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

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I reckon it is time to face it, we’re going to end up with BRINO. It will still damage the UK but the last (nearly) three years has basically been spent working out the trade-off between how much economic damage we are willing to suffer to keep the muppets who voted for this from kicking off.

It will satisfy precisely no one and will just lead into another era of Brexies moaning about being betrayed and Remainers just saying that it was all pointless, stupid and damaging and achieved less than nothing.

When we leave, the campaign to rejoin starts.


 
Posted : 03/04/2019 7:19 pm
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Something on the scale of EU membership is not something any party could easily ignore or refuse to honour for obvious reasons.

A bit like tuition fees? Getting thems extra foreigners below 100k a year?

Is there some risk based "how ignorable is this policy?" ranking system that I don't know of?


 
Posted : 03/04/2019 7:21 pm
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And yeah, sounds like Labour will be the midwife of Tory Brexit, without a 2nd ref....

As we suspected


 
Posted : 03/04/2019 7:32 pm
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A bit like tuition fees? Getting thems extra foreigners below 100k a year?

Good examples. Where exactly was the will of the people then?


 
Posted : 03/04/2019 7:39 pm
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When push comes to shove, I'm positive there is an element of "how ignorable is this policy".


 
Posted : 03/04/2019 7:54 pm
 dazh
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I reckon it is time to face it, we’re going to end up with BRINO.

Look at it this way, the nutters will see it as a massive defeat and failure of their mission. They'll be apoplectic. If this is the only way to beat them and prevent no deal, then we should be able to live with it.


 
Posted : 03/04/2019 8:01 pm
 igm
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forget it


 
Posted : 03/04/2019 8:03 pm
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Jeremy won't support a second ref if no deal is prevented.

****.


 
Posted : 03/04/2019 8:18 pm
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Then Labour's doomed.


 
Posted : 03/04/2019 8:20 pm
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Cooper motion passed, noo deal ruled out, at least for next week.


 
Posted : 03/04/2019 8:22 pm
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Ref now ruled out then!


 
Posted : 03/04/2019 8:22 pm
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Cooper motion passed, noo deal ruled out, at least for next week.

Passed 1st reading, and by not a lot so it will be voted on finally at about 10pm

If corbyn is saying no 2nd ref it's at odds with his front bench who have been saying it has to be added all day. There is always the opportunity to add it at the reading stage of the bill and to vote down the WA again - the events this evening have a bearing on that too


 
Posted : 03/04/2019 8:24 pm
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Passed 1st reading

Passed 2nd reading 315/310
Amendments now, further vote at 10pm.


 
Posted : 03/04/2019 8:34 pm
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What's the further vote, anyone know?


 
Posted : 03/04/2019 8:36 pm
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"MPs will now consider amendments to the bill.

It proposes requiring the prime minister to table a motion seeking MPs' approval for an extension to the Article 50 process beyond April 12 to a date of her choosing.

Further votes on the bill are expected at 22:00 BST."


 
Posted : 03/04/2019 8:42 pm
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Yep it's the sort of normal progress, vote in steps to review, make changes (typos to change of intent)
Final reading and results about 10pm to see if it goes up to the Lords - and it has to go to the Lords next


 
Posted : 03/04/2019 8:45 pm
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Ah OK, so if I understand right, any amendments, if passed could either dilute or strengthen the bill but it will still go to the Lords?


 
Posted : 03/04/2019 8:56 pm
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Am I missing something here?

If JC negotiates with the Maybot that another referendum is a requirement, Labour are screwed because it will stop leavers voting for them again...

If he doesn't then Labour are screwed because it will leave all the mad keen
leavers hacked off and he will be accused of enabling Brexit for the Tories.

.... but if he refuses to get involved after constantly telling everyone that Labour should be consulted, then he is going to get a kicking for that too?

So basically he can't win?... but he is going to have to choose one option isn't he - time to get off the fence?

... or have I got that wrong?


 
Posted : 03/04/2019 8:57 pm
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Yep Jez always had the same problem as may, a 50/50 split to contend with.
He'll have to get off the fence and take a position sooner or later.
His fence sitting is annoying more than 50% of his supporters and a hundred percent of everyone else.


 
Posted : 03/04/2019 9:01 pm
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So the one thing the Brexit can achieve is that it will trash both of the 2 main parties?

Finally... after looking for a positive for Brexit for 3 years we finally find one

(as long as it is both of 'em and not just one)


 
Posted : 03/04/2019 9:04 pm
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So basically he can’t win?… but he is going to have to choose one option isn’t he – time to get off the fence?

If you think there is a win then you don't know how the game is played 😉

This is not about winning or scoring some points but working out what is best for the country


 
Posted : 03/04/2019 9:04 pm
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This is not about winning or scoring some points but working out what is best for the country

Oh... I agree with you 100% - However I don't see many people putting the country first currently and the sort of rhetoric being used by the media and in particular the Brexiteer politicians (traitors/enemies of the people/coups/deselection campaigns etc) isn't helping to improve that situation.

I'm just trying to understand why anybody would think that labour are anything other than ****ed at the moment and the Maybot has just made it even worse by calling Jezza's bluff.


