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Farage says Brexit will be delayed again when PM Johnson's deal falls


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Just now, welovesundaysatspace said:

Sure, find a parliamentary majority to change the UK system that general elections are advisory only. 

Why not? The public are too stupid to vote apparently. If 17.4 million people mean nothing, then democracy is pretty much dead in the UK anyway. Why bother keeping up the pretense?

 

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1 hour ago, baboon said:

Goes to show just how thick a good number of the public are. 

I don’t agree.

 

The lure of simple answers to complex questions and scapegoating foreigners for domestic problems has a long history of fooling large numbers of people regardless of their intelligence.

 

I much prefer Abe Lincoln’s comment on fooling people.

 

It’s now time to see how many people remain fooled.

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Jon Henley

Mon 16 Sep 2019 19.47 BST

 

https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2019/sep/16/bettels-anger-highlights-a-bleak-truth-the-eu27-just-wants-britain-to-go

Bettel's anger highlights a bleak truth: the EU27 just wants Britain to go

 

Luxembourg PM’s exasperation is shared by EU officials and national leaders

it was, by any standards, an unusual spectacle: the leader of the European Union’s second-smallest country deciding to empty-chair the British prime minister at what was supposed to have been a joint press conference after their meeting.

 

Ostensibly, logistics were the problem: No 10 was concerned by the small but very noisy protest awaiting Boris Johnson outside; Luxembourg government officials said there was no room big enough to move the event inside.

 

Whatever the reason, the press conference that Xavier Bettel ended up giving alone – gesturing to the lectern where his counterpart should have stood – served as a striking symbol of EU leaders’ mounting frustration with the Brexit process.

 

 

Edited by david555
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17 hours ago, Enoon said:

"So we won't leave on the 31st of October and then we are really into uncharted waters - whether parliament imposes a second referendum or we have a general election, I really don't know," Farage, 55, said.

 

Or whether the would be "King Johnson the First" decides to defy Parliament, the Law, at least half of the people, and raise his standard in some provincial city and declare himself "Rightful and True Dictator" of........half of the people.

 

Not about Brexit anymore.

 

S***......Fan.......here it comes.

 

 

 

Bettel was right when he said Cameron and the Tory party had created this mess. And it was never ever about leaving the EU really. 

 

No it's becoming a constitutional disaster. A PM openly saying he'll defy the law; the government refusing to be accountable to parliament; an opposition leader demanding a GE then chickening out; the currency and business confidence severely weakened as the World teeters on the verge of recession etc etc.

 

Well played Cameron! Now your Bullingdon Boozer mate is playing an equally great innings!

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1 hour ago, david555 said:

Jon Henley

Mon 16 Sep 2019 19.47 BST

 

https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2019/sep/16/bettels-anger-highlights-a-bleak-truth-the-eu27-just-wants-britain-to-go

Bettel's anger highlights a bleak truth: the EU27 just wants Britain to go

 

Luxembourg PM’s exasperation is shared by EU officials and national leaders

it was, by any standards, an unusual spectacle: the leader of the European Union’s second-smallest country deciding to empty-chair the British prime minister at what was supposed to have been a joint press conference after their meeting.

 

Ostensibly, logistics were the problem: No 10 was concerned by the small but very noisy protest awaiting Boris Johnson outside; Luxembourg government officials said there was no room big enough to move the event inside.

 

Whatever the reason, the press conference that Xavier Bettel ended up giving alone – gesturing to the lectern where his counterpart should have stood – served as a striking symbol of EU leaders’ mounting frustration with the Brexit process.

 

 

 

Bettel et al want stability. And that won't happen until Brexit is concluded one way or another.

 

But, to be fair, they also want to have the 39 billion GBP up-front and to still control many aspects for the UK in return for some vague promises.

 

There are 27 of them plus all those wonderful EU bureaucrats. And none can come up with a better solution or any ideas either?

 

This is showing the entire EU political and bureaucrats up for what they really are. None of them look good.

 

How are Luxembourg doing with any reforms since the Lux Leaks tax avoidance scandals btw?

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2 hours ago, welovesundaysatspace said:

Sure, find a parliamentary majority to change the UK system that general elections are advisory only. 

 

General elections are not advisory only. Referendums are, and currently, cannot be anything more.

