ChatterBank3 mins ago
If The P M Refuses To Ask The E U S S R For An Extension........?
26 Answers
Ok he's breaking the law, he get's arrested, tried, impeached, lost, found, appealed, re tried, boiled in oil, 24 lashes of the cat and keel hauled. All in a fortnight? while the HOQ is wetting their collective knickers we are out no deal by virtue of the clock running down. Or did I mis read the situation?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.It seems peoplle haven't been keeping up with this Brexit thing.
Almost everybody knows that both sides are winging it, there's nothing written in stone and even if there was they'd just call a mason to recarve the offending article.
Nobody of consequence wants the damned Brexit therefore it will be blocked, stalled, dismissed, forgotten or lost down the back of the sofa.
All that's happening currently is that Boris has been given enough rope to hang himself by long time enemies who are a lot better at this stuff than he could ever imagine being.
He's done.
Almost everybody knows that both sides are winging it, there's nothing written in stone and even if there was they'd just call a mason to recarve the offending article.
Nobody of consequence wants the damned Brexit therefore it will be blocked, stalled, dismissed, forgotten or lost down the back of the sofa.
All that's happening currently is that Boris has been given enough rope to hang himself by long time enemies who are a lot better at this stuff than he could ever imagine being.
He's done.
I expect you need to ask in law rather than news ;-)
I don't think any of this is clear until it's tried and a precedent set. I'd have thought that if the government wanted to contest the legitimacy of the bill/act/whatever time would have to be allocated to do so.
I doubt that a note saying it's not really wanted would have much affect. Outlining ways in which MEPs could distupt EU activity for the whole of any extension might. Assuming that's possible.
I don't think any of this is clear until it's tried and a precedent set. I'd have thought that if the government wanted to contest the legitimacy of the bill/act/whatever time would have to be allocated to do so.
I doubt that a note saying it's not really wanted would have much affect. Outlining ways in which MEPs could distupt EU activity for the whole of any extension might. Assuming that's possible.
My understanding is that the opposition (and some of the government) are worried about a no-deal Brexit on October 31. There isn't a great deal of trust around at the moment, and the opposition believes that PM Johnson will find a way of ignoring the wishes of parliament to achieve his "do or die" promise.
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