754 posts
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Post by Latecomer on Sept 25, 2019 20:37:05 GMT
So tired of this. Labour want to negotiate a much better Brexit (Norwayish, close trading but no political union - admittedly worse in my view than remain but I can understand why some people don't want political union) and then they will ask the people what they think. People saying Parliament has “obstructed Brexit” are being simplistic - the referendum didn’t say we had to vote for Theresa May’s Blind Brexit. It was a BAD DEAL, so parliament didn’t vote it through. They were being responsible. It wasn’t just Labour who thought it was a bad deal....all parties (including a lot of conservatives) voted against it.
So much of this was Theresa May’s fault....didn’t try to build consensus after the vote, just blundered along trying to keep everyone in the dark. And then made a pig’s ear of the job.
However, no good saying just because we are FED UP with it all we should just get ANYTHING...we will have to Iive with this deal!
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Post by Deleted on Sept 25, 2019 20:45:00 GMT
How can you say Parliament is doing it’s job when the majority are Remainers, pushing their own agenda and voting, plotting and attempting to block the UK leaving the EU, against the will of their constituents?. We have a representative parliamentary democracy. Members of Parliament were voted in by their constituents at the last election - post EU referendum - to use their best judgement, experience and knowledge in running the country to the benefit of their constituents. By definition, they are acting on the will of their constituents when they make those decisions. That’s what they were voted in to do. Blocking No Deal is their clear duty to their constituents as there is a huge risk of disruption to basic standards of living if we leave without a deal. You may not like it, but they are doing their job. How can you legitimately claim that, when in 2019 alone we have MPs switching parties, changing allegiance, being expelled from their parties, and even a case of an MP being removed from office after a constituency petition? You have areas where the public clearly voted to leave, but the elected MP isn’t just trying to stop no deal, but openly prevent Brexit because they are a remainer and because their loyalty lies primarily with their party, not the people they represent. That is not democratic.
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Post by Deleted on Sept 25, 2019 21:17:11 GMT
We have a representative parliamentary democracy. Members of Parliament were voted in by their constituents at the last election - post EU referendum - to use their best judgement, experience and knowledge in running the country to the benefit of their constituents. By definition, they are acting on the will of their constituents when they make those decisions. That’s what they were voted in to do. Blocking No Deal is their clear duty to their constituents as there is a huge risk of disruption to basic standards of living if we leave without a deal. You may not like it, but they are doing their job. How can you legitimately claim that, when in 2019 alone we have MPs switching parties, changing allegiance, being expelled from their parties, and even a case of an MP being removed from office after a constituency petition? You have areas where the public clearly voted to leave, but the elected MP isn’t just trying to stop no deal, but openly prevent Brexit because they are a remainer and because their loyalty lies primarily with their party, not the people they represent. That is not democratic. Parliament acts for the good of the whole country. Individual MPs are the mouthpiece for issues affecting their constituents, and their constituents' views, but their duty is to direct the development and running of the country as a whole, not purely the tiny microcosm that voted them in. What is in the best interests of their constituents and the country is their call, based on the information laid before them. Many of them have clearly come to the obvious conclusion that No Deal is not in the best interests of anyone and have acted to stop it. That is their prerogative, that is their job and their duty, and it is the very heart of the function of Parliament. Many MPs have shown that their loyalty doesn't, in fact, lie with their party but with their duty. That is to be applauded, not criticised.
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Post by Nicholas on Sept 25, 2019 21:17:52 GMT
Johnson’s performance today is one of the most chilling political things I’ve ever seen.
Having said the prorogation was not about Brexit, he rambles on for fifteen useless minutes about how the Supreme Court etc are trying to thwart Brexit – in short, proving them right. At the VERY LEAST, he turns his political mistake (i.e. BREAKING THE LAW) into a partisan issue.
Yes, he would never have said sorry. However, he could have been moderate. That's the tone he needed to take - understanding of the law, appreciative of his country. He was contemptuous of the law and contemptuous of our country.
At his final flourish, the party behind him ovates. He’s had to reconvene parliament as he illegally lied to his queen and country, and not one person behind him feels that reflects badly on their party.
His language has always been tasteless – the use of the word ‘surrender’ is the most infantile way to ape Churchill, taking the context of war against Nazis and using it against careful economic planning by the Lib Dems – so in today's context it’s particularly us-and-them, again making our constitution and OUR LAW a partisan Brexit issue.
And then, “Humbug”. To THAT question. To THAT issue. To THAT family.
