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Re: Brexit
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Theresa is in a bind and she has convinced herself that she will not let the people down in respect of the referendum decision. If parliament won't agree on anything, no deal will just happen with no further action required. And the sky really won't fall in. That's a promise! ---------- Post added at 12:16 ---------- Previous post was at 12:14 ---------- Quote:
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It is crazy that a transitional arrangement can commit parties to a permanent arrangement, isn't it? |
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Re: Brexit
Given the choice, Parliament would indeed continue to vote against No Deal. There is however the very real possibility that the choice is about to be taken off them. A long extension was always contingent on there being a credible strategy that required a long extension to implement. There is no credible strategy, and that isn’t all Teresa May’s fault; Parliament has made a complete exhibition of itself over the last week. There is no strategy and no sign of one emerging. As things stand right now, the EU has the power to watch us sail over the edge on 12 April, and it may just have grown tired enough of the process to allow it to happen.
This I suspect is the ERG’s strategy. The British political establishment won’t ever choose No Deal, but, once they’re as prepared as they can be, the European one just might. |
Re: Brexit
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oh please let this be the outcome. Extension after extension does nobody any favours (apart from the obvious). If the EU decide to 'let us go' it may even look like we were 'kicked out' to some, so let's all hold hands and jump before being pushed |
Re: Brexit
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Re: Brexit
A bill that forces the PM to propose an extension to A50 is a waste of time. There’s little doubt she would do so anyway. The question now is at what point the EU decides to cash in and choose No Deal over an extension without a strategy, which is the precondition Barnier has repeatedly stated over the last couple of weeks.
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£39bn remember. The EU budget is approved til 2021. Can easily keep us in limbo to pay the bills.
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Re: Brexit
The Lords rejecting a bill does not precipitate a constitutional crisis. Even their sending it back with unhelpful amendments would not do so. They are constitutionally entitled to do so and their mode of operation is set down in statute. If they are repeatedly obstructive the Parliament Act is used to bypass them.
Cooper’s bill will most likely founder for lack of time, which is a precious commodity for non-Government bills. |
Re: Brexit
Oh 100% if it’s rejected quickly that’s good and proper. If a minority attempt to delay it for the purposes of facilitating no deal and deny the will of the Commons that’s the kind of thing the Parliament Act was designed to avoid (legislatively it does not due to timeframes). The fact we’ve the ticking time bomb of Brexit would essentially force a constitutional crisis if the Government acted in a way other than extending to allow the processes to complete.
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This is from ITV’s Paul Brand.
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“2nd referendum. My deal vs Remain. I’m sick of the BS. It’s time to deliver to the people a deal that delivers x, y, z. Gives our businesses stability in a transitional period to 31 December 202X.”
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