Gransnet forums

News & politics

Could you imagine Mrs Thatcher breaking the law?

(216 Posts)
Whitewavemark2 Wed 09-Sep-20 07:47:46

Thatcher is someone I disagreed with passionately, but I respected her ability, honesty and strength of character.

What Johnson us proposing would never, never have been given a moments thought by Thatcher.

She respected the British constitution and standing throughout the world.

Thatcher gain her reputation throughout the world for standing up for just that.

We are going to lose everything and celebrate the fact with Festival!!

God spare us

Whitewavemark2 Sun 13-Sep-20 13:24:44

“Good morning from #Germany, where #UK is becoming less important as an export market & hard Brexit is losing much of its fear. Exports to UK have fallen <€70bn in the past 12mths. Britain is now only the 5th most important export mkt for Germany may soon be overtaken by #Italy.“

Blinko Sun 13-Sep-20 13:25:44

^Could you imagine Mrs Thatcher breaking the law?*

Ask the miners at Orgreave...

Jaberwok Sun 13-Sep-20 15:21:42

Hooray, then you won't mind us leaving then?! Perhaps you'd kindly call off your gorrillas and leave us alone as in our world there's more to life than money!

Whitewavemark2 Sun 13-Sep-20 15:35:20

Jaberwok

Hooray, then you won't mind us leaving then?! Perhaps you'd kindly call off your gorrillas and leave us alone as in our world there's more to life than money!

That has been true for a while now.

The nonsense sold to you that “they need us more than we need them” was never true.

Whitewavemark2 Sun 13-Sep-20 15:56:56

The ECHR was proposed by Churchill, drafted by British lawyers and approved by the Council of Europe in 1953. It came into effect in September 1953, 40 years before the Treaty of Maastricht. Denouncing it as part of Brexit is denouncing British history, not European legislation.

paddyanne Sun 13-Sep-20 16:13:42

The "UK" was NEVER run by the EU ,only 5% of laws came from there and that same "UK" voted FOR them.Contrast the situation in Scotland where Westminster has rule over 80% of SCOTS laws .Thats laws we get NO control over .Now do you realise why we need Independence ? Or do you still thaink its "normal" to be run by your next door neighbour?

GillT57 Sun 13-Sep-20 17:01:30

Oh Paddyanne do you have to bring your perceived unfairness to Scotland into everything? And before you start on me, I say this as a Scot. The issue here is the proposed disregard of the Rule of Law and dismissal of the hard earned and negotiated GFA. Anyone who thinks the behaviour of this current administration is acceptable, and then starts bringing in references to that old fool Bill Cash (yes, I mean you Jabberwok), really needs to have a good look at what is going on, at what we, as a country stand to lose. It really is ok to admit that it is wrong, nobody is asking you to start voting for a Labour government, just admit that this disgraceful proposal by the government that you voted for is wrong. Today, I had lunch with a died in the wool Tory, a retired policeman and a strong Brexit supporter and he said that he just cannot recognise this as the givernment of law and order that he voted for, he is disgusted. He cannot be alone

Whitewavemark2 Sun 13-Sep-20 17:27:47

Explanation of Johnson’s behaviour.

Michael Dugghan

Lots of requests for a step-by-step explanation of Johnson's plans to breach Protocol on Irish border.

No problem. And by the end, you'll understand why this man is totally unfit to hold public office.

Voila:

For Ireland (north and south) May's red lines / decision to leave Customs Union & Single Market transformed Brexit from "problem" into "crisis": customs & regulatory checks on goods have to take place somewhere; if across Ireland = serious economic, social & political impacts

When May came to realise this, she sought to minimise damage of own policy by proposing temporary solution (the infamous "backstop"): whole UK would remain in effective customs union with EU; but some regulatory checks would happen on movement of goods between GB and NI

Brexit Loons went bonkers: May's backstop would stop them pursuing long- & dear-held plans to deregulate UK social and welfare standards; & hinder their (laughable) fantasy that "Global Britain" would revolutionise the terms of world trade in its own favour
having ousted May, Johnson renegotiated withdrawal deal specifically on Irish border: NI & it alone would remain subject to wide range of EU customs and regulatory rules - with extensive checks on trade in goods between GB and NI; and not just on temporary but permanent basis

Johnson's new Protocol was clear & specific about fact that NI will be subject to entirely distinct rules from GB (including eg powers for various EU institutions to decide about NI issues); & that this= significant barriers for NI goods into GB but especially GB goods into NI

with NI dumped by the wayside, Brexit Loons were delighted: now free to deregulate UK & sign trade deals with Trump etc. Johnson sold this as his "Great New Brexit Deal" in the election & then passed it through Parliament. Though he was already lying about it even by then...

