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theaface

Member
Oct 25, 2017
3,149
PREVIOUSLY ON A BLAME OF THRONES...

Why is Britain leaving the European Union?
A referendum - a vote in which everyone (or nearly everyone) of voting age can take part - was held on Thursday 23 June, 2016, to decide whether the UK should leave or remain in the European Union. Leave won by 51.9% to 48.1%. Refusing to bend the knee, the UK instead vowed to take back control. The referendum turnout was 71.8%, with more than 30 million people voting.

What changed in government after the referendum?
Britain got a new Prime Minister - Theresa May. The former home secretary took over from David Cameron, who announced he was resigning on the day he lost the referendum. Like Mr Cameron, Mrs May was against Britain leaving the EU but she played only a very low-key role in the campaign and was never seen as much of an enthusiast for the EU. She became PM without facing a full Conservative leadership contest after her key rivals from what had been the Leave side pulled out.

How did the snap election change things?
Theresa May surprised everyone after the 2017 Easter Bank Holiday by calling an election for 8 June (it had been due in 2020). She said she wanted to strengthen her hand in Brexit negotiations with European leaders. She feared Labour, the SNP and other opposition parties - and members of the House of Lords - would try to block and frustrate her strategy. However Mrs May did not increase her party's seats in the Commons and she ended up weakened, having to rely on support from the 10 MPs from Northern Ireland's Democratic Unionist Party. Her hand was about as strong as Jaime Lannister's after it got chopped off.

So, what's happening now?
In March this year, Theresa May triggered Article 50 of the Lisbon treaty, formally signalling our intent to leave the EU after 2 years. Brexit talks are under way, officially starting on 19 June, 2017. The UK and EU negotiating teams are scheduled to meet face-to-face for one week each month. Their first tasks are trying to get an agreement on the rights of UK and EU citizens after Brexit, reaching a figure for the amount of money the UK will need to pay on leaving, and what happens to the Northern Ireland border. As of September, the talks aren't going particularly well. A Withdrawal Agreement (WA) was completed November 2018. Parliament hated it for various reasons. The government lost a million votes, some by record margins. Parliament have yet to vote a majority for any alternative (seriously ANY). ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

What date will the UK will leave the EU?
For the UK to leave the EU it had to invoke Article 50 of the Lisbon Treaty which gives the two sides two years to agree the terms of the split. Theresa May triggered this process on 29 March, meaning the UK is scheduled to leave on Friday, 29 March 2019. It can be extended if all 28 EU members agree, but at the moment all sides are focusing on that date as being the key one. Extended to April 12th after failing to pass the WA by 11pm March 29th. Likely going to be extended further still.

What's going to happen to all the EU laws in force in the UK?
The Conservative government has introduced the European Union (Withdrawal) Bill to Parliament. If passed, it will end the primacy of EU law in the UK. This "Great Repeal Bill" as it has been called, is supposed to incorporate all EU legislation into UK law in one lump, after which the government will decide over a period of time which parts to keep, change or remove.

What do 'soft' and 'hard' Brexit mean?
These terms have increasingly been used as debate focused on the terms of the UK's departure from the EU. There is no strict definition of either, but they are used to refer to the closeness of the UK's relationship with the EU post-Brexit. So at one extreme, "hard" Brexit could involve the UK refusing to compromise on issues like the free movement of people even if meant leaving the single market. At the other end of the scale, a "soft" Brexit might follow a similar path to Norway, which is a member of the single market and has to accept the free movement of people as a result of that. Labour recently spoke out in favour of the soft option.

Why the OT title?
Because despite what Alexander Boris de Pfeffel Johnson says about whistling, we have made financial commitments to the European Union. Like it or not, the Iron Bank wants what it's owed.


THE PLAYERS

HOUSE CONSERVATIVE

ITNOmoN.jpg

Theresa May - PM and Head of House Conservative
House words - Strong and stable leadership in the seven kingdoms' interest
Current Prime Minister after the last one's reign ended abruptly. Widely considered to lack empathy. Once naughtily ran through the Dothraki great grass sea.

r1WkhPI.jpg

David Davis - Secretary of State for Exiting the European Union
No one understands what he's getting at or what he actually wants.

u5bUPvs.jpg

Boris Johnson - Brexiteer and Foreign Secretary
You shall be my new fool.

tyNaUjn.jpg

Philip Hammond - Master of Coin
Tries to do the right thing, but isn't helped by belonging to a shitty family.

epxhU9N.jpg

Michael Gove - Brexiteer and Secretary of State for Environment
Stabbed his ally in the back, which didn't work out so well for him.

1sJhQDK.jpg

Andrea Leadsom - Brexiteer and Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs
Bat-shit crazy. Plans for British agricultural prosperity last seen drifting out of the moon door.

Iyh0p12.jpg

Disgraced Former Defence Secretary Dr. Liam Fox - Brexiteer and Secretary of State for International Trade
Just because you're a doctor, doesn't excuse what you did. The north remembers.

lVZdksj.jpg

Jacob Rees-Mogg - Brexiteer
Respected in some quarters because he sounds a bit posh. Doesn't approve of abortion, even in cases of rape and patricidal dwarves.

