The chance of another female Prime Minister is extremely positive
Well, no reason why not, of course. Nicola Sturgeon, peut-être?
that irony is perhaps all the greater because the person tipped to succeed Mr Cameron - a woman, you'll doubtless be pleased to find - is also a Remain supporter (and I believe that she's the longest serving UK Home Secretary since the 19th century)...
I have started on your long post and expect to finish sometime in the next Century.
If you can't dazzle them with brilliance, baffle them with bullshit as the old saying goes
and if you are quoting from that leftist moron sheet called the Guardian, that saying almost certainly applies.
And what a strong supporter of Remain she was (not). I am just adding up the speeches she gave during the campaign and I have stopped at one if i am not mistaken.
She at least has the sense to propose that the minister responsible for severing ties with the EU should be from the Brexit side.
Of course, Bliar disagrees and appears to be interested himself, but hopefully he will be in heading for impeachment and prison when the Chilcott report comes out.
She would be better off reforming the Krankies as that is about her level.
Parliament declaring that all bets are off is increasingly looking to be the only sensible way forward.
That would be monumentally stupid and undemocratic. The fact that Bliar thinks it should be considered is more than sufficient to submit that it would be an extremely dangerous thing to do and would distance the establishment from the people for a generation.
What is done is done
and the job now is to stop moaning, stop the silly doom and gloom show and extracate ourselves from this EU mafia.
Wow if there was this much discussion on piano related topics this forum might still be good lol.
Long live a free Britain.
It's only been 160 posts; there must surely have been plenty of piano related issues that have attracted far more posts than that!
Not recently really.
Sadly true old chap, so why don't you start one and I lets try and beat 160 posts.How about "Am i ready for the Fantasy Impromptu".
I've failed to be surprised by anything the UK electorate has done since they voted in Margaret Thatcher. A constituency gets what it deserves.
Interesting article.https://morningstaronline.co.uk/a-9c1f-Free-movement-in-the-EU-actually-means-free-exploitation
I certainly have seen audition room threads longer than that. Perhaps I shall solicit michael sayers' opinion on Brexit
I believe MS is in Stockholm.
Not quite sure of the point of this
I am. It is the rich trying to overturn a decision of the poor and it is disgusting.
https://www.mishcon.com/news/firm_news/article_50_process_on_brexit_faces_legal_challenge_to_ensure_parliamentary_involvement_07_2016
It is the rich trying to overturn a decision of the poor and it is disgusting.
It would be if it were but it isn't so it's not.Just as no progress (or regress, depending on the individual point of view) can be made on Brexit until Article 50 is invoked by Parliament, that Article cannot by law be invoked without it first being debated in Parliament. The referendum result is not a "decision"; it cannot be so because(a) those who voted have no power to "decide" what is or is not to happen following announcement of its result and(b) it is not in any case legally binding.The only "decisions" that can therefore be made are in the hands of Parliament alone, namely to elect to have and then hold such a debate and then to invoke or decline to invoke Article 50 at some point of its own choosing thereafter. That's the law.
You cannot possibly be so wilfully naive.
It's perfectly obvious what it is. It is an attempt to obfuscate and subvert the process by ensuring the situation arises where MPs have to either vote according to their beliefs (which will result in a substantial majority to remain), or fall back on "the majority of my constituents said x, therefore I will vote accordingly". It is mischief-making.
And this whole argument about referenda being advisory only is such an irrelevance. I can't think of any previous referendum in which the electoral decision (NOT opinion) has been ignored. And if a referendum is ultimately going to be regarded as advisory only, why even bother to hold it?
I still think remain is the better option (and that those who voted to leave are the most likely to be affected deleteriously by their decision), but the nature of this thread is inducing unwelcome sympathy for the leave side.
Parliament has a legal obligation to do this in any case, irrespective of the law firm's reminder (of which I therefore didn't and don't see the point), so there can be no attempt to obfuscate or subvert any process because the situation to which you refer will arise in any case when Parliament debates it (as it has to do by law) and then votes thereon. At that point, it will be up to each MP to decide on which of the two alternatives that you correctly identify when he/she votes on it. That would make quite a decision for my own MP to make, since in his constituency there was a 60% vote favouring Brexit but I believe (although he didn't actually declare his hand) that he supported Remain.
My comment wasn't sufficiently clear. Yes, I understand the Parliamentary obligation to debate the issue, and thus concur that the legal action taken by Mishcon might reasonably be seen as superfluous. But it's not. The upcoming debate should be a formality - with MPs of all hues taking the line that 'the people have spoken', even if not especially decisively. But I strongly suspect they won't: such legal actions are taken for a reason, and you don't have to look deeply to speculate on the possible motivations.
They are lawyers, after all and not in a position to lobby MPs and interfere with due Parliamentary process.
That is easily the daftest thing you have ever said. If what you say were true, then influential figures would not be pouring money down their gullet.
I notice that, after luring the British voters into the quagmire that is/will be Brexit (assuming the UK government will not use its brains and not declare the whole shebang void), Mr. Farage, now the question to be answered are 'how?' and 'then what', not forgetting 'how do we ever get out of this again', has declared he wants his life back and slips out of the back door, leaving others to clean the mess.
Predictable lefty attack. Surely it must be time to post another link from the Guardian.
The man deserves a knighthood for his years of service and for helping the people of this Country coming to their senses and voting to seperate ourselves from these clowns.
Hinty, please leave some more bad loser horseshit in the following space
I am off to The Crown at Bedfield for a pint.
There can be no good or bad losers here right now because Article 50 has yet to be debated on and then invoked (or otherwise)
It has to be invoked, that was the will of the people. The Brexiteers had a 1,250,000 majority in the referendum.
Parliament can debate it if they must, but if they try to wriggle out of it, we will have anarchy and democracy in this Country will be dead.
What makes you think that democracy is still alive in the country in any case?
Alternatively, only 34.75% of the electorate want to remain. 28% it seems aren't too fussed either way. If you want to deal with this, make voting mandatory.
MPs are supposed to represent the will of their constituents and be their servant.
Any MP who decides that in a matter of this importance they will indulge their own personal feelings should be ejected at the soonest opportunity for abusing their position. Incidentally my view regarding this applies irrespective of whether they vote against a constituency leave vote or against a constituency remain vote.
If our pathetic leaders manage to wriggle out of a Brexit it will no longer exist.
The rules were clear. 60% was not required and we could do referendums for the rest of time on this subject and not get 60%.
Only a majority was required and that is what we got.
I still fail to see what there is not to accept.
Please keep any response to less than 10,000 words
Whilst less than 37.5% is not a majority, yes, "what we we got" was just what we deserved for having set this thing up and conducted it as we did