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[Politics] Brexit

If there was a second Brexit referendum how would you vote?


  • Total voters
    1,099


Herr Tubthumper

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Jul 11, 2003
62,683
The Fatherland
So with no support for Chequers and no support for "no deal" at the Commons, and no wiggle room on the Irish border thanks to her DUP chums, May is a busted flush.

Who was it yesterday who likened her to a chess player with just her king remaining, moving all around the board one square at a time waiting for the inevitable to happen? Tremendous analogy and 100% correct. If she doesn't engineer it so that she goes back to the people, she is an idiot. But regardless of that, her party are now proven incompetents and have no business governing the country IMO. They are only there by default.

I can’t see what other option there is than to go to the voting public.
 




Simster

"the man's an arse"
Jul 7, 2003
54,948
Surrey
She has no moves left, goes one way the EU stop her, goes the other the ERG stop her, goes another the DUP stop her and goes one last way Parliament will stop her. This goes back to triggering Article 50 without having a concrete plan in place, she should have negotiated the withdrawal bill before this and then used the 2 year period to tie up the loose ends of a trade deal.

And Universal Credit has been delayed , what was that about a 'coalition of chaos' and 'strong and stable government' ???
At actually makes me quite angry when I recall the last Tory election campaign. They have been utterly feeble from the outset.

I can’t see what other option there is than to go to the voting public.
She could agree a deal that keeps NI in the EU and call another election, but that is the only other choice I can see.
 


ManOfSussex

We wunt be druv
Apr 11, 2016
15,168
Rape of Hastings, Sussex
She has no moves left, goes one way the EU stop her, goes the other the ERG stop her, goes another the DUP stop her and goes one last way Parliament will stop her. This goes back to triggering Article 50 without having a concrete plan in place, she should have negotiated the withdrawal bill before this and then used the 2 year period to tie up the loose ends of a trade deal.

And Universal Credit has been delayed , what was that about a 'coalition of chaos' and 'strong and stable government' ???

She's got no way out of this now and it's just parliamentary paralysis - a debate on knife crime was postponed yesterday too because of the Brexit one. It's a complete shambles.
 


Gwylan

Well-known member
Jul 5, 2003
31,827
Uffern
So with no support for Chequers and no support for "no deal" at the Commons, and no wiggle room on the Irish border thanks to her DUP chums, May is a busted flush.

She has got wiggle room on Ireland: she could include NI and the UK in a customs union. That would have the support of the DUP, Labour and the EU. The only people who wouldn't support it are the head-bangers in the ERG. That's May's problem: she could come to a deal but it would lead to civil war in her party.
 


ManOfSussex

We wunt be druv
Apr 11, 2016
15,168
Rape of Hastings, Sussex
This was Rachel Rachel Sylvester's take on the state of play in The Times today.

It was always going to be the case that the negotiations at Westminster would be tougher for the prime minister than the haggling in Brussels. Although the European Union is striking a hard bargain — as it was bound to do — it is broadly united, consistent and acting rationally to protect its interests. The same cannot be said of the United Kingdom, where ideology is being put before pragmatism and party concerns placed above the national interest.

The Brexit talks are on a knife-edge before what was to have been a “moment of truth” summit this week because, for entirely domestic reasons, Theresa May has no room to compromise. One cabinet minister describes the “tiny airstrip just a few metres wide” on to which it would be possible to land a deal with the EU, but the prime minister’s co-pilots will not let her adjust course by even a few degrees in order to get the plane to the safe spot.

At least three Brexiteer cabinet ministers are threatening to resign in protest at plans to effectively keep the country in a customs union, while the Democratic Unionist Party is warning that it will withdraw its support from the government if the prime minister agrees to a situation that could mean Northern Ireland staying in a version of the EU single market. Its leader Arlene Foster has now said that she believes a no-deal Brexit to be the most likely outcome of the talks.

Ruth Davidson, the Scottish Tory leader, has also made clear that she would strongly oppose any solution that gave special status to Northern Ireland, since that could strengthen the case for another referendum on Scottish independence and hasten the break-up of the UK. If Mrs May tries to pivot towards the Tory Eurosceptics to protect her position in No 10 she will lose the support of her cabinet pro-Europeans. Meanwhile, Labour is like the air traffic controller sending out mixed messages that risk sending the aircraft crashing to the ground.

