Rowls is waiting for you He-ManLancasterclaret wrote:No!
I possibly could be turned by the right chap, but I'm sure that chap isn't him!

Rowls is waiting for you He-ManLancasterclaret wrote:No!
I possibly could be turned by the right chap, but I'm sure that chap isn't him!
Many people live in countries all over the world. It's not dependent on being in the EU.Lancasterclaret wrote:Fill me in Rowls
I've only been listening to political commentators and reading stuff on it. I have to admit not having considered the views of a barman from France, but I'm open to anything you may have to add to the debate.
Enjoy your day in the sun with the benefit of EU freedom of movement and employment.
Hahah.UpTheBeehole wrote:Rowls is waiting for you He-Man
Oh here's hoping hey, Lancaster?Lancasterclaret wrote:Nowt to do with me Rowls that particular one!
Ringo and Rowls for once I hope you are both 100% correct.
But at this moment in time, you cannot say that for sure.
Agree with all of that, but wouldn't be overly concerned. What parliament vote away, they can always vote back again.nil_desperandum wrote:I don't think that the problem with this Bill has anything to do with Brexit at all. It's all to do with the Sovereignty of Parliament, and our democratic process.
There are 3 main elements to this bill.
1. Repealing the European Communities Act and thus returning all power to UK institutions
2. Converting EU law as it stands at the moment of exit into UK law before exiting the EU. This will allow businesses to continue operating knowing the rules have not changed significantly overnight, and provides fairness to individuals, whose rights and obligations will not be subject to sudden change.
3. Creating powers to make secondary legislation. This will allow ministers to make amends to laws that would not function appropriately once we have left the EU.
I don't think many people have an issue with points 1. or 2., since we need something in place when we jump over the cliff edge. However, it is the third point that is highly controversial, since it theoretically gives powers to ministers to amend laws without Parliamentary assent. If Corbyn tried to do this then the tabloids would justifiably be up in arms, and the Tory Party would stand united against it. As things stand, however, it appears that most Conservatives will vote for it despite some Senior figures such as Dominic Grieve expressing serious concerns about Parliament giving their powers away like this.
I expect the Bill to go through but with some amendments to ensure that the full Sovereignty of Parliament is protected.
Sidney1st also needs to have a read of this.Lancasterclaret wrote:Ringo, have a gander at the Great Enabling act of 1933.
Go on enlighten me! I'm at work and fair busy. But, and I'm not taking the p, what's the connection?Lancasterclaret wrote:Ringo, have a gander at the Great Enabling act of 1933.
Colburn_Claret wrote:Agree with all of that, but wouldn't be overly concerned. What parliament vote away, they can always vote back again.
If any Government abused it they would be held accountable to the houses and the people.
That after all is democracy.
Lancasterclaret wrote:Google it mate, I'm in exactly the same boat!
I think Rowls is 100% safe unless we fall out of the EU without agreement. If that goes tits up and we continue to be punitive against low income/low skilled immigration in that situation, then who knows?
I'm 100% genuine in that I don't want anything like that to happen to anybody, be that Rowls or any of the 3 million EU citizens over here.
Key paragraphs:RingoMcCartney wrote:Go on enlighten me! I'm at work and fair busy. But, and I'm not taking the p, what's the connection?
I still maintain that believing that Rowls right to live and work in France is due to EU membership. Is mixing up correlation and causation.
The Enabling Act (German: Ermächtigungsgesetz) was a 1933 Weimar Constitution amendment that gave the German Cabinet – in effect, Chancellor Adolf Hitler – the power to enact laws without the involvement of the Reichstag.
Although they received five million more votes than in the previous election, the Nazis failed to gain an absolute majority in parliament, and depended on the 8% of seats won by their coalition partner, the German National People's Party, to reach 52% in total.
Reads awfully similar to Theresa May's minority government taking powers away from Parliament and solely into the hands of her and her party, dontcha think?Under the Act, the government had acquired the authority to pass laws without either parliamentary consent or control. These laws could (with certain exceptions) even deviate from the Constitution. The Act effectively eliminated the Reichstag as active players in German politics. While its existence was protected by the Enabling Act, for all intents and purposes it reduced the Reichstag to a mere stage for Hitler's speeches. It only met sporadically until the end of World War II, held no debates and enacted only a few laws.
