Brexit delayed

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Which Tyler
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Re: Brexit delayed

Post by Which Tyler »

Can anyone get behind the paywall on this - not sure I believe the headline:
https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/brus ... -2vg9g7b30?
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Stones of granite
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Re: Brexit delayed

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Sherelle Jacobs gives the game away in the Telegraph.
https://premium.telegraph.co.uk/newslet ... =DM1109210

The Government’s silence on other problematic aspects of the Withdrawal Agreement has only heightened suspicion. (On thorny issues like fishing and European Investment Bank contributions, we are still none the wiser about its plans.)
...
It is rumoured that the PM has designed his proposal to be rejected by Europe after a few days of phoney talks, because he knows that no deal is his only route to a majority. Johnson understands all too well that if the narrative swings back from establishment conspiracy to Conservative catastrophe, his party will be eviscerated. He also no doubt senses that the Opposition is aching to deploy Brexiteer language against him, with accusations of “betraying” the union.
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Which Tyler
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Re: Brexit delayed

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Stones of granite wrote:Sherelle Jacobs gives the game away in the Telegraph.
Gives the game away? we all knew that before he even approached making at attempt at getting a deal.
The entire purpose is to give himself enough wriggle room when it comes to the blame game once everything's gone to shit after Brexit, but that it can't possibly be the fault of Brexit or its advocates.

It's the Remainers fault for not believing hard enough.
It's the MP's fault for standing up for what they believe in, and not doing what Theresa told them to.
It's the EU's fault for not doing our work for us, and finding those pesky unicorns; and then having the temerity to point out that our unicorns don't actually exist.
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Stones of granite
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Re: Brexit delayed

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Which Tyler wrote:
Stones of granite wrote:Sherelle Jacobs gives the game away in the Telegraph.
Gives the game away? we all knew that before he even approached making at attempt at getting a deal.
The entire purpose is to give himself enough wriggle room when it comes to the blame game once everything's gone to shit after Brexit, but that it can't possibly be the fault of Brexit or its advocates.

It's the Remainers fault for not believing hard enough.
It's the MP's fault for standing up for what they believe in, and not doing what Theresa told them to.
It's the EU's fault for not doing our work for us, and finding those pesky unicorns; and then having the temerity to point out that our unicorns don't actually exist.
I know that we all knew that, the interesting thing is that a Torygraph journalist is now writing it. I suspect they are flying that kite to make sure that the true believers, some of who might not be bright enough to realise what is going on, don't start falling for Farage's claims of a sell-out.
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Re: Brexit delayed

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Stones of granite wrote:
Which Tyler wrote:
Stones of granite wrote:Sherelle Jacobs gives the game away in the Telegraph.
Gives the game away? we all knew that before he even approached making at attempt at getting a deal.
The entire purpose is to give himself enough wriggle room when it comes to the blame game once everything's gone to shit after Brexit, but that it can't possibly be the fault of Brexit or its advocates.

It's the Remainers fault for not believing hard enough.
It's the MP's fault for standing up for what they believe in, and not doing what Theresa told them to.
It's the EU's fault for not doing our work for us, and finding those pesky unicorns; and then having the temerity to point out that our unicorns don't actually exist.
I know that we all knew that, the interesting thing is that a Torygraph journalist is now writing it. I suspect they are flying that kite to make sure that the true believers, some of who might not be bright enough to realise what is going on, don't start falling for Farage's claims of a sell-out.
Fair
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Which Tyler
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Re: Brexit delayed

Post by Which Tyler »

Wow, I'm really surprised by this, really couldn't have seen this coming 3 years ago.[/deadpan]
https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/p ... 43221.html
Brexit: Boris Johnson moves to scrap environment safeguards to get deal with Trump
Trade secretary says scrapping protections ‘vital for giving us the freedom and flexibility’ to sign deals


Boris Johnson is scrapping a commitment by Theresa May to stick to EU rules on the environment, safety standards and workers’ rights – to raise his chances of getting a trade agreement with Donald Trump.

Article Continues
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Re: Brexit delayed

Post by Digby »

Which Tyler wrote:Wow, I'm really surprised by this, really couldn't have seen this coming 3 years ago.[/deadpan]
https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/p ... 43221.html
Brexit: Boris Johnson moves to scrap environment safeguards to get deal with Trump
Trade secretary says scrapping protections ‘vital for giving us the freedom and flexibility’ to sign deals


Boris Johnson is scrapping a commitment by Theresa May to stick to EU rules on the environment, safety standards and workers’ rights – to raise his chances of getting a trade agreement with Donald Trump.

Article Continues
I'd like to know the details, but (a) it's no surprise (b) they've been lying to us on this subject too and (c) it'll diverge us still further from the EU making a deal with greater access more problematic

Maths is not remotely on the side ion Boris in all this
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Re: Brexit delayed

Post by Sandydragon »

So now we want to do our own thing in terms of standards but still have a close deal with the EU.

Cakism.
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Puja
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Re: Brexit delayed

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Sandydragon wrote:So now we want to do our own thing in terms of standards but still have a close deal with the EU.

