- "It's not about foreigners, it's about sovereignty"
- British judges make decision that Britain's elected parliament must vote on Article 50 in accordance with British law.



- "It's not about foreigners, it's about sovereignty"
- British judges make decision that Britain's elected parliament must vote on Article 50 in accordance with British law.
These tweets are crazy, I don't know a single democracy that doesn't require the vote of the parliament when it comes to international treaties and most of the time the qualified majority is used.
Would be hilarious if they the government had to refer this judgement to the European Courts
Are your investments in foreign currencies? Does that explain why you're not bothered about the fall in the pound/ effects of a hard Brexit?![]()
of course. Just look at the USA and the influence of congress on these matters...These tweets are crazy, I don't know a single democracy that doesn't require the vote of the parliament when it comes to international treaties and most of the time the qualified majority is used.
like the woman banging on about sacking judges (presumably because they arrived a a decision she does not like)... and this is a woman standing for leadership of a major UK political party'Unelected judges' is a rather bewildering and frankly worrying complaint to make.
That's exactly what I thought, I can't really believe that something like that has been produced.Apparently so, chief:
https://www.gov.uk/government/news/...ty-campaign-starts-today-see-it-say-it-sorted
That poster's a bit too reminiscent of Nazi propaganda for my liking.
After reading a couple of articles it just sounds like a timing issue bundled into this whole thing. Can't imagine and hope MPs wouldn't vote against Brexit now.
like the woman banging on about sacking judges (presumably because they arrived a a decision she does not like)... and this is a woman standing for leadership of a major UK political party![]()
They know full well there will be riots, so they wont vote against it.
These tweets are crazy, I don't know a single democracy that doesn't require the vote of the parliament when it comes to international treaties and most of the time the qualified majority is used.
Funny, watching brexiters lose their shit.
The UK's ratification of TTIP, for example, would not have required a Commons vote of approval. Or such is my understanding. The authority to do so rests with the Government.
Far from loosing my shit.Funny, watching brexiters lose their shit.
We should just half-leave, half-stayThe title made me think we were getting a Fallout spin-off based here after brexit. Pretty disappointed.
A "half Brexit" seems about right, 52% is only about half of the voters wanting it anyway. Maybe just kick the top 52% of the country out?
I find that crazy, international treaties affects several generations, it's hard to make them disappear because they affect to many aspects of people's and companies' lives. To me the vote of the parliament and a qualified majority are mandatory before their ratifications.
Yeah I really dont understand.It was always a non-binding referendum, this was known at the time, so anyone losing their shit over the fact that parliament has to vote is a bit daft really, they absolutely should be voting.
I find that crazy, international treaties affects several generations, it's hard to make them disappear because they affect to many aspects of people's and companies' lives. To me the vote of the parliament and a qualified majority are mandatory before their ratifications.
The government's language suggests, they know it's a farce. "we will make the best of it, we don't want a running commentary".All this is their fault. They won the vote without even formulating any practical plan as to how Brexit would actually look or the process taking us through it. Absolute mugs.
You're making the mistake of thinking that being in a democracy means we matter in any way.Yeah I really dont understand.
I voted remain. But I understand that the majority of the country who voted, voted leave. So really, we have to leave. But it was an on binding referendum, so parliament needs to have a vote on it. But the MPs will vote to leave because thats what the people did. So it's fine.
What the government doesn't want to do is tell parliament their plan. Because they dont have a plan.
According to this (no idea how reliable), the parliament of every European member state except the UK and Malta has to ratify the agreement. No idea why that would be different for us?I find that crazy, international treaties affects several generations, it's hard to make them disappear because they affect to many aspects of people's and companies' lives. To me the vote of the parliament and a qualified majority are mandatory before their ratifications.
Nobody believes A50 won't be triggered. But parliament will have a say and that's what matters.Far from loosing my shit.
As others have pointed out, MP's aren't going to vote against the will of the people, they'd be concerned about their jobs first and foremost. All the calls for a General Election would benefit the Conservatives too. I really couldn't see Labour having much of an impact and if people who voted leave feel their vote is threatened, they'd likely just move to UKIP giving them a huge boost.
At the end of the day, Article 50 will still be activated, and most likely within the time line stated, but there will be a lot more discussion and headaches to deal with.
The whole thing is a waste of time.
lets appeal to the European court of human rights about it?"Parliament should be sovereign, not Brussels!"
"Okay let's vote on article 50"
"This is treason."