Brexited | the worst threads live the longest

Do you think there will be a Deal or No Deal?


  • Total voters
    194
  • Poll closed .
It is bullshit. It's off by 10%.

72.2% turnout. 52% voted leave. 72.2% * 52% = 37.5%.
The 28% that didn't vote had a chance to have a say and they forfeited it.. They don't get to whine now.


Gentlemen, this is democracy manifest... get your hands off my penis
 
This whole thing is just insane at this point. It's still laughable to think that they tried to push the narrative that May was Thatcher 2.0 at one point. Thatcher was a cnut but at least she was good at being one. May is just useless.
 
The only other option is to slam on the brakes by revoking Article 50 (hence the petition today). May would see that as a massive personal failure.

In a way, no deal is fairly likely because no-one needs to vote to agree on anything for that to happen. It's the default position on Brexit day if May's deal isn't approved in the House.

Yes, because she has been such a success so far.
 
How popular are they among Unionists?
Very unfortunately. Their voter base is that thick, the DUPers just have to bleat on about keeping “them uns” (Catholics) out and about how the big bad Sinn Fein monster will destroy their way of life.
 
You're right. He should have gotten the DUP and ERG in order, and got his Tory whips to back his deal and control his own party. He should have negotiated with the EU earlier.

Oh wait,

So you think Corbyn has helped the situation? All I see is a completely inept person who has completely failed to hold the government to account.
 
Very unfortunately. Their voter base is that thick, the DUPers just have to bleat on about keeping “them uns” (Catholics) out and about how the big bad Sinn Fein monster will destroy their way of life.

That's not true. Most Unionists fecking hate the DUP - in fact most people here fecking hate them. The trouble is there are no other parties to vote for really if you are that way inclined.

I should note that I've never voted for them and would rather cut my own arm off than vote for the scum and I'm from a 'unionist' background.
 
A member of the public has just said one of the most confusing sentences I have ever heard on Radio 5 Live.

"No one's said whether we shouldn't be leaving the Brexit" - quadruple negative?
 
Problem is that if the UK had 5 years to prepare it would never be enough.

Do you think it's valuable to say the same thing over and over and over again, to the same group of people, who have no influence whatsoever on the thing you're obsessing over?
 
But why? Why is No Deal good for a Northern Irish unionist party? Isn't it a dangerous policy, considering that Northern Ireland voted Remain. Aren't they afraid that their hardline No Deal stance will increase the popularity of the concept of a united Ireland?
It’s complicated. The DUP are saying they don’t want a hard brexit and a border in Ireland, but they’d love anything to further split the North from the South, however you’re right that this could backfire on them by pushing more moderates towards the idea of Irish Unity.

On the other hand, Sinn Fein for obvious reasons don’t want a hard brexit or a hard border, however long term, this would be favourable for nationalism as it would make a unity referendum unavoidable.
 
Very unfortunately. Their voter base is that thick, the DUPers just have to bleat on about keeping “them uns” (Catholics) out and about how the big bad Sinn Fein monster will destroy their way of life.

As a block of voters, they're about as thick as sinn fein voters to be fair. That's the issue with the bloody country.
 
Yes, because she has been such a success so far.
She thinks she has.
She doesn't know yet, and neither do we. Her plan hasn't changed for a good while, take it to the wire so there's a binary choice and no alternative. Only then will we know whether her plan has been successful or not.

She does seem to have wound up some of the MPs who were ready to switch to her side, but come that last vote their choicesd will be the same, wound up or not, deal or no deal. I reckon she still has a good chance, but I might be the last one to think so.
 
She doesn't know yet, and neither do we. Her plan hasn't changed for a good while, take it to the wire so there's a binary choice and no alternative. Only then will we know whether her plan has been successful or not.

She does seem to have wound up some of the MPs who were ready to switch to her side, but come that last vote their choicesd will be the same, wound up or not, deal or no deal. I reckon she still has a good chance, but I might be the last one to think so.
In fairness if she gets it through (and to be honest I think she might) she will walk away and probably leave an almighty mess for whoever follows but she will still probably be seen as having done better than Cameron did in loosing the referendum then walking away.

Suspect she might be able to get the deal through and that the erg etc know the real prize isn't the w.a. but the nature of any future trading arrangement and that having a right wing nut job in charge of that is worth any shoddy w.a.

