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Brexit

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  • HAYSIEHAYSIE Member Posts: 35,705
    Brexit amendments: The MPs trying to change Theresa May's course

    MPs are trying to influence the Brexit process in a number of ways, as Theresa May continues her bid to get the EU to change the deal.



    Most MPs want to avoid a no-deal scenario, fearing chaos at ports and disruption to business. However, some Brexiteers have played down that prospect, arguing it is an example of "Project Fear", and say the no-deal option offers leverage in negotiations with Brussels.
    "A senior ERG source says they haven't decided whether to abstain or vote against, but they won't back the government," said BBC political editor Laura Kuenssberg.

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-47225819
  • HAYSIEHAYSIE Member Posts: 35,705
    edited February 2019
    Let's talk about immigration | EU Referendum – Brexit 2016

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X-JvzFb3jEM
  • rainman215rainman215 Member Posts: 1,186
    edited February 2019
    HAYSIE said:
    Why are you trying to turn it into a debate on immigration ?
    Taking our jobs thread might be better place to post this.
  • goldongoldon Member Posts: 9,032
    Think he means flooding our country with Terrorists undesirables by non elected EU members.
  • HAYSIEHAYSIE Member Posts: 35,705

    HAYSIE said:
    Why are you trying to turn it into a debate on immigration ?
    Taking our jobs thread might be better place to post this.
    The Guardian full title on YouTube was as follows,

    Let's talk about immigration | EU Referendum – Brexit 2016


    I just abbreviated it a little.
  • rainman215rainman215 Member Posts: 1,186
    HAYSIE said:

    HAYSIE said:
    Why are you trying to turn it into a debate on immigration ?
    Taking our jobs thread might be better place to post this.
    The Guardian full title on YouTube was as follows,

    Let's talk about immigration | EU Referendum – Brexit 2016


    I just abbreviated it a little.
    The majority of LEAVE voters i have spoken to who voted LEAVE didnt vote for leave because of immigration.
  • HAYSIEHAYSIE Member Posts: 35,705
    Another criticism being levelled at Brexiteers, is that they tend to go onto forums, and post the same videos multiple times.
    Mistakenly thinking that nobody will notice.
    Maybe its a memory issue.
  • rainman215rainman215 Member Posts: 1,186
    HAYSIE said:

    Another criticism being levelled at Brexiteers, is that they tend to go onto forums, and post the same videos multiple times.
    Mistakenly thinking that nobody will notice.
    Maybe its a memory issue.

    remoaners like 2 have 2 votes for the same issue, maybe its a memory issue. :D:D:D
  • rainman215rainman215 Member Posts: 1,186
    https://youtu.be/qm5SYxRXHsI
    Are these the immigrants you are referring to haysie.
  • HAYSIEHAYSIE Member Posts: 35,705
    Brexit fallout: vet destroys Nigel Farage live on LBC

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=leEfrYamf00
  • goldongoldon Member Posts: 9,032
    We need Vets to look after my Puppies...... Please encourage Uni to train more Vets.
  • rainman215rainman215 Member Posts: 1,186
    Quick question to all remoaners, who want to stay in the eu, with so many countries in Europe having so called far right political parties on the rise, what happens to the eu if they gain power ?
  • rainman215rainman215 Member Posts: 1,186
    edited February 2019
    tomgoodun said:

    https://youtu.be/xjVVYRVhN0Q
    You know you are on the right team, when abbott is on the opposing team. :D:D:D

    I suggest you look up her voting record on Health and Social care, etc etc

    Jacob Rees Mogg a “ Man of the People”, and you’re on the opposing team to Diane Abbot speaks volumes...
    I have done as you suggested and looked up dimwit abbott voting record.
    Will post video in a sec.
    Sorry about late reply.
  • rainman215rainman215 Member Posts: 1,186
  • dobiesdrawdobiesdraw Member Posts: 2,793
    Brexit: Theresa May suffers fresh Commons defeat
    Prime Minister Theresa May has suffered another Commons defeat after MPs voted down her approach to Brexit talks.

    MPs voted by 303 to 258 - a majority of 45 - against a motion endorsing the government's negotiating strategy.

    The defeat has no legal force and Downing Street said it would not change the PM's approach to talks with the EU.

    But Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn urged Mrs May to "admit her Brexit strategy has failed" and to come forward with a plan Parliament would support.

    The defeat came after the pro-Brexit European Research Group (ERG) of Conservative MPs announced it had taken a "collective decision" to abstain, because backing the motion would have amounted to an endorsement of efforts to rule out a no-deal Brexit.

    The voting figures showed it was not just hardline Brexiteers that failed to support the government - a number of Tory Remainers also declined to vote, as more than a fifth of the party in the Commons failed to back the government.

    Five Conservative MPs - Brexiteers Peter Bone, Sir Christopher Chope, Philip Hollobone, and Anne Marie Morris, and the pro-Remain Sarah Wollaston - even voted with Labour against the motion.