Mrs May might get through today’s cabinet meeting by keeping the plane circling in the air for a bit longer before specifying her landing spot, but she cannot stay in the holding pattern for ever. In her Commons statement she was deliberately vague about the terms of the so-called backstop but she will have to offer clarity soon. “Her strategy has failed,” says one senior Tory MP. “We are between a rock and a hard place and she will crash into one side or the other. We are approaching the final act of the Tory party. Europe is the disease which has destroyed the last four Tory prime ministers and it’s about to destroy this one too.”

A minister compares the Conservative leader to a chess player with only a king left on the board, who is powerless but still hanging on. “She’s in a situation where every move she makes worsens the national predicament. We still basically have no agreed government position — it’s absurd. If you were playing computer chess the only way out of this would be to press the reset button.”

Another minister says that with the hard-Brexit European Research Group flexing its muscles “the Conservative Party has taken leave of its senses and the party of pragmatism is being driven by the ideologues. The country is being held hostage by petty politicians pushing their own fortunes.”

President Macron of France said recently that the rest of the EU faced a version of the “prisoner’s dilemma”, the game theory concept in which two parties acting in their own selfish interests refuse to co-operate and so ultimately lose out. “Everyone can have an interest in negotiating on their own and think they can negotiate better than their neighbour,” he said, but by doing that “it is probable that collectively we will create a situation which is unfavourable to the European Union and thus to each of us”.

So far at least the other 27 countries have acted together for the greater good, but in the divided UK the political tribes are operating in their narrow self-interest in a way that could end up producing the outcome they least want.

By refusing to endorse potential compromises the hard-Brexiteers risk bringing about a parliamentary crisis that triggers a second referendum that could lead to the country staying in the EU. The Remainers are in danger of creating a situation in which the country crashes out with no deal, the scenario they most fear. The DUP could end up with the “hard border” they loathe if they push the prime minister so hard that she loses all ability to negotiate. The Labour MPs in Brexit-backing areas who are planning to vote through a deal could see themselves punished at the polls if their constituents end up worse off.

The civil servants who have been trying to engineer the outcome they believe to be least damaging to the country will find the matter taken out of their hands by elected politicians if they produce something that the House of Commons cannot accept.

As for the prime minister, by attempting to assert her authority over her cabinet and prove her strength by refusing to change course, she has only demonstrated her weakness and perhaps fatally undermined her own position.

Mrs May’s strategy seems to be to leave everything until the very last minute, whip up a sense of hostility to the EU as an external adversary and hope that she can cobble together a deal before bouncing parliament into supporting it for fear of something worse. But there are what one minister describes as such “fundamental incompatibilities” in the positions of the key players at Westminster that it is hard to see how that will work.

For now all the sound and fury is coming from the Brexiteer side but the Remainers are just as angry and will not wave through what they see as a deal that is worse than the status quo.

Ministers could vote for a second referendum if the country is heading for what they see as a catastrophic no-deal Brexit. There is no majority for any of the options in the Commons and now both time and patience are running out.

“She’s toast,” says one publicly loyal minister. “This is such a global shambles. We are a laughing stock on the world stage. The government feels like it’s really at a point of no return in terms of credibility. I feel we have just got to start with a totally clean slate.”

With friends like those in Westminster, Mrs May will have no need of enemies in Brussels to bring her Brexit house of cards crashing down.

https://www.thetimes.co.uk/edition/comment/may-is-about-to-crash-land-the-brexit-plane-8nnpxb7qd
 






Westdene Seagull

aka Cap'n Carl Firecrotch
NSC Patron
Oct 27, 2003
21,526
The arse end of Hangleton
Ok mate. You go with that. I'm not the only person who noticed what you were saying. Keep up the good work!

It would have been much quicker to have typed "I can't show you where you said it". Joining the group of liars I see.
 


Thunder Bolt

Silly old bat
She has got wiggle room on Ireland: she could include NI and the UK in a customs union. That would have the support of the DUP, Labour and the EU. The only people who wouldn't support it are the head-bangers in the ERG. That's May's problem: she could come to a deal but it would lead to civil war in her party.

That's how the whole sorry mess started and we're all in a pickle because of it.
 






beorhthelm

A. Virgo, Football Genius
Jul 21, 2003
36,014


Blue Valkyrie

Not seen such Bravery!
Sep 1, 2012
32,165
Valhalla
no speaker, elected by all of parliament, is going to be the stooge of a small group. by convention/rules of the house they keep debate open and support the House over the government.
This Government already broke the vote pairing tradition on a Brexit vote.

