ger147
Tour Winner
Can they change that in law? Would they have time?
Yes and yes, assuming the HoC's voted in favour of it.
Can they change that in law? Would they have time?
Can they change that in law? Would they have time?
100 to 1? if the EU say no to an extension and we do not have a deal by the 29th then we will leave on the 29th with no deal.
You forgot secret option c
Revoke article 50
Which we can do at anytime
We don’t need agreement from any states
Once revoked brexit is cancelled
100/1? I’ll take £10 on that if you fancy backing your odds 😂
You forgot secret option c
Revoke article 50
Which we can do at anytime
We don’t need agreement from any states
Once revoked brexit is cancelled
100/1? I’ll take £10 on that if you fancy backing your odds 😂
I'd be prepared to spend significantly more than a tenner to watch Rees-Mogg's reaction to that!![]()
Did May properly lose the plot a bit yesterday?
It went something like -
When the first vote on the amendment went through (No 'No Deal' ever), that caught her off guard, she'd thought she would win that one but lost narrowly. Then panic ensued and she arranged a 3 line whip to get all her MPs (including ministers who are supposed to obey) to vote down her own Govt motion on the main vote of 'We wont leave with a No Deal on the 29th March'. She was then seen in the lobby voting against her own motion and so in a round about way voting for a No Deal herself and took some stick from MPs for it - Jess Phillips who's never afraid to speak her mind told May to her face 'It was a dsigrace'.
A number of cabinet and junior minsiters abstained, some other Brexiteer MPs later calling for their resignations because it was a 3 line whip. Farage raging. One minister did resign I believe. The ministers that abstained must know that's very serious but May has so little control she can't do diddly about that it seems. Those ministers were caught bewteeen a rock and a hard place though - could not be seen to vote for No Deal or they'd have been vilified for it, May put them in an impossible position. They all claim to back PM on leaving with a deal however.
Clearly she wanted to keep a No Deal option alive all along (legally it is still alive as others have noted above) but to have it 'alive' for a later date after 29th in a commons voting sense, if not a legal one.
Is that about the size of it?
Desperate stuff and not the behaviour of a PM/leader in control. How is she continually able to survive as PM? Shambles.
Probably because at the moment in the situation we are in, no one will do a better job as everyone knows there is no majority for anything in parliament. Gove, Bojo et al are keeping as quiet as they can waiting to pounce when the time is right. But I'd argue to take over now would not be a great career move.
No. But you already know that.There was, wasn’t there? And it passed with a greater majority?
Amendment going in to take 2nd referendum off the table, be interesting to see if speaker allows it.
No. But you already know that.
And that soft Brexit could well be Mrs May’s deal. And what is often forgotten is that Mrs. May herself is not that keen on it. It’s just the only thing she can get, because we allowed the EU to dictate the negotiations and couldn’t negotiate a trade agreement in tandem with the WA.It's political suicide if that would be done without some form of referendum where it obtained a significant majority. I'd argue a very managed soft Brexit is the only possible way out of this. I imagine that no one will be particularly happy with that but over time we'll move on. Any of the other options (no deal, revoke article 50) will just lead to massive divisions in society and parliament and years and years of arguing, blaming the other side etc etc.
The worst of it was that Caroline Spelman tabled the motion to take no deal off the table for good, then realised what she had done and declined to move it, leaving co signatory Yvette Cooper (Labour, though we know Labour are irrelevant according to some on here, so cannot be blamed or credited) to move it forward anyway. Spelman had no choice but to vote for it and it would have only taken her and one other voting against for a tie.Did May properly lose the plot a bit yesterday?
It went something like -
When the first vote on the amendment went through (No 'No Deal' ever), that caught her off guard, she'd thought she would win that one but lost narrowly. Then panic ensued and she arranged a 3 line whip to get all her MPs (including ministers who are supposed to obey) to vote down her own Govt motion on the main vote of 'We wont leave with a No Deal on the 29th March'. She was then seen in the lobby voting against her own motion and so in a round about way voting for a No Deal herself and took some stick from MPs for it - Jess Phillips who's never afraid to speak her mind told May to her face 'It was a dsigrace'.
A number of cabinet and junior minsiters abstained, some other Brexiteer MPs later calling for their resignations because it was a 3 line whip. Farage raging. One minister did resign I believe. The ministers that abstained must know that's very serious but May has so little control she can't do diddly about that it seems. Those ministers were caught bewteeen a rock and a hard place though - could not be seen to vote for No Deal or they'd have been vilified for it, May put them in an impossible position. They all claim to back PM on leaving with a deal however.
Clearly she wanted to keep a No Deal option alive all along (legally it is still alive as others have noted above) but to have it 'alive' for a later date after 29th in a commons voting sense, if not a legal one.
Is that about the size of it?
Desperate stuff and not the behaviour of a PM/leader in control. How is she continually able to survive as PM? Shambles.