Cakism.
And, of course, have no border with either Ireland or Northern Ireland, except in the circumstances where we want one.

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Re: Brexit delayed

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Puja wrote: And, of course, have no border with either Ireland or Northern Ireland, except in the circumstances where we want one.
Schrödinger's border
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Re: Brexit delayed

Post by Son of Mathonwy »

Digby wrote:
Which Tyler wrote:Wow, I'm really surprised by this, really couldn't have seen this coming 3 years ago.[/deadpan]
https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/p ... 43221.html
Brexit: Boris Johnson moves to scrap environment safeguards to get deal with Trump
Trade secretary says scrapping protections ‘vital for giving us the freedom and flexibility’ to sign deals


Boris Johnson is scrapping a commitment by Theresa May to stick to EU rules on the environment, safety standards and workers’ rights – to raise his chances of getting a trade agreement with Donald Trump.

Article Continues
I'd like to know the details, but (a) it's no surprise (b) they've been lying to us on this subject too and (c) it'll diverge us still further from the EU making a deal with greater access more problematic

Maths is not remotely on the side ion Boris in all this
A quick check of Wikipedia tells me the amount of trade we do with the EU is 3.4x the amount we do with the USA.

So it's manifestly against the UK's interests to prioritise US trade over EU trade. That's before we even get into the impact of reduced standards on UK citizens.

So either they're incompetent or they're mad ... or they're doing this for personal gain. (Hey, they're multi-talented, why not all three?)
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Re: Brexit delayed

Post by Sandydragon »

Ignore trade, this is ideological. All this crap about trade deals with the rest of the world is a smokescreen, they just want to leave the EU at any cost.
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Re: Brexit delayed

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https://www.newstatesman.com/politics/e ... rly-stupid
Why the UK cannot see that Brexit is utterly, utterly stupid

The British press helped condone austerity. It’s now blinding us to the stupidity of Brexit.

If you talk to almost anyone overseas, except those at the right-wing extreme (like Trump) or part of a tiny minority of the left, their reaction to Brexit is similar that of the former prime minister of Finland. What the UK is doing is utterly, utterly stupid. An act of self harm with no point, no upside. Sometimes outside opinion is based on incomplete or biased information and should be discounted, but on Brexit it is spot on. So why are so many people in the UK unable to see what outsiders can see quite clearly?

The days when Leavers talked about the sunlit uplands are over. Liam Fox has not even managed to replicate the scores of trade deals the UK will lose when we leave the EU. As for independence, Leavers cannot name any laws imposed on the UK by the EU that they do not like. Since the referendum, even public attitudes to immigration have become much more favourable.

Article Continues
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Re: Brexit delayed

Post by Digby »

As Sandy notes it's ideological, you cannot refute claims around sunlit uplands with this driving the Brexit agenda with facts, indeed facts will only make them angry
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Re: Brexit delayed

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Sources have told the Times that the Speaker of the House John Bercow is being considered as a possible leader of a government of national unity. Which is clearly a nonsense idea, you simply cannot start to build unity around such a divisive figure, and it's a horrible step for what would be a very recent former speaker of the house into the bargain.
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Re: Brexit delayed

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Digby wrote:Sources have told the Times that the Speaker of the House John Bercow is being considered as a possible leader of a government of national unity. Which is clearly a nonsense idea, you simply cannot start to build unity around such a divisive figure, and it's a horrible step for what would be a very recent former speaker of the house into the bargain.
Yup.
The point is (allegedly) to built a cabinet of people who aren't going tonstand for election again, so they're no threat to JC. There are so many better candidates to build that around though (Ken Clarke)
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Re: Brexit delayed

Post by Son of Mathonwy »

Which Tyler wrote:
Digby wrote:Sources have told the Times that the Speaker of the House John Bercow is being considered as a possible leader of a government of national unity. Which is clearly a nonsense idea, you simply cannot start to build unity around such a divisive figure, and it's a horrible step for what would be a very recent former speaker of the house into the bargain.
Yup.
The point is (allegedly) to built a cabinet of people who aren't going tonstand for election again, so they're no threat to JC. There are so many better candidates to build that around though (Ken Clarke)
I think Bercow would be an ok choice.

He's a former Tory, but now effectively independent. The Bercow party isn't likely to threaten Labour (or anyone else).

He's divisive, yes, but that's across the house. What the GNU needs is a figure who isn't divisive amongst members of the GNU.
And (presumably) Bercow has the respect (to say the least) of most of them.
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Re: Brexit delayed

Post by Stom »

Son of Mathonwy wrote:
Which Tyler wrote:
Digby wrote:Sources have told the Times that the Speaker of the House John Bercow is being considered as a possible leader of a government of national unity. Which is clearly a nonsense idea, you simply cannot start to build unity around such a divisive figure, and it's a horrible step for what would be a very recent former speaker of the house into the bargain.
Yup.
The point is (allegedly) to built a cabinet of people who aren't going tonstand for election again, so they're no threat to JC. There are so many better candidates to build that around though (Ken Clarke)
I think Bercow would be an ok choice.

