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While I think on balance it's a good thing that Parliament will vote on the final deal, I can see it causing major problems if they reject it. What happens then? UK ministers will be mandated to renegotiate, but will the EU wish to do so? Also will it be clear which parts of the deal Parliament wishes to be renegotiated?Actually it makes the prospect of "No Deal" all the more likely.
I agree with the first part of your post TRB but disagree with the second part. What the vote last night did was make 'No Deal' all but impossible.Parliament now gets the final say on any deal. Therefore there is no point in Mrs May taking any deal to Parliament that she knows wont get through Parliament. So in order to know what Parliament wants to see in the deal - she has to discuss and negotiate with it before she puts it to Brussels. So although that vote was technically on the details of the final deal - it is actually on who gets to draft up the British terms for that deal and what sort of deal it is.If we say that staying in is (currently) off the table there are 3 possible types of deal she can go for:1.No deal - favoured only by about 30 or 40 hard Brexiteers2.Full alignment with the single market & customs union in an EFTA, Norway, Switzerland style deal - the policy of the Labour Party and those 'soft' Tories who voted against the government last night3.A limited Canada style free trade agreement - the government's currently stated policySo I think rather than 'no deal', last night's vote actually makes a 'staying in in all but name' more likely - if Mrs May wants a deal she can get through Parliament. It also makes next weeks vote even more interesting, especially for Hoola. At the moment we have told the EU we are leaving in March 2019 but there is nothing in British law to say that. Hence why the government & Brexiteers want the date & time of leaving in the Withdrawal Act. If Parliament reject that - then we haven't left until this deal with EU is completed!
Actually, Wilts your point about setting the date in stone is important. If the Government is defeated, or more likely backs down, then our leaving date does become more flexible, at least from our side. It's unclear how the EU will react to things dragging on. I suppose it depends whether they want us in, out or half in and half out.
I agree with the assessment from Wilts, but with one further consideration......the possibility that this fragile government will collapse in the meantime.What changes would follow from an early election remains to be seen. Maybot is clinging on with the support of the DUP, and despite wide divisions in her own party, all of which could implode at any time.
Quote from: albie on December 14, 2017, 07:08:04 pmI agree with the assessment from Wilts, but with one further consideration......the possibility that this fragile government will collapse in the meantime.What changes would follow from an early election remains to be seen. Maybot is clinging on with the support of the DUP, and despite wide divisions in her own party, all of which could implode at any time.I agree Albie, in fact one bookmaker was offering 5/6 that May would go as PM during 2018. If Parliament rejected May's deal I'm pretty sure she would feel compelled to resign. That could precipitate a General Election. And if she comes back with what the Tory Brexiteers consider a bad deal she might be removed anyway. It did strike me that Juncker and Tusk were trying hard to praise May last week. Whatever they think of her they would probably prefer not to have to deal with another PM.
It did strike me that Juncker and Tusk were trying hard to praise May last week. Whatever they think of her they would probably prefer not to have to deal with another PM.
Quote from: The Red Baron on December 14, 2017, 08:45:24 pmIt did strike me that Juncker and Tusk were trying hard to praise May last week. Whatever they think of her they would probably prefer not to have to deal with another PM. Well aye. They are both Centre-Right politicians. They inevitably prefer one of their own in No10. Even a quite magnificently incompetent one.
There’s no right wing Brexiteer alternative. Because they could never carry a vote in the Commons. And there is little prospect of a Hard Brexit Tory party winning an Election. As for Labour, the Party might well be led by a man who could hardly get his kecks on quickly enough to rush out in front of the cameras to declare that “Article 50 must be invoked immediately” at 7am the day after the Brexit vote, but the party has pretty much ignored his lead and is being steered by Keir Starmer. I suspect there’d be a far more sensible approach to the divorce if Labour were in power and negotiating.
Read your last sentence and all I can think about is methadone.
Quote from: redwine on December 15, 2017, 09:34:05 amRead your last sentence and all I can think about is methadone. I wonder if the caller in this clip was on something similar.... http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-news/brexit-supporter-vote-leave-eu-lack-white-faces-hospital-james-obrien-lbc-northwick-park-a8099561.html or maybe just racist. Sadly, I know a few people who think the same as that caller, and voted leave because of it.
On the contrary BST i think like the man from Barnsley said last night the vote was clearly OUT of Europe or stay IN. I didn’t vote but the main issues concerning people was to regain UK sovereignty and take control of immigration and that seemed simple enough but what’s happening now is the whole negotiation is being conducted by a political party, with a weak mandate, in which a majority would wish to remain in the single market. They will ignore the wishes of the majority of the UK electorate at their very peril come the next GE.
On the contrary BST i think like the man from Barnsley said last night the vote was clearly OUT of Europe or stay IN. I didnt vote but the main issues concerning people was to regain UK sovereignty and take control of immigration and that seemed simple enough but whats happening now is the whole negotiation is being conducted by a political party, with a weak mandate, in which a majority would wish to remain in the single market. They will ignore the wishes of the majority of the UK electorate at their very peril come the next GE.
Very good news your daughter qualified to study in Copenhagen Hoola but I must warn you it’s more expensive than Dublin!