Cool. Let’s have a second ref solely on which form of Brexit the country wants......Puja wrote:Mellsblue wrote:I doubt parliament will allow no deal on to the ballot paper. The only reason to have a second ref is to try to overturn the first, not to enable a hard Brexit.Puja wrote:
If we're going to do a second ref, then it surely has to be a preference one with Remain, Withdrawal Agreement, and No Deal on there. That way we can actually see if "The Will Of The People" (TM) can get a majority for one of those on first and second choice votes.
Puja
I'd say the only reason to have a second ref is to get an actual decision out of "The Will Of The People" (TM) rather than arguing about what it means. It seems pointless to do it if one of the popular options isn't on there.
Puja
Brexit delayed
- Mellsblue
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Re: Brexit delayed
- Which Tyler
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Re: Brexit delayed
Campaign? yes, ballot? NoMellsblue wrote: The leave campaign was clearly based on an end to free movement, no EUCJ and the ability to strike trade deals. That points to a very clear version of Brexit to me, not that I agree with it.
If you think this fuck up is entirely on May and the Tory party then you don’t follow politics closely enough or fully understand it, and/or you’re wilfully blind because you agree with the Remainers.
I’d agree the some Brexiteers haven’t budged and inch but I’d also point to plenty of Remainers that haven’t budged an inch. As I’ve says from the start, very few people have come out of this well.
If you think only Lib Dem MPs haven’t been willing to give Brexit a chance then I’ll refer you back to the bit about you not following politics closely enough.
To you maybe, to the other 33.5m voters... Less so
Well, that's charming. Complete bullshit of course. You having an opinion ion does NOT mean that anyone having an different opinion doesn't known what they're talking about.
Beyond that, you're just doubling down on being an arsehole by being a bigger arsehole.
- Mellsblue
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Re: Brexit delayed
There is only the name of the candidate and their party on the ballot of a GE but I assume everyone knows the platform behind the name and party. No different with the referendum. You can't accept that Leave campaigned on those three planks and in the next sentence then claim it's not clear what platform they campained on.Which Tyler wrote:Campaign? yes, ballot? NoMellsblue wrote: The leave campaign was clearly based on an end to free movement, no EUCJ and the ability to strike trade deals. That points to a very clear version of Brexit to me, not that I agree with it.
If you think this fuck up is entirely on May and the Tory party then you don’t follow politics closely enough or fully understand it, and/or you’re wilfully blind because you agree with the Remainers.
I’d agree the some Brexiteers haven’t budged and inch but I’d also point to plenty of Remainers that haven’t budged an inch. As I’ve says from the start, very few people have come out of this well.
If you think only Lib Dem MPs haven’t been willing to give Brexit a chance then I’ll refer you back to the bit about you not following politics closely enough.
To you maybe, to the other 33.5m voters... Less so
Well, that's charming. Complete bullshit of course. You having an opinion ion does NOT mean that anyone having an different opinion doesn't known what they're talking about.
Beyond that, you're just doubling down on being an arsehole by being a bigger arsehole.
If you honestly think this is solely May and the govts fault then you don't understand how our parliament works. If you think it's solely Lib Dem MPs who have refused to accept the result then you can call me whatever you like but you are refusing to acknowledge that all the SNP, Plaid and Green MPs haven't accepted the result, and that's as obvious as is possible. To them you can add the numerous Labour and Conservative MPs who, from day 1, have refused to accept the result - have a look at the origins of the People's Vote movement and the Independent Group/Change UK and tell me it was just the Lib Dems.
- Which Tyler
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Re: Brexit delayed
The GE was largely fought on issues other than Brexit, it was also fought at a time when most remainers had accepted the result of the referendum, and thus were voting on other issues.Mellsblue wrote: There is only the name of the candidate and their party on the ballot of a GE but I assume everyone knows the platform behind the name and party. No different with the referendum. You can't accept that Leave campaigned on those three planks and in the next sentence then claim it's not clear what platform they campained on.
