Mellsblue wrote:Puja wrote:Mellsblue wrote:
Checking with that body also seems as much use as a chocolate fire guard. Given what’s happened in the last month or so, I really don’t understand this ‘if only they’d sought agreement via parliament first, it would all have been hunky-dory by now’ logic.
The WA is pretty much a compromise between the Conservative and Labour policies as per their GE manifesto, albeit a lot closer to Lab’s, yet, even given that, it wasn’t even close to being voted through. Labour’s stated Brexit policy is to try to force a GE. Doesn’t bode too well to finding consensus.
The problem is that the Conservatives turned it into a Conservative deal, a policy and direction decided solely by Conservatives and presented to Parliament as "the Government's deal". This after spending several years shouting loudly that Labour were the enemy and nothing more than demented lunatics whose sole aim was to wreck the economy. It may be petty party politics for Labour to refuse to back it, but at the risk of sounding pettier, they did start it! Also, Labour's stated Brexit policy all the way through has been nothing more than "Fuck the Tories" which would've been a lot harder to stick to if they'd been invited to give their tuppence at the beginning (and thus actually had to have one).
The difference with trying to gain a consensus first on what Brexit actually meant (aside from Brexit, of course) is that if a consensus couldn't be reached, then there would have been time for options like elections, citizens assemblies,cross-party committees, basically anything you like apart from, "Here's the deal that we've spent ages negotiating and which is now the only one on the table - like it or lump it." Plus we wouldn't have spunked away precious goodwill from the EU side by fighting them tooth and nail over a deal that it turns out we don't want.
Puja
Good to see that this Conservative govt started adversarial politics. There are quite a few politics texts books that need rewriting.
That wasn't exactly what I said, but I guess it is easier to attack, which nicely illustrates both of our points as well as what's wrong with politics in this country.
Mellsblue wrote:As for the govt’s deal, that is literally how our political system works - a govt is formed and they put their manifesto policies to parliament.
I'm familiar with that. But also literally how our political system works is that votes are put to parliament and, if a government is so weak as to not be able to get their manifesto policies through, then they either amend them to try and get enough MPs on side or they don't get them through.
Mellsblue wrote:I’m really not sure that Labour would have moved away from their ‘f**k the Tories’ policy. Despite unbelievably terrible personal ratings, below both May and Don’t Know, Corbyn seems determined to stay on message.
You're not wrong, but given a slightly less incompetent government, he would've had a lot more trouble keeping all his MPs onside.
Mellsblue wrote:There was of course a GE after the referendum that returned the Conservatives as the largest party and Labour as the second largest (both taking record shares of the vote and numbers of votes) both of which ran on pro-Brexit platforms and there is a cross party Brexit committee, chaired by Hillary Benn of the opposition, in place. I’m surprised you suggest citizens assemblies as you, amongst many others, have denounced the general public for not being intelligent enough to know what is best for them.
Okay, lots of sophistry there. Firstly, the GE was fought on anything but Brexit and a combination of the mess that is FPtP and Labour's tightrope of mendacity on Brexit means that a lot of Remain voters voted Labour as a "Not the Tories" vote or a "Fuck the Tories" vote or a "Corbyn will be gone and Labour will then oppose Brexit" vote. So parrotting May's line that 82.4% of people voted for pro-Brexit parties is specious and you're too intelligent not to know that.
Secondly, the select committee scrutinises the work of the Department of Exiting the EU. It has no powers to set policy or any input into the negotiations. They get to criticise (and they do), but there's no decision-making capacity there.
And yes, I am generally of the opinion that "The People" have the collective wisdom of an out-of-date tin of Aldi salmon and wouldn't ideally want them polled at any time, but my point is that there would be an option, there would be things that we could do, rather than just the unedifying choice of May's deal or No Deal with a ticking clock in the background. Since The Will of The People (TM) has become so sacrosanct since 2016, an assembly might've been an option to work out what that Will actually was.
Mellsblue wrote:How you get to the idea that we have spunked away any good will by fighting tooth and nail with the EU, I don’t know. It’s seems to me that there have been robust negotiations leading to an agreement that led one EU official to declare they had their first colony. If anything ‘spunked away precious goodwill’ it is the embarrassment of a legislature unable to decide what it wants once a deal was agreed upon.
Oh, the EU are a bag of dicks as well, no argument there. Doesn't change the fact that taking 2 years to negotiate a deal that we manifestly don't want is not a good way to build a future relationship.
Mellsblue wrote:I say all this whilst thinking May et al have made a massive hollicks of it all and believing May is a terrible leader, but I believe that blaming them and them only for not seeking consensus is incredibly one eyed.
And so we agree once again - everyone involved is a fucking idiot and we're all doomed. I believe we reached exactly the same point the last time we had this argument.
Puja