Parklaner81
Steve Hodge
Who doesn't love a bit of Joey Tempest?
I just hope we actually are on the final countdown to Brexit...
Who doesn't love a bit of Joey Tempest?
A problem that a deal is not an option? Well it was the will of the people to leave with a deal, so there is that.The statecraft bit was convincing Leo he matters like proper leaders of big countries do.
The rest of it might be as you've said - you seem to feel it's a problem if it is?
It is just a repackaged max-fac proposal which has so many fundamental flaws in it as to not warrant serious discussion. It shows where the Tories want this to go - hard brexit, low reg, low wage, blah blah. The border and all the associated problems are just a fly in their ointment. They'd eject NI from the union in a nanosecond if they could.
Probably went into his spam folder.I don't think Javid got the memo on this bit before his speech.
Who doesn't love a bit of Joey Tempest?
A deal is an option, if the EU wants to put up a border in Ireland that's up to them.A problem that a deal is not an option? Well it was the will of the people to leave with a deal, so there is that.
We're back to the stupid brick Boris was trying to peddle today. Did we not just deal with that? That is not gonna fly.A deal is an option, if the EU wants to put up a border in Ireland that's up to them.
Unless the EU wants to tear up the peace agreement it'll have to.We're back to the stupid brick Boris was trying to peddle today. Did we not just deal with that? That is not gonna fly.
This one again! No one will buy that transparent bit of blame-shifting. Well maybe a few leavers, but no one who isn't under the influence of ERG brainwashing. That proposal today is not a serious one and will be rejected.Unless the EU wants to tear up the peace agreement it'll have to.
Why would the EU allow us to leave the customs union? It permanently neuters us. That's the whole pointI think they did raise one interesting point that's not been discussed much before, in what way can the UK leave the customs union in a way that's acceptable to the EU? Otherwise I think Boris is saying if they can't offer such a solution then there's no point trying to negotiate a deal. I still don't think they'll accept this deal either.
...so many reasons to be confident about our country and its direction and yet we are like a world class athlete with a pebble in our shoe, there is one part of the British system that seems to be on the blink.
If parliament were a laptop, then the screen would be showing the pizza wheel of doom. If parliament were a school, Ofsted would be shutting it down. If parliament were a reality TV show the whole lot of us would have been voted out of the jungle by now. But at least we could have watched the speaker being forced to eat a kangaroo testicle. And the sad truth is that voters have more say over I’m a celebrity than they do over this House of Commons. Which refuses to deliver Brexit, refuses to do anything constructive and refuses to have an election just at the moment when voters are desperate for us to focus on their priorities.
Have to say I liked this bit
This is politics - impressions are all that actually count. Presented properly, this will look like the EU putting up a border that we've insisted we won't put up.This one again! No one will buy that transparent bit of blame-shifting. Well maybe a few leavers, but no one who isn't under the influence of ERG brainwashing. That proposal today is not a serious one and will be rejected.
Anyway, I don't think it will matter a whole lot as it is too late for any new deal, stupid or not. Unless Boris comes up with a legal trick no one has thought of yet, which could happen I suppose, we're looking at an extension. One prediction I will make is the following election will be the most divisive ever.
Why would the EU allow us to leave the customs union? It permanently neuters us. That's the whole point
Yes this is true, perception matters, but reality is far easier to spin than another fantasy. Another unicorn story won't change too many minds. And indeed whoever drives the original narrative really takes control of the message. The simple fact is that everyone already knows this a problem of the UK's own making, not Ireland's or the EU, and this truth has already taken hold. Presenting it now as something else will change nobody's mind except a few right wing loons. And add to that the UK government are proposing border infrastructure in their new border plan and have admitted it is required in operation yellow hammer, then you are really talking about epic levels of gas-lighting and for a solution that achieves nothingThis is politics - impressions are all that actually count. Presented properly, this will look like the EU putting up a border that we've insisted we won't put up.
You're right about a divisive election - that's what happens when parliament tries to subvert the will of the people.
What are those compromises? Bearing in mind the govt needs the DUP votes (because May's a fudging idiot) and this is about as close to the line as we can sail with them on board.Yes this is true, perception matters, but reality is far easier to spin than another fantasy. Another unicorn story won't change too many minds. And indeed whoever drives the original narrative really takes control of the message. The simple fact is that everyone already knows this a problem of the UK's own making, not Ireland's or the EU, and this truth has already taken hold. Presenting it now as something else will change nobody's mind except a few right wing loons. And add to that the UK government are proposing border infrastructure in their new border plan and have admitted it is required in operation yellow hammer, then you are really talking about epic levels of gas-lighting and for a solution that achieves nothing
In my opinion, there are proposals that can be made to make it look like a good compromise was achieved, and with some careful language and the right amount of caveats might persuade enough of the right people. This taking control of our borders except for at the actual border is not one of them.
Actually the will of the people was to leave the EU - with or without a deal both meet that remit, although with a deal is obviously most people's preference. The only option that goes against that will is remaining, which is what parliament is clearly forcing us into.And the will of a people was a deal, as that is what leave campaigned on, so it is the government's no deal strategy that is subverting the will of the UK people. Sorry I couldn't let that slide .
That was the point, from their side they understandably don't want us too but can't reasonably say they won't accept any deal that lets us out of the customs union.
Well now that you asked, I think you have to try and look at it from what's best for the UK/or what the UK voted for versus what is good for the Tories. These are not one and the same and your post alludes to that also. The only good state-crafting I've seen Boris do is to conflate these somewhat disparate agendas to the point that they seem the same.What are those compromises? Bearing in mind the govt needs the DUP votes (because May's a fudging idiot) and this is about as close to the line as we can sail with them on board.
Actually the will of the people was to leave the EU - with or without a deal both meet that remit, although with a deal is obviously most people's preference. The only option that goes against that will is remaining, which is what parliament is clearly forcing us into.