but all along, we warned of real risk that Johnson had only signed his “oven ready deal” to win general election. Having done so, real plan would be to tear up withdrawal treaty, including own NI border plan, ruin talks on future EU-UK relations & blame EU for resulting mess

Which is precisely what Johnson went on to do. From outset, made mockery of talks on future relations & also ruled out transition extension = heading for no deal Brexit (on top of pandemic). And very quickly, made clear he would do everything possible to undermine border plans

Eg refusing permission for EU to even have an office in Belfast. But culminating in UK Internal Market Bill – which clearly, deliberately and consciously empowers Johnson directly and without any ambiguity to breach two key parts of his own legally binding Withdrawal Agreement

First: UKIM Bill empowers UK to ignore controls on goods leaving NI for GB. From point of view of “hard border” that is less serious than if he proposed ignoring controls on goods leaving GB for NI: after all, goods are heading away from EU so no risk of harming Single Market

But this is still serious stuff: not only a clear breach of the legally binding withdrawal treaty; also raises questions about WTO compliance if UK is not treating all trading partners equally; & of course makes NI a smuggler and fraudster’s paradise for access into entire UK

Secondly: UKIM Bill empowers UK to ignore EU rules that would prevent unlawfully subsidised goods entering Single Market via NI. From “hard border” perspective this is very serious: UK effectively letting NI act as backdoor to engage in unfair dumping of British goods into EU
To the Brexit Loons, Johnson’s behaviour might look like it delivers on all the things they ever really wanted: teach Ireland a lesson; scupper relations with EU for years to come; totally free to deregulate UK & realign with hard right allies like the vile Trump
But in real world: Johnson’s plans are a serious violation of his own Withdrawal Agreement; resurrect fears of a hard border in Ireland; damage EU-UK talks on future relations in trade and security; undermine rules-based international order; & harm UK reputation and interests

And Johnson’s attempts to justify his plans are so grossly dishonest (indeed, offensive) that it confirms him & his regime as full-scale post-truth populists of the most degenerate variety. A risk to peace and stability in Ireland. And a growing threat to UK democracy.

growstuff Sun 13-Sep-20 18:08:46

Jaberwok

Hooray, then you won't mind us leaving then?! Perhaps you'd kindly call off your gorrillas and leave us alone as in our world there's more to life than money!

Which gorillas?

Seeing gorillas seems to be a symptom of having serious anger and fantast issues.

varian Sun 13-Sep-20 19:25:39

Brainwashing by the Daily Express?

I may be wrong it could be The Sun or The Daily Mail or possibly the Torygraph.

Whitewavemark2 Mon 14-Sep-20 07:10:02

FT reporting that the new a Japanese deal the U.K. has just signed is stricter regarding state aid curbs than the current ones being negotiated by the EU.

Q.
Has the government read it and not understood, and once it does in 6 months want to break the contract.? Or

It does understand it and the fuss it is making over the EU agreement is because the government is intent on a no deal?

I suspect the latter.

Whitewavemark2 Mon 14-Sep-20 07:30:09

Johnson promises ERG and hedge fund managers a No Deal.

Free lunch on me!

t.co/SpH8y5NOxO?amp=1

Dinahmo Thu 17-Sep-20 14:29:18

MayBee70

And also, Mrs Thatcher was a scientist and countries that have had people in power with a scientific background seem to have fared much better.

Thatcher the scientist!

After graduating in 1947 she moved to Essex for a job with BX Plastics. In 1948 She applied for a job with ICI but was rejected by the HR department as being "headstrong, obstinate and dangerously self opinionated"

She became increasingly active in politics and was adopted as Conservative candidate for Dartford in February 1949. She met Dennis at a dinner to celebrate her adoption. Whilst preparing for the election she worked as part of a team for Lyons researching into emulsifiers for ice cream. She subsequently claimed that she invented Mr Whippy. Hardly the best ice cream in the world, even then.

So much for her scientific career.

As regards her integrity, whilst PM she sailed very close to the wind over arms deals that involved her son Mark.

Alegrias Thu 17-Sep-20 14:50:09

I don't want to be seen to be defending Mrs Thatcher, the words I would use to describe her couldn't be used on Gransnet....

She didn't have a scientific career but she did have a scientific mind. She understood when technical things were explained to her and knew the right questions to ask, even on things she hadn't been briefed on. I heard that from colleagues in the seventies and eighties whose opinion I trusted.

varian Thu 17-Sep-20 15:32:28

My opinion of Margaret Thatcher is the same as yours Alegrais . Her policies were appalling but she was intelligent, well-educated and hard-working. Johnson is none of these.