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[Closed] Is May about to call an election?

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[quote=igm ]Corbyn's getting quite good isn't he? I didn't expect that.
Admittedly it's only compared to May, but even so.
I suspect he and Starmer would be better in charge of the negotiations than any of the Tories.

It appears he can do a TV debate AND think about Brexit.

I've written it before, but anything is preferably to a bloody difficult woman who's prepared to walk away as if she's buying a used car, in a situation where we hold little power and the best results will be achieved by compromise. But of course her stated position plays to those who she's trying to get to vote for her.

[quote=mrmo ]I do wonder if Corbyn is looking realistically at the relationships the EU has with Norway, Switzerland and Turkey and considering them as a goal??? That he accepts a clean break is not in the UKs interests, and a fudge is the best way forward. But isn't willing to say it???

I thought he had got very close to saying that? At least my expectation of the deal with Corbyn in charge would be something similar to what Norway has - which TBH is probably the best possible outcome at this stage as it avoids the awkward problem of "ignoring" the referendum result, whilst getting as close to what the majority of people actually want. I'm reasonably confident if he went to the EU with this as an aim and asked them to work with him to provide a deal the British public would accept they'd be more than eager to do so.


 
Posted : 02/06/2017 3:41 pm
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be worth it just to see Jacob Rees-Moggs head explode.


 
Posted : 02/06/2017 3:51 pm
 igm
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Can we stick JRM's head in Farage's gob before it explodes. It would be almost poetic.


 
Posted : 02/06/2017 4:01 pm
 ctk
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๐Ÿ˜†


 
Posted : 02/06/2017 4:04 pm
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Not sure anyone but those in the know can comment on likely or not Brexit deal - there is a huge incentive for EU to make the deal as poor as possible for UK or risk other nations follow suit.

Deciding whether 'no deal' is better somewhat depends on the deal that is negotiated to surely?


 
Posted : 02/06/2017 4:28 pm
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Deciding whether 'no deal' is better somewhat depends on the deal that is negotiated to surely?

only if you think a negotiated deal would somehow be worse than moving to the WTO arrangement.


 
Posted : 02/06/2017 4:37 pm
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How can one negotiate a deal worse than WTO?
even I dont think the tories are that bad ๐Ÿ˜‰

I think the Eu will accept many things as long as it remains true to the four pillars* and keeps EU integrity
Many things ranging from switzerland style to ETA
What we wont get is better than we have now, no, or even reduced payments and the freedom to choose on which of the pillars we adhere to

The Eu is a somewhat all or nothing on its rules, as are most clubs

* the free movement of goods, services, capital and labour. we wont get the three we want without the fourth we dont.


 
Posted : 02/06/2017 4:38 pm
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[quote=jet26 ]there is a huge incentive for EU to make the deal as poor as possible for UK or risk other nations follow suit.

Not necessarily - the deal just has to be worse than staying in. It's clear to everybody apart from the deluded Brexiteers that applies to any deal. It also seems that the population of other EU countries has noticed and there is little appetite elsewhere to leave (Brexit is largely a peculiarly British thing, based upon the notion that we are somehow superior). The reality is that the incentive for the EU is to make the best deal for their members - that might sometimes seem like making the deal as poor as possible for the UK, but that itself won't be a major driver for them. The reality is also that given a suitable negotiator who is prepared to compromise the EU would like to have a deal close to what we already have.

Deciding whether 'no deal' is better somewhat depends on the deal that is negotiated to surely?

Well yes - but that relies upon the assumption that they'll somehow negotiate a deal which is worse than not having one. Not only that but the whole "no deal" thing is a bit of a fallacy - even if we don't have a negotiated deal we still have to have a relationship with the EU. It's not like walking away from a used car.


 
Posted : 02/06/2017 4:46 pm
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Would be interesting to see some useful data on what those who voted leave actually want 'leave' to mean - I am not entirely clear what people were voting for if they voted leave.


 
Posted : 02/06/2017 4:49 pm
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unfortunately neither were they ๐Ÿ™

They were promised so much some did it to return freedom, some as a protest vote to the establishment [ these folk should have the right to vote removed]. some to leave the EU politically but still trade, some to leave entirely in all respects. some to "save the NHS" and some to stop Muslims coming here
there was no unanimity in their vote.

Most leavers did think and want a trade deal, and the campaign expected to get one* so i think its reasonable to say most were not voting for a hard brexit.

* apparently they need us more than we need them as we have a deficit with them - of course this ignores the fact its 45% our exports and 4% of theirs and they are 5 x the size of us in GDP terms - and the EU wont be as daft as do something that would harm trade - incredibly they faith the EU is not as stupid as they were being. I am not so sure this is the case and whilst the May stick [ difficult woman] may play well here with some/core tory voters it is harming our chances of an agreement


 
Posted : 02/06/2017 4:55 pm
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Good luck with that! I'm not sure those who voted Leave even know.