If you honestly think this is solely May and the govts fault then you don't understand how our parliament works. If you think it's solely Lib Dem MPs who have refused to accept the result then you can call me whatever you like but you are refusing to acknowledge that all the SNP, Plaid and Green MPs haven't accepted the result, and that's as obvious as is possible. To them you can add the numerous Labour and Conservative MPs who, from day 1, have refused to accept the result - have a look at the origins of the People's Vote movement and the Independent Group/Change UK and tell me it was just the Lib Dems.
The referendum didn't include candidate or party names at all, and was a single-issue vote.
Show members I haven't accepted that leave campaigned for a hard Brexit? Now show me where they didn't also campaign on a soft Brexit. Leave were absolutely trying to be all things to all people whom were disaffected with the EU, and picked up votes across the whole range of people, from those who were registering a protest about being asked the question, through those who wanted a Norway-style departure, to those who wanted to crash and burn.
What you're doing is exactly what got us into this mess in the first place. "You lost get over it" or hell, even "you won, now you have to kowtow to my demands because I'm more extreme that you".
Quite frankly, you can fuck off with that attitude. That unwillingness to see other people's opinions as even being genuinely held, let alone valid, or as valid as your own.
Like May you are refusing to discuss this in good faith. Consequently you have lost any faith I had in discussing this with you, but feel free to have the last word anyway.
On the political party thing - I was talking about parties represented across Britain, not the nationalists; and no-one gives a damn about the Greens. Remain Tories and labour, and now-TIG were okay accepting the result of the referendum. They're not now because of the attitudes you're parroting, and because of 3 years of bad governing.
Please note, there's a difference between "accepting the result" and "full-heartedly embracing the result" not that you'll see it.
Farewell.
- Puja
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Re: Brexit delayed
Which would also be removing one of the popular options. There's absolutely no point in doing it if it leaves a major grouping crying that they weren't represented.Mellsblue wrote:Cool. Let’s have a second ref solely on which form of Brexit the country wants......Puja wrote:Mellsblue wrote: I doubt parliament will allow no deal on to the ballot paper. The only reason to have a second ref is to try to overturn the first, not to enable a hard Brexit.
I'd say the only reason to have a second ref is to get an actual decision out of "The Will Of The People" (TM) rather than arguing about what it means. It seems pointless to do it if one of the popular options isn't on there.
Puja
Puja
Backist Monk
- Which Tyler
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Re: Brexit delayed
Thinking a little more about it - yes, I can prove that "not that many" remain MPs accepted the result of the referrendum (though I grant, I should have included the nationalist parties as well as the lib dems stuck to their line, albeit possibly for differing reasons)
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-38833883
So that's 1 out of 317 tories, and 47 out of 262 labour MPs who refused to accept the results.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-38833883
So that's 1 out of 317 tories, and 47 out of 262 labour MPs who refused to accept the results.
- Mellsblue
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Re: Brexit delayed
So you accept it’s an attempt to overturn the first referendum.Puja wrote:Which would also be removing one of the popular options. There's absolutely no point in doing it if it leaves a major grouping crying that they weren't represented.Mellsblue wrote:Cool. Let’s have a second ref solely on which form of Brexit the country wants......Puja wrote:
I'd say the only reason to have a second ref is to get an actual decision out of "The Will Of The People" (TM) rather than arguing about what it means. It seems pointless to do it if one of the popular options isn't on there.
Puja
Puja
- Stom
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Re: Brexit delayed
When you're starting to market a new product or service, you generally survey people for their opinions. This takes 2 things.
1. Your question is written is such a way to get the most useful answers.
2. You interpret what they say with a degree of aptitude.
The leave referendum failed on both these counts.
The question was open to interpretation and did not allow anyone to offer a differing view on a complex subject.
And then when the result came in, there was no attempt to understand why the answers were as they were. Instead, it was taken as an absolute. Which has caused many, many issues. Because, well, if you look deep into the reasons why people voted to leave, they didn't vote because they want an end to free movement, or they want to be able to make our own laws and not "bow down" to the EU.
