In that instance you'd presumably just find another buyer, which is not an option with Brexit. The EU are the only 'buyer' on the market and a very reluctant one at that, hence the reason you need to maintain a threat to walk away from the deal in the hope it will persuade them to improve their offer. Of course the deal is further complicated by the fact that the 'seller' is not the sole owner of the car. They're more like the nominated driver of a vehicle which has been utilised by a large number of passengers, the majority of whom have voted to sell it. However, a combination of squabbling over the price by those who wish to sell it and a backdrop of moaning from those who wanted to keep the vehicle has led to the nominated driver being replaced, probably by one who will have fewer qualms about driving it into a tree to end the impasse.This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
View Poll Results: Will Brexit happen on 31st October?
- Voters
- 105. You may not vote on this poll
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Yes
45 42.86% -
No
60 57.14%
Results 181 to 210 of 8133
Thread: Brexit - What Now.
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13-06-2019 09:32 AM #181
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13-06-2019 09:50 AM #182
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This seems to be the biggest problem with referendums ie that too many MPs or MSPs think they know better than the electorate and because, unlike general elections which come round every few years, they can't handle the fact there's not another chance to have things their way. Hence why we now live in a seemingly endless cycle of attempts to block Brexit and to force another Scottish independence referendum.
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13-06-2019 10:00 AM #183This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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13-06-2019 10:11 AM #184This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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13-06-2019 10:13 AM #185This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
J
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13-06-2019 10:14 AM #186This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
Edmund Burke - "Your representative owes you, not his industry only, but his judgment; and he betrays, instead of serving you, if he sacrifices it to your opinion."
MPs should have the necessary intellect, access to all the relevant evidence and the time that you and I might not necessarily have to come to a judgement. You don't like his/her judgements then you have the chance to vote them out next election.
In the case of Brexit, it ought to be, by now, overwhelmingly obvious to MPs that it's a stupid idea that should be dropped quicker than Boris' latest mistress. Unfortunately not enough of them have the metaphorical balls to do it.
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13-06-2019 11:11 AM #187
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This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show QuoteLast edited by G B Young; 13-06-2019 at 11:16 AM.
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13-06-2019 11:15 AM #188
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13-06-2019 12:00 PM #189This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
J
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13-06-2019 12:28 PM #190This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
I agree with you to the extent that if parliament is going to bottle its responsibility to decide things and hold a referendum instead, then parliament should be bound by the result.
However, the problem with Brexit (from start to finish) though is that there are many different forms of Brexit and the soft end (Norway style) is arguably closer to remain than the hard end of no deal. What was promised by the Brexiters, complete sovereign control with no economic downside, ie. having cake and eating it, has (surprise!) proved impossible to implement. It's ridiculous to claim a mandate for no deal from a vote including people who voted for Norway.
I think they need to either pick a specific version of Brexit and put that to a ref2 vs remain or just cancel it altogether.
The problem with ref2 is that they will pick no deal and then the same set of lying *****bags that won ref1 will update their lies to show that they can still have their cake and eat it. The Tory leadership candidates already have this process well underway. The EU are about to back down, they'll get a "managed" no deal, GATT art 24 will come to the rescue in a way that every trade commentator has already dismissed as TOTAL AND UTTER ****ING NONSENSE, magical technology that nobody is developing will fix the Irish border, they can just go and negotiate directly with Germany/Ireland/France/the Tooth Fairy and Barnier's team will be cut out of the loop. Blah, blah and more ****ing blah.
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13-06-2019 12:42 PM #191
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"I may take a different view to many of my constituents on Brexit, but I like and respect them enough to know that wanting to leave the EU is not the same as being stupid or racist, as they have too often been labelled. They listened to the economic arguments I, and others, put forward in 2016 and took a judgment to vote leave. I am yet to meet more than a handful of people who have changed their minds.
