BobKowalski
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- 17 May 2007
- Messages
- 21,511
I'm calling you a liar. Any hope of consensus went out of the window with May's red lines (and of course the failure to come good on the promise that we'd still be in a free trade zone from Iceland to the Russian border).Great post
Indeed, as this forum as shown, for most Remainers it has all been about having the vote reversed. An acceptable alternative could have secured consensus if they had ever bothered to do other than spit their collective dummy
Hmmm - not nonsense - simple fact and having managed a good number of competitive tendering processes on behalf of HMG - I am very familiar with the processesThis is nonsense.... a state can own industries (and they do in many countries...) all that has to happen is that a competitive tendering process takes place and it is transparent. How do you think the Dutch French and Germans still control their own rail networks?
Judge has refused to halt the shutting of parliament @bbc news
Hardly surprising. What Boris has done, whilst undemocratic and morally wrong, is totally legal.
Lewis Goodall is the guy I think you are referring to. He’s pretty good. Don’t always agree with him but often provides interesting analysis. His take from an hour ago...
‘Grant Shapps on Today: “Boris Johnson has made more progress in a few weeks” than has taken place for years. Just a reminder that *no* actual changes have occurred. The EU has said they will listen to UK ideas if they’re compatible with the WA. That’s it. They haven’t moved.’
E27 leaders have been courteous to Johnson and will listen to our proposals but we have to come up with something. No deal is not the lever to move them. Guaranteeing that you can a deal through Parliament will move them (and even then it can’t break their own redlines). Suspending Parliament just tells them Johnson doesn’t have the votes.
I recalled your remark watching footage of Camp Dora on TV last night - about 55' 10 inThink that’s just you mate.
Not at all weird - a great example of showing controlFactual and weird. We show we've taken control of our borders by deciding not to have one.
And Maesteg would still not have got the money. I'm still not sure where all the EU money has gone that was filtered through the Regional Development Agencies that the Tories (and LibDems) were so quick to abolish.
The beeb had a constitutional bod on yesterday who contradicted the leg which says that Corbyn and the opposition would have 14 days to form a government if Johnson loses a vote of no confidence. She said prorogation cuts that short. Johnson would still likely be PM when that happens allowing him to call a November election when parliament resumes
...
Why do the UK get sooooo much more scrutiny than either Germany or France as they conduct the various OJEU procedures?
I fully understand I thinkBecause what was certain is no longer certain. What individual EU Govts do with non EU nationals is an internal matter so they no longer have protection under EU law. If a future Spanish Govt changes it’s mind on the status of non EU nationals then guarantees given no longer apply. By removing their rights and protections under EU law you placed them in a more vulnerable situation.
This is all self evident so I do not understand why you and others cannot grasp that when you remove peoples rights under law there are consequences.
It's completely nuts. A former conservative PM is now involved in a legal challenge to stop the current conservative PM from subverting the British constitution. Regardless of what side of this debate you are on, you can't not be a little gobsmacked by this.Agreed. I don’t see these legal challenges coming to anything but the Judge has only thrown out the immediate halting of prorogation and wants a full hearing on the case on 6th Sept which has surprised me.
I see John Major and Gina Miller have also joined forces.
I just addressed the point.“It’s so unfair mummy, other boys get away with it” so much fucking whining. When did we turn into this nation of snivelling soft arses?
Especially since that former conservative PM used prorogation to avoid the Cash for Questions debate.It's completely nuts. A former conservative PM is now involved in a legal challenge to stop the current conservative PM from subverting the British constitution. Regardless of what side of this debate you are on, you can't not be a little gobsmacked by this.
Doh!I agree with all that - but my post that you replied to was about QEII
You can have a nominal Socialist government, but it will be restricted by state aid rules. Therefore things like saving British Steel is at the mercy of the markets not the government.
Apart from losing 20% of the value of their state pension because of the pound slump.
I fully understand I think
Yes - that there is uncertainty is a fact
But - we have 4m EU27 nationals in the UK - why would the EU27 countries want to take action that will be different from the advice that they will be given by the EU? especially action against citizens that contribute.
Let's just test some reality....
Spain was the country mentioned. Tell me why Spain - a country with so many economic problems and one that is soooooo dependent on the tourist industry - and the UK plays a big part in that - would take action to fuck off the citizens of the UK that flock there every year by being spiteful to ex-pats that are net-contributors.
What would happen to the volume of tourists from the UK if Spain were seen to be acting out of petty spite
I just prefer to live in the real world and not promote the disingenuous narratives of project fear
At least they have it.
We can all look forward to being 75 before we have to worry about it’s value.
It's completely nuts. A former conservative PM is now involved in a legal challenge to stop the current conservative PM from subverting the British constitution. Regardless of what side of this debate you are on, you can't not be a little gobsmacked by this.