Many, many people voted to leave because they're scared. And why are they scared? Could it be that they are sitting there making less money than they have for decades, their adult children are still dependent on them because there are no jobs, stretching their budgets further, the prices of everything is higher, they are suffering with health problems (don't we all as we get older), yet the health service is catering for them less and less, with longer waiting times and the inability to take multiple problems to the GP. Their community is smaller than ever before as people become more insular thanks to the internet and their lack, or perceived lack, of the means to go out and enjoy life.
In other words, the referendum was a complete rejection of the political and economic system that has taken hold in Britain since Thatcher (even if she didn't intend this, she was the catalyst in the UK).
Now, I cannot blame the government for failing to address this. After all, they can't paint themselves as the bad guys as much as they preside over the quickest and deepest descent into inequality around... (4m children in relative poverty, ffs!)
But I can blame the opposition, and by the opposition I mean all the fuckers, not just Labour, for their absolute failure to address these issues. To take a stand and say: You have been royally fucked over. We want to bring back a living wage, we want to create jobs and ...
Instead, Labour talk about theory (because they have bloody theorists in charge again), and the Lib Dems talk about nothing at all, because they all seem to be a bunch of old men. The SNP talk about many good things, but then drown it all out with their own bloody referendum. But you can't really blame them: they see their responsibility sitting with the people of Scotland, not the Union.
So yeah, we can say that the referendum failed to give a result. Because no one actually interpreted the bloody thing.
1. Your question is written is such a way to get the most useful answers.
2. You interpret what they say with a degree of aptitude.
The leave referendum failed on both these counts.
The question was open to interpretation and did not allow anyone to offer a differing view on a complex subject.
And then when the result came in, there was no attempt to understand why the answers were as they were. Instead, it was taken as an absolute. Which has caused many, many issues. Because, well, if you look deep into the reasons why people voted to leave, they didn't vote because they want an end to free movement, or they want to be able to make our own laws and not "bow down" to the EU.
Many, many people voted to leave because they're scared. And why are they scared? Could it be that they are sitting there making less money than they have for decades, their adult children are still dependent on them because there are no jobs, stretching their budgets further, the prices of everything is higher, they are suffering with health problems (don't we all as we get older), yet the health service is catering for them less and less, with longer waiting times and the inability to take multiple problems to the GP. Their community is smaller than ever before as people become more insular thanks to the internet and their lack, or perceived lack, of the means to go out and enjoy life.
In other words, the referendum was a complete rejection of the political and economic system that has taken hold in Britain since Thatcher (even if she didn't intend this, she was the catalyst in the UK).
Now, I cannot blame the government for failing to address this. After all, they can't paint themselves as the bad guys as much as they preside over the quickest and deepest descent into inequality around... (4m children in relative poverty, ffs!)
But I can blame the opposition, and by the opposition I mean all the fuckers, not just Labour, for their absolute failure to address these issues. To take a stand and say: You have been royally fucked over. We want to bring back a living wage, we want to create jobs and ...
Instead, Labour talk about theory (because they have bloody theorists in charge again), and the Lib Dems talk about nothing at all, because they all seem to be a bunch of old men. The SNP talk about many good things, but then drown it all out with their own bloody referendum. But you can't really blame them: they see their responsibility sitting with the people of Scotland, not the Union.
So yeah, we can say that the referendum failed to give a result. Because no one actually interpreted the bloody thing.
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Re: Brexit delayed
My point about the GE is that the ballot paper doesn’t set out a party or candidates position, as with the referendum, but people going into that booth know what they are voting for based on the campaign. The same is true for the ref.Which Tyler wrote:The GE was largely fought on issues other than Brexit, it was also fought at a time when most remainers had accepted the result of the referendum, and thus were voting on other issues.Mellsblue wrote: There is only the name of the candidate and their party on the ballot of a GE but I assume everyone knows the platform behind the name and party. No different with the referendum. You can't accept that Leave campaigned on those three planks and in the next sentence then claim it's not clear what platform they campained on.
