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Brexit ? No-deal on 31st October


Lala81
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2 hours ago, Nlatio said:

Knn this BJ really sibei kwailan.... watch him telling the parkliament he will not obey the law and ask for extension... see if he get remove first or that Donald Duck... both see their law no up... 😷 

I do somewhat agree with the Lib Dem charbo... 3 years ago, people vote to leave base on certain promises, but turn out it's not true... and since the parkliamen cannot agree to anything, then let the people decide... if the people decide again to leave, then the gov should be given the mandate to decide and move on... else... back to status quo and take this as a learning exercise that lasted 3 years. 

iirc, BJ was most vocal during the Brexit referendum, so its kinda apt that things have come full circle for him as Brexit is now his baby. [;)]

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19 hours ago, Vid said:

The UK should get this done and over with. No point arguing that Teresa May's deal was better. So what if her deal was better when EU never agree to it.

Better exit with a deal than a no deal. People who oppose are those who want to see the whole UK collapse.

Agree that this should be further delayed since there is no viable solution that will get the majority vote from the UK parliament or one that the EU will agree. 

In the 1st place, ppl should stopped arguing if Brexit is should or should not to ahead cos the ppl has voted to leave. Ppl can argue that the Brexiteers pulled the figures from thin air and ppl are deceived into believing a dream that will not be fully materialised.  The same can be said of the Remainners who also pull figures from thin air to 'scare' ppl to vote to remain. At the end of the day, a bit more ppl voted to believe in one lie over another. 
 

Hopefully, ppl will learn from Brexit and use their votes more responsibly, not use it as 'protest' vote against the incumbent and get the shocking result that they don't really want.

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2 hours ago, Silver_blade said:

Agree that this should be further delayed since there is no viable solution that will get the majority vote from the UK parliament or one that the EU will agree. 

In the 1st place, ppl should stopped arguing if Brexit is should or should not to ahead cos the ppl has voted to leave. Ppl can argue that the Brexiteers pulled the figures from thin air and ppl are deceived into believing a dream that will not be fully materialised.  The same can be said of the Remainners who also pull figures from thin air to 'scare' ppl to vote to remain. At the end of the day, a bit more ppl voted to believe in one lie over another. 
  

Hopefully, ppl will learn from Brexit and use their votes more responsibly, not use it as 'protest' vote against the incumbent and get the shocking result that they don't really want.

Brexit is becoming a joke. Smlj Benn Act to delay it. I'm surprised all the EU members indulge them every time the guniang UK MPs indecisive decisions waste more time, money and resources on this.

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2 hours ago, Vid said:

Brexit is becoming a joke. Smlj Benn Act to delay it. I'm surprised all the EU members indulge them every time the guniang UK MPs indecisive decisions waste more time, money and resources on this.

Any delay will cost both the Uk and EU money and destablise the region. But EU also does want the Uk to leave without a deal cos EU do sell quite a bit of stuff to the UK and access to the north sea 

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it seem boris cannot keep his promise.

what happen to by cook or by hook, will get out of EU?

what happen to the decision of the voting?

if the vote of the ppl mean nothing,  where is the democracy??

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10 hours ago, Wt_know said:

bringing your dog to polling station can get 2 ballot paper? lol

59ADB8C2-5937-4EAA-8B9D-B623019066E7.jpeg

The guy in the background reminds me of Mustank's cat.

98921255_JealousKitty.jpg.581a5758307bd48188e4247b2a2b9cb6.jpg

Maybe it's the cat in human disguise.

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7 hours ago, Beregond said:

it seem boris cannot keep his promise.

what happen to by cook or by hook, will get out of EU?

what happen to the decision of the voting?

if the vote of the ppl mean nothing,  where is the democracy??

My impression is that with Boris's victory in the GE, the British populace as a whole want Brexit.  It's only the influential in London that thinks otherwise.

Actually we also have the same thing.  Voted Oppo but grassroots advisor still.......  but dont derail thread.

Democracy is getting more like I let you vote but you better choose what I wanted. Or else.

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57 minutes ago, Philipkee said:

My impression is that with Boris's victory in the GE, the British populace as a whole want Brexit.  It's only the influential in London that thinks otherwise.

