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I give up.If people can't be arsed to understand how important the backstop is...and most importantly GFA..What is the point in any further talks:shrug::shrug: |
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Sure you can say that. |
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Funny thought: if we crashed out with no deal and then quietly rejoined a full customs union two months later... I bet the vast majority of Brexit voters wouldn't even ****ing notice :joker:
You could ask them in 2 years time and they'd be like "Yassss we won we won no deal Brexit rule Britannia" |
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It's madness that fault is even used, everyone knows there is no deal out there as good as we already have, so politicians trying to protect their constituents aren't really at fault for anything, and history will view everyone who voted for and tried to force this bs through, very badly. The promises were made by leave; the easiest deal in the history of the world, everyone will be begging us for a deal, we'll be able to pick and choose what we want etc. All bull, all completely ignored by leavers that live in a fantasy world of WW2 iconography. |
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Sick of hearing it all now though realy. Its just a huge mess, and should never ever have happened the way it did. No vote should ever have happened until there were plans, proper plans, for either result. The way it happened is just embarassing, tbh. As is the way it has been 'handled' since. |
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I agree with the rest of your statement, the people were never supposed to vote leave, and I blame Boris for getting on board the leave bus for tipping the balance in leaves favour |
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I've said the last twice Labour should have supported May's agreement. I was disappointed they didn't. It's for me, the best on the table st present if we have to leave. My point was the government had the numbers to pass it, with only the Cons and DUP. It shouldn't be down to expecting opposition Parties votes. Yes however. I think Labour should have supported it. It wasn't just Labour who didn't vote for it though. SNP, Paid Cymru , Lib Dems. The Green and most Independents didn't too. I agree with you, it is the best thing there now that could and should be tried again. |
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Lord MacDonald, the former director of public prosecutions, said if Johnson refused to request an extension he could be found in contempt of court.
“A refusal in the face of that would amount to contempt of court, which could find that person in prison,” MacDonald told Sky News. “He won’t get any co-operation, apart from the fanatics around him … the attorney general won’t sit there quietly while this happens.” The Scottish Conservative MSP Adam Tomkins, a former law professor, said Johnson should resign rather than break the law by forcing through a no-deal Brexit. In a series of tweets, Tomkins said Johnson had only one option if he refused to ask for an extension: resign. “Irrespective of what we think about Brexit, or the PM, surely we can all agree on one fundamental principle: the government is bound to obey the law,” he said. The Guardian Lock him up! :laugh: |
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Get em' Boris
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Just how pathetic does he look too with that truly awful Leadsom woman saying.
This Con party now will put a candidate against the Speaker.. Which no PM or government even thought about before. Anyone he sees as a dissenting voice to his madness and demands, will be threatened and dispensed with. This is a PM, really that anyone could respect, surely only by extremely militant hardliners. He is as Ammi strongly points out despicable beyond comprehension. Power mad he is, and dangerously so too. |
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