mancan92
Full Member
wow shes a straight up witch
On any basis they like, really. Or no basis at all.On what basis? Assuming we are requesting in good faith?
If EU doesn't unanimously agree to an extension am I right in thinking that one (fairly comical) option is for the UK to unilaterally revoke article 50, then immediately reinstate it so we can all enjoy another two years of this nonsense.
Would the EU even allow that or do they have a choice?
Not heard that but there's an old docu called The Power of Nightmares about that, which is fantastic.Yes! Fascinating.
Would the EU even allow that or do they have a choice?
It's a coup put in place by chancers seeking to make cash from chaos; all the rest is just window-dressing. This has nothing to do with patriotism, immigration, 'Blitz spirit' etc etc. It's a scam.
What this guy, the EU Brextit negotiator, says for one:On what basis? Assuming we are requesting in good faith?
Presumably one or two of the countries might try to leverage their veto for some other purpose. But once the big players back it, I would imagine everyone will fall in line. The 27 have been very united (until now) on Brexit.What this guy, the EU Brextit negotiator, says for one:
https://www.express.co.uk/news/poli...cle-50-extension-vote-deal-EU-guy-verhofstadt
There are also the right wing Italians who want to see us leave and are talking to Farage by all accounts.
Yeah the reason of this vote tonight was to show the ERG that the two options were May's deal or a softer deal. They now expect the ERG to vote for May's deal.The song remains the same - May will put her deal back to parliament next week as the only means of delivering the great prize of Brexit. And she win probably win.
The lesson for me is not to laugh at disfunctional “democracies” in other parts of the world. Here, despite a growing majority for remain, we are being held to ransom by some awkward xenophobe who is somewhere on the Asperger’s spectrum and leading a party of 100,000 geriatrics and there is absolutely nothing we can do about it.
ITS WHAT THE PEOPLE WANT.So a second referendum is unthinkable... but May’s deal can come back for a third vote after being rejected twice.
Not heard that but there's an old docu called The Power of Nightmares about that, which is fantastic.
The exact thing they said was that you can do it as long as it does not involve an abusive practice. The revocation has to be in good faith; immediately triggering A50 again is obviously the very definirion of an abusive practice.There'd be nothing stopping us doing it. That was confirmed in January.
It would really feck everybody off though.
ERG deputy chairman has just said that they will not support it.Yeah the reason of this vote tonight was to show the ERG that the two options were May's deal or a softer deal. They now expect the ERG to vote for May's deal.
Can someone explain to me the logic behind this vote? Isn't NO DEAL something that inevitably will happen in the absence of an alternative? Why are they voting on this?
My understandig was that if you want NO DEAL you vote against any proposed deals or extensions, and if you wan't a deal then you have to vote for the single one available or for an extension to try and get another.
What am I missing?
I think that is what she is hoping. To me she is flogging a dead horse but there is no talking to her.ERG deputy chairman has just said that they will not support it.
They won't, so long as the default option is hard brexit, that's what the ERG want in the first place.ERG deputy chairman has just said that they will not support it.
No, that's not possible. The ECJ ruling pretty explicitly ruled that out. The purpose of revoking A50 must be to confirm EU membership, in good faith and sincere cooperation.If EU doesn't unanimously agree to an extension am I right in thinking that one (fairly comical) option is for the UK to unilaterally revoke article 50, then immediately reinstate it so we can all enjoy another two years of this nonsense.
The exact thing they said was that you can do it as long as it does not involve an abusive practice. The revocation has to be in good faith; immediately triggering A50 again is obviously the very definirion of an abusive practice.
So no, the UK can't feck around like that, not even technically.
Article 50 TEU must be interpreted as meaning that, where a Member State has notified the European Council, in accordance with that article, of its intention to withdraw from the European Union, that article allows that Member State — for as long as a withdrawal agreement concluded between that Member State and the European Union has not entered into force or, if no such agreement has been concluded, for as long as the two-year period laid down in Article 50(3) TEU, possibly extended in accordance with that paragraph, has not expired — to revoke that notification unilaterally, in an unequivocal and unconditional manner, by a notice addressed to the European Council in writing, after the Member State concerned has taken the revocation decision in accordance with its constitutional requirements. The purpose of that revocation is to confirm the EU membership of the Member State concerned under terms that are unchanged as regards its status as a Member State, and that revocation brings the withdrawal procedure to an end.
As far as I remember (I might be wrong) the ECJ ruled that a member state could unilaterally withdraw from Article 50 at any point so while doing so might annoy them I don't think other EU members have any say at all.
http://dcubrexitinstitute.eu/2018/1...-50-notification-can-be-unilaterally-revoked/This is the judgement:
Your point was the EU's opposition to it, but the court found against those arguments.
I think you might possibly be confusing it with the UK's ability to leave the backstop which did have a good faith element.
So no, I'm not mixing it up with anything. They just made it concrete what good faith means.At point 148 of the Opinion it is claimed that the principles of good faith and sincere cooperation (Article 4(3) TEU) function as limits on the exercise of revocation. The judgment does not confirm any such further substantive conditions. The only echo of any such further limitations imposed by EU law are that the notification of revocation must be ‘unequivocal and unconditional, that is to say that the purpose of that revocation is to confirm the EU membership of the Member State concerned’ (para 75). This approach avoids the possible pitfalls that may arise from attempting to apply the vague obligations of good faith and sincere cooperation to processes that have been explicitly recognised by the ECJ as subject to the voluntary sovereign choice of the Member State concerned.
The world is laughing at us.