If you honestly think this is solely May and the govts fault then you don't understand how our parliament works. If you think it's solely Lib Dem MPs who have refused to accept the result then you can call me whatever you like but you are refusing to acknowledge that all the SNP, Plaid and Green MPs haven't accepted the result, and that's as obvious as is possible. To them you can add the numerous Labour and Conservative MPs who, from day 1, have refused to accept the result - have a look at the origins of the People's Vote movement and the Independent Group/Change UK and tell me it was just the Lib Dems.
The referendum didn't include candidate or party names at all, and was a single-issue vote.
Show members I haven't accepted that leave campaigned for a hard Brexit? Now show me where they didn't also campaign on a soft Brexit. Leave were absolutely trying to be all things to all people whom were disaffected with the EU, and picked up votes across the whole range of people, from those who were registering a protest about being asked the question, through those who wanted a Norway-style departure, to those who wanted to crash and burn.
What you're doing is exactly what got us into this mess in the first place. "You lost get over it" or hell, even "you won, now you have to kowtow to my demands because I'm more extreme that you".
Quite frankly, you can fuck off with that attitude. That unwillingness to see other people's opinions as even being genuinely held, let alone valid, or as valid as your own.
Like May you are refusing to discuss this in good faith. Consequently you have lost any faith I had in discussing this with you, but feel free to have the last word anyway.
On the political party thing - I was talking about parties represented across Britain, not the nationalists; and no-one gives a damn about the Greens. Remain Tories and labour, and now-TIG were okay accepting the result of the referendum. They're not now because of the attitudes you're parroting, and because of 3 years of bad governing.
Please note, there's a difference between "accepting the result" and "full-heartedly embracing the result" not that you'll see it.
Farewell.
I’m not doing anything. I don’t agree with the ERG and voted Remain, I’m just pointing out that your attempt to solely blame May and her govt shows a lack of understanding of how our political system works.
I'll happily accept that I think the winning side shouldn’t have to compromise, mainly because they won. Again, I don’t back the ERG and they don’t represent Brexiteers at large. What they do represent is how those on both fringes have become more entrenched as we’ve gone along.
I am discussing on good faith, I’m just using both eyes when discussing.
The nationalists are MPs in our parliament, you can’t just not include them. If you’ve decided not to, it’s best to make that clear.
- Stom
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Re: Brexit delayed
You cannot overturn advice...Mellsblue wrote:So you accept it’s an attempt to overturn the first referendum.Puja wrote:Which would also be removing one of the popular options. There's absolutely no point in doing it if it leaves a major grouping crying that they weren't represented.Mellsblue wrote: Cool. Let’s have a second ref solely on which form of Brexit the country wants......
Puja
-
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Re: Brexit delayed
Ideal day to announce a near three year practical joke......
Good wumming Nige.
Good wumming Nige.
- Stom
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Re: Brexit delayed
But you cannot see the result of an advisory referendum as a "win" or "lose", and if you do, you simply play into the narrative of the people who want a hard Brexit for their own gains.Mellsblue wrote:My point about the GE is that the ballot paper doesn’t set out a party or candidates position, as with the referendum, but people going into that booth know what they are voting for based on the campaign. The same is true for the ref.Which Tyler wrote:The GE was largely fought on issues other than Brexit, it was also fought at a time when most remainers had accepted the result of the referendum, and thus were voting on other issues.Mellsblue wrote: There is only the name of the candidate and their party on the ballot of a GE but I assume everyone knows the platform behind the name and party. No different with the referendum. You can't accept that Leave campaigned on those three planks and in the next sentence then claim it's not clear what platform they campained on.
If you honestly think this is solely May and the govts fault then you don't understand how our parliament works. If you think it's solely Lib Dem MPs who have refused to accept the result then you can call me whatever you like but you are refusing to acknowledge that all the SNP, Plaid and Green MPs haven't accepted the result, and that's as obvious as is possible. To them you can add the numerous Labour and Conservative MPs who, from day 1, have refused to accept the result - have a look at the origins of the People's Vote movement and the Independent Group/Change UK and tell me it was just the Lib Dems.
The referendum didn't include candidate or party names at all, and was a single-issue vote.
