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Default Can farmers sue Leave?

On Sun, 03 Jan 2021 16:15:43 +0000, Norman Wells wrote:

On 03/01/2021 14:21, Pamela wrote:
On 14:05 3 Jan 2021, The Todal said:
On 03/01/2021 13:58, Jeff Gaines wrote:
On 03/01/2021 in message Roger
Hayter wrote:


They are most certainly not just history!Â*Â* The next time a Prime
Minister wants to make a decision irrevocably committing the country
under an international treaty, or the next time he or she wants to
carry out something like Krystallnacht with Parliament conveniently
prorogued then these decisions will make it obviously ultra vires.Â*
That is a bigger contribution to the UK constitution than many other
people have made.Â* Certainly bigger than Farage's contribution
whether or not you think Brexit a good thing.

Presumably Parliament would be free to change the law (or the effect
of these judgements)?

Certainly. Parliament (as distinct from the Government or the Prime
Minister) is always able to change the law. It is the supreme
authority. And always should be.

Boris is currently unpopular with the public. Yet he has a huge
majority in Parliament. The only way to reconcile these two facts is
to have a leadership challenge soon, now that Brexit is "done".

https://www.theguardian.com/politics...poll-predicts-
a-uk-general-election-now-would-wipe-out-tory-majority


Boris is a one-trick Brexit pony without any more tricks.

He may manage to evade responsibility for not delivering election
promises, but post-Brexit chaos and mismanagement of Covid will be
firmly put at his door.


No, once it's all gone away, people will just be glad to forget it and
get back to normal. They'll be thankful.

It's hard to imagine how he can be re-elected.


Well, there's no need to worry yourself about that until 2024, is there?

The Tory Party will appoint a replacement long before then.


Why should they after all he's done for them? They're in a very
comfortable position, thank you very much, Boris.


de Pfeffel's in a tailspin. He's ****ed up every single thing that he's
touched.

He'll be gone before the end of this year.
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Default Can farmers sue Leave?

On 04/01/2021 20:32, Jon wrote:
On Sun, 03 Jan 2021 16:15:43 +0000, Norman Wells wrote:

On 03/01/2021 14:21, Pamela wrote:
On 14:05 3 Jan 2021, The Todal said:
On 03/01/2021 13:58, Jeff Gaines wrote:
On 03/01/2021 in message Roger
Hayter wrote:


They are most certainly not just history!Â*Â* The next time a Prime
Minister wants to make a decision irrevocably committing the country
under an international treaty, or the next time he or she wants to
carry out something like Krystallnacht with Parliament conveniently
prorogued then these decisions will make it obviously ultra vires.
That is a bigger contribution to the UK constitution than many other
people have made.Â* Certainly bigger than Farage's contribution
whether or not you think Brexit a good thing.

Presumably Parliament would be free to change the law (or the effect
of these judgements)?

Certainly. Parliament (as distinct from the Government or the Prime
Minister) is always able to change the law. It is the supreme
authority. And always should be.

Boris is currently unpopular with the public. Yet he has a huge
majority in Parliament. The only way to reconcile these two facts is
to have a leadership challenge soon, now that Brexit is "done".

https://www.theguardian.com/politics...poll-predicts-
a-uk-general-election-now-would-wipe-out-tory-majority

Boris is a one-trick Brexit pony without any more tricks.

He may manage to evade responsibility for not delivering election
promises, but post-Brexit chaos and mismanagement of Covid will be
firmly put at his door.


No, once it's all gone away, people will just be glad to forget it and
get back to normal. They'll be thankful.

It's hard to imagine how he can be re-elected.


Well, there's no need to worry yourself about that until 2024, is there?

The Tory Party will appoint a replacement long before then.


Why should they after all he's done for them? They're in a very
comfortable position, thank you very much, Boris.


de Pfeffel's in a tailspin. He's ****ed up every single thing that he's
touched.

He'll be gone before the end of this year.


By whose hand?


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Default Can farmers sue Leave?



"Jon" wrote in message
...
On Sun, 03 Jan 2021 16:15:43 +0000, Norman Wells wrote:

On 03/01/2021 14:21, Pamela wrote:
On 14:05 3 Jan 2021, The Todal said:
On 03/01/2021 13:58, Jeff Gaines wrote:
On 03/01/2021 in message Roger
Hayter wrote:


They are most certainly not just history! The next time a Prime
Minister wants to make a decision irrevocably committing the country
under an international treaty, or the next time he or she wants to
carry out something like Krystallnacht with Parliament conveniently
prorogued then these decisions will make it obviously ultra vires.
That is a bigger contribution to the UK constitution than many other
people have made. Certainly bigger than Farage's contribution
whether or not you think Brexit a good thing.

Presumably Parliament would be free to change the law (or the effect
of these judgements)?

Certainly. Parliament (as distinct from the Government or the Prime
Minister) is always able to change the law. It is the supreme
authority. And always should be.

