Off Topic The Politics Thread

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Should the UK remain a part of the EU or leave?

  • Stay in

    Votes: 56 47.9%
  • Get out

    Votes: 61 52.1%

  • Total voters
    117
  • Poll closed .
How could there be a Parliamentary majority for remaining in the Customs Union, when the Brady amendment was passed yesterday, which insists that the backstop be replaced because it risks keeping us in the Custom's Union?

The Tory party were whipped to accept the Brady amendment and oppose all the others. Many did so through gritted teeth, after being promised more votes in two week's time. The Tory Remain/Soft Brexit rebels haven't gone away, they are just biding their time.
 
In hindsight, I would take Mays deal now compared to a no deal. I know this was never an option before or during the referendum and I know not one single person in the country actually voted for it in the referendum, but it's the lesser of two evils in my book. **** the %52 And the %48 let's go for the 3rd option.
 
There are 3-4 of them on here that stick together and 'like' each others posts even when they are wrong. They are the last of the Euro lovers who couldn't accept the result of the vote. Even after last nights Cooper defeat and I said it was 'game over' I got this as the first part of a reply <doh>

It's like they want our country to fail FFS. The enemy within.

Agreed, but in all this is the sad fact people that have got on with each other on this forum and the old beeb are now falling out and slagging each other off, me included just because of the way we voted, hopefully we can keep our current dislike for each other to remain on this page and this page only, and when it’s all over maybe we can all get along again and play nice together, after all we are all here for one reason only and that’s because we support our beloved QPR.
 
It's very easy to play international brinkmanship with people's jobs from behind a keyboard on an internet forum.

Here's an interesting thought - the EU won't accept a deal without the backstop. Brexiteers won't accept a deal when the EU have to give their blessing for the UK to leave the backstop.

What about if there was a backstop, but instead of the EU having to give the UK permission to leave, the UK had to reach an agreement with Ireland to leave the backstop? Has the advantage of removing power from Brussels but Brussels bring confident the UK can't leave without something Ireland are happy with. Further, Ireland alone would be easier to deal with than EU27 en masse. Obvious downside of Ireland having a lot of power but they do already with a veto in the EU and at least this cuts out 26 others...
 
"strong negotiators" you see that is once again where you fail to grasp anything. They have not been good, we were just weak.
As for 'little Island' comments we aren't doing too bad for the 5th largest economy in the World. Not bad for a little island that leads the way on many things.
"little island" you have shown your true colours... enemy within
I don’t actually think we were weak as such, I think the problem was sending a remainer to do our negotiations, said remainer was only going to try to leave with as much left in as she / he could, almost like having the wife’s solicitor as well during a divorce, unethical and stupid.
 
The Tory party were whipped to accept the Brady amendment and oppose all the others. Many did so through gritted teeth, after being promised more votes in two week's time. The Tory Remain/Soft Brexit rebels haven't gone away, they are just biding their time.

Most of the Tory Rebels voted against the government anyway, balanced by about the same number of Labour who voted for it. I cannot see the Tories voting for a Custom's Union. They're more likely to vote for May's original deal, but we know how popular among Tories that was - because the backstop could keep us in the Custom's Union and prevent us entering our own trade agreements
 
It's very easy to play international brinkmanship with people's jobs from behind a keyboard on an internet forum.

Here's an interesting thought - the EU won't accept a deal without the backstop. Brexiteers won't accept a deal when the EU have to give their blessing for the UK to leave the backstop.

What about if there was a backstop, but instead of the EU having to give the UK permission to leave, the UK had to reach an agreement with Ireland to leave the backstop? Has the advantage of removing power from Brussels but Brussels bring confident the UK can't leave without something Ireland are happy with. Further, Ireland alone would be easier to deal with than EU27 en masse. Obvious downside of Ireland having a lot of power but they do already with a veto in the EU and at least this cuts out 26 others...

Speaking for myself, I'm happy to express my views face to face with anybody, and do. I don't hide behind a keyboard.
 
Omg she's anything but strong. She has crumbled to the ERG
right let me try and explain this to you without sounding patronising.
Anyone who becomes the longest serving Home secretary in recent years. PM... survives a confidence vote from her own party and then the commons is not weak
As for your comment re the ERG? You need to look deeper into this. I actually mentioned this before but you obviously ignored or went down your ill-informed route.
May answers to Tory members like me. Many Tory members support the ERG and want a clean break from Europe. So May is actually worried about the members and future seats. She doesn't want to be the one who kills the Tory party but stopping Brexit or not listening to her voters. The ERG are basically the voice for many of us Tory voters.
You can either take this on board or not.
 