Show members I haven't accepted that leave campaigned for a hard Brexit? Now show me where they didn't also campaign on a soft Brexit. Leave were absolutely trying to be all things to all people whom were disaffected with the EU, and picked up votes across the whole range of people, from those who were registering a protest about being asked the question, through those who wanted a Norway-style departure, to those who wanted to crash and burn.
What you're doing is exactly what got us into this mess in the first place. "You lost get over it" or hell, even "you won, now you have to kowtow to my demands because I'm more extreme that you".
Quite frankly, you can fuck off with that attitude. That unwillingness to see other people's opinions as even being genuinely held, let alone valid, or as valid as your own.
Like May you are refusing to discuss this in good faith. Consequently you have lost any faith I had in discussing this with you, but feel free to have the last word anyway.
On the political party thing - I was talking about parties represented across Britain, not the nationalists; and no-one gives a damn about the Greens. Remain Tories and labour, and now-TIG were okay accepting the result of the referendum. They're not now because of the attitudes you're parroting, and because of 3 years of bad governing.
Please note, there's a difference between "accepting the result" and "full-heartedly embracing the result" not that you'll see it.
Farewell.
I’m not doing anything. I don’t agree with the ERG and voted Remain, I’m just pointing out that your attempt to solely blame May and her govt shows a lack of understanding of how our political system works.
I'll happily accept that I think the winning side shouldn’t have to compromise, mainly because they won. Again, I don’t back the ERG and they don’t represent Brexiteers at large. What they do represent is how those on both fringes have become more entrenched as we’ve gone along.
I am discussing on good faith, I’m just using both eyes when discussing.
The nationalists are MPs in our parliament, you can’t just not include them. If you’ve decided not to, it’s best to make that clear.
First, it was advisory.
Second, no one interpreted it, so how can you know what anyone voted for?
- Mellsblue
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Re: Brexit delayed
This again shows a lack of nuance. People vote for all sorts of reasons other than just that they believe in what’s in front of them. Look at Lab not voting for the WA when decoupled even though it’s virtually what they want from Brexit. As Banquo has pointed out, Starmer has admitted its party politics. Voting one way and politicking behind the scenes to achieve the exact opppsite is common place.Which Tyler wrote:Thinking a little more about it - yes, I can prove that "not that many" remain MPs accepted the result of the referrendum (though I grant, I should have included the nationalist parties as well as the lib dems stuck to their line, albeit possibly for differing reasons)
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-38833883
So that's 1 out of 317 tories, and 47 out of 262 labour MPs who refused to accept the results.
Last edited by Mellsblue on Mon Apr 01, 2019 9:19 am, edited 1 time in total.
- Mellsblue
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- Joined: Thu Feb 11, 2016 7:58 am
Re: Brexit delayed
Love the advisory line. Why have it if you aren’t to do as instructed?Stom wrote:But you cannot see the result of an advisory referendum as a "win" or "lose", and if you do, you simply play into the narrative of the people who want a hard Brexit for their own gains.Mellsblue wrote:My point about the GE is that the ballot paper doesn’t set out a party or candidates position, as with the referendum, but people going into that booth know what they are voting for based on the campaign. The same is true for the ref.Which Tyler wrote:The GE was largely fought on issues other than Brexit, it was also fought at a time when most remainers had accepted the result of the referendum, and thus were voting on other issues.
The referendum didn't include candidate or party names at all, and was a single-issue vote.
Show members I haven't accepted that leave campaigned for a hard Brexit? Now show me where they didn't also campaign on a soft Brexit. Leave were absolutely trying to be all things to all people whom were disaffected with the EU, and picked up votes across the whole range of people, from those who were registering a protest about being asked the question, through those who wanted a Norway-style departure, to those who wanted to crash and burn.
What you're doing is exactly what got us into this mess in the first place. "You lost get over it" or hell, even "you won, now you have to kowtow to my demands because I'm more extreme that you".
Quite frankly, you can fuck off with that attitude. That unwillingness to see other people's opinions as even being genuinely held, let alone valid, or as valid as your own.
Like May you are refusing to discuss this in good faith. Consequently you have lost any faith I had in discussing this with you, but feel free to have the last word anyway.
