

 

What's your point?

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1 hour ago, Basil B said:

In one way or another Prim Ministers are elected, but they are not by a general election, in actual fact in a general election the party with the most MP's leader may have lost their seat.

 

Most parties the leader is appointed by the members, IMHO this should be left to the MP's, in actual fact as I see it any MP can be PM if they have the support of enough MP's as happened in 1940 when Chamberlain lost a vote of confidence and Churchill was appointed to replace him.

Correct.  You agree with me.

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