    Downing Street blamed Mr Corbyn for the defeat, saying he had "yet again put partisan considerations ahead of the national interest" by voting against the government's motion

    As far as the bolded bit above , that really is rich , considering how a section of their own party voted / abstained .

  • HAYSIEHAYSIE Member Posts: 35,705

    Brexit: Theresa May suffers fresh Commons defeat
    Prime Minister Theresa May has suffered another Commons defeat after MPs voted down her approach to Brexit talks.

    MPs voted by 303 to 258 - a majority of 45 - against a motion endorsing the government's negotiating strategy.

    The defeat has no legal force and Downing Street said it would not change the PM's approach to talks with the EU.

    But Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn urged Mrs May to "admit her Brexit strategy has failed" and to come forward with a plan Parliament would support.

    The defeat came after the pro-Brexit European Research Group (ERG) of Conservative MPs announced it had taken a "collective decision" to abstain, because backing the motion would have amounted to an endorsement of efforts to rule out a no-deal Brexit.

    The voting figures showed it was not just hardline Brexiteers that failed to support the government - a number of Tory Remainers also declined to vote, as more than a fifth of the party in the Commons failed to back the government.

    Five Conservative MPs - Brexiteers Peter Bone, Sir Christopher Chope, Philip Hollobone, and Anne Marie Morris, and the pro-Remain Sarah Wollaston - even voted with Labour against the motion.

    Downing Street blamed Mr Corbyn for the defeat, saying he had "yet again put partisan considerations ahead of the national interest" by voting against the government's motion

    As far as the bolded bit above , that really is rich , considering how a section of their own party voted / abstained .

    Impossible for the EU to think that she has any credibility.
  • HAYSIEHAYSIE Member Posts: 35,705
    Who needs the Working Time Regulations?

    A life of servitude awaits us all if we ditch the EU’s flagship employment legislation, say critics – but some are less concerned



    This year marks the 20th anniversary of the Working Time Regulations (WTR). It’s arguably the most important piece of legislation concerning the way we employ people in the UK. And yet it is so taken for granted that its flagship birthday will pass largely unnoticed.



    Now, it faces perhaps its toughest challenge to date. In December, newspapers reported that Michael Gove and Boris Johnson were among members of the cabinet calling for the WTR to be scrapped after Brexit. They are said to have broad support in the Conservative Party, including among influential figures such as Jacob Rees-Mogg and secretary of state for international trade Liam Fox, who has described the regulations as a ‘burden’.

    What do the regulations mean in practice?
    The legislation says workers in the UK can work no more than 48 hours a week on a 17-week average. Under-18s cannot work more than eight hours a day and 40 hours per week. It grants a mandatory right to paid annual leave of at least four weeks, including bank and public holidays, and a minimum 20 minutes’ rest in any shift lasting more than six hours.
    But many workers are excluded, such as those in jobs that require 24-hour staffing, the Armed Forces, emergency services and domestic servants, as well as those where working time is ‘unmeasured’ and essentially within the worker’s control. Employers can ask workers to opt out of the WTR at any point.
    Many are willing to opt out; for example, to ensure they receive overtime pay. But as no one can at present opt out of restrictions on working hours for night shifts or statutory rest breaks, repealing the WTR would allow more flexibility over shift patterns, affecting night workers, for example.
    When it comes to holiday pay, the UK has already gone beyond EU law. The Labour government amended existing regulations in 2007, adding a further 1.6 weeks’ annual leave entitlement to a maximum 28 days for a five-day-week employee.

    https://www.peoplemanagement.co.uk/long-reads/articles/who-needs-working-time-regulations
  • dobiesdrawdobiesdraw Member Posts: 2,793
    Parts of It obviously needs reform...post Brexit would seem like a good opportunity



    WTR rules surrounding holiday and sick leave have been a particular bone of contention for many years. For example, employees who fall ill while on holiday are entitled to claim those days back, and take them at a later date. Furthermore, employees continue to accrue rights to annual leave under the WTR while being on long-term sick leave, providing an opportunity for these rules to be abused.

    There are further examples of the WTR placing a potentially unfair cost on businesses. Compulsory and voluntary overtime, incentive bonuses and results-based commission payments must now be taken into account when calculating an employee’s rate of pay during WTR-mandated annual leave, which, some say, unfairly rewards employees, and benefits those who manipulate the timing of their leave.

    Likewise, depending on when they take their leave, the WTR may entitle part-time employees who only work for part of the year to the same holiday pay as those who work a full year, burdening employers and creating arbitrary distinctions.
  • HAYSIEHAYSIE Member Posts: 35,705
    The Asylum Seeker dispersal programme may well have created Leave Voting areas.

    The contracting out of this has resulted in the companys involved taking up only the very, very, cheapest accommodation available. Therefore dispersing large numbers of asylum seekers into areas that are already the poorest locations in the country, and none into the more affluent areas where no cheap housing is available.
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