On the political party thing - I was talking about parties represented across Britain, not the nationalists; and no-one gives a damn about the Greens. Remain Tories and labour, and now-TIG were okay accepting the result of the referendum. They're not now because of the attitudes you're parroting, and because of 3 years of bad governing.
Please note, there's a difference between "accepting the result" and "full-heartedly embracing the result" not that you'll see it.
Farewell.
I’m not doing anything. I don’t agree with the ERG and voted Remain, I’m just pointing out that your attempt to solely blame May and her govt shows a lack of understanding of how our political system works.
I'll happily accept that I think the winning side shouldn’t have to compromise, mainly because they won. Again, I don’t back the ERG and they don’t represent Brexiteers at large. What they do represent is how those on both fringes have become more entrenched as we’ve gone along.
I am discussing on good faith, I’m just using both eyes when discussing.
The nationalists are MPs in our parliament, you can’t just not include them. If you’ve decided not to, it’s best to make that clear.
First, it was advisory.
Second, no one interpreted it, so how can you know what anyone voted for?
Because I followed the campaign closely. I’ve already stated the three central planks of the campaign and what that means.
- Stom
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- Joined: Wed Feb 10, 2016 10:57 am
Re: Brexit delayed
Doesn't that kind of undermine your argument about the ref?Mellsblue wrote:This again shows a lack of nuance. People vote for all sorts of reasons other than just that they believe in what’s in front of them. Look at Lab not voting for the WA when decoupled even though it’s virtually what they want from Brexit. As Banquo has pointed out, Starmer has admitted its party politics. Voting one way and politicking begins the scenes to achieve the exact opppsite is common place.Which Tyler wrote:Thinking a little more about it - yes, I can prove that "not that many" remain MPs accepted the result of the referrendum (though I grant, I should have included the nationalist parties as well as the lib dems stuck to their line, albeit possibly for differing reasons)
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-38833883
So that's 1 out of 317 tories, and 47 out of 262 labour MPs who refused to accept the results.
- Stom
- Posts: 5846
- Joined: Wed Feb 10, 2016 10:57 am
Re: Brexit delayed
If it wasn't meant to be advisory, they could have done it differently...Mellsblue wrote:Love the advisory line. Why have it if you aren’t to do as instructed?Stom wrote:But you cannot see the result of an advisory referendum as a "win" or "lose", and if you do, you simply play into the narrative of the people who want a hard Brexit for their own gains.Mellsblue wrote: My point about the GE is that the ballot paper doesn’t set out a party or candidates position, as with the referendum, but people going into that booth know what they are voting for based on the campaign. The same is true for the ref.
I’m not doing anything. I don’t agree with the ERG and voted Remain, I’m just pointing out that your attempt to solely blame May and her govt shows a lack of understanding of how our political system works.
I'll happily accept that I think the winning side shouldn’t have to compromise, mainly because they won. Again, I don’t back the ERG and they don’t represent Brexiteers at large. What they do represent is how those on both fringes have become more entrenched as we’ve gone along.
I am discussing on good faith, I’m just using both eyes when discussing.
The nationalists are MPs in our parliament, you can’t just not include them. If you’ve decided not to, it’s best to make that clear.
First, it was advisory.
Second, no one interpreted it, so how can you know what anyone voted for?
Because I followed the campaign closely. I’ve already stated the three central planks of the campaign and what that means.
And no-one has interpreted it, how do you know why others voted for leave? I know why I DIDN'T vote remain: I wasn't given the bloody chance, along with another 70,000 of us in Europe who didn't receive our ballot papers in time.
- Which Tyler
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Re: Brexit delayed
Ahh - so this shows a lack of nuance; but there's no nuance to be had whatsoever in the referendum?Mellsblue wrote:This again shows a lack of nuance. People vote for all sorts of reasons other than just that they believe in what’s in front of them. Look at Lab not voting for the WA when decoupled even though it’s virtually what they want from Brexit. As Banquo has pointed out, Starmer has admitted its party politics. Voting one way and politicking behind the scenes to achieve the exact opppsite is common place.Which Tyler wrote:Thinking a little more about it - yes, I can prove that "not that many" remain MPs accepted the result of the referrendum (though I grant, I should have included the nationalist parties as well as the lib dems stuck to their line, albeit possibly for differing reasons)
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-38833883
So that's 1 out of 317 tories, and 47 out of 262 labour MPs who refused to accept the results.