Johnson is a danger to the country. How do you think people around the world – not just in Europe, but in future trading partners – see the Tories’ apathy to criminal use of parliament and prorogation? How should we see this chilling response to death threats to our elected officials, let alone tacit encouragement thereof through 'die in a ditch' rhetoric? Why do we let him use the language of war to refer to our own referendum, to speak AGAINST our own hard-working principled elected officials? How can we stop him from doing that to the Conservative Party, to our government?
The worst factor is that his party is as unrepentant. They heard the ruling. They have to stand with their leader or their country. In choosing their leader they’ve turned their backs on you and me. And the leader is a criminal and a thug.
This is one of the scariest days in UK politics.
However, never not time for cheap smut, eh, so...
So much of this was Theresa May’s fault....didn’t try to build consensus after the vote, just blundered along trying to keep everyone in the dark. And then made a pig’s ear of the job. Better than what Cameron did with the pig.
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Post by Deleted on Sept 25, 2019 21:22:33 GMT
Look, you are a very long way from grass roots activism, whether it's Blue or Red. Therefore, you have part of a story. Not party politics, which is partisan in ways that led me to move away from it (for the record, I was a labour party member over thirty years ago, partly around the time of Militant entryism). There is more to grass roots activism than party politics, however. You just can’t hark back to the past to tie people to the future. You lose, you make changes, you do so by seeing what the membership think. That overrides a losing manifesto. If Labour change their position on Brexit, or whatever, to appeal to voters in the next election then so be it. Nicholas - I just finished watching the whole sorry debate on BBC Parliament. At the tail end, after Johnson had refused to stay for points of order on his replies, there were many shellshocked (not too strong a word) MPs explaining how their lives had just been made so much more dangerous by Johnson’s language, his attitude and his airy denial of guilt. Jo Swinson said that today she had to report a threat made about her five year old child. This wasn’t just a dangerous response it was pathologically dangerous.
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Brexit
Sept 25, 2019 22:34:15 GMT
Post by Deleted on Sept 25, 2019 22:34:15 GMT
It's a pity that someone like James Dyson hadn't taken Bercow and the Remainers to court and said they were denying the views of the people in a Referendum. There would have been more indignation than when Sour Sowbury was called a Nazi. A referendum is advisory only, not legally binding. And in any event the result was the views of some people in a wafer thin majority, and it didn't give any mandate for a No Deal Brexit, so stop conflating multiple different things and spreading inaccuracies. Parliament is doing its job,simple as that. The referendum was won by a clear 3.78% and nearly 1.27 million votes so that wasn't wafer thin. Wafer thin was something like the 2000 US Presidential Election. I don't particularly want a No Deal Brexit, that isn't good for any sides. But it annoys me when I see people who are sitting in Parliament having been elected for another party than what they currently represent helping to scupper things. I really hope than when they do the new Queen's Speech it says that any MP who switches parties has to face a by-election within 3 months. I'm sure both Tories and Labour who have lost a number of MPs would support it. John Bercow too whilst saying he is upholding Parliamentary has certainly made his views on subjects clear in a way that I never heard previously high regarded speakers such as Bernard Weatherill or Betty Boothroyd do when they held the position.
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Post by d'James on Sept 26, 2019 0:56:18 GMT
It's a pity that someone like James Dyson hadn't taken Bercow and the Remainers to court and said they were denying the views of the people in a Referendum. There would have been more indignation than when Sour Sowbury was called a Nazi. I don’t think name calling is appropriate.
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Brexit
Sept 26, 2019 4:50:44 GMT
Post by londonpostie on Sept 26, 2019 4:50:44 GMT
Look, you are a very long way from grass roots activism, whether it's Blue or Red. Therefore, you have part of a story. There is more to grass roots activism than party politics, however. The point is you didn't understand the importance to the membership, including the constituency delegates, of manifesto pledges. ergo:
This is out of touch with key events.
Ditto anyone else talking about how a constituency elects an MP to do what they think 'is best for everyone' - like democracy is still some kind of Downton Abbey cap-doffing exercise: If they don't heed their local party, they may well be trigger balloted.
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Brexit
Sept 26, 2019 8:06:46 GMT
Post by Deleted on Sept 26, 2019 8:06:46 GMT
There is more to grass roots activism than party politics, however. The point is you didn't understand the importance to the membership, including the constituency delegates, of manifesto pledges. ergo:
This is out of touch with key events.
