Labour and Brexit



The Times cartoonist Morten Morland explains Jeremy Corbyn's latest policy position on Brexit after the Labour leader contradicted himself yet again over the prospect of the UK remaining a member of the EU Single Market. 

  


Battle Over Brexit (04/09/17)

Image result for having your cake and eating it

The madness of Brexit is illustrated in this article from Politics Home which reports that the UK is preparing to 'buy back' into a collaborative research programme run by the European Union (EU). 

The position of the both the Conservative Government and Labour opposition is that they want to leave the European Union, but at the same time wish to retain all the benefits of remaining in the EU which strikes me as more than a little dishonest.

Why would our neighbours allow us to allow to walk away from a 'club' with agreed rules, fees and regulations - only for the UK to come back and demand membership benefits on its own terms.

Now this is completely crazy if you ask me, because membership organisation simply don't operate on a 'have your cake and eat it basis' including UK trade unions, for example.

If someone leaves a trade union, they would be laughed at for demanding they continue to receive all the 'benefits' of trade union membership.

Yet 'having things both ways' is exactly what Jeremy Corbyn and the Tories are demanding.      

  

https://www.politicshome.com/news/uk/technology/science/news/88677/uk-preparing-pay-£1bn-stay-eu-science-programme?

UK 'preparing to pay £1bn to stay in EU science programme'

By John Ashmore - Politics Home

The UK is ready to pay around £1bn to remain part of the European Union's science and research fund, Horizon 2020.

The Brexit department will set out the plans later this week - Credit: PA Images

David Davis' Brexit department will set out its plans in a fresh position paper on Wednesday, the Times reports.

They may also include paying into other research programmes such as the Galileo satellite navigation system and Copernicus, the earth observation programme run in partnership with the European Space Agency.

Although it is run by the EU, the Horizon scheme does have associate agreements with countries outside the bloc such as Switzerland, Norway and Israel.

However relations between the two negotiating teams appear to be fracturing, with Mr Davis yesterday accusing EU counterpart Michel Barnier of being "silly".

The Brexit Secretary told the Andrew Marr Show that the European Commission is refusing to begin discussions on in order to pressurise the UK into paying a hefty 'divorce bill'.

"Of course [Mr Barnier] wants to put pressure on us, which is why the stance this week in the press conference - bluntly, I think it looked a bit silly, because there plainly were things that we achieved."

Mr Davis also urged potential Tory rebels to back the Government's EU Withdrawal Bill when it comes before the Commons this week.

First Secretary of State Damian Green has warned that backbenchers who fail to support the legislation risked letting Jeremy Corbyn into Downing Street.

But Mr Davis said: "This bill is about ensuring continuity. Anybody - Remainer or Leaver - should support this bill."

David Davis' Brexit department will set out its plans in a fresh position paper on Wednesday, the Times reports.

They may also include paying into other research programmes such as the Galileo satellite navigation system and Copernicus, the earth observation programme run in partnership with the European Space Agency.

Although it is run by the EU, the Horizon scheme does have associate agreements with countries outside the bloc such as Switzerland, Norway and Israel.

However relations between the two negotiating teams appear to be fracturing, with Mr Davis yesterday accusing EU counterpart Michel Barnier of being "silly".

The Brexit Secretary told the Andrew Marr Show that the European Commission is refusing to begin discussions on in order to pressurise the UK into paying a hefty 'divorce bill'.

"Of course [Mr Barnier] wants to put pressure on us, which is why the stance this week in the press conference - bluntly, I think it looked a bit silly, because there plainly were things that we achieved."

Mr Davis also urged potential Tory rebels to back the Government's EU Withdrawal Bill when it comes before the Commons this week.

First Secretary of State Damian Green has warned that backbenchers who fail to support the legislation risked letting Jeremy Corbyn into Downing Street.

But Mr Davis said: "This bill is about ensuring continuity. Anybody - Remainer or Leaver - should support this bill."

Battle Over Brexit (05/12/16)


The battle over 'Brexit' shifted focus to the Supreme Court today, but the real fight is over the terms on which the UK will continue to trade with its European neighbours.

I though the issues were summarised well in a reported conversation between Carlo Calenda, Italy's economic development minister and Boris Johnson, the UK's foreign secretary.

Calenda recalled their exchange as follows:

Johnson: "I don’t want free movement of people but I want the single market." 

Calenda. “I said, ‘No way." 

Johnson: "You’ll sell less prosecco.’ 

Calenda: "I said, OK, you’ll sell less fish and chips, but I’ll sell less prosecco to one country and you’ll sell less to 27 countries.’ 

Game, set and match to the Italian minister, if you ask me.

  


Safe Pair of Hands (19/11/16)Image result for UK supreme court


A confected row has broken out over comments by a judges in the UK Supreme Court (Lady Hale) who observed recently that the Brexit referendum was not legally binding.

Now the dogs in the street know this to be true, even Nigel Farage accepts the advisory nature of the EU referendum, yet some of our politicians and the right-wing press are up in arms because Lady Hale has set out the pros and cons of an appeal case that the Supreme Court has to consider in December. 

All I can say is that Lady Hale was one of the five judges who sat on the landmark FoI (Freedom of Information) case against South Lanarkshire Council back in 2013 - and that turned out OK, as regular readers know.

Read the full story via the following link to The Guardian, but if you ask me the decision is in safe hands.

  


https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2016/nov/15/supreme-court-judges-views-on-article-50-legislation-anger-leave-campaigners

Supreme court judge hints at legal hitch that could seriously delay Brexit
Lady Hale raises possibility of PM having to replace 1972 act before triggering article 50, incurring wrath of anti-EU Tories


 
Lady Hale is one of 11 judges due to rule on whether the government can trigger article 50 without a vote by MPs. Photograph: Supreme Court/PA

By Anushka Asthana and Rowena Mason - The Guardian

A supreme court judge has raised the prospect that Theresa May would have to comprehensively replace existing EU legislation before the government could even begin Brexit, in a move that could seriously delay the process.

In a speech that angered leave campaigners, Lady Hale said the supreme court judges could go further than simply forcing May to publish a short piece of legislation to approve the triggering of article 50.

The deputy president of the court said that next month’s case – in which the supreme court will hear the government’s appeal against a high court ruling that MPs must approve the triggering of article 50 – raised “difficult and delicate issues” about the relationship between government and parliament.

“Another question is whether it would be enough for a simple act of parliament to authorise the government to give notice, or whether it would have to be a comprehensive replacement of the 1972 act,” she said in comments to law students in Kuala Lumpur that were published online on Tuesday. The European Communities Act 1972 took the UK into the then European Economic Community.

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