 
Posted : 03/04/2019 9:10 pm
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Labour were always gonna be fekked the second they get of the fence.

The illusion will evaporate when he's forced into taking a decisive stance.


 
Posted : 03/04/2019 9:22 pm
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Shit is really hitting the fan now isn't it?


 
Posted : 03/04/2019 9:26 pm
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Labour were always gonna be fekked the second they get of the fence.

The only way off the fence is with conviction and desire, whichever way they go they have to go all in and sell it to the people. Though I feel a strong mumble about to hit us along with some more resignations


 
Posted : 03/04/2019 9:26 pm
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something specific molgrips?


 
Posted : 03/04/2019 9:28 pm
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Voting for an extension when the answer is already no. Not sure how that works but it's just as well I'm not doing Barnier's job... .


 
Posted : 03/04/2019 9:34 pm
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It's another catch 22... If an extension is in law, the EU don't budge (ref or GE).

Then either a ref or GE will be forced.

Hopefully a ref as a GE won't accomplish anything.
Barnier’s job is actually quite easy. They hold all the cards.. No deal or raised eyebrows until the UK unshafts itself.


 
Posted : 03/04/2019 9:37 pm
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Voting for an extension when the answer is already no. Not sure how that works but it’s just as well I’m not doing Barnier’s job… .

Not sure you have been listening to the words being said, extensions are possible just for the right reasons, you would have to say that a good reason would be a resurgence in common sense in the UK and giving us a little more time to do that would save everyone a lot of cash


 
Posted : 03/04/2019 9:38 pm
 dazh
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The illusion will evaporate when he’s forced into taking a decisive stance.

Funny how the only party which has had a clear, consistent and cohesive policy on brexit is perceived as the one being indecisive. This idea that labour has to choose between one set of supporters or another is wrong. They've created a policy which attempts to bring both sides together and address the root problems. Whether it's successful or not remains to be seen but it's been fairly successful so far.


 
Posted : 03/04/2019 9:49 pm
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extensions are possible just for the right reasons

and for the right length.


 
Posted : 03/04/2019 9:56 pm
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Bill Cash being his normal obnoxious self.


 
Posted : 03/04/2019 10:00 pm
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Yeah saw his early contributions, like a good STW pedant he was getting to the meat of the deal 🙂


 
Posted : 03/04/2019 10:04 pm
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I've been listening enough to have heard the UK government vote down any option that would justify an extension to Art 50. Unlees someone can point out what I've missed. So a question for you all:

What would justify an extension that hasn't already been voted down?


 
Posted : 03/04/2019 10:06 pm
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Unlees someone can point out what I’ve missed. So a question for you all:

What would justify an extension that hasn’t already been voted down?

At every point the language used by the EU has been very careful and measured, it has never ruled out long extensions or delays, they have left many doors open for the UK.


 
Posted : 03/04/2019 10:10 pm
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Bill Cash being his normal obnoxious self.

Who the **** votes for that soapy old goat?


 
Posted : 03/04/2019 10:15 pm
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https://www.parliament.uk/biographies/commons/sir-william-cash/288
The good people of Stone - Posh Rural Stoke 😉


 
Posted : 03/04/2019 10:18 pm
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Funny how the only party which has had a clear, consistent and cohesive policy on brexit

The Liberal Democrats?


 
Posted : 03/04/2019 10:18 pm
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A long extension is dependent on the UK taking part in European elections, beyond 12 April "a long extension will automatically become impossible" if the UK does not organise elections.

The short extensions depend on the signing of May's deal. That's not happened so far.

So I'm stil all ears. What can justify an extension that is currently on the table and hasn't been voted against?

Try watching some EU TV channels because they are a lot more clued up on teh contradictions than the Beeb or even the much better coverage on Sky news. When the EU journos look at it they can't see why May should be given an extension given her refusal to either sign the deal or bring something new to the debate.


 
Posted : 03/04/2019 10:27 pm
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If we leave without a deal aren't we screwed on the Irish border issue?


 
Posted : 03/04/2019 10:30 pm
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Try watching some EU TV channels because they are a lot more clued up on teh contradictions than the Beeb or even the much better coverage on Sky news.

I do tend to try and watch many sources but the statements direct from the EU leaders

When the EU journos look at it they can’t see why May should be given an extension given her refusal to either sign the deal or bring something new to the debate.

So why do you assume something new will not be brought to the table? At the moment the chances of May making May are slim, the chances of Parliament shackling the PM enough to force change are high, the state of the government is shakey.

If I was the EU I'd like to see the revoke argument play out at least, I'd want No Deal binned for a start - the point where the she goes and the tories live is not a deal the EU want to get to as it's the one with no withdrawal agreement.

There are a heap of options in play at the moment.


 
Posted : 03/04/2019 10:36 pm
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What would justify an extension that hasn’t already been voted down?

I don't think anything has been fully ruled out yet has it? The indicative votes weren't binding.


 
Posted : 03/04/2019 10:37 pm
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https://twitter.com/NickBoles/status/1113535648688951296

And a bit more info starts to come out


 
Posted : 03/04/2019 10:54 pm
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I think it's time the BBC was put out of our misery.


 
Posted : 03/04/2019 11:00 pm
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