MPFGLB wrote: » I being writing for over 3 years that the only sensible stand point for any NI politician is as a Remainer The majority of NI voted to remain but also leaving the EU was never an option that did not include some sort of border between NI & Republic or NI and British mainland Only the most idiotic and reprehensible NI politician would align themselves to a Brexiter government in Westminster The DUP really are the worst of the worst ...and that is saying something
Joe_ Public wrote: » As was written here recently the dup gonna dup. I think one of the unfortunate confluences of the brexit saga was to happen at a time when the dup got this incredible and completely disproportionate influence in the hoc. Only shenanigans could come of that and while folk now write them off they still can get johnson beaten so theyre not done yet.
The high horse brigade wrote: » Yes looks like all the DUP wanted was to use the influence they felt they had to try force a border in Ireland
Joe_ Public wrote: » Yes, thats what it was about and now they see that not a viable option ever so the status quo of remain got to be next best thing. They still got critical 10 votes so very interesting to see how that might swing things down the line. Wonder too whether Kate Hoey might stay with them and actually vote with her party this time for once!
ArmaniJeanss wrote: » Yeah, Hoey has announced herself as a No Vote. I don't think its a surprise though as she voted against Mays deal as well, despite voting Tory on seemingly everything else. So its not a bonus vote on the count or anything. Would be good to get one or two people who voted yes previously to announce no, just to turn the tide a little.
10000maniacs wrote: » Poor old Nigel Dodds on Radio 4 this morning cut off mid rant by a sore eared Mishal Hussain. He was going on about losing the Unionist veto and Leo Varadkar. He's now indignant about Varadkar insulting the DUP about the Queen and letterboxes. Yet the DUP answer to food shortages is to "go to the chippy".
woohoo!!! wrote: » The DUP are the reason a United Ireland will happen. It's a wierd one how quickly things shift in perceptions. Johnson from Irish eyes is now seem more positively, the border in the sea is settled. UK remainers coming out with the deal facilitates a UI, we didn't vote for that/give NI away are coming into focus as the new enemy. The unicorns are on all sides. The overwhelming feeling from Ireland is just sign the damm thing and go away chasing bigly trade deals.
Mr.Wemmick wrote: » Labour MPs need to get on the right side of history today. They will never be forgiven for fallen into Johnson's trap and need look past the ignorant baying brexit mobs. The country is being destroyed by the toxic tory sh!tshow, and it's time they were stopped.[\QUOTE] Brexit is going to happen. There’s little doubt about that. It’s a good thing for Ireland if this gets passed so I hope it does. After that, Johnson needs an election result to go overwhelmingly in his favour in order for his supposed elaborate trap to bear fruit. That’s not a certainty
Tea Shock wrote: » Mr.Wemmick wrote: » Labour MPs need to get on the right side of history today. They will never be forgiven for fallen into Johnson's trap and need look past the ignorant baying brexit mobs. The country is being destroyed by the toxic tory sh!tshow, and it's time they were stopped.[\QUOTE] Brexit is going to happen. There’s little doubt about that. It’s a good thing for Ireland if this gets passed so I hope it does. After that, Johnson needs an election result to go overwhelmingly in his favour in order for his supposed elaborate trap to bear fruit. That’s not a certainty 100pc. its unreal to see the squirming from never brexiters... not right deal,vote again, now a bullsht amendment which will water it down to nothing. stop guffing and admit some people do not want any deal at any costs.
beggars_bush wrote: » All goes out the window today when it's voted down in the HOC
woohoo!!! wrote: » Most informed observers think it's going to fail, but narrowly. The EU will give an extension, with stages built in. I read that France have indicated that March is the furthest date. There isn't enough time for a referendum and I don't think a GE can be held off for much longer. From our perspective a hard border has been defined and in the only place it can be, the Irish sea, whether this deal or some subsequent one. David Lammy has correctly identified that the only reason to leave the SM and CU is the intention to drop standards in order for Britain to compete with the EU. We'd be more sympathetic but remainers are now wibbling about NI being thrown away and creating in effect a UI, so we've a leave em at it attitude.
RickBlaine wrote: » If the Letwin is passed and then the deal is passed, does that just basically postpone actually voting for the deal until another day?
Enzokk wrote: » I think if Letwin passes it states that legislation has to go through first so the deal itself cannot pass today. It just means everything is delayed until they get legislation done which with the numbers in the HoC means a lot of changes to the deal and could mean in the end Johnson voting against his own deal if they attach amendments to it that he doesn't like. What a spectacle that would be.
Joe_ Public wrote: » Mark Carney: Brexit deal will boost flagging global economyhttps://www.theguardian.com/business/2019/oct/18/mark-carney-brexit-deal-will-boost-flagging-global-economy?CMP=Share_AndroidApp_Copy_to_clipboard Does this strike people as a truly independent position from BoE governor? Carries whiff of government mouthpiece to me. Suggesting the uk is going to lead us all out of global recession post-brexit! Not even the toriest of tories could come out with guff like that with a straight face.
PokeHerKing wrote: » Didn't May already do that? What is they say about the definition of insanity...
Enzokk wrote: » May had the obstacle that she couldn't keep bringing her deal back unchanged for votes so she toyed with the idea of getting the legislation done before the meaningful vote. It was a way for her to try and get people to study her deal to see the benefits, this would be the opposite, give them time to study it to see how bad it is for everyone but the ERG. Same tactic for different reasons.
Enzokk wrote: » The headline is a little misleading, but not deliberately. Passing this deal will mean that the UK economy can start recovering, but if they were to remain then he would state that it would be ten times better than the deal negotiated. Its just this deal gives them certainty and that is better than the mess there was since Johnson was elected, so in that respect he is right. But it is still worse than if they were to revoke.
PokeHerKing wrote: » No I meant didn't May end up voting against her own deal at some point?