I don't understand.
I followed it very closely and I didn't realise it was advisory.
I'm starting to think that the government put this little clause in as a 'get-out', if things didn't go their way.
Ah, the mythical 'liberal elite' - the last soundbite of the truly meaningless.
Meanwhile, back in the real world, the one the rest of us inhabit - the one where there is no precedent for what you want - if Parliament is to debate Brexit and have a say (as it's supposed to), new laws will needed to be drafted, Parliamentary time put aside, it then has to go to the House of Lords - and this is all assuming it gets safe passage. There's a decent chance it will be sent back and forth if Parliament don't agree to the terms.
Don't give a shit if you don't like it - that's how our Sovereign Parliament works; the one you so covetously voted for.
If that is your understanding of leaving then you are seriously deluded.
What law are we breaking FFS, BG has it spot on ,a bunch of cry babys clutching at strawsYou don't understand what the court case is about do you ?
It is about following the law and not resorting to criminality.
We will still leave the EU. We will however do it in such a way that doesn't break the law.
If I was you I would stop thinking that right away - British referendums are always advisory. If they weren't the sovereignty of Parliament would be compromised, a possibility that led people as far apart as Thatcher and Attlee to describe them as instruments of fascism and, by implication, mob rule.
I don't understand.
they still want to be in the EU end of, a watered down version of out with as much EU influence they can get their grubby hands onWhat exactly do the complainants want? I'd like to know what the ulterior motive is. What do remoaners want from us leaving the EU?
It's clear you have no desire for Parliament to be Sovereign, otherwise you wouldn't be criticising the legal challenge.
If they come out in favour of the government's position - and it's something that no-one can see a legal precedent for - it will mean that the Judiciary has wilfully stripped Parliament of all its Soveriegnty; something it was granted 350-odd years ago. And therefore stripped it of something you so dearly hold true.
It will leave the Prime Minister in a position to use whatever executive powers they wish - on a whim - without there being a need for Parliament.
Not going to happen, is it?
You don't understand the court case either do you ?What law are we breaking FFS, BG has it spot on ,a bunch of cry babys clutching at straws
regards
DR
Indeed.
Out is out.
No strings or preconditions attached.
The possibilities are infinite. Let's hope our ACE negotiators bring back the best ones.
but you're already counting your chickensYou don't understand the court case either do you ?
Firstly, we don't have the verdict yet. If the judges rule that all is ok, then happy days, all is above board. No laws broken. Winner.
If the judges rule that the Prime Minister is breaking the law if she enacts article 50 without getting an Act of Parliament, then that she must get that Act passed.
Brexit still goes ahead, the Act will get passed. And again happy days, all is above board. No laws broken. Winner.
It's win-win isn't it ?
You don't understand the court case either do you ?
Firstly, we don't have the verdict yet. If the judges rule that all is ok, then happy days, all is above board. No laws broken. Winner.
If the judges rule that the Prime Minister is breaking the law if she enacts article 50 without getting an Act of Parliament, then that she must get that Act passed.
Brexit still goes ahead, the Act will get passed. And again happy days, all is above board. No laws broken. Winner.
It's win-win isn't it ?
To be fair to PPF, he was offered a chance to vote 'out' and did, because 'out' is, to him, more important than the terms or details. And this is what the referendum offered. If I were he, I would be saying 'finger out, fire the gun'. I personally favoured remain, mostly because there was absolutely not sniff of any plan with respect to the leaving process. That was the arrogance and stupidity of Cameron, assuming and gambling all in winning. But we had the chance to vote and Brexit with no need for a plan won the vote. End of story.
If I were a Brexiter, of the views of PPF, I would be pretty annoyed the gun hasn't been fired. What is the point of waiting to develop a negociating path, when the outcome must be Brexit? We fire the gun, then spend the best part of 2 years asking for whatever we can get. That cn be the only plan, surely? Arguably we may have a few things that the Europeans might want to negociate for. I can't think of anything off the top of my head; maybe access to Europe's financial powerhouse - London; but I am sure Berlin, Frankfurt etc would be willing to 'step in'.
No, if you voted Brexit because Brexit was more important to you than anything, then you'd expect us to be Brexited by now. If you voted Brexit for some other reason (such as thinking it may push Europe into a renegociation, as Boris apparently did) then you are . . . a complete ****wit, anyway. Brexit means Brexit. Even Corbyn understand this, which is why he has made it clar that Labour will not manouvre to stymie the gun firing . . . .
My view? Treeze has no option other than to pull up her leather trousers, tell Europe 'no free movement of peoples' and take the 'no deals on trade, then' on her chin. If she has any rabbits up her leather trousers to offer the Europeans, then I'd be delighted to know about it. After a few years, things will settle down.
The thing that gets me, though, is given that after god knows how many years of Tory government, with non-EU migration more that 100K (more than ten times the government target) with this already ALL UNDER OUR ABSOLUTE CONTROL, how is 'taking back control of our borders' (what? see above) going to make a jot of difference? We will lose free trade and will still be too useless and incompetant to control our borders - because that's what we do. Maybe that's where UKIP may gain . . . a promise to control our borders with massive queues, visas like we are China, and guns and dogs. It would work, and it would be what plenty of Brexit voters would like more than anything. If that's what they get, that's democrasy folks. Pull up your liberal pants and live with it (as I will have to do - can't be arsed to campaign against it; Attila and Jeremy Action won't save me, and it's hard to batter determined folk into submission with nothing more than a rolled up copy of the Guardian).
did we have all this bull shit when we joined the EU ................
regards
DR