Untangling the excessively tangled.
Posted: 04 Jul 2016, 10:28
What a mess!
Farage has resigned from UKIP, forthwith, as he "wants his life back". He says that he "has done his bit" following the vote to leave the EU.
How very nice of him to now walk away. This decision is in the same league as Cameron's quitting as PB, but not just yet. Maybe Nigel has seen the writing on the wall for UKIP and wants to get back to making money in banking.
His decision, however, pales into insignificance when compared to the legal challenge now being raised against invoking A50 without the consent of Parliament.
A company of lawyers, Mishcon de Reya, argues that under the UK constitution the decision to trigger A50 rests with Parliament. It is, of course, acting for business clients and academics. The argument goes that the referendum was not legally binding and that a PM has no executive powers to invoke A50. It says an act of Parliament to override a previous act of Parliament, the 1972 European Communities Act, is required to give a PM those powers
What a move that would be. MPs. largely Remainers, voting on an act to enforce the Leave vote.
All of the things I have read about legalities post Brexit must surely have been known before the referendum was tabled. Why were they not cleared up before the referendum took place? All of this shilly-shallying is hurting the country and makes the UK look inept.
Farage has resigned from UKIP, forthwith, as he "wants his life back". He says that he "has done his bit" following the vote to leave the EU.
How very nice of him to now walk away. This decision is in the same league as Cameron's quitting as PB, but not just yet. Maybe Nigel has seen the writing on the wall for UKIP and wants to get back to making money in banking.
His decision, however, pales into insignificance when compared to the legal challenge now being raised against invoking A50 without the consent of Parliament.
A company of lawyers, Mishcon de Reya, argues that under the UK constitution the decision to trigger A50 rests with Parliament. It is, of course, acting for business clients and academics. The argument goes that the referendum was not legally binding and that a PM has no executive powers to invoke A50. It says an act of Parliament to override a previous act of Parliament, the 1972 European Communities Act, is required to give a PM those powers
What a move that would be. MPs. largely Remainers, voting on an act to enforce the Leave vote.
All of the things I have read about legalities post Brexit must surely have been known before the referendum was tabled. Why were they not cleared up before the referendum took place? All of this shilly-shallying is hurting the country and makes the UK look inept.