He's a former Tory, but now effectively independent. The Bercow party isn't likely to threaten Labour (or anyone else).

He's divisive, yes, but that's across the house. What the GNU needs is a figure who isn't divisive amongst members of the GNU.
And (presumably) Bercow has the respect (to say the least) of most of them.
He doesn't, though, because he's pretty much an avowed remainer. We'd need a "moderate" lunatic.
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Re: Brexit delayed

Post by Son of Mathonwy »

Stom wrote:
Son of Mathonwy wrote:
Which Tyler wrote: Yup.
The point is (allegedly) to built a cabinet of people who aren't going tonstand for election again, so they're no threat to JC. There are so many better candidates to build that around though (Ken Clarke)
I think Bercow would be an ok choice.

He's a former Tory, but now effectively independent. The Bercow party isn't likely to threaten Labour (or anyone else).

He's divisive, yes, but that's across the house. What the GNU needs is a figure who isn't divisive amongst members of the GNU.
And (presumably) Bercow has the respect (to say the least) of most of them.
He doesn't, though, because he's pretty much an avowed remainer. We'd need a "moderate" lunatic.
He doesn't have the respect of the opposition? Are you sure? I'm not saying he's anyone's favourite, just someone most people would find acceptable.

Most of the GNU would be remainers. How can that rule him out? He doesn't need to bring parliament back together again (nothing can do that in the short term), he just needs to hold the GNU together (for how long? A week would do it).
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Re: Brexit delayed

Post by Puja »

Son of Mathonwy wrote:
Stom wrote:
Son of Mathonwy wrote: I think Bercow would be an ok choice.

He's a former Tory, but now effectively independent. The Bercow party isn't likely to threaten Labour (or anyone else).

He's divisive, yes, but that's across the house. What the GNU needs is a figure who isn't divisive amongst members of the GNU.
And (presumably) Bercow has the respect (to say the least) of most of them.
He doesn't, though, because he's pretty much an avowed remainer. We'd need a "moderate" lunatic.
He doesn't have the respect of the opposition? Are you sure? I'm not saying he's anyone's favourite, just someone most people would find acceptable.

Most of the GNU would be remainers. How can that rule him out? He doesn't need to bring parliament back together again (nothing can do that in the short term), he just needs to hold the GNU together (for how long? A week would do it).
And the Europeans find him quaintly amusing, which is probably the highest esteem they have for any of our politicians right now, so he's the right person to send for an extension. :D

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Which Tyler
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Re: Brexit delayed

Post by Which Tyler »

Quite a bit to get through overnight, most notably (I think) these two:

https://www.theguardian.com/politics/20 ... rexit-plan
Revealed: the EU's point-by-point rejection of Johnson's Brexit plan


https://blogs.spectator.co.uk/2019/10/h ... otiations/
How Number 10 view the state of the negotiations


I'm unlikely to have a chance to actually pick through these until much later today


Elsewhere, the Pasty Cockwomble calls Extension Rebellion "uncooperative crusties". Being uncooperative is the whole point of the thing, whereas the reason it's got so big is that it's NOT just crusties.

However, great to see Pasty Cockwomble sticking to his principles of escalating everything he possibly can escalate.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-49967784
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Re: Brexit delayed

Post by Banquo »

Which Tyler wrote:Quite a bit to get through overnight, most notably (I think) these two:

https://www.theguardian.com/politics/20 ... rexit-plan
Revealed: the EU's point-by-point rejection of Johnson's Brexit plan


https://blogs.spectator.co.uk/2019/10/h ... otiations/
How Number 10 view the state of the negotiations


I'm unlikely to have a chance to actually pick through these until much later today


Elsewhere, the Pasty Cockwomble calls Extension Rebellion "uncooperative crusties". Being uncooperative is the whole point of the thing, whereas the reason it's got so big is that it's NOT just crusties.

However, great to see Pasty Cockwomble sticking to his principles of escalating everything he possibly can escalate.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-49967784
Not much good faith then.
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Re: Brexit delayed

Post by fivepointer »

Every word, every observation, every conclusion is nailed....

David Allen Green in typically fine form

https://threadreaderapp.com/thread/1181 ... 21024.html

"At each stage of the process, the belief that things were just a matter of political will have been confounded by legal reality. And still Brexiters put their heads down and charge at the walls, and get clapped and cheered on. None of this to say that law explains everything, or indeed many things, about Brexit. And there are things legal commentators have got wrong - am first to admit. But the failure to take law seriously explains a good deal why this attempt at Brexit was so botched. The sad thing, nothing has been learned. Every set-back just makes Brexiters shoutier about political will and then they wonder why they keep on being frustrated.
But at least they cannot say they were not warned"
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Which Tyler
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Re: Brexit delayed

Post by Which Tyler »

fivepointer wrote: But at least they cannot say they were not warned"
Wanna bet?
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Re: Brexit delayed

Post by Digby »

For now they just don't care, fuck business!
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