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Gits. I'm on holiday from the 20th December to the 2nd of January.
Do I have to become an MP to get the extra days off?
If you want the summer off as well, then yeah maybe.
Gits. I'm on holiday from the 20th December to the 2nd of January.
Do I have to become an MP to get the extra days off?
Count yourself lucky, I only get the 25th and 26th offGits. I'm on holiday from the 20th December to the 2nd of January.
Do I have to become an MP to get the extra days off?
The fact that the EU don't want a No Deal outcome should mean that they will do whatever they can to avoid such an outcome - but it is also politically nigh on impossible that the UK parliament will opt for that route now anyway - the ECJ ruling paved the way for a reversal of the Brexit decision, and the EU will (when push comes to shove) facilitate that, probably by extending Article 50 (with no strings attached) to allow for a second referendum to happen. Assuming that this happens after the 'only possible deal' has been rejected, I would imagine that a second referendum would have to be a simple yes or no to the question 'Do you want the UK government to revoke Article 50 and remain inside the EU?'Ok, so because of the Grieve's Amendment if the deal is voted down by the MPs then the same MPs must come up with a decision on what happens next.
Let's then suppose the deal is indeed voted down. If you discard other consequences (final meltdown of the cabinet; PM's resignation; another Tory for PM or GE), the Brexit clock is still ticking and the current MPs need to meet to decide on what to do. What are the possible decisions?
a) No Deal Brexit - it won't be approved;
b) Revoking Article 50 by Parliament decision - With or without ensuing civil unrest they'd all - regardless - become "Enemies of the People", the stench of "treason" hovering over the politicians would never dissipate in the UK's collective psyche, and the word "traitor" wouldn't leave its political class' vocabulary from that point on (and for a long time).
c) Calling a new referendum on No Deal vs No Brexit (aka revoking Article 50 by the People's decision) - Same "treasonous" rhetoric would ensue, but with less ground to stand on. In any case, would need a plea to the EU for the current article 50 deadline to be postponed (check below)
d) Asking the EU (considering all this would happen with a General Election looming) for the current article 50 deadline to be postponed for a few months more (i.e. kicking the can … again) and hope the EU countries unanimously agree to it.
e) None of the above can be approved in Parliament - Quite possible considering the paralysis that seems to affect the UK's political institutions. The deadline is reached without a deal being signed. No Deal Brexit it is (what you cal the solution "by default").
I said before and I say it again Faced with options that are all harmful to them, politicians are professional can-kickers. And this applies to EU countries also, nobody wants the UK to leave the Common Market and Customs Union (think Portugal, where else will we sell all those Port Wine bottles you guys drink? ), so I'm betting on solution d), with a General Election meanwhile, and maybe, with a Labour Government, the acceptance of the "rule-taker" status, meaning no borders for trade or for people from the EU (and vice versa).
You'll be worse off than with full membership, but the politicians will eventually find a way to explain that it's not really worse, just … different. And each time there's a meeting with someone from outside the EU they'll say that they're discussing the many oportunities Brexit allows for a UK opened to the world.
Considering my UK-based family and their interests, this is by far the best outcome I can think of.
100,000 people holding their MPs to ransom doesn't sound like a resounding endorsement of democracy. It sounds like a bunch of spoilt kids stamping their feet.Good lord, what is happening in here?
100,000 people holding their MPs to ransom doesn't sound like a resounding endorsement of democracy. It sounds like a bunch of spoilt kids stamping their feet.
Many of the "Yellow Vests" who hit the streets again on Saturday wielded signs with the acronym RIC – for "Citizens' Initiative Referendum" – as demonstrators demanded popular votes be held to allow citizens to vet government policy proposals. In a list of demands released in late November, the Yellow Vests ask that any policy proposal garnering 700,000 signatures trigger a national referendum to be held within a year. The RIC is one item on a list of 42 measures being demanded by the Yellow Vests. A 2008 constitutional amendment provided for holding a referendum if a measure had the support of one-fifth of the members of Parliament and the backing of one-tenth of registered voters. But the citizens' initiative has never been used, despite the launch of a website dedicated to listing the public proposals currently under debate.
Opponents of a second Brexit referendum are warning that allowing such a vote will embolden Scottish Nationalists to push for a second referendum on Scottish independence. But... others are warning that not allowing a second Brexit referendum (on the basis that the deal is terrible) would rule out the possibility of a third Scottish independence referendum that might overturn a possible second Scottish independence referendum that ends up as badly as Brexit
The problem is that if a Peoples Vote (obviously a re-spun Referendum) is held then every subsequent referendum is arguably subject to being re-run until the "right" decision is reached.
Anyhow... not paid that much attention to them in the past, but man.. BBC comments section isn't much better than YouTube is it!
While the UK has blundered through the Brexit process, the EU has purposefully shafted it
Sadly I'm now resigned to the fact that the UK will not get a fair trade deal with the EU unless we opt for a No Deal Brexit.
Would the EU have behaved differently if the Leave campaign was better behaved and/or the margin of victory far greater? I seriously doubt it.
and again they will divert the attention and no doubt blame immigrants and and the liberals and this endless cycle will continue.
I'm not sure it would have changed the EU's position merely by being better behaved, but I think had the Leave campaign and vote been better supported by the electorate, and championed by a government that was better supported by the electorate, we'd have gone into it better prepared, and in a stronger position. The referendum itself was shaky enough but the moment the results of the snap GE came in it was as obvious as it could be that the EU were dealing amateurs with no real power.
The key word here is 'impossible' - the fact is that a good deal with the EU (from a UK point of view) was possible, however it was undoubtedly over-sold by the Leave campaign as being much more likely than it has turned out to be...In a way I don't blame the British public, we were sold a vision (which I actually bought into) which was completely and utterly impossible and it was presented as fact.
The key word here is 'impossible' - the fact is that a good deal with the EU (from a UK point of view) was possible, however it was undoubtedly over-sold by the Leave campaign as being much more likely than it has turned out to be...
.. but, the biggest irony of all is that No Deal will actually put the UK in a far stronger negotiating position with the EU that could actually deliver the kind of future relationship that Brexiteers have been calling for all along.