Ditto anyone else talking about how a constituency elects an MP to do what they think 'is best for everyone' - like democracy is still some kind of Downton Abbey cap-doffing exercise: If they don't heed their local party, they may well be trigger balloted.
The power invested in members of a political party is something that I find worrying. It puts power in the hands of few (see the Conservative leadership vote, complete with UKIP entryists) and, as we have seen, has driven both main parties out to their extremes. I understand it, and how it can be used, I dislike it intensely. Even with that, manifestos only hold sway if ideas remain unaffected by events and the need to appeal to voters, to stick to them is inflexible dogma.
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1,972 posts
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Post by sf on Sept 26, 2019 8:43:01 GMT
His language has always been tasteless – the use of the word ‘surrender’ is the most infantile way to ape Churchill, taking the context of war against Nazis and using it against careful economic planning by the Lib Dems – so in today's context it’s particularly us-and-them, again making our constitution and OUR LAW a partisan Brexit issue.
And then, “Humbug”. To THAT question. To THAT issue. To THAT family.
Johnson is a danger to the country. How do you think people around the world – not just in Europe, but in future trading partners – see the Tories’ apathy to criminal use of parliament and prorogation? How should we see this chilling response to death threats to our elected officials, let alone tacit encouragement thereof through 'die in a ditch' rhetoric? Why do we let him use the language of war to refer to our own referendum, to speak AGAINST our own hard-working principled elected officials? How can we stop him from doing that to the Conservative Party, to our government?
The worst factor is that his party is as unrepentant. They heard the ruling. They have to stand with their leader or their country. In choosing their leader they’ve turned their backs on you and me. And the leader is a criminal and a thug.
This is one of the scariest days in UK politics. Absolutely. The language he used last night was absolutely sickening (and for the sake of my sanity I'm very glad I wasn't watching it live). My expectations of him, God knows, are rock bottom, and he managed to stoop even lower than I thought possible, and his party cheered him on. There's a gaping moral vacuum where the Tory benches used to be.
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Brexit
Sept 26, 2019 9:16:42 GMT
Post by Deleted on Sept 26, 2019 9:16:42 GMT
I agree that bringing Jo Cox into it was totally wrong. Tracy Brabin spoke with dignity and composure when she disagreed with it. The other female Labour MP was rather hysterical and I must admit that I had never even heard of her before let alone as a strong voice in the Brexit debate.
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Post by karloscar on Sept 26, 2019 11:07:24 GMT
Margaret Atwood is absolutely right in her analysis of our predicament. Follow the money. Who benefits from prolonged chaos and uncertainty? People backing the PM who are rich and unscrupulous enough to speculate on the worst possible outcomes. The care nothing for what happens to our economy or democracy as long as they make money out of other people's misery. Anyone stupid enough to think Brexit will be good for the country really needs to examine who will really be better off. Only the extremely wealthy.
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1,863 posts
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Post by NeilVHughes on Sept 26, 2019 13:03:21 GMT
As in the furore over the language in Parliament last night we need to self moderate.
Over half of the population of the UK voted to leave who cannot all be considered stupid, racist and uneducated and therefore there is validity in the position of wanting to leave the EU.
I am a remainer at heart and would be amenable to a Deal somewhere between Norway+ and Canada+ which requires compromise on all sides.
We are being dictated to/shouted at by the fringe 10% on the extreme Leave/Remain spectrum and most of us who are and in the middle 80% need to come together somehow or at least be able to consider a counter position with respect.
I am surprised with the revulsion the Labour position is being met with, it is trying to build bridges, agree a Norway+ / Canada+ Deal with the EU, get agreement in Parliament and then give a clear description of the pluses and minuses of Remain / Leave against the defined Deal in a referendum and allow the public to decide on facts.
I do not find this complicated but appear to be in a minority, maybe in the toxic political world we have created extremism is what we look for in our Leaders and find the shift to ‘extremism’ on Brexit by the Lib Dems uncomfortable which is pushing me me towards supporting Labour despite a lot of their policies becoming too Left leaning for me to be comfortable with, even though some form of re-distribution of wealth is long overdue.
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573 posts
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Brexit
Sept 26, 2019 14:24:22 GMT
Post by Dave25 on Sept 26, 2019 14:24:22 GMT
I have a question about the situation.
Boris Johnson is still threatening with a no-deal Brexit. In the meantime, he is hoping for a deal and trying to convince people that a general election should take place right now.
