Theresa May to hit the campaign trail, touring the country to persuade voters to back her, like she did in the election. Are Number 10 entirely sure that's going to help?
Theresa May to hit the campaign trail, touring the country to persuade voters to back her, like she did in the election. Are Number 10 entirely sure that's going to help?

No. I wasn't. There was of course some violence but the Viet Nam demonstrations were numerous, huge and global., and no doubt influenced opinion and eventually American policy.
Breaking:
President Trump says May's deal is good for EU and makes a trade agreement with the US more difficult.
Or taken in a wider perspective, "the withdrawal agreement is good for the EU, while bad for the UK"
As one of the main reasons for exiting, was to make trade with the rest of the world, more accessible.
Damn it, that's where we got this lot from ????drain the swamp
He thinks it should be debated
Are all bills debated
If yes then fair enough
If no then he's a ****
I hate female genital mutilationHows the discussion to go? Anyone disagree that laws should be implemented to stop this ****? Nope? Ok. Waste of time I’d agree on most things but what is there to debate exactly?
I hate female genital mutilation
Absolutely ****ing disgusting
Should every law that can end up with a jail sentence be discussed properly
How about blasphemy
Upsets a minority
Pass the law anyway without any discussion on its merits
Chope is my MP. He rang my doorbell once. I found him a bit odious, TBH. He's one of the "breakfast plotters" who met (or still do meet) once a week to plan how they could get the Conservatives to do things they wanted which weren't on the official party or government agenda. He has a large swathe of loyal (but increasingly older) supporters who consume the Telegraph and Mail, don't do social media (lucky them) and don't look past the suit, the accent and his views on "lost Britain" that they find so appealing. I doubt that anyone knows what he really thinks or wants personally, but he certainly knows what to say and do to get re-elected. Next time (if he doesn't retire, he's 71) I think he might struggle.
He's not the only MP who turns up on a Friday to oppose any private members bills which might otherwise pass unopposed to the next stage. It's a shared job and they take turns, apparently. They say they do this because everything should be properly debated so we don't pass poor laws. Which on the surface, sounds reasonable, yes? A public service, even.
Private members bills usually come from the opposition side. The government of the day usually turns initiatives from their own side into government policy and presents them to Parliament using a different route. In effect, it slows down or kills any proposals that don't come from the Conservatives. It's a game. I've got a suspicion that they didn't play this game when the Conservatives were in opposition. Maybe some Labour MPs did. Who knows?



Was the up skirting eventually passedI don't doubt you Kiwi for a second and wouldn't question your morality you seem like a top fella, I totally agree most things require further discussion, I just can't see what merit blocking/delaying either of the bills has any merit at all.
The up skirting and FGM are clear violations of a person by another person or persons, potential loopholes in laws rather than a new discussion in my opinion.
Was the up skirting eventually passed
Should have had plenty of time to discuss it by now
How does one person get it stopped anyway
Is he the only one to turn up for the vote
cheers bdThe convention is that the first reading of a private members bill is passed without a vote or a debate. The reason for this is that there is not much Parliamentary time allocated to private members bills at all, so anything that speeds up a stage will be a good thing. However, anyone can object and force it to be debated - even at the first reading stage. That's what Chope and his buddies do. Then time must be found for a debate - which often never happens because Parliament never has enough time to cover off everything that it gets asked to cover. So, most private members bills do not make it into law as they are at the back of the queue when it comes to being scheduled, run out of time and get scrapped.
The up-skirting furore was such bad publicity for the Conservatives that the private members bill proposal was adopted by the government. Therefore, no longer a private members amendment but a government one - which is higher up the pecking order and gets more debating time. No idea if it's law or not yet.