Hi claretspice, I agree your description of the draft bill - and, that's the bit that should be changed - a few carefully crafted amendments that places parameters around the "henry VIII" actions that the government can take. Anything more major, bring back to parliament. Job sorted. Democracy wins. No one needs to be offended.claretspice wrote:The comparison between the normal use of secondary legislation powers, and what is proposed here is absolutely invalid.
Normally, secondary legislation derives from a specific act of parliament granting the secretary of state particular powers in defined circumstances as described in the ultimate act of parliament that "enables" the right to make secondary legislation. The scope of the subject matter of that ultimate act of parliament defines the scope of the secondary legislation that can be made (so for example, a transport act might permit the secretary of state to make regulations relating to a particular transport scheme - HS2 being a good example of this).
What is being proposed here is far, far wider - its the ability to re-write every law which has derived from Brussels over the past 50 years. Which as every Brexiteer knows, is a lot of our laws. Indeed, the only precedent for this is itself the ability of the government to make regulations in relation to the domestic application of EU law, which is precisely what we are trying to reclaim in the name of parliamentary sovereignty.
We all know that Brexit is going to profoundly change the country, and we are going to try and differentiate ourselves from Europe after Brexit (whatever its form) takes effect. For the government to put forward legislation predicated on the assumption that it should have the right to determine this, without necessarily having to consult parliament, is a grotesque affront to democracy which ought to offend everyone in the land.
Hi ngsobob, I'm fascinated with your psephology. What happened to the "old and uneducated" voted brexit analysis?ngsobob wrote:Ringo, pay attention. I've already pointed out that a majority of Labour voters are pro-EU. Most of the UKIP vote went to the Tories who are doing UKIP's job for them. We're experiencing a right-wing coup. Recent research suggests that it was the collapse of the banks that lead to the Brexit vote. Somebody, anybody, to blame for austerity. Now we have a group of extreme right wingers driving a minority Tory government because, as ever, Tories always put party before country. That's why they've hung around so long. They're not daft, just lack morals.
It hasn't, and it's unlikely it will. For it to go through in it's current form, it means that the rebel Tories will have to back down, and I can't see that happening.KateR wrote:well I for one am glad it passed through
Thanks for the info matey. ( genuinely)UpTheBeehole wrote:Key paragraphs:
Reads awfully similar to Theresa May's minority government taking powers away from Parliament and solely into the hands of her and her party, dontcha think?
The last quoted paragraph is where we could end up heading under this power-mad leader
Is that because I laughed at your Nazi comment?UpTheBeehole wrote:Sidney1st also needs to have a read of this.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enabling_Act_of_1933
And I disagree with your opinion that brexit was brought about by the economic collapse.ngsobob wrote:Ringo, pay attention. I've already pointed out that a majority of Labour voters are pro-EU. Most of the UKIP vote went to the Tories who are doing UKIP's job for them. We're experiencing a right-wing coup. Recent research suggests that it was the collapse of the banks that lead to the Brexit vote. Somebody, anybody, to blame for austerity. Now we have a group of extreme right wingers driving a minority Tory government because, as ever, Tories always put party before country. That's why they've hung around so long. They're not daft, just lack morals.
Ringo. I'll have one last go.RingoMcCartney wrote:There were only 12 Labour MPs who voted with the government last night. If anybody's putting party before country it's the duplicitous Labour party. Otherwise , the vast majority of Labour MPs would have voted with the government.
Thanks for tolerating me and I apologise for any exasperation I'm causing. I'll go back to my original points.nil_desperandum wrote:Ringo. I'll have one last go.
If the vote were just about Brexit, then Labour MPs would have been instructed by the whips to vote with the Govt. There's no doubt about this, and I doubt any of them would have defied the party whip, since it's party policy. All agree that a simple bill of this nature is needed.
What Labour and the other opposition MPs voted against was the additional unnecessary clause to the Bill, which removes the need for Parliamentary scrutiny BEYOND us leaving the EU, and to use your term having already "taken back control". No sane person would give any executive this level of power. It's points 1 & 2 of the Bill that will give us control of our laws the day after we leave the EU.
If it's passed without point 3, you will have your Brexit, so it makes no sense to say that the Labour Party is delaying the process. The only people jeopardising / potentially delaying the process are Davis, May and their team, by trying to snatch executive powers to legislate, when - in fact - they are a minority administration.
As I implied in my first contribution to this thread, if Corbyn, McDonnell and Abbot were trying to do this you'd be justifiably frothing at the mouth.