Now, the new bill says that Johnson is required to request a three-month Brexit delay by 19 October. So isn't a no-deal on October 31st per definition off the table?
Because there are only 2 scenarios in which Mr Johnson would not have to request an extension: 1. MPs approve a Brexit deal in another meaningful vote (which means deal instead of no deal) 2. MPs vote in favour of leaving the EU without a deal (which will not happen) In either of these scenarios, Mr Benn's law would not force any Brexit extension to be requested.
The only other option would be ignoring the law again, which would make Johnson a repeat offender. Which would have legal consequences and he would definitely not be eligible anymore in new elections.
So basically, why is the opposition still being held hostage with this "no-deal threat"? Because it seems to me that Johnson doesn't have that power anymore.
If they accept to be held hostage by this false threat, and there are no consequences at all implemented after him breaking the law last week, he might ask for the extension (as the bill says), and then have new elections and win and then push through whatever he wants the next month/after October 31st anyway.
My point is that the opposition is in power now. There is no thinkable scenario for a no-deal Brexit on October 31st, is there? If there is, can someone explain it to me? I am trying to understand why the opposition is still so worried about a no-deal on October 31st while that is already impossible, and says it wants elections after that date, but the real danger lies in having elections after that date. There should be no elections before Brexit is off the table, because opposition parties (and remain voters) are while in fact probably in the majority now, scattered. In my opinion that is wrong and dangerous to mix this debacle with general elections. Because if Johnson walks that route, he may be in the position to crash out with no-deal in January. In my opinion MP's must reject every deal, if there is no option for remain involved. Because otherwise it might end up with no-deal in january and we must be protected from that.
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1,863 posts
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Post by NeilVHughes on Sept 26, 2019 14:51:52 GMT
At the moment the Benn Act is in place to make leaving with No-Deal unlawful within the constraints of the Act.
If we have a vote of no-confidence and Parliament is prorogued for a General Election there is no recourse only through the Courts and this could take time.
The date of the General Election is the prerogative of the sitting Government if no other Government can be agreed.
We have a Prime Minister who knowingly misleads and the feeling in Parliament is that he will say one date and once Parliament dissolved change it to a date after the 31st Oct.
There is no Prime Minister in place as we are in the process of voting in a new Government on the 19th Oct, therefore no Prime Minister in place to request an extension as explicitly stated in the Act cannot be fulfilled.
We will fall back to the original Act of extension which means that on the 31st Oct we will leave without a Deal as we have agreed in law to leave on the 31st.
This why there is caution in calling a General Election, there has been talk today of a Government of Unity to cover the next 6 weeks removing Johnson, this is still being considered so at the moment the only thing to do is keep Parliament in session until there is an agreed extension, while Parliament sits further Bills/Acts can be introduced or the Benn Act amended if a loop-hole is found to further tighten the straight jacket around Johnson. (this is why Parliament was prorogued unlawfully as no Parliament no chance of meddling Acts)
Obviously the corollary is why Johnson is desperate for a General Election and why we have the strong language to force a vote of no confidence, at the moment the Opposition Parties are holding firm and the impact on Johnson is obvious as he crumbles before us, one caveat is we need to tread carefully as a caged Prime Minister is potentially a dangerous thing and he will likely become even more extreme to force a reaction as it is his only available course of action.
Once a General Election is called and the Conservatives win they will implement the Brexit Strategy of their Manifesto and as you say we could still leave without a Deal.
Limping along for another 3 years with a dysfunctional Parliament is Political suicide for all Parties therefore all that can be done is delay until after the 31st Oct with an extension in place, have a General Election, it will be up to us to read the manifestos and elect a Government that meets our position.
The likelihood is that we will have a hung Parliament and my opinion is that we need another referendum prior to a General Election, Deal ratified in Parliament put to the people against remain and move on, if we cannot define what Leave means even though we voted for it why do we expect our elected representatives to know.
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573 posts
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Brexit
Sept 26, 2019 15:03:02 GMT
Post by Dave25 on Sept 26, 2019 15:03:02 GMT
Thanks, Yes, I understand that. My fear is just that a general election after the October 31st is just as dangerous. Maybe even more.
Hopefully new bills/acts will be introduced indeed. A Government of unity for the next 6 weeks sounds interesting too.
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Post by NeilVHughes on Sept 26, 2019 15:15:14 GMT
Dave25 updated my original post as I realised I hadn’t covered this point.