Boris is currently unpopular with the public. Yet he has a huge
majority in Parliament. The only way to reconcile these two facts is
to have a leadership challenge soon, now that Brexit is "done".

https://www.theguardian.com/politics...poll-predicts-
a-uk-general-election-now-would-wipe-out-tory-majority

Boris is a one-trick Brexit pony without any more tricks.

He may manage to evade responsibility for not delivering election
promises, but post-Brexit chaos and mismanagement of Covid will be
firmly put at his door.


No, once it's all gone away, people will just be glad to forget it and
get back to normal. They'll be thankful.

It's hard to imagine how he can be re-elected.


Well, there's no need to worry yourself about that until 2024, is there?

The Tory Party will appoint a replacement long before then.


Why should they after all he's done for them? They're in a very
comfortable position, thank you very much, Boris.


de Pfeffel's in a tailspin. He's ****ed up
every single thing that he's touched.


Nope, he got brexit done and recovered from the virus fine.

Got to be PM too.

And he has got a lot more done than you ever have too.

He'll be gone before the end of this year.


Just another of your pathetic little drug crazed drunken fantasys.


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Default Can farmers sue Leave?

On 04/01/2021 20:32, Jon wrote:
On Sun, 03 Jan 2021 16:15:43 +0000, Norman Wells wrote:

On 03/01/2021 14:21, Pamela wrote:
On 14:05 3 Jan 2021, The Todal said:
On 03/01/2021 13:58, Jeff Gaines wrote:
On 03/01/2021 in message Roger
Hayter wrote:


They are most certainly not just history!Â*Â* The next time a Prime
Minister wants to make a decision irrevocably committing the country
under an international treaty, or the next time he or she wants to
carry out something like Krystallnacht with Parliament conveniently
prorogued then these decisions will make it obviously ultra vires.
That is a bigger contribution to the UK constitution than many other
people have made.Â* Certainly bigger than Farage's contribution
whether or not you think Brexit a good thing.

Presumably Parliament would be free to change the law (or the effect
of these judgements)?

Certainly. Parliament (as distinct from the Government or the Prime
Minister) is always able to change the law. It is the supreme
authority. And always should be.

Boris is currently unpopular with the public. Yet he has a huge
majority in Parliament. The only way to reconcile these two facts is
to have a leadership challenge soon, now that Brexit is "done".

https://www.theguardian.com/politics...poll-predicts-
a-uk-general-election-now-would-wipe-out-tory-majority

Boris is a one-trick Brexit pony without any more tricks.

He may manage to evade responsibility for not delivering election
promises, but post-Brexit chaos and mismanagement of Covid will be
firmly put at his door.


No, once it's all gone away, people will just be glad to forget it and
get back to normal. They'll be thankful.

It's hard to imagine how he can be re-elected.


Well, there's no need to worry yourself about that until 2024, is there?

The Tory Party will appoint a replacement long before then.


Why should they after all he's done for them? They're in a very
comfortable position, thank you very much, Boris.


de Pfeffel's in a tailspin. He's ****ed up every single thing that he's
touched.

He'll be gone before the end of this year.

You said that last year as well.

But the latest opinion polls show a nice surge for the Tories. The 'red
wall' approves of The Deal. And its taken the wind out the wee krankies
sails.

Whether COVID destroys him (and many other leaders) remains to be seen.

The one who will be gone by the end of next year is Joe Biden. Kamala
will be president...

--
"Socialist governments traditionally do make a financial mess. They
always run out of other people's money. It's quite a characteristic of them"

Margaret Thatcher
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Default Can farmers sue Leave?

On 08:41 5 Jan 2021, The Natural Philosopher said:
On 04/01/2021 20:32, Jon wrote:
On Sun, 03 Jan 2021 16:15:43 +0000, Norman Wells wrote:
On 03/01/2021 14:21, Pamela wrote:


The Tory Party will appoint a replacement long before then.

Why should they after all he's done for them? They're in a very
comfortable position, thank you very much, Boris.


de Pfeffel's in a tailspin. He's ****ed up every single thing
that he's touched.

He'll be gone before the end of this year.

You said that last year as well.

But the latest opinion polls show a nice surge for the Tories.


That's the problem with reading the Express: it invents "facts" and you
believe them. In reality Tory support slumped massively last May and
has never recovered.

See https://www.politico.eu/europe-poll-...nited-kingdom/


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Posts: 472
Default Can farmers sue Leave?

On 05/01/2021 08:41, The Natural Philosopher wrote:
On 04/01/2021 20:32, Jon wrote:
On Sun, 03 Jan 2021 16:15:43 +0000, Norman Wells wrote:

On 03/01/2021 14:21, Pamela wrote:
On 14:05Â* 3 Jan 2021, The Todal said:
On 03/01/2021 13:58, Jeff Gaines wrote:
On 03/01/2021 in message Roger
Hayter wrote:


They are most certainly not just history!Â*Â* The next time a Prime
Minister wants to make a decision irrevocably committing the country
under an international treaty, or the next time he or she wants to
carry out something like Krystallnacht with Parliament conveniently
prorogued then these decisions will make it obviously ultra vires.
That is a bigger contribution to the UK constitution than many other
people have made.Â* Certainly bigger than Farage's contribution
whether or not you think Brexit a good thing.

