We need to take back control...Zhivago wrote:So JRM has been saying today that if parliament tries to block no deal, May should cancel Parliament...
Sovereignty of parliament...
Something something throwback
We need to take back control...Zhivago wrote:So JRM has been saying today that if parliament tries to block no deal, May should cancel Parliament...
James Dyson - he may not have invented it, but he's certainly perfected the moral vacuum!twitchy wrote:The mental gymnastics involved in brexit supporters defending dyson moving to singapore is some thing to behold. At what point will the penny drop? It's just getting embarrassing now.
Is he the one who looks like a fat Penfold?Mellsblue wrote:To be fair to Mark Francois he has brought a new idea to the party.
Ha, yes it is!! Brilliant comparison. Given his outburst on TV, I’d imagine Penfold will not be happy with the comparison.Digby wrote:Is he the one who looks like a fat Penfold?Mellsblue wrote:To be fair to Mark Francois he has brought a new idea to the party.
It’s a matter for the people of Yorkshire to come to terms with. I really couldn’t care less one way or the other. If there is a significant proportion of the people of Yorkshire who feel that way, then they can deal with it in the way they see fit.Zhivago wrote:Typical English arrogance, belittling the Scottish nation by comparing them to Yorkshire. Not so different to Putin saying that Ukraine isn't a real country.Mellsblue wrote:Independence for Yorkshire, cos we have to suck up what everyone else decides. Also, independence for the south-east as they subsidise everybody else. Finally, independence for every region because they either have to suck up decisions made by everyone else - whilst actually getting most of what they want - or subsidise everyone else. It’ll be the biggly-est, most stable genius independence policy ever.Stones of granite wrote: You are conflating separate issues. At its most basic, the principal issue is one of national sovereignty. The UK is withdrawing from the EU simply by sticking an article 50 notice in and leaving. Scotland cannot withdraw from the UK by giving notice to the Act of Union. Once this basic issue is resolved, the other things like who Scotland enters a trade partnership with, or which economic/political unions it joins/leaves can be discussed and voted on by the Scottish people. In the meantime Scots just have to suck it up and do what the English decide.
I feel bad now, for Penfold, I can't imagine anyone feeling bad for FrancoisMellsblue wrote:Ha, yes it is!! Brilliant comparison. Given his outburst on TV, I’d imagine Penfold will not be happy with the comparison.Digby wrote:Is he the one who looks like a fat Penfold?Mellsblue wrote:To be fair to Mark Francois he has brought a new idea to the party.
The government are still refusing to schedule the required primary legislation for no deal or May's deal and all the statutory instruments required. Whether because they're worried about more defeats or all the amendments they suspect would be attached they're simply not confirming in publicDigby wrote:Still no confirmation article 50 is getting delayed, and as I understand for a while now if today (or for a while) we accepted no deal or voted to accept May's deal we wouldn't have time for parliament to vote all the necessary legislation anyway. So either they might as well admit we have to change the time remaining or we have to accept parliament would have to vote on hundreds of items without ever looking at them and certainly without debate or amendment
Maybe they'd get it done with vast use of the sunset clause? But given the process would anyone trust the executive wouldn't slip in god only know what?
A] yesPuja wrote: She really is a consummate master of kicking the can down the road and dealing with problems tomorrow, isn't she?
Puja
Sorry, meant to say "pushing things away to be tomorrow's problem". Agreed that she has yet to deal with anything, but at some point, you just have to stand back and admire the mastery of the art of procrastination. I've seen 3rd year uni students less adept.Which Tyler wrote:A] yesPuja wrote: She really is a consummate master of kicking the can down the road and dealing with problems tomorrow, isn't she?
Puja
B] no
She's had plenty of tomorrow's, and is yet to deal with 1 single problem
The thing that amuses is that we still can't say what it is we want. All we've achieved today is a knowledge that Parliament apparently wants "Not That."Mellsblue wrote:That is pretty much what the amendment says, I believe. The EU have constantly asked what it is we want and we’ve finally got something through parliament so we can tell them. Obviously, it would’ve been just a little bit more useful to have done it a couple of months ago but we’re there now. Let’s see what happens in Brussels/Paris/Berlin/Dublin. Their united front over the border is slightly less united than it was a fortnight ago; though, obviously, a cagillion times more united than the school playground at Westminster.
That pretty much sums up Brexit so far, no chance of rainbows and unicorns, no chance even of going back before brexit started to unleash its damage, but don't worry because things could be much worsemorepork wrote:Shit man, try the view from across the pond if you want useless and unreliable.
I’m not arguing that we’ve handled this anything but abysmally, but isn’t this how the EU have conducted their negotiations? Regional parliaments in Belgium demanded changes to CETA, and were accommodated, after negotiators had agreed the treaty. Are we now saying that parliament must just give a tacit nod to any treaty put before them, rather than scrutinise them and ask for changes if they feel it necessary?fivepointer wrote:Ian Dunt has been superb on Brexit from day one.
His whole column is spot on, but this sums up our current plight perfectly for me -
"But there are consequences to this lunacy. Britain is now, it is clear to the world, not a serious country. The way it is behaving is simply not rational. Any reputation it had for credibility or sound judgement is gone. It is a basketcase.
That is humiliating enough. But it has significant medium-term implications too. Firstly, it shows why the backstop was needed in the first place. This country has become an unreliable negotiating partner. It will demand something one day then seek to detonate it the next. The events in the Commons today actually had the ironic effect of reaffirming to the EU the need for the backstop insurance policy.
On a broader level, we are about to go around the world asking for trade deals. But we're seen, by everyone, on the largest stage imaginable, to be fundamentally politically insane. We've gone mad and everyone is looking"
The difference is that Parliament aren't asking for specific changes that can be agreed or disagreed with, but the removal of something vital to the working of the treaty with unspecified "alternative arrangements". We're not negotiating, we're simply refusing and hoping the problem goes away.Mellsblue wrote:I’m not arguing that we’ve handled this anything but abysmally, but isn’t this how the EU have conducted their negotiations? Regional parliaments in Belgium demanded changes to CETA, and were accommodated, after negotiators had agreed the treaty. Are we now saying that parliament must just give a tacit nod to any treaty put before them, rather than scrutinise them and ask for changes if they feel it necessary?fivepointer wrote:Ian Dunt has been superb on Brexit from day one.
His whole column is spot on, but this sums up our current plight perfectly for me -
"But there are consequences to this lunacy. Britain is now, it is clear to the world, not a serious country. The way it is behaving is simply not rational. Any reputation it had for credibility or sound judgement is gone. It is a basketcase.
That is humiliating enough. But it has significant medium-term implications too. Firstly, it shows why the backstop was needed in the first place. This country has become an unreliable negotiating partner. It will demand something one day then seek to detonate it the next. The events in the Commons today actually had the ironic effect of reaffirming to the EU the need for the backstop insurance policy.
On a broader level, we are about to go around the world asking for trade deals. But we're seen, by everyone, on the largest stage imaginable, to be fundamentally politically insane. We've gone mad and everyone is looking"