|
Brexit
Oct 10, 2019 6:39:50 GMT
Post by londonpostie on Oct 10, 2019 6:39:50 GMT
I complained a while ago that the BBC was using unattributed quotes as headlines. This is misleading as it “reads” on first glance as a factual statement...it is only when you click on the headline that you see who has made the quote.
"Industry insiders" Industry experts" "senior industry figure" - it's milk and cows, it's not Edward Snowden.
There is a name near the bottom - but talking about another subject. The piece is long and smartly constructed propaganda. I honestly think Brexit will be the end of the BBC as we know it.
|
|
5,707 posts
|
Brexit
Oct 10, 2019 15:44:38 GMT
Post by lynette on Oct 10, 2019 15:44:38 GMT
They mean farmers. Fair enough. Why not say so?
|
|
5,062 posts
|
Brexit
Oct 10, 2019 16:55:57 GMT
Post by Phantom of London on Oct 10, 2019 16:55:57 GMT
Just to continue to lower the tone of the discussion and to bring some comfort to Neil, I expect there will be some enterprising entrepreneurs who import Japanese toilets for our delight. So we can buy them and forget about Andrex puppies...so to speak. Shouldn’t this one be on the Toilet Jinx thread?
|
|
5,707 posts
|
Post by lynette on Oct 10, 2019 18:01:38 GMT
Just to continue to lower the tone of the discussion and to bring some comfort to Neil, I expect there will be some enterprising entrepreneurs who import Japanese toilets for our delight. So we can buy them and forget about Andrex puppies...so to speak. Shouldn’t this one be on the Toilet Jinx thread? I was referring to the problem of shortages. And referencing imports. Very Brexit.
|
|
|
Brexit
Oct 10, 2019 21:24:52 GMT
via mobile
Post by ronnette on Oct 10, 2019 21:24:52 GMT
I’m calling it. General Election 26th November.
|
|
311 posts
|
Post by olliebean on Oct 10, 2019 22:56:12 GMT
I’m calling it. General Election 26th November. 2nd December is being talked about, apparently.
|
|
2,340 posts
|
Brexit
Oct 12, 2019 7:54:20 GMT
Post by theglenbucklaird on Oct 12, 2019 7:54:20 GMT
We are most probably in a hiatus until the 19th, full of sound and fury signifying nothing The Opposition are waiting to play their Joker which they may have to if they want to remove any doubt of a No-Deal Brexit due to the mixed messages from Johnson, will comply with the Benn-Act and still leave on the 31st. My gut feeling is that a vote of no confidence will take place on the 21st once the Johnson strategy is in motion/understood and whether an extension or deal has been tabled. On an election all is quiet, the numbers indicate no Party will have a majority and Johnson really needed one before, or to have left the EU by the 31st, the election will definitely not happen and leaving unlikely, therefore the Conservatives wooed by the Brexit Party are unlikely to return to the fold believing their best bet is to vote with the Brexit Party therefore reducing the Conservative chance of a majority. The unknown is how the Labour and Lib Dem’s get on, If Labour become a Leave Party they could get a majority, if not on their own, in a coalition with the SNP / Plaid and Greens and may chance an election. The likelihood once we get past the 31st is neither Labour and the Conservatives would want an election as the Brexit Party would weaken the Conservatives chances of a majority and the Lib Dem’s weaken Labours. Ironically the best way forward for the Conservatives if we haven’t left on the 31st is a referendum, how the Conservatives could engineer one would be a masterclass in spin and they will likely have to influence Labour or the Lib Dems to trigger one. The end game on Brexit is still up in the air and the only thing we know for sure is, O time! thou must untangle this, not I; It is too hard a knot for me to untie! Are you a liberal democrat Neil? If Boris does pull a Brexit deal out of the fire does that make the Lib Dems an electoral irrelevance?
