Forum search & shortcuts

EU Referendum - are...
 

[Closed] EU Referendum - are you in or out?

Posts: 15555
Free Member
 

If we go WTO there will have to be a hard border.. Thier members won't tolerate differing deals and the EU won't tolerate it either.
Let's not forget the Irish who would also be really pissed off and have a veto.

It's not physicality possible to do this, it's not rocket science.

Hard brexit is really suicide for the UK.


 
Posted : 12/12/2018 11:27 pm
Posts: 31128
Full Member
 

Surely you didn’t fall for the old numbers trick

No, I didn't. Assuming your £40k salary is correct, and he's been employed for three years, that is less than half the money known/declared. And the real total figure is higher anyway… slippery hidden members that I'm trying to get you to admit exist. You know they do.

Where's the link to a Wiki list of ERG members?

Why do this group of Conservative MPs get money to further their cause of undermining a Conservative government?


 
Posted : 12/12/2018 11:29 pm
Posts: 34541
Full Member
 

the frothing of the hard brexit fans on twitter is very very amusing

Moggy really did look like his head was going to wobble off his shoulders

has anyone heard from Johnson yet?


 
Posted : 12/12/2018 11:32 pm
Posts: 7279
Free Member
 

So the public are paying for Jacob rich snobbs extra curricular activities?

Indeed, but it is £10,000 per annum to subscribe to the SNP one, IPSA did question the value for money - again see report

I get you like to accept stuff that backs you up and disregard stuff that doesn’t but the EU gets a say on it’s borders. It’s kind of a shared thing.

No problem with EU having the right, but if it is essentially a red line, it does bring into question their intent regarding Ireland.


 
Posted : 12/12/2018 11:38 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

He just sits there sniping away and avoiding any real responsibility.

I’d like to hope that someday, somewhere he will say the wrong thing to someone a bit handy, not have his nannies around, and will get a ****ing good hiding. I live in hope.

On a slight detour, but has anyone yet come up with a compelling and non bullshit reason why Brexit is a good idea?

Just wondering, as it does really seem ‘the point’.


 
Posted : 12/12/2018 11:48 pm
Posts: 15555
Free Member
 

Well I'd rather be a vassal state to the EU than this bollocks.

I was unsure whether May's win tonight was good, bad or indeferent..


 
Posted : 12/12/2018 11:48 pm
Posts: 52609
Free Member
 

Just wondering, as it does really seem ‘the point’.

So far today, Will of the people, becasue we said we would, manifesto, blah blah blah
Will you ask the people what they think?? Hell NOOO!!!!!


 
Posted : 12/12/2018 11:52 pm
Posts: 34541
Full Member
 

Well I’d rather be a vassal state to the EU than this bollocks.

what do you mean? the Brexit consumed Tory party are the very model of Strength & Stability,

Ill bet the rest of the world cant wait to do deals with us, our public school, oxbridge educated elite are truly a shining beacon of statecraft & competence


 
Posted : 13/12/2018 12:01 am
Posts: 66124
Full Member
 

Cloudnine

Subscriber

Unless over 100 opposition MPs vote for the only deal on offer:
All ending at the bottom of the cliff and hard brexit.

Why say something you must know isn't true?


 
Posted : 13/12/2018 12:02 am
Posts: 1635
Free Member
 

Just watching newsnight and to be fair Emily maitlis really got under jrms skin and got a bit paxman on him. Very entertaining. "You've let down the brexiters..." Haha


 
Posted : 13/12/2018 12:05 am
Posts: 44823
Full Member
 

Their intent Mefty as you full well know is protection of the single market by not allowing an open border for non compliant goods to arrive thru - and the UK would have to put up a hard border to " take back control of our borders"

Of course NI has to stay in the single market or there has to be a hard border. there is no third way


 
Posted : 13/12/2018 12:08 am
Posts: 57418
Full Member
 

You’re being far too cynical

All round the world they’re happy to see some backward gazing, insular, obnoxious creationist, anti-abortion, anti-gay, bigoted, sectarian orange order ****s setting U.K. government policy


 
Posted : 13/12/2018 12:12 am
Posts: 7279
Free Member
 

No, I didn’t. Assuming your £40k salary is correct, and he’s been employed for three years, that is less than half the money known/declared. And the real total figure is higher anyway… slippery hidden members that I’m trying to get you to admit exist. You know they do.