"Every time I talk about this I am told I should be resolutely making the argument for remain. But I and others did exactly that in 2016, spending months in the most sceptical towns of the North West, North East and Midlands making the case for the many and varied benefits of EU membership. We weren’t very much helped by a national campaign which championed the economic benefits of remaining. After decades of relative decline, and much EU structural fund investment focused on rebuilding our great cities, it just didn’t cut it among many people in towns who had seen jobs disappear and young people leave, and it still doesn’t.
"Almost universally on the doorstep questions about a second referendum are largely greeted with bewilderment. I am reminded frequently that we’ve had one already and it’s time for Parliament to get on with it."
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13-06-2019 12:47 PM #192This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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13-06-2019 12:50 PM #193
Fully anticipate no-deal now, with Johnson being effectively sworn in after two rounds of votes. This is mental, and not the good kind of "we've just won the Scottish cup" bewildered mental.
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13-06-2019 02:06 PM #194This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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13-06-2019 04:43 PM #195This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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13-06-2019 04:49 PM #196This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
Not strictly true.
Prime minister is normally voted because of being leader of a party and they become prime minister through a general election.
We are about to have our second prime minister through party members onlyThere is no such thing as too much yarn, just not enough time.
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13-06-2019 04:57 PM #197This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show QuoteEvery gimmick hungry yob,
Digging gold from rock and roll
Grabs the mic to tell us,
He'll die before he's sold.
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13-06-2019 05:06 PM #198This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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13-06-2019 05:09 PM #199
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Nicola Sturgeon became FM when Salmond stood down.Last edited by James310; 13-06-2019 at 05:14 PM.
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13-06-2019 05:16 PM #200This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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13-06-2019 05:29 PM #201This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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13-06-2019 08:04 PM #202
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Ruth lost that election as well. I make it, 8 in a row now.Last edited by ronaldo7; 13-06-2019 at 08:14 PM.
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27-06-2019 11:38 AM #204
A neat visualisation of why the EU is a bit more relaxed about No Deal than the Brexiters (still!) think:
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27-06-2019 03:50 PM #205
There are so many threads that this could go on.
Westminster VI
https://twitter.com/flaviblePolitic/...732580352?s=19There is no such thing as too much yarn, just not enough time.
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27-06-2019 04:11 PM #206
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Doesn't sit well with me during the Conservative leadership contest them all saying they'd never call a GE
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28-06-2019 01:50 PM #207This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
My take is that we'll leave the EU on 31 October on a mildly re-worded version of the WA, that maybe emphasises more the Tories' aim of being out of all EU institutions. It'll be sold by Johnson to his own MPs on a "back me or sack me" basis, sugared with the key prospect of a subsequent general election. He'll have enough Labour MP votes to counter the DUP. The attraction (to Tory MPs) of a GE after leaving the EU is that he will have pleased the "just get on with it" brigade. They, the majority of voters who don't pay attention, vastly outnumber the rabid no-dealers, and will this time vote for the buffoon because he, to quote a famous football term, "delivered". The Tories will then be returned with a majority of 50 or so seats, ready to negotiate with a more amenable HoC behind them. The Brexit Party and Corbyn will both be history.
But BoJo himself will lose his seat in Uxbridge to Ali Milani, leaving the winning party without a PM
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28-06-2019 01:56 PM #208This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
But....
https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/eu-brexit-deal-talks-boris-johnson-renegotiation-irish-back-stop-border-a8975666.htmlThere is no such thing as too much yarn, just not enough time.
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28-06-2019 02:03 PM #209This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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28-06-2019 02:17 PM #210
I think we will leave on Halloween with no deal. Having thrown the Tory membership so much red meat with his vehement EU bashing, Bozo won't be able to do anything else. His concern is his own career, and it would be suicide for him to u-turn now. The EU will not re-negotiate the withdrawal agreement (nor should they) and the UK government cannot get anything through parliament. I can only forsee leaving with no deal; any other outcome would be astonishing, in my opinion.
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