This..Jobbo wrote: Thu Mar 28, 2019 9:26 am Best option now is to revoke, since there's no positive majority in favour of anything. Keeping the status quo could be the answer.

This..Jobbo wrote: Thu Mar 28, 2019 9:26 am Best option now is to revoke, since there's no positive majority in favour of anything. Keeping the status quo could be the answer.
It doesn't need 2000 words... 500 is probably fine
This. Surely just the last 24 hours of publicity around the EU copyright directive and mandatory EU speed limiters means this should've sunk in but clearly not.Swervin_Mervin wrote: Thu Mar 28, 2019 9:50 am There is no status quo. Never has and certainly isn't now we've utterly torpedoed our already historically fractious relationship with them. Nor will it bring the country or politics back together.
This. Status quo defined as "not leaving". We could then have an election on the topic of getting politicians that would take EU membership seriously and start to exert influence from within, rather than riding the gravy train while pretending they're making a difference.
Unfortunately the 'exert influence from within' has and always will be a bullshit argument and has been proven wrong time and time again. The structure of the EU is such that you cannot as an individual member assert enough influence to repatriate rights if you're obtaining them for your own benefit and not those of the majority. You will always be outvoted.DeskJockey wrote: Thu Mar 28, 2019 10:16 amThis. Status quo defined as "not leaving". We could then have an election on the topic of getting politicians that would take EU membership seriously and start to exert influence from within, rather than riding the gravy train while pretending they're making a difference.
This is the point. The UK does not want (and never has wanted) to do that. You're basically saying - come on lads forget all your previous opinions on the matter, accept you lost and throw yourselves into it. Be like France and Germany - be part of that majority and then try and influence the majority position.DeskJockey wrote: Thu Mar 28, 2019 10:30 am My point is that Britain could play a much bigger and more important part in the EU if it wanted to do so.
Still interested on whether the DUP think No Deal is better than May's Deal, in terms of the Irish Border. GG?JonMad wrote: Thu Mar 28, 2019 8:12 am What's the DUP's position on No Deal? Given they are anti May's Deal and no other option has any favour (including Revoke)?
Doesn't the referendum result cast doubt on that view - it would now appear that almost 50% of those who voted are kinda liking the idea of Greater Political Integration and "being like France and Germany"...GG. wrote: Thu Mar 28, 2019 10:34 amThis is the point. The UK does not want (and never has wanted) to do that. You're basically saying - come on lads forget all your previous opinions on the matter, accept you lost and throw yourselves into it. Be like France and Germany - be part of that majority and then try and influence the majority position.DeskJockey wrote: Thu Mar 28, 2019 10:30 am My point is that Britain could play a much bigger and more important part in the EU if it wanted to do so.
It just isn't realistic and it isn't acceptable to the majority of the British public, hence the referendum went the way it did.
Its a good question isn't it. I believe their logical consistency (as noted above as "unionism above all else") means if it is WA or no deal they'd go no deal. Worse in various ways for NI but doesn't damage the union per se.JonMad wrote: Thu Mar 28, 2019 10:37 amStill interested on whether the DUP think No Deal is better than May's Deal, in terms of the Irish Border. GG?JonMad wrote: Thu Mar 28, 2019 8:12 am What's the DUP's position on No Deal? Given they are anti May's Deal and no other option has any favour (including Revoke)?![]()
Attributing characteristics to people who voted a certain way usually says much more about the person doing the attributing than anything else.dinny_g wrote: Thu Mar 28, 2019 10:51 am I think I get your point GG... I know in life, you get paid by the word but.. well...![]()
Based on the views expressed here, I''ve assumed that all those who voted leave were Bigoted, knuckle dragging Morons whereas those who voted Remain were the intellectual elite.
If you're suggesting that some of the Remain voters chose remain in expectation of an EU that will never come to pass then I don't know what to think anymore...
Other than No Deal Exit...![]()
No, what I'm saying is that as nobody can agree about what leaving should look like, and there is a significant popular demand for another vote, maybe it is time to put it to the people again, but this time on a platform of "let's try to improve the EU" so that everybody gains. If leave wins again, then there is a further referendum on whether Britain crashes out or takes the deal already on the table.GG. wrote: Thu Mar 28, 2019 10:34 amThis is the point. The UK does not want (and never has wanted) to do that. You're basically saying - come on lads forget all your previous opinions on the matter, accept you lost and throw yourselves into it. Be like France and Germany - be part of that majority and then try and influence the majority position.DeskJockey wrote: Thu Mar 28, 2019 10:30 am My point is that Britain could play a much bigger and more important part in the EU if it wanted to do so.
It just isn't realistic and it isn't acceptable to the majority of the British public, hence the referendum went the way it did.
Confirmatory ref torpedoes it as a way out of the mess however as it would require a second, longer extension and participation in EU parliamentary elections.JonMad wrote: Thu Mar 28, 2019 10:54 am Also, will it come down to Bercow allowing MV3 or not, as to whether we end up leaving with no deal? (on the assumption that MV3 *might* pass now, given nobody wants, or at least expressed a majority, for anything else). Maybe they have to offer the current deal plus a confirmatory referendum to get it past Bercow as a 'substantial change'.
You're offering them a unicorn that you can't deliver in "improving the EU".DeskJockey wrote: Thu Mar 28, 2019 11:00 amNo, what I'm saying is that as nobody can agree about what leaving should look like, and there is a significant popular demand for another vote, maybe it is time to put it to the people again, but this time on a platform of "let's try to improve the EU" so that everybody gains. If leave wins again, then there is a further referendum on whether Britain crashes out or takes the deal already on the table.GG. wrote: Thu Mar 28, 2019 10:34 amThis is the point. The UK does not want (and never has wanted) to do that. You're basically saying - come on lads forget all your previous opinions on the matter, accept you lost and throw yourselves into it. Be like France and Germany - be part of that majority and then try and influence the majority position.DeskJockey wrote: Thu Mar 28, 2019 10:30 am My point is that Britain could play a much bigger and more important part in the EU if it wanted to do so.
It just isn't realistic and it isn't acceptable to the majority of the British public, hence the referendum went the way it did.