He had a predecessor, it has been going for yonks. Para 63 of IPSA report says it has no other significant sources of income. It has subscribers, that is where the public money comes from, it is spent according to the rules.


 
Posted : 13/12/2018 12:26 am
Posts: 15555
Free Member
 

The American health insurance companies will will be slavating over this new market I'm sure.


 
Posted : 13/12/2018 12:33 am
Posts: 31128
Full Member
 

He had a predecessor

I didn't know that. Who was it? Which years? What salary?

Where’s the link to a Wiki list of ERG members?

Why do this group of Conservative MPs get money to further their cause of undermining a Conservative government?

100 members? I dunno. I suppose that tally is pretty close to this week's vote against May. Anyway… as I suggested before, many "members" are not "subscribers", and there is no published list of who they all are.


 
Posted : 13/12/2018 1:04 am
Posts: 11661
Full Member
 

Just watching newsnight and to be fair Emily maitlis really got under jrms skin and got a bit paxman on him. Very entertaining. “You’ve let down the brexiters…” Haha

She barely held in her contempt for him during the interview but she kicked him the bollox with her mention of “the erg being a busted flush”, very happy to see him visibly squirm under direct questioning.


 
Posted : 13/12/2018 1:09 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

or indeferent

Oh yes, that’s very good. 🙂


 
Posted : 13/12/2018 7:55 am
Posts: 24869
Free Member
 

I know busted flush is a card hand synonym, but I think it's particularly apt for JRM and the ERG, being pieces of shite that just won't go away.


 
Posted : 13/12/2018 8:29 am
Posts: 34541
Full Member
 

Newsnights Voxpops with some old Tory party members last night still showed an amazing amount of self-delusion, theyre certain that May can now go to brussles & demand a better deal, after all this shambles, people still believe the crap the brexiteers told them 2 years ago

https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2018/12/12/brexiteers-have-failed-so-they-blame-theresa-may/?utm_term=.9747cf3dfbc0


 
Posted : 13/12/2018 9:05 am
Posts: 6763
Full Member
 

Now I admit to dropping in and out of this thread and this may have been covered but... is a lot of the current MP vote on the deal / T-May confidence vote all down to the Gina Miller legal action some time ago?

I dont want to go all JHJ but if she hadn't started the legal action, and been sucessful in securing a commons vote on the deal, would this have all gone through smoothly without the additional vote of no confidence on the PM?


 
Posted : 13/12/2018 9:41 am
Posts: 57418
Full Member
 

Bloody democracy, eh?

Yip... Theresa was dead set against Gina Millars legal action because, for all her many faults, she's a realist. She knew full well that whatever 'deal' the EU were prepared to offer her would inevitably be a compromise (unicorns not actually existing, after all) and therefore hadn't a cat in hells chance of being voted through parliament, as it would, by the very nature of compromises, satisfy nobody.

This is still the case. Its a circle that can't be squared. One of many.

We're truly ****ed. There's just no way out of this nightmare that will end well


 
Posted : 13/12/2018 9:49 am
Posts: 7513
Free Member
 

Gina miller was all about the triggering of A50, which is a different thing. This parliamentary approval is different. I think.


 
Posted : 13/12/2018 9:58 am
Posts: 24869
Free Member
 

Just watched Maitlis vs Mogg.

So he's presenting it as a good result (for the ERG) because once you take the ministers and their aides out of the equation, 2/3 of the remaining membership voted against her.

But surely if those 146 or whatever it was felt that she / her deal was unacceptable, 1/ they could vote against anyway because it's a secret ballot or 2/ would have resigned* to have voted for the 'right' thing.

But they didn't?

* I suppose there is a third option, that they don't think her deal and leadership is right but voted for it anyway because they like their jobs. But then that would make then duplicitous, conniving, lying, two-faced....... I could go on (for some time, actually)

How do we deal with this man and his colleagues now? I'm inclined to approach in the same way as road ragers when I'm on the bike, just smile, wave, laugh, and blow kisses, but don't engage in any discussion.... and see how much he can wind himself up.