 

The UK parliament should have taken the advice, explored all the options, remaining with the existing deal, leaving with a deal looking like .... various scenarios, and leaving with no-deal BEFORE invoking Article 50. All these options could have been explained to people and another advisory referendum held to determine the direction people want to go. 

 

But, politicians jumped in and started to try and exploit things for themselves and their agendas. May thought she'd got a winner by trying to use the Royal Prerogative so that she and her executive could simply agree a deal they liked. All been downhill, steeply, since then.

 

A real leader, with the best country's interests at heart would revoke Article 50. Call a GE and the country would move on. If a substantial (not a tiny %) still wanted to leave, things could be handled correctly. If not then it's end of.

 

 

 

 

Edited by Baerboxer
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11 hours ago, 7by7 said:

 If they not only had the majority of seats in the House, but also polled well over 50% of the votes nationwide, then I'd say go for it.

 

But even if she wins the most seats, will she have over 50% of the votes? The last time that happened was 1931!

 

So, I'm against her party's policy; let's settle this in the only true democratic way; a final, legally binding referendum.

The 2016 referendum was " a final, legally binding" one.
The elite are trying to ignore that. Swinson has stated if another referendum was "out" she would still fight to remain.
Common Market - maybe - Federal State of Europe - no way.

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7 minutes ago, Baerboxer said:

 

General elections are not advisory only. Referendums are, and currently, cannot be anything more.

 

The UK parliament should have taken the advice, explored all the options, remaining with the existing deal, leaving with a deal looking like .... various scenarios, and leaving with no-deal BEFORE invoking Article 50. All these options could have been explained to people and another advisory referendum held to determine the direction people want to go. 

 

But, politicians jumped in and started to try and exploit things for themselves and their agendas. May thought she'd got a winner by trying to use the Royal Prerogative so that she and her executive could simply agree a deal they liked. All been downhill, steeply, since then.

 

A real leader, with the best country's interests at heart would revoke Article 50. Call a GE and the country would move on. If a substantial (not a tiny %) still wanted to leave, things could be handled correctly. If not then it's end of.

 

 

 

 

In order to have a national referendum, Parliament needs to pass legislation & as part of this they can state that the result is legally binding as they did with the 2011 "Alternative Vote" referendum... 

 

https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2016/jun/23/eu-referendum-legally-binding-brexit-lisbon-cameron-sovereign-parliament 

 

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7 minutes ago, Baerboxer said:

 

Bettel et al want stability. And that won't happen until Brexit is concluded one way or another.

 

But, to be fair, they also want to have the 39 billion GBP up-front and to still control many aspects for the UK in return for some vague promises.

 

There are 27 of them plus all those wonderful EU bureaucrats. And none can come up with a better solution or any ideas either?

 

This is showing the entire EU political and bureaucrats up for what they really are. None of them look good.

 

How are Luxembourg doing with any reforms since the Lux Leaks tax avoidance scandals btw?

The major fact is that the U.K. decided to leave, not the E.U. was kicking them out ….. the leaver supposed to see for them a better future , just same as in any divorce..., and same also the running tab bills need to be paid for which both signed in…,any divorce is a pain.

So the reasons to give in on a leaver are very small , as the existing 27 just keep running their union  ….only with a even ( important ) member less ….

 

Even when that one was only considering themselves as a part time member , one foot in and 1 foot out ….the E.U  shall never make that mistake again

 

About scandals we can play ping pong forever, country to country ...party to party …! What about the Russian money laundering in "the city"... from the oligarchs ?...And same time having the Russians killing renegades agents on British soil  contaminating a big part of a village  ?…. double standards or not ….money talks ...then principals are covered ! 

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7 minutes ago, Bluespunk said:

Nonsense.

For once I think he is right ... it is comparable …., only lucky it is now happening 300 years later and people supposed to be more civilized , a 50/50 (almost ) contradiction  creates such 

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3 minutes ago, david555 said:

For once I think he is right ... it is comparable …., only lucky it is now happening 300 years later and people supposed to be more civilized , a 50/50 (almost ) contradiction  creates such 

Personally I think the Chartist movement, the events prior to and after the Peterloo massacre regarding voter reform, the great strike wave from 1889 till the outbreak of WWI were times of greater civil strife.

Edited by Bluespunk
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