there are a lot of Tory's near the top of their party who have had to hold their noses to go along with the stench coming out of No10 already. Some don't want an election now and others want to try and pass the bill anyway, allowing more time. — Punshhh
Are you confident that the British public won't eventually see through this smoke and mirrors and doublethink of the vote leave campaign. — Punshhh
Regarding the public, there are a lot of voters who think that "getting it done", means it will all be sorted. This is one of the worst deceits of the government, they know it won't be done, we will have another decade of it. There certainly won't be any certainty. The only way to stop it is to revoke, support for a people's vote may be increasing now, it's difficult to read though along with anything else at the moment. — Punshhh
No, the hung parliament is not the problem since many conservative MPs have also voted against the various deals proposed by May and Johnson. In the old days, when the prime minister was elected by parliament and not by party members, the whip had power and could force his MPs into line with their leader. It was in their own interest to support the PM from their own party even if they didn’t agree with him a hundred percent. Those days are gone. By introducing this foolish rule that the leaders must be directly elected by party members, the unintended consequence has been to turn the distinguished British parliament into a messy American Congress where every representative is on his own without responsibility for the overall functioning of government. No plan can be expected from a group of people without a common purpose and they certainly don’t feel obligated to support a leader they have not chosen themselves.It's a problem caused by the hung Parliament — Tim3003
A quick Brexit whatever the costNot Johnson, he’s working for what he believes in
— Congau
What's that then? — Evil
I agree it won't all be sorted for years yet, and there will certainly be an outcry against the continuing payments the UK has to make in the transition period. Indeed I've just read the UK will lose its rebate, so we'll be paying more than whilst in, still be subject to EU laws, and with no say! But once the withdrawal deal is passed it becomes a matter of when rather than if. I can't see support for another referendum doing anything but reducing from here as even hardened remainers start to accept the inevitable - assuming, that is, Boris wins the election..
It's a problem caused by the hung Parliament — Tim3003
No, the hung parliament is not the problem since many conservative MPs have also voted against the various deals proposed by May and Johnson. — Congau
In the old days, when the prime minister was elected by parliament and not by party members, the whip had power and could force his MPs into line with their leader. It was in their own interest to support the PM from their own party even if they didn’t agree with him a hundred percent. — Congau
Party loyalty is not a basic instinct among MPs, it follows logically from what is at stake for them personally. When the leader was elected by them, they had to be loyal or else they would be responsible for the failure of their own favoured policy. Now they don’t have much to lose by voting against their leader since he was never their real leader in the first place. — Congau
The possibility of leaving without an agreement is now effectively zero — Wayfarer
On the contrary, the expulsion of the twenty Tories proves the new impotence of the whip. In the past the whip had power because he could threaten consequences in case of non-abidance. There was no need to carry out the threat.The whips still have that power - hence the 20-odd expelled Tory MPs. — Tim3003
There was an interesting Despatches on Channel 4 tonight about how the NHS would be compromised in the Trump trade deal with the US. Apparently government officials have already discussed this with US officials. Estimates suggest that the current drug bill for US drugs for the NHS (approx £18 billion per year) would increase to approx £45 billion. Working out at an increase of £500 million per week which the NHS would have to pay. It also suggests that there would be legal requirements for the NHS to buy only from the US suppliers at the higher rates, rather than buy generic equivalent drugs from elsewhere. Apparently Trump has accused the UK of "free loading" from US drug suppliers. — Punshhh
If Parliament won't vote to pass a deal.... — Michael
They voted for the Johnson deal last week, remember? That was Johnson’s only win thus far: that he actually got the Brexit bill through, immediately followed by another vote delaying it’s implementation. — Wayfarer
We're going to have an election, Labour is supporting it now. (there is also a rumour that it might be followed by a no confidence vote) — Punshhh
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