She had that bell end in Scotland constantly reminding us that May was an unelected PM...UpTheBeehole wrote:Very soon the UK will be paying 'reparations' to the EU, with many people feeling aggrieved about that. Read the Daily Mail or Daily Express, or the words of David Davis. They're frothing at the mouth at the prospect of paying the UK's agreed contributions to the EU.
Theresa May is power mad. She called a completely unnecessary general election when her government should have been concentrating on getting its **** in order for the brexit negotiations. Her entire campaign was based upon her; in most of her election material there wasn't even a mention of the Conservatives, it was all Theresa May.
Don't waste your time. Ringo is a fully paid up Brexit cultist. He'd unquestioningly get behind literally anything if someone told him it was in aid of Brexit and attack anyone / anything accused of frustrating the process. Logical or reasoned discussion is wasted on him.nil_desperandum wrote:Ringo. I'll have one last go.
Hi ngsobob, no probs with timing of responding - I've been out for a walk.ngsobob wrote:Hi, Paul. Sorry for the delay in responding, I've been searching for the reference re the study about the World Financial collapse, but typically can't find it. It's new, probably saw a ref on my twitter feed. The argument was that the bank collapse in 2008 led to austerity policies, most savagely in the UK with the Osborne budget in 2010. Other economies, like the US, and our own under Labour recharged the economy with investment packages. That's why the US under Obama recovered better than most. Remember the scrappage schemes here, for example. As a result, by the time Labour left office , the economy was growing at an annualised rate of 2.4%. Osborne's budget collapsed the economy, against the advice of economists generally. Cameron/Osborne then followed austerity policies for ideological reasons which has meant the slowest recovery in 300 years, low pay, low productivity etc. The referendum gave the populace a binary chance to kick 'the establishment', them politicians, and so on. In a healthier economy, people would have been less p....d off and less liable to hit themselves in the face with a dustbin lid. That's the gist, and it makes sense to me.
As for 'old and uneducated', you'll search a long time to find any reference from me on those lines and still fail. Some young folk might anyway consider me old, and I accept being uneducated about modern music. Too much is made of that - a goodly proportion (was it a third?) of the 65+ age group voted remain.
Final point is that GDP will fall by between 6% (HM Treasury) and 10% (IFS) every year if we leave - that's every year. As the welfare budget's largest slice is pensions, stand by for blast off. Ready yourself for the NHS listing ailments it won't treat (I have a sore heel they won't treat until I'm crippled). The poor will get even poorer. Ideal conditions for civil unrest. And this is Albion, with it's mother of parliaments. For shame.
Agree re Osborne. The only thing that he did I liked was the idea of the "northern powerhouse." We now need to get Andy Burnham driving for the government to follow thru on these plans.ngsobob wrote:Paul,
Osborne's Panic Budget was another example of his unsuitability to be Chancellor. I groaned when he said it, stupid man. Even so, Project Fear is showing to be Project Fact.
I take your point about HMT/IFS figures. I'll check it out when I can be persuaded to put down the latest John Le Carre (brilliant so far).
Hi ngsobob, let's look at what those words say: "GDP could be more than 7% less in the long run than it would otherwise have been."ngsobob wrote:Having a rest from A Legacy of Spies so as not to finish it too quickly. Found this:
Taking account of these dynamic effects, and assuming WTO rules, NIESR, CEP and HM Treasury all find that GDP could be more than 7% less in the long run than it would otherwise have been.
Source: IFS Report 116: Brexit and the UK's Public Finances
The forecast (only a forecast but these people know their stuff) is a fall in total GDP, not the rate of growth of GDP. Grim.
Did you not have a problem with it when these EU laws were being waved through without votes in the first place?quoonbeatz wrote:if you didn't think this was a power grab, there was a motion passed last night (by just 19 votes) that gives the tories control of the selection committees.
they can basically implement whatever brexit related laws they like now.
this country is ******.
You've lost everybody with that one.Did you not have a problem with it when these EU laws were being waved through without votes in the first place?
eh?claretandy wrote:Did you not have a problem with it when these EU laws were being waved through without votes in the first place?
I think the only consolation - assuming this Govt survives beyond Brexit, is that by the next general election, it will be clear (to all but the most blind), who got us into this mess, and they won't be able to hide from it. If - despite being a minority administration, they are going to exclude other parties, (except the DUP of course!), from decision making, then they won't be able to apportion blame on anyone else.quoonbeatz wrote:if you didn't think this was a power grab, there was a motion passed last night (by just 19 votes) that gives the tories control of the selection committees.
they can basically implement whatever brexit related laws they like now.
this country is ******.