I pray to him that you stop speaking to people in a condescending tone.Sorry to disappoint you but I am not Christ.
I am sure he is watching over you so keep praying.
He's yet to answer me.
I pray to him that you stop speaking to people in a condescending tone.Sorry to disappoint you but I am not Christ.
I am sure he is watching over you so keep praying.
No, the written constitution would present the guidelines for holding a referendum on major change. Any Government wishing to initiate a referendum would have to meet that criteria, including specifying the winning margins, it could be by just one vote, providing the referendum is held in accordance with the relevant part of the constitution.
The decision to hold a referendum would always be in the lap of the Government of the day, that wouldn't change. We don't have a written constitution just now, the nearest thing is the Magna Carte, so the only thing that's sacrosanct is precedent.
My original point was that Referendums do not have to be the lotteries they tend to be at the moment. Learning from history is never bullshit!
Here your is the original point,
"Referendums are only lotteries when those calling them have not defined the terms of acceptance, e.g. a 2:1 outcome, or over 65 % result etc. beforehand"
Now you say
"including specifying the winning margins, it could be by just one vote"
The history lesson from all this is that referendums are not solutions to difficult political decisions we shouldn't hold them and more people should have voted for Ed Miliband and none of this would have happened.
In fairness the referendum they had was advisory and not binding... It's the politicians who chose to make it binding by invoking article 50.I can see that!
I'm talking about having a UK written constitution which lays down these things in advance, not some 'winning' margin dreamed up by whoever calls the referendum. The Scots Nationalists called for the referendum in Scotland, not the Unionists, Cameron called for the Brexit referendum in the UK because of promises he made to parts of his party, and he thought Remain would win... both initiators set their own winning post margins.
I don't even think it's that that makes it "binding", it's that most politicians from the two main parties regard it as undemocratic to suggest opinions may have altered in the face of evidence three years on.In fairness the referendum they had was advisory and not binding... It's the politicians who chose to make it binding by invoking article 50.
I pray to him that you stop speaking to people in a condescending tone.
He's yet to answer me.
So are any feckwiteers still happy with their decision? if so, could you give me 1 reason to be cheerful that's factual and not emotional rhetoric.
I love the way bmi blaming brexit uncertainty for their collapse.
18 people per flight average. feck off
I love the way bmi blaming brexit uncertainty for their collapse.
18 people per flight average. feck off
It’s actually because they can no longer use the EU carbon offset scheme = large costs.
I love the way bmi blaming brexit uncertainty for their collapse.
18 people per flight average. feck off
They operate 45 seater airplanes. Not 180 seaters. Obviously the company wasn’t doing particularly well anyway, but that number as a year long average is not tremendously low.
I must say I find the attitude kinda what I was expecting would happen among Brexiteers. First (pre-Referendum), claim the businesses will boom. When the businesses issue warnings, claim it’s “project fear”. When business start to shut down citing Brexit, claim it’s all lies. And finally when recession truly bites, blame everyone else from the incompetent politicians, to the EU, to the bad man in the sky.
What about all of the other organisations that are hurt or moving?
I love the way bmi blaming brexit uncertainty for their collapse.
18 people per flight average. feck off
He will be, he doesn't give a toss.What about all of the other organisations that are hurt or moving?
Is that funny too? Or is it just a coincidence that they are all packing up a month before brexit?
Have a good laugh, March 30th none of us will be laughing.
Claims to be more in touch with the common man.
I love the way bmi blaming brexit uncertainty for their collapse.
18 people per flight average. feck off
All the planes i fly on to the uk are packed, i used to fly british Midland from schipol as it was my favourite. If bmi is the same company and it has died then bad luck, if it isnt the same company then bad luck. feck me, blame brexit all you like, uk jas not left yet.They operate 45 seater airplanes. Not 180 seaters. Obviously the company wasn’t doing particularly well anyway, but that number as a year long average is not tremendously low.
I must say I find the attitude kinda what I was expecting would happen among Brexiteers. First (pre-Referendum), claim the businesses will boom. When the businesses issue warnings, claim it’s “project fear”. When business start to shut down citing Brexit, claim it’s all lies. And finally when recession truly bites, blame everyone else from the incompetent politicians, to the EU, to the bad man in the sky.
I dont laugh at people losing jobs, only companies incorrectly blaming brexit.Claims to be more in touch with the common man.
Laughs at people losing their jobs.
Ladies and gentlemen i give you @Stanley Road
Dont worry you fit right in with your tory mates.I dont laugh at people losing jobs, only companies incorrectly blaming brexit.
Yeah, tory, thats meDont worry you fit right in with your tory mates.
What's worse, Fox was telling them to hurry up.It's quite interesting that they're trying to get more or less the same deal as the EU from an incredibly weakened position. The time frame alone makes the UK desperate and of course the Japanese are well aware of this.
What's worse, Fox was telling them to hurry up.
Anyone watched “brexit: uncivil war” yet? Halfway through, some of the characters are as I’d imagine them
One of you lot must be Dominic Cummings I reckon
Yes. The uncertainty is starting to bite. These people are looking 10 years into the future.That’s not good
So far all I see is about jobs going (as predicted) and very little about job creation
That’s not good
So far all I see is about jobs going (as predicted) and very little about job creation
Will they not be redeployments from within the civil service because you wont need many civil servants in roles that were directly linked to the EU?What about all the extra Customs officer posts, Border Police and Port Authority Personnel posts, to handle the expected queues at Dover and the other expanding ports?
So roughly for one company that could equate to the loss of about 7000 jobs. Christ that is bleak.Yes. The uncertainty is starting to bite. These people are looking 10 years into the future.
The Civic is built at Swindon and one of their first tier suppliers is UYS in Cowley. They make the exhaust systems pretty much exclusively for Honda and employ 2,500. The Company I used to work for manufacture automatic welding fixtures for UYS - they employ 50. In turn that company has about 10 other companies in the supply chain for components of those fixtures. And that's just the exhaust system of the car.
The Financial Times cited unnamed officials in Tokyo who reacted with dismay to a letter sent on 8 February in which Hunt, the foreign secretary, and Fox, the international trade secretary, insisted that “time is of the essence” in securing a trade deal with Japan, the world’s third-biggest economy.
According to the FT, they took exception to a line in which Hunt and Fox said “we are committed to [speed and flexibility] and hope that Japan is too”, interpreting it as an intimation that the Japanese side lacked a sense of urgency.
The newspaper also reported that Japanese trade officials were growing frustrated with their British counterparts, who had arrived at meetings without specialists capable of taking the talks forward.