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MTVN 07-09-2019 11:27 AM

The DUP thought the WA was hanging Northern Ireland out to dry so it's not a simple issue

I'm starting to think it will come back to the Commons anyway as Boris' last hope to avoid requesting an extension. Either that or he calls a vote of no confidence in himself

Cherie 07-09-2019 11:29 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Kizzy (Post 10672988)
Oh surely not? ... lovely fluffy bumbling Boris, the funny zip wire travelling joker an autocratic dictator?!
Who knew?

Obviously quite a number of his party who voted for him and know him well?

arista 07-09-2019 11:52 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by MTVN (Post 10673049)
The DUP thought the WA was hanging Northern Ireland out to dry so it's not a simple issue

I'm starting to think it will come back to the Commons anyway as Boris' last hope to avoid requesting an extension. Either that or he calls a vote of no confidence in himself


Yes one of his many plans.

But he said yesterday
on the Long Scottish TV Interview
he will bypass the new Labour Extension
by going to Brussels himself
to get a new deal and still leave on
the 31st.



I hope he takes Cummings with him.

Twosugars 07-09-2019 11:53 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Cherie (Post 10673052)
Obviously quite a number of his party who voted for him and know him well?

I think even his enemies expected him to be a more skillful operator :laugh:

bots 07-09-2019 11:54 AM

What people are ignoring is that the EU is prohibited from interfering in the politics of member nations. The backstop is direct interference

joeysteele 07-09-2019 11:55 AM

Actually Labour voted against the withdrawal agreement because they want a, or the, customs union and still closer links to the single market.

That has always been their position and still is.

If the withdrawal agreement, had that in it, there'd be no need for the backstop.

Just to put the record straight on that.

When May finally got round to including Labour in talks near the end of her premiership.
Had she included a customs union plan in the agreement, she'd have got at least 190 likely Labour votes supporting it.
No general election at all.

She wasn't though allowed to bring back the results of those talks as her Party kicked her out before she could.

Then again those ERG grouping would have tried to vote it down, with any customs arrangement proposal in it.

Twosugars 07-09-2019 11:58 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by bitontheslide (Post 10673067)
What people are ignoring is that the EU is prohibited from interfering in the politics of member nations. The backstop is direct interference

The backstop was May's idea

bots 07-09-2019 12:00 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Twosugars (Post 10673071)
The backstop was May's idea

doesn't matter, the eu are using it to reference the good friday agreement which is direct political interference

arista 07-09-2019 12:01 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by bitontheslide (Post 10673067)
What people are ignoring is that the EU is prohibited from interfering in the politics of member nations. The backstop is direct interference



Yes they say their Single Market
is Sacred.

Twosugars 07-09-2019 12:02 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by joeysteele (Post 10673068)
Actually Labour voted against the withdrawal agreement because they want a, or the, customs union and still closer links to the single market.

That has always been their position and still is.

If the withdrawal agreement, had that in it, there'd be no need for the backstop.

Just to put the record straight on that.

When May finally got round to including Labour in talks near the end of her premiership.
Had she included a customs union plan in the agreement, she'd have got at least 190 likely Labour votes supporting it.
No general election at all.

She wasn't though allowed to bring back the results of those talks as her Party kicked her out before she could.

Then again those ERG grouping would have tried to vote it down, with any customs arrangement proposal in it.

Well said Joey.
The slim ref majority should only result in a soft brexit.
Had May been a stateswoman she would have formed a coalition with labour to sort brexit and a soft brexit would have sailed through the parliament.
As it happened she wasted 3 years on tory brexit which was voted down by some of her own MPs
Pathetic partisanship

Twosugars 07-09-2019 12:04 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by bitontheslide (Post 10673072)
doesn't matter, the eu are using it to reference the good friday agreement which is direct political interference

There was no choice, no other country has such odd situation where an eu and non eu areas have a single economy.

joeysteele 07-09-2019 12:05 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Twosugars (Post 10673074)
Well said Joey.
The slim ref majority should only result in a soft brexit.
Had May been a stateswoman she would have formed a coalition with labour to sort brexit and a soft brexit would have sailed through the parliament.
As it happened she wasted 3 years on tory brexit which was voted down by some of her own MPs
Pathetic partisanship


I've always said and felt brexit should have been an all party negotiated and planned process.
Thereby ensuring success.

