Re: Bye bye Theresa
Posted: Wed Mar 27, 2019 10:07 am
The SI has been laid anyway, so your argument is technical and irrelevant:
I, for one, am shocked.
Its a constitutional quagmire though. The whole point of the European Communities Act is that is gives legal effect in the UK to those directives (including the ECJ jurisprudence on direct effect). So although the ECJ could demand that we give effect to historical and future directives, we wouldn't under UK law, have to comply with them because in our legal fiction, to preserve the (residual!) sovereignty of the UK parliament, we deem that EU law only takes precedence because we have the ECA 1972 saying that it does.Jobbo wrote: Wed Mar 27, 2019 10:02 am No we don't leave. We cannot enact any domestic law which makes us 'leave' the EU. We are still members of the EU until 12 April at least.
What would happen is that we would be members of the EU, we would have enacted a statute which purports to remove the application of EU law but it would still have direct effect domestically (remember your EU law lectures).
Laid but presumably given the timing subject to the affirmative rather than negative resolution procedure (as the latter has a 40 day period to come into effect). So not irrelevant just yet as it needs to be voted on and passed.Jobbo wrote: Wed Mar 27, 2019 10:07 am The SI has been laid anyway, so your argument is technical and irrelevant:
Jobbo is incorrect. Surely that's more shocking.
Swervin_Mervin wrote: Wed Mar 27, 2019 3:34 pm MPs have voted by 331 - 287 to go ahead with further voting.
On reading further around this it is even more of a confusing clusterfuck than it first appears.GG. wrote: Wed Mar 27, 2019 11:10 amIts a constitutional quagmire though. The whole point of the European Communities Act is that is gives legal effect in the UK to those directives (including the ECJ jurisprudence on direct effect). So although the ECJ could demand that we give effect to historical and future directives, we wouldn't under UK law, have to comply with them because in our legal fiction, to preserve the (residual!) sovereignty of the UK parliament, we deem that EU law only takes precedence because we have the ECA 1972 saying that it does.Jobbo wrote: Wed Mar 27, 2019 10:02 am No we don't leave. We cannot enact any domestic law which makes us 'leave' the EU. We are still members of the EU until 12 April at least.
What would happen is that we would be members of the EU, we would have enacted a statute which purports to remove the application of EU law but it would still have direct effect domestically (remember your EU law lectures).
Good innit?Rich B wrote: Wed Mar 27, 2019 3:34 pmSwervin_Mervin wrote: Wed Mar 27, 2019 3:34 pm MPs have voted by 331 - 287 to go ahead with further voting.![]()
Regarding Corbyn's motion K, anyone got a clue what the actual f*** Labour's position is that they're asking MPs to secure? how can you have a vote on something so vague?No Deal (B) – John Baron (Conservative) - Agrees to leave the EU on 12 April without a deal.
Common market 2.0 (D) – Nick Boles (Conservative) - Government joins the European Economic Area (EEA) through the European Free Trade Association (EFTA), and negotiates a temporary customs union until alternative arrangements can be found.
EFTA and EEA (H) – George Eustice (Conservative) - Remains in the European Economic Area (EEA), and applies to re-join the European Free Trade Association (EFTA). Declines to form a customs union but seeks “agreement on new protocols relating to the Northern Ireland border and agri-food trade”.
Customs union (J) – Ken Clarke (Conservative) - Enshrine the objective to form a customs union in primary legislation.
Labour’s alternative plan (K) – Jeremy Corbyn - Negotiate changes to the withdrawal agreement and the political declaration to secure Labour’s position, and pass these objectives into law.
Revocation to avoid no deal (L) – Joanna Cherry (SNP) - If the Withdrawal (Agreement) Bill has not been passed before exit day, the government will ask MPs to approve no deal. If this does not pass, the government will revoke Article 50.
Confirmatory public vote (M) – Margaret Beckett (Labour) - Government cannot implement or ratify the withdrawal agreement and the political declaration unless and until they have been approved in a referendum.
Contingent preferential arrangements (O) – Marcus Fysh (Conservative) - Malthouse Plan B: The UK makes its budgetary contributions to the EU to the end of 2020 and agrees with the EU a period of two years in which UK goods have full access to the EU.
This.Beany wrote: Wed Mar 27, 2019 6:15 pm Oh fuck, please don't let that dribbling cuntstick get the PMs job.