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Speaking for myself, I'm happy to express my views face to face with anybody, and do. I don't hide behind a keyboard.

My point more being that it's easy to say those things when you have no responsibility for the decision or resulting outcomes. The weight of responsibility the likes of May must face would make it much less easy to be flippant about no deal.
 
Do I ? The ironic thing is, you jest at other comments yet add nothing of any input at all. Thank god Goldy is on here. You have similar stances yet he actually has informed input.
ah bless. Guess what... I agree Goldie has some great points sadly I cannot remember one of yours.
 
My point more being that it's easy to say those things when you have no responsibility for the decision or resulting outcomes. The weight of responsibility the likes of May must face would make it much less easy to be flippant about no deal.

You can say that about any political decision. Blair had responsibility for the Iraq war. Were voters not entitled to hold a view on it, because they have no responsibility for the decision or resulting outcomes?

Job security is one factor among a number that must be taken into account in a move to WTO.
 
The problem is Labour is as fractured as the Tories. Some want a second ref, some voted for the Brady option objecting to the backstop. I don't know whether he could whip enough for it to pass - if, as you say, he wanted May's deal to pass

Only 7 or 8 Labour MPs, the hard line Brexiters like Hoey, Skinner and Mann, voted for Brady. May had 200 of her own MPs, she would need 116 more MPs prepared to compromise. I suspect this is her actual plan, faff around a bit more, come back in a couple of weeks and say the EU won’t give us anything more, it’s my deal or nothing, get Barnier, Merkel and Junckers to say the same thing, give the House an ultimatum, my deal or no deal, possibly hinting at hardships related to no deal.

Very dodgy approach when they are all still playing party and intra party politics, while party loyalty is rapidly disintegrating. No one is taking accountability anywhere. Be interesting to see the turnout at the next election, I’d wager on an historic low unless we have some interesting new entrants, such is the collapse in respect for our political classes.
 
right let me try and explain this to you without sounding patronising.
Anyone who becomes the longest serving Home secretary in recent years. PM... survives a confidence vote from her own party and then the commons is not weak
As for your comment re the ERG? You need to look deeper into this. I actually mentioned this before but you obviously ignored or went down your ill-informed route.
May answers to Tory members like me. Many Tory members support the ERG and want a clean break from Europe. So May is actually worried about the members and future seats. She doesn't want to be the one who kills the Tory party but stopping Brexit or not listening to her voters. The ERG are basically the voice for many of us Tory voters.
You can either take this on board or not.
Take what on board? Did you say something vaguely interesting? It came up on my screen as blah blah blah a man said on the radio blah blah if all else fails slag Corbyn blah blah blah some insult towards anyone who dared vote remain blah blah
 
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You can say that about any political decision. Blair had responsibility for the Iraq war. Were voters not entitled to hold a view on it, because they have no responsibility for the decision or resulting outcomes?

Job security is one factor among a number that must be taken into account in a move to WTO.

Agree entirely! As much as it's easy to berate politicians, they hold significant responsibility. We're entitled to our opinions, of course. Whether those would change if the decision was on our shoulders is the question I was posing.
 
Only 7 or 8 Labour MPs, the hard line Brexiters like Hoey, Skinner and Mann, voted for Brady. May had 200 of her own MPs, she would need 116 more MPs prepared to compromise. I suspect this is her actual plan, faff around a bit more, come back in a couple of weeks and say the EU won’t give us anything more, it’s my deal or nothing, get Barnier, Merkel and Junckers to say the same thing, give the House an ultimatum, my deal or no deal, possibly hinting at hardships related to no deal.

Very dodgy approach when they are all still playing party and intra party politics, while party loyalty is rapidly disintegrating. No one is taking accountability anywhere. Be interesting to see the turnout at the next election, I’d wager on an historic low unless we have some interesting new entrants, such is the collapse in respect for our political classes.

Brady passed by 317 votes to 301. I don't know the breakdown but the 317 must surely include more than 200 Tory MPs. The DUP have 10. Tory and Labour rebels cancelled themselves out. Going to Strolls point, I see no evidence that the Tories would support a permanent Customs Union.

You could well be right about "my deal or nothing". Nothing being WTO rather than no Brexit. If Cooper has another go, it could throw a spanner in the works.