Actually we also have the same thing.  Voted Oppo but grassroots advisor still.......  but dont derail thread.

Democracy is getting more like I let you vote but you better choose what I wanted. Or else.

abit different, we voted oppo , but they only got 40% vote 

we ll suck thrump

british is the ppl vote for brexit with higher % , but the government refuse to give what the ppl vote for..

in this case vote for what??

its only same only if for example oppo win majority % but they cannot form gov.

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Final results.

Boris Johnson wins biggest Conservative majority in UK election since 1987
dec-13--2019-uk-election-boris-johnson.j

LONDON: British Prime Minister Boris Johnson's Conservatives have won an outright majority in parliament on Friday (Dec 13) that will allow him to take Britain out of the European Union in a matter of weeks.

The Conservatives won 364 of the 650 seats in the House of Commons, gaining 47 seats to trump Labour's total of 203 seats. 

That represents the biggest majority the Tories have held since Margaret Thatcher's win in 1987. 

Condemning more than three years of political wrangling over Brexit, Johnson vowed in his victory speech on Friday to "put an end to all that nonsense" and "get Brexit done on time by Jan 31, no ifs, no buts".

It was a disastrous night for Jeremy Corbyn's Labour Party, which lost 59 seats. It marked the worst result for the party since 1935. 

The Scottish National Party (SNP) gained 13 seats to finish as Britain's third biggest party, with 48 seats.

With just the constituency of St Ives the only one yet to declare, the Liberal Democrats won 11 seats, with a loss of one. Lib Dem leader Jo Swinson lost her East Dunbartonshire seat to the SNP by 149 votes.

Previous coalition partner DUP also lost two seats - including their deputy leader Nigel Dodds - to finish with eight seats.

Sinn Fein returned with seven seats, and Plaid Cymru retained its four seats. The Greens won one seat.

There will be newcomers in the Commons. The Social Democratic and Labour Party won two seats, while the Alliance Party took home one. 

Nigel Farage's Brexit Party failed to win a seat.

LABOUR LOSSES

Labour's Dennis Skinner, who would have been the longest-serving lawmaker in parliament, lost the seat he had held since 1970, as another brick in the "Red Wall" of traditional Labour support fell to Johnson's Conservatives and their pledge to deliver Brexit.

Skinner, 87, was defeated by Conservative Mark Fletcher, who overturned his 5,288 majority to win Bolsover with 21,791 votes against Skinner's 16,492.

Results showed Johnson's strategy had successfully breached seats across the Brexit-supporting areas of the Midlands and northern England where he cast his political foes as the out-of-touch enemies of Brexit.

The Conservatives took Sedgefield, once held by former Prime Minister Tony Blair, Labour's most successful leader.

file-photo--jeremy-corbyn-speaks-during-

"This is obviously a very disappointing night for the Labour Party with the result that we've got," Corbyn said after being re-elected in his own north London electoral seat. He said he would not lead the party in any future elections.

Weary Labour candidates taking in the scale of their defeat said his leadership had played a major role in the defeat.

Ruth Smeeth, who said she also expected to lose her seat in Stoke-on-Trent, laid the blame firmly at Corbyn's door.

"He should have gone many, many, many months ago," she said.

Labour now faces a civil war between the socialists who control it and more moderate factions which will demand power.

"GET BREXIT DONE"

Johnson called the first Christmas election since 1923 to break what he said was the paralysis of Britain's political system after more than three years of crisis over how, when or even if to leave the European Union.

Johnson fought the election under the slogan of Get Brexit Done, promising to end the deadlock and spend more on health, education and the police.

It was a gamble that paid off handsomely. 

He was helped early in the election by Farage's Brexit Party, which stood down hundreds of candidates in a bid to prevent the pro-Brexit vote from being split. 

Results showed the Brexit Party had poached a significant number of voters from Labour.

While Brexit framed the election, the slow-motion exit from the EU has variously fatigued, enthused and enraged voters while eroding loyalties to the two major parties.

"We must understand now what an earthquake we have created," Johnson later told party staff, according to the Press Association news agency.

He earlier declared when he was re-elected as an MP that voters had given him "a powerful new mandate to get Brexit done".

Johnson now has up to five years to govern until he is obliged to call another election.

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