Workingman wrote:But in answer to Meds' last point. This is how it has been all down the line with the risk assessment, stress tests and so on. I am very surprised that parliament has not had the collective backbone to stop this. What am I saying, get a grip WM. It has now got to the point where something out of our hands could foment a constitutional crisis for the UK. We will see in about a week.
Well let us see. Labour has been wittering on about the Queen dissolving parliament and the press and media have not eviscerated them for such idiotic thinking. This whole "constitutional crisis" is nothing more than a straw man put up there to see how people will respond. Our government may be at war with itself but it is far from where the Labour Government was in the late 70's, regardless of what the press and media might want us to think.
We have the decision of the CJEU on Tuesday and the vote on the 11th. But let us think clearly here. Both the EU and the UK government have said that this deal is IT. No further negotiation, no options no do overs. If the parliament vote against it they have voted FOR No Deal. I wonder when that will get through to them?
Then, even if the CJEU comes back and says that the UK can unilaterally rescind the A50 notification, May has no remit to do so, she would have to have another referendum. Something May has absolutely NO intention of doing and no possible Tory PM candidate to replace her would do so either.
So it comes down to this. Dec 11th, parliament has a vote. This Deal or No Deal. No constitutional crisis, no broken government, just a direction set and full steam ahead.
Let us see what happens on the day.