ChatterBank5 mins ago
Can Boris Do It?
Restaurant lunch with Junker (sounds boozy) on Monday. Supreme court will throw out this proroguing nonsense challenge on Tuesday? The pound is shooting up. Everything's going tickety-boo, wouldn't you say?
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by Khandro. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.jim; You had me scurry away to check & it seems though you are correct in by pointing out the difference, you are in fact doing Boris a favour, in that if it isn't against any specific law, he has no need to act on this decision;
http:// www.dif ference between .net/mi scellan eous/le gal-mis cellane ous/dif ference -betwee n-illeg al-and- unlawfu l/
http://
There is no deal which will be in Britain's interest. The only option which delivers a proper Brexit is "no deal".
Sad that.
Like others I don't trust this backstop narrative. The May " deal" is Versaille: a surrender document inflicted on a vanquished foe by a vindictive conqueror.
It's all there - war reparations - the lot.
Sad that.
Like others I don't trust this backstop narrative. The May " deal" is Versaille: a surrender document inflicted on a vanquished foe by a vindictive conqueror.
It's all there - war reparations - the lot.
// if it isn't against any specific law, he has no need to act on this decision //
Depends on what the Court says. For example the Scottish Court ruled that it was unlawful but then also decided not to enforce that ruling, pending the Supreme Court ruling. If the SC agrees with the Scottish Court, and also ruled that the government *must* reverse that decision, then it would be obliged to listen. And besides, Johnson has already undercut that: he has already said that if the Supreme Court ruled against him then he'd recall Parliament.
Depends on what the Court says. For example the Scottish Court ruled that it was unlawful but then also decided not to enforce that ruling, pending the Supreme Court ruling. If the SC agrees with the Scottish Court, and also ruled that the government *must* reverse that decision, then it would be obliged to listen. And besides, Johnson has already undercut that: he has already said that if the Supreme Court ruled against him then he'd recall Parliament.