 
Posted : 13/12/2018 9:59 am
Posts: 52609
Free Member
 

But surely if those 146 or whatever it was felt that she / her deal was unacceptable, 1/ they could vote against anyway because it’s a secret ballot or 2/ would have resigned* to have voted for the ‘right’ thing.

But they didn’t?

Nobody has voted for or against her deal because the vote was pulled, that is what kicked off this round of blood letting


 
Posted : 13/12/2018 10:16 am
Posts: 24869
Free Member
 

OK, technically they were voting for / against her leadership, but a large part of that comes down now to her determination to stick to her deal vs the ERG's attempt to unseat her to put their vision forward (in 3 months despite not having made any attempt to explain their vision previously. Other than telling everyone else to **** off because they want to count their money)

It had nothing to do with any other aspect of leadership or policies; it was a one issue vote.


 
Posted : 13/12/2018 10:24 am
Posts: 57418
Full Member
 

Theres presently yet another Brexit phone in on Five Live.

As usual its full of delusional, halfwitted gammons telling the politicians to 'just get on with it!'

Get on with what exactly? Dispensing with the rules of the EU and giving us everything we want, including the magic unicorns, because thats what Boris and the Daily Mail had assured them they were going to get


 
Posted : 13/12/2018 10:34 am
Posts: 6998
Full Member
 

My favourite part of this whole thing so far has been the government desperately trying to avoid being told whether they can unilaterally revoke A50 or not.

"We don't want to know,
we don't want to know,
we don't want to know,
LA-LA-LA-LA-LAAAA-LA,
HONESTLY, WHAT PART OF WE DON'T WANT TO KNOW DON'T YOU UNDERSTAND???"


 
Posted : 13/12/2018 11:01 am
Posts: 31075
Free Member
 

Theres presently yet another Brexit phone in on Five Live.

I especially liked the market trader.


 
Posted : 13/12/2018 11:03 am
Posts: 8027
Full Member
 

It had nothing to do with any other aspect of leadership or policies; it was a one issue vote.

It says nothing about their support for her proposal just that they didnt want to go through a leadership election at this time and, possibly, that they would she would be amenable to changing her proposal to something closer to what they want.
Trying to convert it into support for her plan is impressive spinning. The one thing we can be sure off is that her plan doesnt have sufficient support and some who voted for her were lining up to vote against the plan.


 
Posted : 13/12/2018 11:25 am
Posts: 44823
Full Member
 

~Can anyone help with this? I want to retain my full EU movement rights. I believe there is something in the proposals to the effect that if you are employed in the EU during brexit you can do so

I have family in the Netherlands who own a couple of businesses. Could I get them to employ me as a "consultant" basis so as to protect my position? any other way I can finesse this?


 
Posted : 13/12/2018 11:34 am
Posts: 3422
Free Member
 

oooooh, I had to get a limosa to do some work in Antwerp earlier this year. I wonder if that qualifies me.

Cheaper than an Irish passport, although that is option B


 
Posted : 13/12/2018 11:39 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Mogg was on the today Programme earlier and was talking about 'honourable positions' and suchlike.

Is this it? Is this the moment where the universe just disappears in a blinding flash of light? Or when we wake up, Bobby Ewing style, and it was all a bad dream?

I cannot, and don't think I ever will, get my head around the sheer wilful ignorance, blatant shamefaced lying and hypocrisy that has pervaded Brexit since before the referendum.

One of the great philosophers said that our experience of the world is only what we allow ourselves to perceive, but the sheer effort it must take to avoid all common sense and reason is remarkable.


 
Posted : 13/12/2018 11:40 am
 dazh
Posts: 13393
Full Member
 

Theres presently yet another Brexit phone in on Five Live.

Can't believe I missed it. The daily 5Live brexit phone-in has become part of my routine.


 
Posted : 13/12/2018 11:40 am
Posts: 91169
Free Member
 

Aren't you retiring soon? Think you could probably move to NL for 5 years and bag citizenship, if you aren't having to work..?