1oLLl6r.jpg

David Cameron - Remainer and former Prime Minister
His poor judgement caused a load of grief and led to his castration. Politically, at least. The piggies aren't safe yet.

i2lXQTm.jpg

Anna Soubry - Remainer and Conservative MP
Oh my sweet summer child.

pdB3q6C.jpg

Kenneth Clarke - Remainer and Conservative MP
Respected politician who's not afraid to tell it like it is.

ZsISGZZ.jpg

Ruth Davidson - Remainer and Leader of Scottish Conservatives
A formidable opponent who garners respect from both sides.


HOUSE LABOUR

u1p6hBX.jpg

Jeremy Corbyn - Head of House Labour
House words - (Coalition of) chaos is a ladder
Campaigned for Remain. Just about. Now supports Brexit. Sort of. Allegiances unclear.

f1gik5C.jpg

Diane Abbott - Remainer and Shadow Home Secretary
Fierce and unpredictable. Can be an asset or a liability. Very quotable.

e55zYLA.jpg

Chuka Umunna - Remainer
"A single day of freedom is worth more than a lifetime in chains."

f2GSoUi.jpg

Angela Eagle - Labour Party
Remember her?


HOUSE SNP

SmNx7s5.jpg

Nicola Sturgeon - Head of House SNP
"We're not clever like you southerners. When we say we'll do something, we do it."
Fights for the rights of the Scottish free folk in the north.

EhnjSB9.jpg

Alex Salmond - SNP
Former First Minister in Scotland.


HOUSE LIB DEM

fdgfbEy.jpg

Vince Cable - Head of House Liberal Democrats
Principled. Has seen some shit.

4pVGczO.jpg

Tim Farron - Remainer and former leader of the Liberal Democrats
Refused to bend the knee to our Brexit gods or LGBT people.

bFAPpoG.jpg

Nick Clegg - Also a remainer and former leader of the Liberal Democrats
Was broken at the last GE, but became the three-eyed raven, able to use his green-seer ability to predict the Brexit shitstorm with fascinating accuracy.


LESSER HOUSES

iCBCk3S.jpg

Nigel Farage - Brexiteer-in-Chief and occasionally former leader of UKIP
He really was a cunt, wasn't he.

jeFNhwj.jpg

Paul Nuttall - Former leader of UKIP
Ambitious, cowardly little weasel of a man. Will say just about anything to protect his own skin.

w79EpCx.jpg

Arlene Foster - Leader of the DUP
Forged an unholy alliance with House Conservative in a 'confidence and supply' relationship, so that the minority government with enemies on all sides is able to limp on.

g3sSEOG.jpg

Michel Barnier - European Chief Negotiator for Brexit
So far has shown himself to be steely and unflappable in the Brexit negotiations.

ahLG5Ch.jpg

Jean-Claude Juncker - President of the European Commission
Provocateur who ultimately has the best interests at heart of the body he represents.

mpIcZnF.jpg

Mark Carney - Governor of the Iron Bank of England
The guy who's unenviable job it is to un-fuck the situation from a monetary perspective.

VztP2be.jpg

Caroline Lucas - Leader of the Green Party
I'm not sure how they're relevant to the story, to be honest.

Karv2CX.jpg

Immigrants
Foreign savages.

sK5SbYo.jpg

Lord Buckethead


KEY QUOTES

"Brexit means Brexit." - Theresa May
"Strong and stable leadership." - Theresa May
"I'm interested in all these terms that have been identified – hard Brexit, soft Brexit, black Brexit, white Brexit, grey Brexit – and actually what we should be looking for is a red, white and blue Brexit."
- Theresa May
"Nothing has changed! Nothing has changed!" - Theresa May
"If you believe you're a citizen of the world, you're a citizen of nowhere." - Theresa May
"People in this country have had enough of experts" - Michael Gove
"I am pro having my cake and pro eating it" - Boris Johnson
"Sovereignty is not just at the national level; that's the mistake of Brexit that other people make." - Emmanuel Macron
"Every lord I've ever met's been a cunt. Don't see why the House of Lords should be any different. - A Eurosceptic Tory backbencher, maybe, probably


iP42wHz.gif

tumblr_inline_oqocq3nFkK1rbgili_540.gif
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Oct 25, 2017
607
If we do turn this into a general UK PoliGAF thread... the title has to be 'BUI DING A C NTRY THA ORKS OR RYON', right?
 
OP
OP
theaface

theaface

Member
Oct 25, 2017
3,149
To those talking about merging this and UK Poli - happy to go with the consensus and the mods perspective. If they are merging, I'll request a title change.
 
Oct 25, 2017
607
My suggestion was on the Discord but it's actually against ERA rules given it's a reference to the old site.

I prefer something like "Beating Dick and Dom to death with dead otters" tho

Problem is, threads last much longer here (I think), due in part to the newer software. That reference will feel dated by the end of the week. Given the speed UK PoliGAF moved at, we could still have that tagline by the time of the next election.
 

