What is the Tory majority from 2017, BTW?
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can they command a majority in parliament?
if not, we can have another ge and he'll get one then.
If he can't, he'll call a general election and get one.
Boris Johnson announced this morning that negotiations over Brexit would not continue until the Irish Backstop was removed from the discussions. Looks like DUP is punching more than their weight.
I know there is no hard and fast answer to this, only opinions. But I'm curious what the UK folks and the ROI folks think Arlene Foster is whispering in BoJo's ear right now? Is this simply putting the red line on the Province border and not in the Irish Sea? Or is this an attempt to undo Good Friday? Foster is a devoted Paisley disciple, correct?
your whining again. every response is always a tangent away from the reply you quote.
like you keep trying to catch me out with some clever logical ruse. failing, and moving on to lay the next 'trap' in the hope i will fall into it.
if you were dealing with a half wit it might work, but that is the level we're operating at here.
but to directly answer your next tangent:
yes he did. as did most of labour. now we're looking at a harder brexit than we were heading to with may's deal.
pleased with yourself?
i did my bit - made my compromise - and things are now moving in a direction i am comfortable with. i'm not sure why you're looking for outrage from me...
One notes that both the EU and many in the UK insist they will not support "No Deal" and yet they refuse to negotiate any substantive change to "the deal".
This raises the question of how, exactly, we are supposed to leave with a deal if "the deal" cannot be reintroduced to Parliament this session.
When May set her red lines, the rules of the EU meant the deal she eventually got was the deal she was always going to get. Put data through a function, you can calculate the result that's going to come out. Why are you complaining about the result? If you don't like the result, start with different data.
Firstly, politics is not a science.
Secondly - that is not remotely my point.
At this stage there are only two options - Remain and No Deal?
So - why are both Britain and the EU continuing to demand the other move their position and why are pundits supporting this charade?
The EU is rules based. If you want certain conditions, then in the main these are the options open. They published a map at the beginning detailing the conditions that a UK government may demand and what possible options there may be as a result of these conditions. May's deal fitted that map to a tee, as everyone paying attention could have predicted. Make certain demands, and you can have those but you'll rule out certain avenues.
The EU haven't demanded that the UK move their position. Quite the opposite. They've repeatedly said that the deal is the result of concluded negotiations which they entered into in good faith, and they'll keep up their end, and it's up to the UK to keep up theirs. There is no further movement. They've even disbanded the negotiation team. It's only the UK who's repeatedly demanded that the other side move their position.
If it does come down to Remain and No Deal, presumably you'd opt for No Deal, and blame the EU.
You're not listening.
The EU says it wants "the Deal" and the UK must "get on with" passing "the deal.
This is clearly not going to happen before October 31st - but the EU has refused further extensions.
So - why does the EU claim it wants a deal so badly and yet refuse to countenance further negotiation?
The truth is either that the EU does not particularly want a deal, it is not particularly concerned about a "hard border" in Northern Ireland, or that the EU does not understand the situation in the UK and believes we will buckle at the last possible second.
Then you have all those in Parliament who say they want "a Deal" but not "the Deal" despite the EU saying "there is only The Deal".
So, are both sides stupid, insane, dishonest, or all of the above?
This does not compute. The EU has said the negotiations are complete. The deal is the best the UK can have, given its own demands, and given the rules of the EU and treaties to which the UK is subject to (such as the GFA). Why do you equate the deal with further negotiation? The UK set its own rules, the EU has its own rules. The two were put together to find a position that satisfies both. May's deal is the result.
Also, why are you solely blaming the EU for the NI-RoI border? The issue is a bilateral agreement between the UK and the RoI. The EU guarantees it, but it's not just the EU that guarantees it, as the US has also (in the last week AFAIK) also guaranteed it. Yet you blame only the EU, not the US, not the UK. Again, it is not brinkmanship as you portray it. There are rules, and either the UK abides by these rules (the bilateral treaty between the UK and the RoI), or it can ignore those rules and take the hit to its international relations that being a rogue state that does not keep agreements involves.
When everything is at the instigation of the UK, and the EU is but one of a number of parties involved, why do Brexiteers still insist on blaming the EU and the EU only?
Attachment 22756
Literary Boris:
"Here, as always, Johnson claims the privileges of the clown while exercising the power of a politician."
Spoiler Alert, click show to read:
I see the Irish are shitting themselves.
They'll be fine. Being a Dependency of a large power is one exchanges sovereignty for protection.
More resetting a large bone that has been broken for over 30 years. It'll hurt like hell but it isn't the doctor's fault who resets it, it s those who broke it in the first place.
~:smoking:
Over the last 30 years or so - since the previous referendum - what the UK populace agreed to has morphed well past the tolerances that would have been expected at the time. Getting back to where we were is going to be difficult.
Would you prefer that the bone was incorrectly set in the first place?
~:smoking:
Couldn't the same be said about what Brexit means? Look at what Leave campaigners were promising at the time of the campaign, and compare with what they're promising now. Farage was promising Norway. Fox was promising the easiest trade deals ever. Others were promising single market benefits without the responsibilities. All of them were saying that the EU needed us more than we need them. Now we're looking at no deal. If you want to talk about changes in perceptions, there's been a greater change in what Brexit promises in a much shorter length of time.
Where is the broken bone? If EU membership is the broken bone because of changed perceptions, how would you describe Brexit?
This thread in a nutshell:
Pan: Do you still support Brexit?
Everyone: Yes
Pan: Why, it is going to give us X outcome.
Everyone: I dont see X outcome as bad.
Pan: Why?
Everyone: Here is an analogy.
Pan: No, that analogy actually means Brexit is bad!
Everyone: .......
Pan: Do you still support Brexit?
Every single week.
I'm not even commenting how good the analogies are and what they accurately apply to. Just seeing a pattern.
You've missed out one.
Pannonian: Are the Brexiteers going to take responsibility for the consequences of Brexit?
Brexiteers: It's the EU's fault.
You can see that on this very page, in PFH's posts. Arguably in rory's posts too, but PFH's posts fit the above to a tee. It's all the EU's fault. Never theirs.