Besides which, 2 years have passed between that vote and the WA votes - or haven't you noticed that? too nuanced maybe?
- Mellsblue
- Posts: 14579
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Re: Brexit delayed
Sorry, meant politicians. I’m supposed to be working so typing quickly. There are hundreds of examples they show you when you study this stuff. Too long ago for me to remember.Stom wrote:Doesn't that kind of undermine your argument about the ref?Mellsblue wrote:This again shows a lack of nuance. People vote for all sorts of reasons other than just that they believe in what’s in front of them. Look at Lab not voting for the WA when decoupled even though it’s virtually what they want from Brexit. As Banquo has pointed out, Starmer has admitted its party politics. Voting one way and politicking begins the scenes to achieve the exact opppsite is common place.Which Tyler wrote:Thinking a little more about it - yes, I can prove that "not that many" remain MPs accepted the result of the referrendum (though I grant, I should have included the nationalist parties as well as the lib dems stuck to their line, albeit possibly for differing reasons)
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-38833883
So that's 1 out of 317 tories, and 47 out of 262 labour MPs who refused to accept the results.
- Mellsblue
- Posts: 14579
- Joined: Thu Feb 11, 2016 7:58 am
Re: Brexit delayed
The agenda leave campaigned on was incredibly clear. You’ve accepted that yourself in an earlier post. I’ll grant you that no deal - but I’ve been clear in my condemnation of the ERG - wasn’t on that agenda but not being in a customs union certainly was.Which Tyler wrote:Ahh - so this shows a lack of nuance; but there's no nuance to be had whatsoever in the referendum?Mellsblue wrote:This again shows a lack of nuance. People vote for all sorts of reasons other than just that they believe in what’s in front of them. Look at Lab not voting for the WA when decoupled even though it’s virtually what they want from Brexit. As Banquo has pointed out, Starmer has admitted its party politics. Voting one way and politicking behind the scenes to achieve the exact opppsite is common place.Which Tyler wrote:Thinking a little more about it - yes, I can prove that "not that many" remain MPs accepted the result of the referrendum (though I grant, I should have included the nationalist parties as well as the lib dems stuck to their line, albeit possibly for differing reasons)
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-38833883
So that's 1 out of 317 tories, and 47 out of 262 labour MPs who refused to accept the results.
Besides which, 2 years have passed between that vote and the WA votes - or haven't you noticed that? too nuanced maybe?
What does time have to do with it? Should we have a referendum on EU membership every two years in perpetuity?
As with you, I’m done with the discussion. Mainly as I’m done with Brexit as a rule but I also have a job to get on with. You want to blame it all on May and I want to spread the blame around, whilst accepting that May has handled it all atrociously. I’ll leave it there (no pun intended).
- Stom
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Re: Brexit delayed
So politicians are allowed to have a nuanced view but voters cannot?Mellsblue wrote:Sorry, meant politicians. I’m supposed to be working so typing quickly. There are hundreds of examples they show you when you study this stuff. Too long ago for me to remember.Stom wrote:Doesn't that kind of undermine your argument about the ref?Mellsblue wrote: This again shows a lack of nuance. People vote for all sorts of reasons other than just that they believe in what’s in front of them. Look at Lab not voting for the WA when decoupled even though it’s virtually what they want from Brexit. As Banquo has pointed out, Starmer has admitted its party politics. Voting one way and politicking begins the scenes to achieve the exact opppsite is common place.
You can't be stiff in one thing and loose on another just because it suits your argument. I can and will blame far more than the government, but that doesn't mean I think the ref vote was remotely an endorsement of a single course of action. Just watch some of the interviews to see that...