|
|
1,863 posts
|
Brexit
Oct 12, 2019 9:02:51 GMT
Post by NeilVHughes on Oct 12, 2019 9:02:51 GMT
theglenbucklaird , the LibDems have currently positioned themselves as a one issue Party with the policy to sweep up as many Labour and Conservative remain voters as possible. If Johnson gets a Deal which is ratified in Parliament the issue becomes irrelevant, the Labour & Conservative remain voters will likely return to their historical voting patterns. (Similarly for Labour & Conservative leavers in The Brexit Party) The Deal if it transpires is almost catastrophic from a Lib Dem perspective, they will ease back into their core voters and remain the fringe Party they have become, apart from Brexit we know nothing about their current Policies and I believe they are positioning themselves as a ‘Tory Lite’ Party, the issue here is that Johnson apart from Brexit is really a ‘liberal’ at heart and his centrist policies (almost left domestically) will also impact their electability. If Brexit is ‘resolved’ we are likely to return to a Two Party system and a lot will depend on how we feel or have been impacted by Austerity. If the rumours of Northern Ireland remaining in the Customs Union renamed a ‘Custom Partnership’ (for the literally challenged) the very reason Johnson resigned as May was initially proposing this before the Backstop was introduced will make the 19th a very interesting day of spin, smoke & mirrors and bluff in Parliament. The Lib Dem’s will have to vote against and will have to rely on the ERG and DUP siding with them. Labours position will depend on workers rights and as Johnson if the rumours are true has already ceded on the Customs Union in Northern Ireland, his need (desperation) for a Deal will likely lead to him ceding to Labour’s demands on workers rights and a few other caveats to get it through Parliament.
|
|
|
Brexit
Oct 12, 2019 9:46:13 GMT
Post by londonpostie on Oct 12, 2019 9:46:13 GMT
Not only reverting to ye olde two-horse/red-blue dynamic, but the rationale for Johnson's Premiership immediately begins to erode.
By the end of the next GE campaign, Johnson might well look more of a socialist than Blair ever did. He'll certainly have to throw money at state education and NHS in order to counter Labour policy. Actual redistribution? Very doubtful, imo.
|
|
|
Brexit
Oct 12, 2019 16:49:49 GMT
Post by Deleted on Oct 12, 2019 16:49:49 GMT
I've joked about the Lib Dems being a two or three Taxi party but they did get between 16.8 and 23% of the vote at UK Elections between 1992 and 2010 so they still have a large number of people out there who voted for them. Okay the SNP mopped up a lot of their Scottish seats and could do so again but surely a fairly well run party like them should be able to recover from the under 8% of the vote they got at the last two elections. A solid showing of 10 to 12% should be their minimum target.
If Boris does get a deal to put to Parliament and they reject it then would his hand be stronger or weaker to push for a no deal if there is some Privy Council instrument he can use to defy this. Could we see him holed up in Parliament actively defying the Supreme Court as what is said under Parliamentary Privilege cannot be held in contempt of court. We'll also have John Bercow in his last few days as speaker so he could well go as rogue as he can.
On a lighter note we have the State Opening on Monday so there should be a few Dennis Skinner one liners.
|
|
|
Brexit
Oct 12, 2019 18:56:58 GMT
Post by Deleted on Oct 12, 2019 18:56:58 GMT
The old class based party split is pretty much on its last legs. What is taking its place is the Brexit style split along culture lines, nationalists vs internationalists. Here, the Conservatives and Brexit Party are fishing in the nationalist (read English nationalist)* pool but Labour is split. The, for want of a better word, metropolitan labour vote is hurt by the Lexiter part and the (often Northern) Lexiter part cannot stomach the metropolitan part. Lib Dems are clear, they are internationalist and pro EU. Labour? Caught in two minds and refusing to back either.
Post Brexit or Notbrexit that split will still be the main one. Getting in first to scoop the internationalist vote was easier for Lib Dems as they were positioned there already and it is a much more coherent identity than the previous one (I think many never really got the liberalism vs statism split). It could get even worse for Labour if Brexit happens with Labour MPs helping it across the line, surely they won’t make that mistake? An election soon would see Lib Dems getting between 15 and 20% of the vote, after such a Brexit that could well be even higher.
*A group that I really take against are those who claim to be a English rather than British, Scratch the surface and it divides inexorably; north vs south, city vs town vs country, never pure enough unless there is further division between ‘us’ and ‘them’.
|
|
|
Brexit
Oct 14, 2019 12:38:12 GMT
Post by Deleted on Oct 14, 2019 12:38:12 GMT
Listening to the Queen's Speech and the talk of a 2nd referendum what would there be in place for Parliament to accept the result of the 2nd referendum any more than the first one. Lets say it was 50.1% to 49.9% either way, would either side really respect this?
|
|
|
Brexit
Oct 14, 2019 13:23:02 GMT
Post by londonpostie on Oct 14, 2019 13:23:02 GMT
I'd imagine it must be difficult for the referendum and manifesto majorities to not roll around on the floor at the political class arguing about voter ID / 'voter suppression'. Apparently it's something those nasty Republicans in the United States do and we wouldn't want it here. Not seen a hint of irony yet from middle-class mainstream media.
|
|
1,863 posts
|
Brexit
Oct 14, 2019 13:23:53 GMT
Post by NeilVHughes on Oct 14, 2019 13:23:53 GMT
The Deal would have to be ratified in Parliament prior to the referendum. Any Deal would need to be part of the Act introduced to set up the referendum along with the legal framework to implement the result of the referendum with minimal or no Parliamentary process.
