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Deleted member 1147
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Has there been a good Labour MP since Robin Cook?
Alan Johnson immediately springs to mind, David Milliband is a big loss.Has there been a good Labour MP since Robin Cook?
Alan Johnson immediately springs to mind, David Milliband is a big loss.
Any decent ones now are on the back benches waiting for Corbyn to go. They don't want to be tainted by associating with his leadership.
At this point is it worth recalling that Cameron called Brexit with only 37% of the UK supporting his party far less Brexit.
63% did not want him to be PM.
youre forgetting brexit means wwe can have blue passports and powerfull hoovers.Interesting analysis video link I saw through FB about why No Deal Brexit is likely only beneficial to the very rich. Quite recent and worth a watch I think no matter your views on EU, see if u agree with none, any or all of it. Narrated by the ever-wise Stephen Fry.
At this point is it worth recalling that Cameron called Brexit with only 37% of the UK supporting his party far less Brexit.
63% did not want him to be PM.
Interesting analysis video link I saw through FB about why No Deal Brexit is likely only beneficial to the very rich. Quite recent and worth a watch I think no matter your views on EU, see if u agree with none, any or all of it. Narrated by the ever-wise Stephen Fry.
Not sure the point you're trying to make. At the 2017 election 36.9% of Scottish voters voted for the SNP. Nicola Sturgeon wants another independence referendum but 63% did not want her to be First Minister.
So are you saying that there shouldn't have been an EU referendum because only 37% of the population supported Cameron? In which case you must surely agree that there shouldn't be a Scottish independence referendum because only 37% of Scots supported the SNP.
Not sure the point you're trying to make. At the 2017 election 36.9% of Scottish voters voted for the SNP. Nicola Sturgeon wants another independence referendum but 63% did not want her to be First Minister.
So are you saying that there shouldn't have been an EU referendum because only 37% of the population supported Cameron? In which case you must surely agree that there shouldn't be a Scottish independence referendum because only 37% of Scots supported the SNP.
A lot of those that didn’t vote Tory @ that election voted for UKIP, didn’t they?I am saying that considerably less than the 37% who voted for Cameron were Brexit supporters so his real support for his yet to be proposed Brexit would have been between 18 to 28% of the 37%
A lot of those that didn’t vote Tory @ that election voted for UKIP, didn’t they?
I am saying that considerably less than the 37% who voted for Cameron were Brexit supporters so his real support for his yet to be proposed Brexit would have been between 18 to 28% of the 37%
If, as Fry says, the UK has full sovereignty why did it oppose a number of laws from the EU and lose 16% of those cases? All the information about law making and law opposition is out there. In a recent piece the Remain side went from saying the UK was in full control of its laws to saying the UK lost only 16% of the diktats it opposed, with the emphasis on only. Other Remainers, some of which are on here, have said they prefer the EU making the UK's laws as successive UK govts are inept and/or untrustworthy.
Is the UK in full control of setting its own laws? Technically, yes. The diktats from the EU have to be turned into UK law by the UK parliament. But in a number of cases the UK has reluctantly accepted those laws after opposing them but losing the case.
Full sovereignty? Colour it whichever way you want but the answer is the UK does not have full, independent sovereignty.