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Re: Brexit (New).
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Re: Brexit (New).
Another victory for our sovereign Parliament. No one party should dictate the destiny of our United Kingdom.
A government ignoring the will of Parliament loses a vote of confidence. |
Re: Brexit (New).
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One of the strengths of our Parliamentary system is the ability to change things - otherwise once an Act became Statute Law it would be forevermore. |
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And a Parliament ignoring the will of the people, loses even more respect and confidence from the people that put them there on broken manifesto commitments, there is nothing victorious about MPs stealing Executive privileges so they can serve their own self-interests instead of the electorate that put them there. That said - they cannot do any lasting damage for just one day - They are indicative votes only - not binding - Government can ignore them, if they so wish. |
Re: Brexit (New).
What happens next? I think no-deal, Theresa's deal and people's vote are all unlikely outcomes.
Could a softer Withdrawal Agreement be put forward to the EU in place of Theresa May's deal? How long would it take to negotiate this with the EU? Or a General Election in which case all parties will need to firm up their position on Brexit. They will need to put more than "Brexit means Brexit" in their manifestos. |
Re: Brexit (New).
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---------- Post added at 06:28 ---------- Previous post was at 06:23 ---------- They need to agree the Withdrawl Treaty or we leave on April 12th, so we know that Withdrawl Treaty will not pass, ever. So the only other option is a long extension of a year or more, EU elections and probably a GE, a softer Brexit that isn’t really Brexit at all, or quite possibly remain. The betrayal will be complete. |
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1. Politicians have to act in the best interests of their constituents as they see things. They do not simply look at the way their constituents voted in the referendum, however politically expedient in the short term this might be. 2. A majority of the electorate now want to remain. And before anyone jumps in, no it's not bollocks, that's from multiple polls. ;) So, a Parliament that implements Brexit could be seen as ignoring the electorate. Democracies do allow people to change their minds and many don't-knows are now against leaving. Your point of view is a valid one, Pierre. But so is the counter view. |
Re: Brexit (New).
I don't see how a ge would solve this issue unless Pro leave and pro remain parties would be created and not a vote for either Conservative party or Labour.
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Re: Brexit (New).
Given that the Withdrawal Agreement itself keeps us in the customs union pro tem, maybe we should simply ditch the political statement. Then there will not be any argument left about the backstop or customs union because that will be a matter for any future trade agreement with the EU.
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1. Vote against the referendum in the first place 2. Stand for election on a manifesto to honour the result of the referendum 3. Vote against A.50 They should either had voted against 1. Resigned in the face of 2. Or voted against 3. Quote:
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Re: Brexit (New).
Parliament should have refused to vote for Article 50 until the final plan was known and embraced. May should have come to Parliament with a 'desired outcome' for Parliament to approve and then use that at the basis for the following two years.
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Personally I don't even understand how May's deal actually fixes that problem rather than delay it. Neither side wants customs checks at the border. If you don't want customs checks then you need to have tariff-free access across all physical products and regulatory alignment for them too. That's a customs union. If we're not in the Customs Union with Ireland - and therefore the EU - then you need customs checks. There is not yet any technology that can do this seeminglessly no matter what Boris Johnson says. So either: 1) We have a Customs Union - Can't do trade deals for products plus winds up Brexit supports 2) We put up some degree of customs checks on the island of Ireland - annoys seemingly everyone breaking the Good Friday Agreement but especially Irish people in N.Ireland 3) We put a border in the Irish Sea and have a stipulation that N.Ireland lives in a different regulatory environment - DUP won't have it, and could concede N.Ireland will join Ireland eventually If a new election got rid of the DUP in power than I think 3 would have been the option we would have gone for. 2 no one really seems to wants including Americans who've warned against it. 1 is the most likely at this point. |
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