There is talk that an amendment would be made to the Bill to introduce Johnson’s Deal to require a confirmatory referendum but it seems unlikely at the moment any Deal instigated by Johnson would even reach enough consensus to pass with or without an amendment.
If this is not in place, as you say @brexiteer the outcome could be dismissed and the current situation remains.
This again leaves the question of how to get a Deal through Parliament:
If we go referendum prior to a General Election, the only realistic way to achieve this is through a ‘Government of National Unity’ (GNU) which negotiates a Deal that involves remaining in the Customs Union to circumvent the Irish border issue and the protection of workers rights for the left leaning Parties.
There could be a majority for this with a coalition of Labour, SNP, Lib Dem’s and soft Tory Brexiteers, the sticking point is that there is no agreement on the Leadership of the GNU, and the GNU would have to remain in place for 3-6 months to allow enough time for the referendum to take place during which it’s unity could be tested by ‘events’.
If we go General Election first and then a referendum/leave it relies on one Party getting a majority which is unlikely as still being part of the EU the Brexit votes will be split between the Conservatives and the Brexit Party and the Remain votes split between Labour and the Lib Dem’s.
|
|
|
Brexit
Oct 14, 2019 14:17:24 GMT
Post by Deleted on Oct 14, 2019 14:17:24 GMT
Do those wanting a 2nd referendum want it to be on any negotiated deal or just to decide whether we leave or remain?
If we had a referendum with a GNU and then there was a pro Brexit shift at the next election then we could be back to square one again?
The SNP woulds only support a GNU if they got a clear commitment to be allowed to have a 2nd Independence Referendum and then that could be nullified if the Tories got back into power.
We could even see Boris effectively maneuvering himself and the Tories into opposition but that could be a dangerous move as the SNP, Plaid could prop up a Corbyn lead government as you need a certain number of MPS to trigger a general election. Throw in the 35 odd independents who would effectively hold the balance of power.
Fun times ahead!
|
|
2,340 posts
|
Brexit
Oct 14, 2019 15:42:32 GMT
Post by theglenbucklaird on Oct 14, 2019 15:42:32 GMT
Do those wanting a 2nd referendum want it to be on any negotiated deal or just to decide whether we leave or remain? If we had a referendum with a GNU and then there was a pro Brexit shift at the next election then we could be back to square one again? The SNP woulds only support a GNU if they got a clear commitment to be allowed to have a 2nd Independence Referendum and then that could be nullified if the Tories got back into power. We could even see Boris effectively maneuvering himself and the Tories into opposition but that could be a dangerous move as the SNP, Plaid could prop up a Corbyn lead government as you need a certain number of MPS to trigger a general election. Throw in the 35 odd independents who would effectively hold the balance of power.Fun times ahead! Are you sure?
|
|
2,340 posts
|
Brexit
Oct 14, 2019 15:46:00 GMT
Post by theglenbucklaird on Oct 14, 2019 15:46:00 GMT
Listening to the Queen's Speech and the talk of a 2nd referendum what would there be in place for Parliament to accept the result of the 2nd referendum any more than the first one. Lets say it was 50.1% to 49.9% either way, would either side really respect this? Not in favour of second referendum either although it may be needed. But the second referendum would be a negotiated deal as opposed to remaining. You can see the difference between that and the first referendum. I personally think that is the programme David Cameron should have set out, but he didn't and we were left with the last three and a half years as they were.
|
|
|
Brexit
Oct 14, 2019 18:10:53 GMT
Post by Deleted on Oct 14, 2019 18:10:53 GMT
I'd imagine it must be difficult for the referendum and manifesto majorities to not roll around on the floor at the political class arguing about voter ID / 'voter suppression'. Apparently it's something those nasty Republicans in the United States do and we wouldn't want it here. Not seen a hint of irony yet from middle-class mainstream media. Politicians are not a ‘class’ anymore. Since the seventies the barriers are down, so really they are just ‘people very interested in politics’. Not the sort of phrase that populists can weaponise in their divisive rhetoric when you put it like that. The irony, of course, is that this demoted ‘old boy network’ is maybe ever more concentrated in the ranks of those railing against current politicians. They can’t stand those without their class privilege daring to ‘take their jobs’, something indicative of the rank hypocrisy that exists among so called populists like Farage. I suppose they haven’t got as far as making ‘global’ or ‘cultural elites’, and all of the dark history of those sort of terms, as personifying their main enemy I give them a year or two before they plumb those depths. (on your main point, the last referendum was shoddily organised in the way it disallowed various people from voting, 700,000 British citizens alone, it is claimed.)