With all voting on brexit being free votes in Parliament.

Mrs May and the Cons denied all that, which brings us to the mess in existence now on it.

Kizzy 07-09-2019 01:10 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Cherie (Post 10673033)
I said remainers Kizzy, I thought that was pretty clear

It wasn't just remainers voting the WA down though was it?
If the ERG had voted with may we'd have left by now.

Kizzy 07-09-2019 01:14 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Cherie (Post 10673052)
Obviously quite a number of his party who voted for him and know him well?

Yes the 21 conservatives who'd rather risk their careers than vote with him know him pretty well too.the membership voted him as leader not his MPS, you can fool some of the people all of the time..as the saying goes.

Twosugars 07-09-2019 01:42 PM

Tory grandee Sir Nicholas Soames has launched a searing attack on Boris Johnson’s leadership and Jacob Rees-Mogg, whom he called a “fraud”, adding the Conservative party is lurching towards a divisive, potentially catastrophic form of “hard-right” conservatism.

In an interview with the Times, Soames – who is the grandson of Sir Winston Churchill – said the Conservatives were starting to resemble a “Brexit sect”, after he had the whip removed for rebelling against the Johnson government along with 20 other MPs.

“I am worried about the Tory party because give or take the odd spasm we have always been seen as pragmatic, sensible, good at our job, sane, reasonable and having the interests of the whole country,” he said. “Now it is beginning to look like a Brexit sect.”

Soames rejected comparisons between his grandfather and Johnson, saying the prime minister has never been regarded as “a diplomat or statesman” and his life experience amounts to “telling a lot of porkies about the European Union in Brussels and then becoming prime minister”.

He singled out Jacob Rees-Mogg, calling his recent actions in the Commons “repulsive” and beneath the leader of the house. Rees-Mogg was criticised by Caroline Lucas for lounging on the benches of the Commons during a debate. “The leader of the house has been spread across three seats, lying out as if that was something very boring for him to listen to tonight,” she said.

Soames called Rees-Mogg an “absolute fraud” who is “a living example of what a moderately cut double-breasted suit and a decent tie can do with an ultra-posh voice”.

He also spoke about his concerns for the future of his party, saying that he feared a schism, with many liberal Conservatives turning their backs on the “very hard-right Tory” version of the party that is taking shape under Johnson.

The former defence minister predicted that further Tory MPs would follow the lead of Jo Johnson, who quit this past week – citing conflict between family loyalty and the public interest – if they were forced to sign up to campaigning for a no-deal Brexit during any general election push.

He also expected hardcore no-deal Brexiters to turn on Johnson if he attempted to push through an agreement with the EU, by tweaking the withdrawal agreement. “It is a tragedy that we are going to be potentially sunk on the altar of something so fundamentally un-Tory,” he said.
The Guardian

Beso 07-09-2019 01:43 PM

Tory grandee Sir Nicholas Soames who Twosugars has suddenly perked up and began listening too.

arista 07-09-2019 01:53 PM

"Tory grandee Sir Nicholas Soames has launched
a searing attack on Boris Johnson’s leadership"


Sure but its not important
That old fella is standing down
at the next General Election.

James 07-09-2019 02:03 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by joeysteele (Post 10673068)
Actually Labour voted against the withdrawal agreement because they want a, or the, customs union and still closer links to the single market.

That has always been their position and still is.

If the withdrawal agreement, had that in it, there'd be no need for the backstop.

Just to put the record straight on that.

When May finally got round to including Labour in talks near the end of her premiership.
Had she included a customs union plan in the agreement, she'd have got at least 190 likely Labour votes supporting it.
No general election at all.