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Post by HereForTheatre on Sept 26, 2019 15:33:35 GMT
The government is being stopped calling a General Election, stopped honouring the referendum result, stopped being able to have a queens speech and now even stopped having their party conference when the other major parties have had theirs, yet it's the government being called undemocratic because they tried to prorogue parliament? They are the only one standing up for it. And don't get me started on the lib dems, who have the word democrat in their name yet now have a policy to completely ignore a democratic vote.
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Brexit
Sept 26, 2019 15:51:17 GMT
Post by duncan on Sept 26, 2019 15:51:17 GMT
I see that the people behind the Shakespeare's Rose Theatre are blaming Brexit for the liquidation of the company - who'd have thought it would be Brexit instead of terrible management and a location that people only wanted to visit once that would do for them.
For shame Boris, for shame.
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754 posts
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Post by Latecomer on Sept 26, 2019 16:25:53 GMT
The government is being stopped calling a General Election, stopped honouring the referendum result, stopped being able to have a queens speech and now even stopped having their party conference when the other major parties have had theirs, yet it's the government being called undemocratic because they tried to prorogue parliament? They are the only one standing up for it. And don't get me started on the lib dems, who have the word democrat in their name yet now have a policy to completely ignore a democratic vote. They could have had an election.....but no one trusted Johnson not to crash us out They could have had a Brexit deal.....if they had compromised with Labour They can still prorogue for 3/4 days for a Queens Speech The Labour party offered to only hold uncontentious business on their conference days but this was turned down by Conservatives.
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Brexit
Sept 26, 2019 16:27:59 GMT
via mobile
Post by Deleted on Sept 26, 2019 16:27:59 GMT
I see that the people behind the Shakespeare's Rose Theatre are blaming Brexit for the liquidation of the company - who'd have thought it would be Brexit instead of terrible management and a location that people only wanted to visit once that would do for them. For shame Boris, for shame. I think whatever our views on brexit most of us would agree with you on this one!
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1,863 posts
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Post by NeilVHughes on Sept 26, 2019 16:33:45 GMT
@andyh , this is my take
Prorogation - Undemocratic, as per the Supreme Court judgement, as undemocratic as you can get and what ignited my displeasure.
No General Election - Democratic, Tory introduce Fixed Term Act, all Parties complying, when introduced it was inconceivable that the Government would be begging for an Election
Referendum Result - Particularly the No-Deal scenario - Democratic, All Opposition Parties specifically ruled out supporting No-Deal in their 2017 Manifestos, thereby carrying out their Democratic mandate.
Recess - Democratic, Voted in Parliament, this one is being petty should have been a compromise in 2 days as Labour lost 1 Day this week.
My view on the Lib Dem position is stated elsewhere.
@andyh these are the discussions we need to have as your view is as valid as mine and we need to explain how we come by these views more to better understand each other’s point of view.
The antagonistic my way (No-Deal) or no way of Johnson is a strategic disaster, in life I have always found it is better to be friendly when negotiating, if I have found myself double booked I rarely i.e. never go in saying you must change the date of my booking, I am usually so friendly and humble that they usually comply even if they don’t have to.
I hope despite the animosity the interest in Politics will make us more engaged as I have become going forward as we have record numbers watching Parliament live but I doubt it. As in all life everything is in the details and I will be taking more interest in Party Manifestos going forward.
Now everyone can be happy as I will stop posting my views as off the watch an encore screening of One Man, Two Guvnors at the cinema.
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Post by theatreian on Sept 26, 2019 16:43:24 GMT
I cannot see how this is ever going to be resolved as there seems to be so much vitriol and with the 50/50 split with yes or no to Brexit I cannot see how this country will ever be the same again. Depressing I know but this has been a real game changer for politics and how this country is seen by the world.
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952 posts
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Brexit
Sept 26, 2019 17:14:16 GMT
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Post by vdcni on Sept 26, 2019 17:14:16 GMT
The opposition parties are saying that they are quite happy to have election as long as the government have requested an extension from the EU so we don't leave without a deal.
They're not blocking an election just setting a condition.
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1,863 posts
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Brexit
Sept 26, 2019 17:24:53 GMT
via mobile
Post by NeilVHughes on Sept 26, 2019 17:24:53 GMT
@theatremonkey , technically correct, the Conservatives could have quite easily reneged on it as the Lib Dem’s were as the minor partner and it was all but name a Tory Government.
Will accept this amendment to my previous post, there I have now started using Parliamentary language, there is no hope for me.
Honestly I am on my way to the Cinema.
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