Re: Täällä seurataan Britannian lähtöä EU:sta 23.6.2016
Posted: 12 Oct 2018, 17:13
Neuvostoliitossa ei ollut tätäkään ongelmaa
https://www.punkinfinland.net/forum/
https://www.punkinfinland.net/forum/viewtopic.php?f=2&t=268861
Jos prosentti on hyvä, niin pääsisiköhän SKE-porukasta eroon, jos ne lähettäisi tuonne, kun tärkein yksityiskohta on kuitenkin kunnossa.
Moottoritien varrella loputon maidan telttakylä, jonka jokaisella teltalla oma bajamaja.useita varabooleja piilossa wrote: ↑12 Oct 2018, 21:45Jos prosentti on hyvä, niin pääsisiköhän SKE-porukasta eroon, jos ne lähettäisi tuonne, kun tärkein yksityiskohta on kuitenkin kunnossa.
Harmi vaan että Britanniassa on sitten myös RAJAT KIINNIsuurmursun tutkimukset wrote: ↑12 Oct 2018, 22:06Moottoritien varrella loputon maidan telttakylä, jonka jokaisella teltalla oma bajamaja.useita varabooleja piilossa wrote: ↑12 Oct 2018, 21:45Jos prosentti on hyvä, niin pääsisiköhän SKE-porukasta eroon, jos ne lähettäisi tuonne, kun tärkein yksityiskohta on kuitenkin kunnossa.![]()
Arlene Fosterilla nyt on ihan oma endgame käynnissä, mutta juuh. Tuossa jutun lopussa oli hyvin avattu sitä matematiikkaa, miten hankalaa Mayn on saada mitään diiliä läpi Brittiparlamentissa:gnu/turd wrote: ↑14 Oct 2018, 10:21Viime viikon positiivisista tunnelmista on päästy siihen pisteeseen, että no deal vaikuttaa todennäköisimmältä lopputulokselta.
https://www.theguardian.com/politics/20 ... outcome-eu
Meanwhile the difficulties the prime minister will have in pushing any deal she may secure through parliament are highlighted by new analysis that suggests she will have to rely on the support of more than a dozen Labour MPs to avoid her Brexit deal being torpedoed. According to researchers who examined sources including public statements, interviews and voting records of every MP in the House of Commons, May will need at least 14 Labour MPs to support her Brexit plans if they are to be passed in a vote expected to take place at the end of the year.
That rises to at least 24 should the DUP end its support for the government, were May to sign up to a Brexit withdrawal agreement that treats Northern Ireland differently from mainland Britain.
The stark research by the Edelman public affairs consultancy found that while May needs 320 votes to secure a majority, she can rely on the support of only 277 of the 314 Tory MPs and two former Tories who now sit as independents.
It predicts that 18 of the 37 hardline Tory Brexiters are “potentially persuadable”.
However, even with them on side, along with the DUP and another independent Northern Irish unionist MP, May is still 14 votes short of a majority.
Pawel Swidlicki, the Brexit analyst who led the Edelman research, said: “The good news for the PM is that she has a narrow path towards a majority. The bad news is that this not only requires reconciling the DUP with the backstop, but also winning over a raft of strongly pro-Brexit Tory MPs and a handful of Labour rebels.”[…]
EU leaders are set to hold an extraordinary “no deal” Brexit summit in November to deal with the potential disaster of the UK crashing out of the bloc should Theresa May fail to deliver decisive progress on the Irish border issue this week, the Guardian can reveal.
A special meeting of heads of state and government at which the EU had hoped to finally sign off on the Brexit negotiations next month will instead be turned into a emergency summit to discuss the bloc’s response to a cliff-edge Brexit.[…]