I'm very confident though that a Norway style deal would have the support of a majority of the population right now (even if you ignore those Leavers who've changed their mind).


 
Posted : 02/06/2017 4:56 pm
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It was a fairly simple question Jet26

They were voting to leave the EU

I really don't know why you think there is a need to try and break down and analyse it beyond that just because you didn't like the outcome.


 
Posted : 02/06/2017 4:56 pm
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Good point ninfan - because nobody cares at all what happens now.


 
Posted : 02/06/2017 4:59 pm
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that is like claiming if i ask do you want to go on holiday and my family say yes that they all agreed on where we were going.

yes the country voted to leave but for very different reasons and not all expecting the same thing.
To argue otherwise is disingenuous - hence you are giving it a go ๐Ÿ˜‰

We know some of what it meant, but there is a lot unsaid in the answer....so we need another vote to see if we like the choice of holiday destination ๐Ÿ˜‰


 
Posted : 02/06/2017 5:00 pm
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Both of those could be potentially valid points

Perhaps you, and the rest of the Remainders, would have been better making them in the aftermath of the vote, actually engaging in a debate about 'where do we go from here' instead of bitching and whining like sore losers trying to get the vote overturned or ignored?

As usual, the lefties stayed stuck on transmit instead of switching to receive for a while.


 
Posted : 02/06/2017 5:04 pm
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that is exactly what I said to the kids about the holidays. That sure showed them.

Sorry though you might have gone for sensible for a few more posts or tried to argue there was agreement between brexiters - actually you are not that daft are you. That is more jamby than you as you like to at least have a pretence of fact to your point.


 
Posted : 02/06/2017 5:07 pm
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Hey, Junky, make no mistake, i said this at the time, that we ought to discuss where next

But you lot were all too wrapped up in how e-petitions, court challenges and protest marches could stop Brexit


 
Posted : 02/06/2017 5:11 pm
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[quote=ninfan ]Perhaps you, and the rest of the Remainders, would have been better making them in the aftermath of the vote

Wow - you're really being incisive today. Because this is [url= https://en.oxforddictionaries.com/definition/literally ]literally[/url] the first time anybody has made that point.


 
Posted : 02/06/2017 5:14 pm
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course you did and its our fault, we are very sorry we were to busy whaling and gnashing our teeth to hear your diplomatic tones for unity, after victory, and agreement moving forward. Boy do we feel foolish now for not listening to your one nation together speeches you made unendingly on here - I am only hoping saying this makes you scurry of to your excel file of posts you once said to prove your point as I like to waste your time to ๐Ÿ˜›


 
Posted : 02/06/2017 5:16 pm
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Mindanao I'm not taking issue with the result. The whole debate around what is a good deal is a moot point though if it is entirely unclear what the leave vote wanted.

How do you know if you've got what you want if you don't know what you want in the first place?


 
Posted : 02/06/2017 5:48 pm
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Hey, Junky, make no mistake, i said this at the time, that we ought to discuss where next

But you lot were all too wrapped up in how e-petitions, court challenges and protest marches could stop Brexit

Some of us have moved on labrat. We are just waiting for you brexiters to defeat yourselves, and then we will go to work.


 
Posted : 02/06/2017 5:49 pm
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El-bent - Member
We are just waiting for you brexiters to defeat yourselves, and then we will go to work.
You lot will work on what? You will retire by that time and probably just enjoy your pension to see the world go by. Your children probably will not listen to you because you will be old by then. ๐Ÿ˜›

It will take, at least, another two generations to come up with another "global system" coz we are just starting to dismantle the current ones. ๐Ÿ˜†


 
Posted : 02/06/2017 5:57 pm
 igm
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The dismantling will fall apart quickly Chewkw. We have no fears there.

Ninfan - plenty of remainers were asking what leave actually meant last July, but the Brexies were stuck on transmit about leaving now. Remember the Brexies trashing Polish property? Only now as it's becoming clear it's all falling apart for Brexit are you fools starting to listen. But you're still mainly trying to blame others.
If you check back on this thread you'll find my suggestions of what a decent Brexit deal might look like back in about July (four freedoms as a minimum, no need for grants for farmers, and leaving the European Parliament etc if we must). But I have to be honest - idiot Brexy behaviour since then has hardened my attitude against Brexit somewhat.


 
Posted : 02/06/2017 8:44 pm
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Perhaps you, and the rest of the Remainders, would have been better making them in the aftermath of the vote, actually engaging in a debate about 'where do we go from here'

We did, a lot. Were you not here for that?

Actually though, it would have been more important BEFORE the vote.


 
Posted : 02/06/2017 9:08 pm
 dazh
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Maybe it's just me, but Chairman May is being quietly skewered by the audience on QT. Completely unable and unwilling to answer a question straightly. Even the self declared tory voter seems to despise her!


 
Posted : 02/06/2017 9:11 pm
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Even the self declared tory voter seems to despise her!