- Mellsblue
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Re: Brexit delayed
This thread, and subsequent one linked, pretty much sum up what is happening today and in the short term:
- Mellsblue
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- Joined: Thu Feb 11, 2016 7:58 am
Re: Brexit delayed
Cool. If you don’t think the leave campaign platform was blindingly obvious then fair enough. If you don’t think most politicians areStom wrote:So politicians are allowed to have a nuanced view but voters cannot?Mellsblue wrote:Sorry, meant politicians. I’m supposed to be working so typing quickly. There are hundreds of examples they show you when you study this stuff. Too long ago for me to remember.Stom wrote:
Doesn't that kind of undermine your argument about the ref?
You can't be stiff in one thing and loose on another just because it suits your argument. I can and will blame far more than the government, but that doesn't mean I think the ref vote was remotely an endorsement of a single course of action. Just watch some of the interviews to see that...
Machiavellian at heart then that’s fair enough too. It is possible for one stage to be nuanced and another not within the same process. This is especially true when the actors in those two stages are hugely different, both in number and make up, and when one is a vote to start a process the actors can influence and the other is a single vote after which the actors are passengers.
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Re: Brexit delayed
do they have to rework them to pass the Bercow test? I thought they were just going to vote on the top 3 from last Thursday?Mellsblue wrote:This thread, and subsequent one linked, pretty much sum up what is happening today and in the short term:
The general public may find this a tad confusing. As indeed did Ian Lavery when voting for no-deal last week.
- Stom
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- Joined: Wed Feb 10, 2016 10:57 am
Re: Brexit delayed
Let's do it this way, then...Mellsblue wrote:Cool. If you don’t think the leave campaign platform was blindingly obvious then fair enough. If you don’t think most politicians areStom wrote:So politicians are allowed to have a nuanced view but voters cannot?Mellsblue wrote: Sorry, meant politicians. I’m supposed to be working so typing quickly. There are hundreds of examples they show you when you study this stuff. Too long ago for me to remember.
You can't be stiff in one thing and loose on another just because it suits your argument. I can and will blame far more than the government, but that doesn't mean I think the ref vote was remotely an endorsement of a single course of action. Just watch some of the interviews to see that...
Machiavellian at heart then that’s fair enough too. It is possible for one stage to be nuanced and another not within the same process. This is especially true when the actors in those two stages are hugely different, both in number and make up, and when one is a vote to start a process the actors can influence and the other is a single vote after which the actors are passengers.
A gym runs a special for new customers. They offer 20% OFF the first 3 months of a 6 month contract. They get 100 sign ups. Of those 100 sign ups, 40 are men and 60 are women. 35% are under 30, 25% are 30-40, 20% 40-50, and 20% are 50+.
Glen, a 52 year old man has suffered with some heart issues caused by poor lifestyle choices. His doctor told him to workout or risk a heart attack, so he joined a gym.
Karen, 38, doesn't like the way her tummy looks in a bikini and now there are no more children on the way, she wants to join a gym and flatten it out.
Mike, 25, has got a job and can suddenly afford to work out at a gym with real weights rather than at home with milk jugs.
Julie, 44, has used 4 gyms in the area, and always signs up to new gyms based on special offers. She likes to shop around for the best deals.
All of these people join the gym for different reasons, the fact they joined the gym is important, but there is a host of information behind that.
To suggest that everyone who voted leave wanted the same kind of Brexit, in the same way, is insane. Because every person has different problems that require different solutions.
The government - and the opposition - have completely failed to address this fact. But it doesn't stop it from being true.
That gym said "Get fit and lose your excess fat for less". Yet 50% of the examples did not join to get fit or lose weight.
Just because a bus said £350m for the NHS, doesn't mean that's why Bob, or Carol voted for it.
So stop treating people as morons.
- Stom
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Re: Brexit delayed
As I understand it, no, because they were included in the business motion. If the same business motion were to be re-proposed, Bercow *should* reject it...Banquo wrote:do they have to rework them to pass the Bercow test? I thought they were just going to vote on the top 3 from last Thursday?Mellsblue wrote:This thread, and subsequent one linked, pretty much sum up what is happening today and in the short term:
The general public may find this a tad confusing. As indeed did Ian Lavery when voting for no-deal last week.