Presumably Parliament would be free to change the law (or the effect
of these judgements)?

Certainly. Parliament (as distinct from the Government or the Prime
Minister) is always able to change the law. It is the supreme
authority. And always should be.

Boris is currently unpopular with the public. Yet he has a huge
majority in Parliament. The only way to reconcile these two facts is
to have a leadership challenge soon, now that Brexit is "done".

https://www.theguardian.com/politics...poll-predicts-
a-uk-general-election-now-would-wipe-out-tory-majority

Boris is a one-trick Brexit pony without any more tricks.

He may manage to evade responsibility for not delivering election
promises, but post-Brexit chaos and mismanagement of Covid will be
firmly put at his door.

No, once it's all gone away, people will just be glad to forget it and
get back to normal.Â* They'll be thankful.

It's hard to imagine how he can be re-elected.

Well, there's no need to worry yourself about that until 2024, is there?

The Tory Party will appoint a replacement long before then.

Why should they after all he's done for them?Â* They're in a very
comfortable position, thank you very much, Boris.


de Pfeffel's in a tailspin. He's ****ed up every single thing that he's
touched.

He'll be gone before the end of this year.

You said that last year as well.

But the latest opinion polls showÂ* a nice surge for the Tories. The 'red
wall' approves of The Deal. And its taken the wind out the wee krankies
sails.

Whether COVID destroys him (and many other leaders) remains to be seen.

The one who will be gone by the end of next year is Joe Biden. Kamala
will be president...


By whose hand?


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Default Lonely Obnoxious Cantankerous Auto-contradicting Senile Ozzie Troll Alert!

On Tue, 5 Jan 2021 10:36:43 +1100, cantankerous trolling geezer Rodent
Speed, the auto-contradicting senile sociopath, blabbered, again:

FLUSH the trolling senile asshole's latest troll**** unread

--
"Who or What is Rod Speed?
Rod Speed is an entirely modern phenomenon. Essentially, Rod Speed
is an insecure and worthless individual who has discovered he can
enhance his own self-esteem in his own eyes by playing "the big, hard
man" on the InterNet."
https://www.pcreview.co.uk/threads/r...d-faq.2973853/
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Default Can farmers sue Leave?

On 05/01/2021 09:30, Norman Wells wrote:
On 05/01/2021 08:41, The Natural Philosopher wrote:
On 04/01/2021 20:32, Jon wrote:
On Sun, 03 Jan 2021 16:15:43 +0000, Norman Wells wrote:

On 03/01/2021 14:21, Pamela wrote:
On 14:05Â* 3 Jan 2021, The Todal said:
On 03/01/2021 13:58, Jeff Gaines wrote:
On 03/01/2021 in message Roger
Hayter wrote:


They are most certainly not just history!Â*Â* The next time a Prime
Minister wants to make a decision irrevocably committing the
country
under an international treaty, or the next time he or she wants to
carry out something like Krystallnacht with Parliament conveniently
prorogued then these decisions will make it obviously ultra vires.
That is a bigger contribution to the UK constitution than many
other
people have made.Â* Certainly bigger than Farage's contribution
whether or not you think Brexit a good thing.

Presumably Parliament would be free to change the law (or the effect
of these judgements)?

Certainly. Parliament (as distinct from the Government or the Prime
Minister) is always able to change the law. It is the supreme
authority. And always should be.

Boris is currently unpopular with the public. Yet he has a huge
majority in Parliament. The only way to reconcile these two facts is
to have a leadership challenge soon, now that Brexit is "done".

https://www.theguardian.com/politics...poll-predicts-
a-uk-general-election-now-would-wipe-out-tory-majority

Boris is a one-trick Brexit pony without any more tricks.

He may manage to evade responsibility for not delivering election
promises, but post-Brexit chaos and mismanagement of Covid will be
firmly put at his door.

No, once it's all gone away, people will just be glad to forget it and
get back to normal.Â* They'll be thankful.

It's hard to imagine how he can be re-elected.

Well, there's no need to worry yourself about that until 2024, is
there?

The Tory Party will appoint a replacement long before then.

Why should they after all he's done for them?Â* They're in a very
comfortable position, thank you very much, Boris.

de Pfeffel's in a tailspin. He's ****ed up every single thing that he's
touched.

He'll be gone before the end of this year.

You said that last year as well.

But the latest opinion polls showÂ* a nice surge for the Tories. The
'red wall' approves of The Deal. And its taken the wind out the wee
krankies sails.

Whether COVID destroys him (and many other leaders) remains to be seen.

The one who will be gone by the end of next year is Joe Biden. Kamala
will be president...


By whose hand?


Let us all sincerely wish a long and healthy life to Joe Biden.
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