To my eternal shame I have a couple of Tory councillors on Facebook. Normally they're very active online, very engaged with their local community and campaigning hard when there's a vote at hand.

Right now, utterly silent!


 
Posted : 02/06/2017 9:19 pm
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@dazh Yes and no. Some tough questions to give satisfactory answers to.
She's answered some, and twisted her answer to avoid some others quite well.
Based on what i just saw i'm not quite sure why she's been hiding from debates/media, she seemed just as competent as anyone else.


 
Posted : 02/06/2017 9:19 pm
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if only she shared your confidence

did not get a shoeing but she does waffle a bit /speak like a politician*
Corbyn speaks much more "normally"

* eg education I want the best or every child etc but not actually saying much or answering the question.


 
Posted : 02/06/2017 9:22 pm
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Oh yeah, 'politician' speak is extremely frustrating. We certainly need more that just speak their mind.


 
Posted : 02/06/2017 9:26 pm
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* eg education I want the best or every child etc but not actually saying much or answering the question.

This is the thing for me, she holds pretty much the most powerful position in the country, she's paid very well, she's got a guaranteed gold plated retirement plan, plus other business interests I'm sure. Her husband isn't exactly Skint.

I'm not nessesarily against that but I'd expect certain calibre of person to step up to what is a very tough life consuming job if it's to be done properly and justify the benefits.

I'm not seeing that from May, she strikes me as shrewd opportunistic chancer who'll be laughing all the way to the bank when her time is up regardless of what happens.

That's not head of state material.


 
Posted : 02/06/2017 9:36 pm
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Ooh, Corbyn utterly losing the room there


 
Posted : 02/06/2017 9:41 pm
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Arent you tories meant to be singing Mays praises rather than just attacking corbyn?


 
Posted : 02/06/2017 9:42 pm
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Lol @ the stooge. Jez nearly used the name but err'd back to "the person you're talking about".


 
Posted : 02/06/2017 9:42 pm
 dazh
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Ooh, Corbyn utterly losing the room there

As the young lady said, the fact that some people are obsessed with the idea of killing millions of people is a bit bizarre.


 
Posted : 02/06/2017 9:42 pm
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Arent you tories meant to be singing Mays praises rather than just attacking corbyn?

Why? I've said for ages that Rees-Mogg or Wee Ruthie should have been leader.


 
Posted : 02/06/2017 9:46 pm
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ninfan - Member

Why? I've said for ages that Rees-Mogg or Wee Ruthie should have been leader.

Nice work there Ninfan.... ๐Ÿ™‚


 
Posted : 02/06/2017 9:50 pm
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Well JC's surely having quite a hard time of it. And he's written the front pages for the next couple of days by refusing twice (or 3 times?) to say he'd press the button.

He's done quite well at deflecting questioning about the money tree though.


 
Posted : 02/06/2017 9:58 pm
 dazh
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Well JC's surely having quite a hard time of it.

He was certainly challenged, yes. His response though was to answer the questions honestly and in some detail, and didn't once try to obfuscate or evade. Unless of course you think his dislike of wanting to kill millions of people by using nuclear weapons is a bad thing. ๐Ÿ˜•

Quite frankly it was a far more honest, detailed and passionate performance than May, who again just waffled her way through it.


 
Posted : 02/06/2017 10:03 pm
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[quote=ninfan ]Why? I've said for ages that Rees-Mogg or Wee Ruthie should have been leader.

Don't worry, they'll be getting their chance soon enough.


 
Posted : 02/06/2017 10:04 pm
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@aracer - Imagine, a political party that is happy to drop a leader if they're not doing the job.

IMagine how different things might be this time next week if Labour had the balls to do that


 
Posted : 02/06/2017 10:06 pm
 ctk
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Corbyn smashed it apart from the nukes which was the most awkward moment of the night.

May just droned on saying as little as possible. Dimbleby let her get away with it a bit.


 
Posted : 02/06/2017 10:07 pm
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Didn't actually think either waffled less than the other. Saying we want everyone to be equal in various ways doesn't get to the detail.

Neither of them were great.


 
Posted : 02/06/2017 10:07 pm
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Doesn't she look tired?


 
Posted : 02/06/2017 10:08 pm
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@dazh, he was evading inside the first 2-3mins when challenged on how he could be trusted to be responsible with spending. He more or less dodged it completely and just told us more of what he wanted to spend money on.
And ALL he did on the 'button' question was evade. 'Politician' speak with the odd sprinkling of honesty today from both sides.


 
Posted : 02/06/2017 10:11 pm
 rone
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Corbyn smashed it apart from the nukes which was the most awkward moment of the night.

To be honest an awkward response is the correct one. It shouldn't be easy to come to an abrupt decision.

Besides what is it with red faced fat blokes pushing for the red button ? Idiots. Britain first rejects.


 
Posted : 02/06/2017 10:11 pm
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