D
Deleted member 16999
Guest
Only Wrong in your opinion.Wrong!
Cameron started it by calling the Referendum!
May took over and realised she wouldn't be able to win votes with the slim majority she had, so called another election. That move backfired - badly!
The fact is that MPs are about as divided on the issue as the rest of the country, so it was always going to be a 'tough ask' to get legislation through! And the EU negotiators knew/know this, so adjust their approach accordingly.
No Deal, via Article 50's default, has always looked the most likely 'result' to me! And future negotiations will be just as difficult imo. EU will continue to insist on an arrangement that maintains their control of agenda and agreements!
Cameron carried out a manifesto pledge, now we have people on here criticise parties for not carrying out their manifesto promises, you can’t have it both ways.
May then activated Art 50, then called a snap election for no more than vanity reasons, Cameron had gone by then so no blame can be put on him for this reason.
The 2017 created no clear winner, 98 new MP’s were elected (none of whom were in position when Art 50 was voted on and they were voted in by us in full knowledge of referendum result.
May stayed in Government by paying a bung to the DUP, she then had all sorts of issues with her negotiation team, didn’t disclose the plan to many tory MP’s and took no input from any other party during the negotiation process.
You then brought the deal and was voted down by the highest loss in history, spent 3 months trying to bring it back and continually refusing to speak to other parties, finally spoke to them and changed nothing.
We are were we are today because TM and the tory party(who also gave her a vote of confidence but couldn’t back her deal).
The rest, imo, is smoke and mirrors, Labour, Lib Dems, SNP etc have never had any control over the negotiations nor any input to them, yet people expect them to bend over and take one for the tories without the tories expected to do the same.