She wasn't though allowed to bring back the results of those talks as her Party kicked her out before she could.

Then again those ERG grouping would have tried to vote it down, with any customs arrangement proposal in it.

The third time the Withdrawal agreement was voted on in parliament, the political declaration was removed, leaving the two-year transition.

That means that Labour could still have got a Customs Union and single market ties at a later date. They should have at least voted for the Withdrawal agreement on the third meaningful vote.

lime 07-09-2019 02:32 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by James (Post 10673168)
The third time the Withdrawal agreement was voted on in parliament, the political declaration was removed, leaving the two-year transition.

That means that Labour could still have got a Customs Union and single market ties at a later date. They should have at least voted for the Withdrawal agreement on the third meaningful vote.

:hug:

arista 07-09-2019 02:43 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by James (Post 10673168)
The third time the Withdrawal agreement was voted on in parliament, the political declaration was removed, leaving the two-year transition.

That means that Labour could still have got a Customs Union and single market ties at a later date. They should have at least voted for the Withdrawal agreement on the third meaningful vote.



Crazy
No Point in leaving with that plan

lime 07-09-2019 02:46 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by MTVN (Post 10673049)
The DUP thought the WA was hanging Northern Ireland out to dry so it's not a simple issue

I'm starting to think it will come back to the Commons anyway as Boris' last hope to avoid requesting an extension. Either that or he calls a vote of no confidence in himself

Sorry .The DUP do not represnet NI.The moment May got into bed with them was her downfall.A simple issue should be that NI voted to remain and for once in my life I say fair play to SF who lets face it will never sit in HOC...now they will not run against GP/SDLP or alliance ..so they can try prevent No deal.The DUP are turning on their selves .It is worth remebering that the DUP refused to sign up to GFA.They have no interest in peace...They would rather their folk eat grass than acknoledge some in NI are Irish

joeysteele 07-09-2019 02:46 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by James (Post 10673168)
The third time the Withdrawal agreement was voted on in parliament, the political declaration was removed, leaving the two-year transition.

That means that Labour could still have got a Customs Union and single market ties at a later date. They should have at least voted for the Withdrawal agreement on the third meaningful vote.

Why.
They'd had no input to talks at that time.

The backdrop remained which was the contentious issue with the DUP.

You say Labour could have.
That's not would have.
An agreed customs arrangement in place at that time would have pulled more Labour votes over.
Not a possible customs arrangement.

If May had dropped her red lines of no customs union arrangement, total severance from having some close access of the single market.
She'd have won Labour votes.

Still alienating her own ERG group, who were voting against anything.

With her own Party and the votes of the DUP, she did have an overall majority at the time.

It isn't down to the opposition to help a government that thus far then, had not seriously consulted it.

lime 07-09-2019 02:52 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Twosugars (Post 10673071)
The backstop was May's idea

True.. but we live in a time when facts don't matter

lime 07-09-2019 02:54 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by arista (Post 10673215)
Crazy
No Point in leaving with that plan

Crazy leaving without a plan

lime 07-09-2019 03:01 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by joeysteele (Post 10673218)
Why.
They'd had no input to talks at that time.

The backdrop remained which was the contentious issue with the DUP.

You say Labour could have.
That's not would have.
An agreed customs arrangement in place at that time would have pulled more Labour votes over.
Not a possible customs arrangement.

If May had dropped her red lines of no customs union arrangement, total severance from having some close access of the single market.
She'd have won Labour votes.

Still alienating her own ERG group, who were voting against anything.

With her own Party and the votes of the DUP, she did have an overall majority at the time.

It isn't down to the opposition to help a government that thus far then, had not seriously consulted it.

I understand when you you say that it isn't down to the opposition to help the goverment..

So you guys can carry on arguing against said opposition ..

Where does leave us Irish?You all fight for the sake of fighting .Shamefull.The WA was a great deal


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