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Constitutional Crisis?
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Brexit Advice: https:/ /www.bb c.co.uk /news/u k-polit ics-464 19790
is this as serious as labour are painting it?
is this as serious as labour are painting it?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.A no confidence vote does not automatically lead to a general election. There would be two weeks for the Tories to try to form a new government or form a government of national unity (no laughing at the back please) which process would corrrspond with the height of the Christmas panto season (oh yes it would!)
A GE means Corbyn. The half of the Tory vote which wanted Brexit will not vote except for honest (who dat den da) pro-Brexit MPs.
A Corbyn government will do far more harm to me and Britain's youngsters than any no-deal Brexit. But at least we can get rid of Chavez in five years and start unpicking the harm caused by his version of Socialism.
If he gets us out of the EU it's a price worth paying.
A Corbyn government will do far more harm to me and Britain's youngsters than any no-deal Brexit. But at least we can get rid of Chavez in five years and start unpicking the harm caused by his version of Socialism.
If he gets us out of the EU it's a price worth paying.
A no confidence vote WILL pass if the DUP support it. Quite simply. The government goes not have the numbers otherwise. Of course they’ll do their best to use this threat as leverage, maybe successfully. They do not have to worry about elections or the fact that their position on Brexit is at odds with the majority in NI.
One doesn't wish to get rid of MPs that vote against the deal, and little likelihood, after May's last GE and her actions since, of removing callers for further referendums on the same issue, or worse. The Tories failed so far to replace her and install someone willing to go in a non-subservient direction. Best one can hope for is the House bins the deal, sees through any attempt to ask the same question again, and removes her afterwards, possibly after, or before preferably, we leave without an agreed deal.
Why on earth should the advice be confidential?
If MPs are to vote on whether to accept May’s deal, they should be informed of all the available facts and that includes the legal ramifications.
To expect MPs to support the deal while being excluded from seeing the legal advice is both disingenuous, and will encourage themeven more to reject it.
ALL the opposition parties (not just Labour) are putting on pressure to see the legal advice, so I expect May will have to publish it, or the vote (against) will be a foregone conclusion.
If MPs are to vote on whether to accept May’s deal, they should be informed of all the available facts and that includes the legal ramifications.
To expect MPs to support the deal while being excluded from seeing the legal advice is both disingenuous, and will encourage themeven more to reject it.
ALL the opposition parties (not just Labour) are putting on pressure to see the legal advice, so I expect May will have to publish it, or the vote (against) will be a foregone conclusion.
Gromit: as a general principle govt legal advice is kept confidential as otherwise lawyers might be inhibited from offering full and frank and therefore more useful advice. It’s the same principle Assange threatened by his release of US diplomatic cables. However in this instance an exception ought probably to be made: its hard to see what the govt would have to hide that we don’t know anyway: that we’d be tied to a backstop permanently if no alternative is negotiated? We know that anyway. The backstop actually is a very good arrangement for the U.K. : closed borders and tariff free trade. The PM cannot shout about this of course as it offends the idea of sovereignty and most of all would infuriate the DUP. But it’s a scenario the EU has every incentive to negotiate away in due course.
The legal advice would probably be that the "deal" after the extension would bind ourselves permanently to the EU regulatory and tariff regime, because withdrawal from the backstop would require mutual agreement between May and the Liechtenstein drunk, or between one of her successors and the same sot, or an unelected similar.