|
|
|
Post by Deleted on Oct 14, 2019 18:23:41 GMT
Listening to the Queen's Speech and the talk of a 2nd referendum what would there be in place for Parliament to accept the result of the 2nd referendum any more than the first one. Lets say it was 50.1% to 49.9% either way, would either side really respect this? Not in favour of second referendum either although it may be needed. But the second referendum would be a negotiated deal as opposed to remaining. You can see the difference between that and the first referendum. I personally think that is the programme David Cameron should have set out, but he didn't and we were left with the last three and a half years as they were. The reasoning, I believe, is that we had a referendum with a decision ‘in principle’ and that, to complete the democratic response, there should be a referendum on the deal reached ‘in practice’. This makes sense, to me, and the logic is compelling. It also clarifies the mess created by the first referendum and means that, as it is a vote on something that is factual rather than hypothetical, it would be complete in a way that the first one clearly wasn’t.
|
|
5,707 posts
|
Post by lynette on Oct 14, 2019 21:23:35 GMT
What about wanting to leave but not on the ‘deal’ presented? I’m just saying that a second Ref should have exactly the same q on it as the first. We kinda know what ‘leave ‘ means now don’t we?
|
|
|
Post by londonpostie on Oct 14, 2019 22:18:56 GMT
By what margin will defeat mean victory next time; 44%? 46%? 48% ?
|
|
|
Brexit
Oct 15, 2019 14:59:51 GMT
Post by Deleted on Oct 15, 2019 14:59:51 GMT
I just wondering how much maneuvering there is going on behind the scenes. I've heard talk that some of the Tories who lost the whip may be prepared to vote through an agreed deal. No doubt this would mean the whip is returned. Also those stepping down might be dangled a peerage or a Quango job etc, I know this is immoral but things like this do go on and if MPs who are younger look likely to lose their seat then they do have to look at income streams etc.
Will Labour look to try and get some of their defectors back onside too or will the traditional Tory Right and Labour Left look to shape their parties' futures.
I could see there being support from both major parties to get a deal through as if one is done it negates Mr Farage who could well take major votes from both parties. Boris wants Brexit and I think JC can live with it and would want to then try and pitch his policies to an electorate.
A deal and an election would that be too much to hope for?
|
|
1,863 posts
|
Brexit
Oct 15, 2019 15:57:39 GMT
Post by NeilVHughes on Oct 15, 2019 15:57:39 GMT
We are now in the Schrödinger's Brexit phase, all options are open and only when we open the box tomorrow we will know it’s true state.
At the moment the rumours are that Johnson is caving in on all the EU sticking points to get a Deal and avoid an extension request, willing to leave Northern Ireland in the Customs Union with a border in the Irish Sea until a solution is found for the Border issue (in reality forever) and even potentially agreeing to a level playing field leaving the UK remaining in the single market by proxy with all the regulatory and working rights this entails.
This is a Deal that could get through Parliament as it is close to what Labour required of a Deal but a complete capitulation and a softer Brexit then the May Deal and will enrage both the Brexiteer Tories and DUP.
The Benn-Act could ironically set up the soft Brexit that Corbyn has always really wished for.
Things are moving so fast that on posting this will most likely be complete bull, all states remain in play and cannot believe even Johnson would cave in that much and I’m sure some in Parliament can be ‘bought’ to get the numbers.
|
|
|
Brexit
Oct 15, 2019 17:17:12 GMT
Post by londonpostie on Oct 15, 2019 17:17:12 GMT
Relieved so many football fans from a Empire of Virtue member state didn't have to endure for a minute longer those ignorant, bigoted, In-ger-lan supporters last night.
|
|
2,340 posts
|
Brexit
Oct 15, 2019 17:39:40 GMT
Post by theglenbucklaird on Oct 15, 2019 17:39:40 GMT
Not in favour of second referendum either although it may be needed. But the second referendum would be a negotiated deal as opposed to remaining. You can see the difference between that and the first referendum. I personally think that is the programme David Cameron should have set out, but he didn't and we were left with the last three and a half years as they were. The reasoning, I believe, is that we had a referendum with a decision ‘in principle’ and that, to complete the democratic response, there should be a referendum on the deal reached ‘in practice’. This makes sense, to me, and the logic is compelling. It also clarifies the mess created by the first referendum and means that, as it is a vote on something that is factual rather than hypothetical, it would be complete in a way that the first one clearly wasn’t. Vote Labour then
|
|