Do they want to oust Bercow, and parachute in a swivel eyed Brextremist to ensure Parliament cannot stop *no deal* without a vote of no confidence ?
 




Gwylan

Well-known member
Jul 5, 2003
31,827
Uffern
What happens if a second referendum results in a leave vote again ???

My guess is that won't be an option, as it's that stark binary choice that's led to this mess. I imagine we'll have something like "Leave under WTO rules" and "Leave but stay in customs union" (or something similar). What would be interesting is whether Remain would be an option.
 


beorhthelm

A. Virgo, Football Genius
Jul 21, 2003
36,014
She has got wiggle room on Ireland: she could include NI and the UK in a customs union. That would have the support of the DUP, Labour and the EU. The only people who wouldn't support it are the head-bangers in the ERG. That's May's problem: she could come to a deal but it would lead to civil war in her party.

EU have to give ground on Irish border, the issue it not what happens to the border in negotiations, its what happens in (unlikely) case of no deal - EU want agreement that effectively cedes control of NI. No British PM would give that. the comment from May yesterday was important, support her and you end up with soft brexit or no brexit, by allowing parliament vote, or dont support her and risk leaving on no deal. play the percentages, it starts with EU giving way on the back stop conditions.
 


WATFORD zero

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Jul 10, 2003
27,759
My guess is that won't be an option, as it's that stark binary choice that's led to this mess. I imagine we'll have something like "Leave under WTO rules" and "Leave but stay in customs union" (or something similar). What would be interesting is whether Remain would be an option.

There's been plenty of talk of a 2 stage referendum

Stage 1
Leave
Remain

Stage 2 (if Leave wins)
WTO
Chequers - - (which I'm guessing will have been changed to remain in CU within the month)
 




beorhthelm

A. Virgo, Football Genius
Jul 21, 2003
36,014
This Government already broke the vote pairing tradition on a Brexit vote.

Do they want to oust Bercow, and parachute in a swivel eyed Brextremist to ensure Parliament cannot stop *no deal* without a vote of no confidence ?

the point is how do you suppose parliament will agree to parachute in a brextremist? do you suppose there's a closet brexiteer hiding in the ranks of MP's, known only to the ERG?
 


WATFORD zero

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Jul 10, 2003
27,759
EU have to give ground on Irish border, the issue it not what happens to the border in negotiations, its what happens in (unlikely) case of no deal - EU want agreement that effectively cedes control of NI. No British PM would give that. the comment from May yesterday was important, support her and you end up with soft brexit or no brexit, by allowing parliament vote, or dont support her and risk leaving on no deal. play the percentages, it starts with EU giving way on the back stop conditions.

Why would the EU allow Britain (a soon to be ex-member) to cherry-pick some new border arrangement that it doesn't allow any of it's current members ?

Watch Chequers - - become Britain staying in the CU as we get closer to the date, the same way it happened at the end of phase 1 negotiations
 




Gwylan

Well-known member
Jul 5, 2003
31,827
Uffern
the point is how do you suppose parliament will agree to parachute in a brextremist? do you suppose there's a closet brexiteer hiding in the ranks of MP's, known only to the ERG?

There's no way that an ERG stooge would get elected. There are, at the most, about 80 hard core Brexiteers in the House, that's not remotely enough for one to get chosen.
 




DIFFBROOK

Really Up the Junction
Feb 3, 2005
2,267
Yorkshire
My guess is that won't be an option, as it's that stark binary choice that's led to this mess. I imagine we'll have something like "Leave under WTO rules" and "Leave but stay in customs union" (or something similar). What would be interesting is whether Remain would be an option.

Personally, MPs have singularly failed to come up with a deal. If there is to be a peoples vote, then there would be so many variants of proposed deals, that it simply could not go on a referendum paper. The hypothetical question should simply be a) Leave the EU and all its institutions without a deal and trade on WTO rules, b) remain in the EU and all its institutions.
 


Blue Valkyrie

Not seen such Bravery!
Sep 1, 2012
32,165
Valhalla
What happens if a second referendum results in a leave vote again ???
The question could be :

a) Leave the EU and join EFTA, remaining in the EEA until such a time as Parliament ratifies a Canada style deal.

or
b) Remain in the EU.



Something for everyone, takes away any cliff edges, kicks a can down the road, and still keeps the Canada+++ in play.
 


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