 
Posted : 13/12/2018 11:45 am
Posts: 52609
Free Member
 

One of the great philosophers said

Naughty, naughty, very naughty
Ha ha ha ha ha

Seems about the level of the debate


 
Posted : 13/12/2018 11:48 am
 dazh
Posts: 13393
Full Member
 

Interesting comment in the grauniad this morning

Given the resistance of both May and Corbyn to a new referendum, I'm beginning to wonder whether they know more than they're letting on. Either they have access to private polling/research showing a massive risk that a new vote would result in a no-deal exit, or something else about the breakdown of civil order in the wake of a remain vote. If it was as easy as having another vote to settle the issue, I'm pretty sure both would go for it, so something must be holding them back.


 
Posted : 13/12/2018 11:50 am
Posts: 31075
Free Member
 

Cheaper than an Irish passport, although that is option B

If you want an EU passport and have a right to an Irish one through parentage/grandparent I’d get off my arse and apply soon. The post-referendum application increase was probably over-estimated in reporting, but in the last 12-18 months as the reality of Brexit has been settling in, applications from U.K. residents have increased markedly. The passport office had to employ an extra 250 or so a few months back just for checks on applications. Not an inconsiderable increase in manpower. Presently, even a grandparent born post-partition in NI entitles one to a RoI passport. Who knows what rules may change in the future - although presently, NI becoming part of the RoI is probably more likely than the grandparent rule being changed. 😀


 
Posted : 13/12/2018 11:53 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Naughty, naughty, very naughty
Ha ha ha ha ha

Beat me to it 😂😁


 
Posted : 13/12/2018 11:54 am
Posts: 44823
Full Member
 

molgrips - unfortunatly my retirement date is 25 months away - ie after leave date and after the end of transition if we get it.

I could retire earlier but I want to retain my full rights including the right to work in the EU


 
Posted : 13/12/2018 11:54 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

May can basically ignore the gammons now though, can't she? She won't be around for the next GE and will probably retire on a decent pension and **** off somewhere nicer than here. So, now she can push her deal as being the 'only' way to leave the EU that will safeguard jobs and stuff, no deal not being an option now, or suddenly at the 11th hour revoke Article 50 after a commons vote (the majority of MPs being pro-EU) and remain in the EU. What's the worst that'll happen? We'll have followed the democratic process so there'll be no 'death of democracy' and the handful of hard-line loons who walk among us who actually [i]want[/i] to crash out with no deal will be dead soon enough anyway.


 
Posted : 13/12/2018 12:01 pm
 DrJ
Posts: 14056
Full Member
 

So he’s presenting it as a good result (for the ERG) because once you take the ministers and their aides out of the equation, 2/3 of the remaining membership voted against her.

I think the message to Mogg is "you lost, get over it", as others have said in a related context.


 
Posted : 13/12/2018 12:06 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

I think the message to Mogg is “you lost, get over it”, as others have said in a related context.

"May means May", to quote one wit on facebork.


 
Posted : 13/12/2018 12:09 pm
Posts: 91169
Free Member
 

Given the resistance of both May and Corbyn to a new referendum, I’m beginning to wonder whether they know more than they’re letting on. Either they have access to private polling/research showing a massive risk that a new vote would result in a no-deal exit, or something else about the breakdown of civil order in the wake of a remain vote.

I don't think so, they have just both nailed their colours to the Brexit mast. May would end up looking foolish, and Corbyn wants to leave. Not as complicated as you make out. However Labour are very 2nd ref-ish currently.


 
Posted : 13/12/2018 12:11 pm
Posts: 52609
Free Member
 

May can basically ignore the gammons now though, can’t she?

To a point she can tell them they lost get on with it apart from

So, now she can push her deal as being the ‘only’ way to leave the EU that will safeguard jobs and stuff, no deal not being an option now,

Which she needs to convince about 350 MP's it's a good deal - we know it's not the only option too


 
Posted : 13/12/2018 12:17 pm
Posts: 31128
Full Member
 

Tick. Tock.

Between them, the party leaders have killed off most of the options now, by just watching the time run out.


 
Posted : 13/12/2018 12:21 pm
Page 1232 / 1714