Suspect the main people in the next cabinet will be
Johnson mogg Davies ledsom raab and probably POB as he always seems to slime his way in there
 
In fairness if she gets it through (and to be honest I think she might) she will walk away and probably leave an almighty mess for whoever follows but she will still probably be seen as having done better than Cameron did in loosing the referendum then walking away.

Suspect she might be able to get the deal through and that the erg etc know the real prize isn't the w.a. but the nature of any future trading arrangement and that having a right wing nut job in charge of that is worth any shoddy w.a.

Suspect the main people in the next cabinet will be
Johnson mogg Davies ledsom raab and probably POB as he always seems to slime his way in there
All of that could be true sun, every bit of it!
 
Sky said:
No one can doubt the prime minister's determination and fortitude. She worked tirelessly to secure her deal and in so doing implement the result of the referendum as she saw it.

Do the PM's words reveal anything else about her strategy as she battles through the ongoing crisis at Westminster?

The problem is that vision was rejected - twice and by the biggest margins in history. Yet the prime minister has simply not responded, politically, intellectually or possibly even personally.

She seems to have dug a psychological bunker so profound that the reality of her defeats has been unable to reach its depths.

She has reacted not with humility or contrition or openness, but with a tone so lecturing and hubristic that many MPs have thought her deeply arrogant. Her spokesman explains this by saying she is frustrated with parliament's "inability to take a decision".

The truth is it has, repeatedly on all manner of things - they're just not decisions to her liking.

Mrs May is unique in our constitutional history in refusing to accept the will of the House of Commons. This streak was most clearly on display on Wednesday when she refused to act on her own motion from last week which said she would seek a long extension to Article 50 if her deal had not passed by now.

She has also reneged on the idea of indicative votes to determine the will of the House, something her deputy promised only days ago. She has repeatedly flouted convention by not resigning after the major defeat of legislation.

She thought she could just ignore the rules of the Commons which say they must not vote on something more than once. She has refused to rule out no deal despite the fact that, again, the House of Commons voted for such a move twice.

It's no wonder that MPs on all sides of the House think she treats them with little or no respect. Her message is that they must travel with her because she says so, because they must.

But parliamentary democracy does not work in such a fashion, especially if you lead a minority government.

Mrs May acts as if she has an enormous majority and that she can bend them to her will - but she has not and she cannot. It is no surprise hers is the first government in history to be found in contempt of parliament.
 
The 28% that didn't vote had a chance to have a say and they forfeited it.. They don't get to whine now.


Gentlemen, this is democracy manifest... get your hands off my penis

That's not how our democracy works at all actually...
 
Sky: The government has over 200 gagging orders on different companies over Brexit.
 
Well now that’s just bullshit, if that were the case, leave wouldn’t have won.

What? No it isn't, I don't have the numbers in front of me now but when I did earlier if you look at number of votes who voted leave (17m ish) as a total of total registered it works out around that.

But instead of looking at the figures yourself just say bullshit, it's easier

Edit: can't find the numbers now, maybe the voting population number it gave me was off, searched on work pc and now can't find it in my phone.
 
MP Lloyd Russel-Moyle saying he was assaulted by a leave voter today. First of many I'm sure sadly
 
This is not democracy.
 
What? No it isn't, I don't have the numbers in front of me now but when I did earlier if you look at number of votes who voted leave (17m ish) as a total of total registered it works out around that.

But instead of looking at the figures yourself just say bullshit, it's easier

Edit: can't find the numbers now, maybe the voting population number it gave me was off, searched on work pc and now can't find it in my phone.

It is bullshit. It's off by 10%.

72.2% turnout. 52% voted leave. 72.2% * 52% = 37.5%.

34.7% of the population support remain if we use turnout as the true metric to measure these things.

That is correct.

It is bullshit. If you use turnout there are less remain supporting people.
 
Who's POB?

pob-friends-pob-childrens-tv-uk-a031.jpg
 
Doesn't really matter how many people voted Leave anyway as the interpretations of Leave are vastly different which why we are in the calamitous situation we're in right now.
 
BBC reporting that the 22nd May date may actually have been dropped from the final draft, due to concerns that it is too close to the EU elections.

They are also reporting that EU leaders were not very impressed with May's speech this afternoon.
 
RTE:

Breaking: officials are drafting a new text at the #EUCO. I understand the Brexit A50 extension date of May 22 has been removed and replaced by “another configuration”.
 
Bloomberg:

Breaking: EU considering 9 month delay if May's Brexit deal fails for a third time in parliament next week