FSP

Banned
Oct 25, 2017
1,644
London, United Kingdom
Problem is, threads last much longer here (I think), due in part to the newer software. That reference will feel dated by the end of the week. Given the speed UK PoliGAF moved at, we could still have that tagline by the time of the next election.

Our parlimentary institutions involve a ritual where someone speaks in medieval Norman French. I think we could survive having an old joke. ;)
 
Oct 25, 2017
607
d6993d78c72ae63e2a1ab485a374e756.png



Why is Britain leaving the European Union?
A referendum - a vote in which everyone (or nearly everyone) of voting age can take part - was held on Thursday 23 June, 2016, to decide whether the UK should leave or remain in the European Union. Leave won by 51.9% to 48.1%. Refusing to bend the knee, the UK instead vowed to take back control. The referendum turnout was 71.8%, with more than 30 million people voting.

What changed in government after the referendum?
Britain got a new Prime Minister - Theresa May. The former home secretary took over from David Cameron, who announced he was resigning on the day he lost the referendum. Like Mr Cameron, Mrs May was against Britain leaving the EU but she played only a very low-key role in the campaign and was never seen as much of an enthusiast for the EU. She became PM without facing a full Conservative leadership contest after her key rivals from what had been the Leave side pulled out.

How did the snap election change things?
Theresa May surprised everyone after the 2017 Easter Bank Holiday by calling an election for 8 June (it had been due in 2020). She said she wanted to strengthen her hand in Brexit negotiations with European leaders. She feared Labour, the SNP and other opposition parties - and members of the House of Lords - would try to block and frustrate her strategy. However Mrs May did not increase her party's seats in the Commons and she ended up weakened, having to rely on support from the 10 MPs from Northern Ireland's Democratic Unionist Party. Her hand was about as strong as Jaime Lannister's after it got chopped off.

So, what's happening now?
In March this year, Theresa May triggered Article 50 of the Lisbon treaty, formally signalling our intent to leave the EU after 2 years. Brexit talks are under way, officially starting on 19 June, 2017. The UK and EU negotiating teams are scheduled to meet face-to-face for one week each month. Their first tasks are trying to get an agreement on the rights of UK and EU citizens after Brexit, reaching a figure for the amount of money the UK will need to pay on leaving, and what happens to the Northern Ireland border. As of September, the talks aren't going particularly well.

What date will the UK will leave the EU?
For the UK to leave the EU it had to invoke Article 50 of the Lisbon Treaty which gives the two sides two years to agree the terms of the split. Theresa May triggered this process on 29 March, meaning the UK is scheduled to leave on Friday, 29 March 2019. It can be extended if all 28 EU members agree, but at the moment all sides are focusing on that date as being the key one.

What's going to happen to all the EU laws in force in the UK?
The Conservative government has introduced the European Union (Withdrawal) Bill to Parliament. If passed, it will end the primacy of EU law in the UK. This "Great Repeal Bill" as it has been called, is supposed to incorporate all EU legislation into UK law in one lump, after which the government will decide over a period of time which parts to keep, change or remove.

What do 'soft' and 'hard' Brexit mean?
These terms have increasingly been used as debate focused on the terms of the UK's departure from the EU. There is no strict definition of either, but they are used to refer to the closeness of the UK's relationship with the EU post-Brexit. So at one extreme, "hard" Brexit could involve the UK refusing to compromise on issues like the free movement of people even if meant leaving the single market. At the other end of the scale, a "soft" Brexit might follow a similar path to Norway, which is a member of the single market and has to accept the free movement of people as a result of that. Labour recently spoke out in favour of the soft option.

Why the OT title?
Taken from the A Song of Ice and Fire book of the same name, it refers to crows to picking at the corpses of fallen soldiers on a battlefield. In the case of Brexit, the crows are the major and minor players in the EU looking to lap up the best and brightest of our talent as well as systematically relocate the UK's financial sector to places like Paris and Frankfurt.



e60c1c8070da56c8380dacd041b6a7ec.png



c10f4179811a162caae7c627e86e0125.png

Theresa May - PM and Head of House Conservative
House words - Strong and stable leadership in the seven kingdoms' interest
Current Prime Minister after the last one's reign ended abruptly. Widely considered to lack empathy. Once naughtily ran through the Dothraki great grass sea.

r1WkhPI.jpg

David Davis - Secretary of State for Exiting the European Union
No one understands what he's getting at or what he actually wants.

u5bUPvs.jpg

Boris Johnson - Brexiteer and Foreign Secretary
You shall be my new fool.

tyNaUjn.jpg

Philip Hammond - Master of Coin
Tries to do the right thing, but isn't helped by belonging to a shitty family.

epxhU9N.jpg

Michael Gove - Brexiteer and Secretary of State for Environment
Stabbed his ally in the back, which didn't work out so well for him.

1sJhQDK.jpg

Andrea Leadsom - Brexiteer and Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs
Bat-shit crazy. Plans for British agricultural prosperity last seen drifting out of the moon door.

Iyh0p12.jpg

Disgraced Former Defence Secretary Dr. Liam Fox - Brexiteer and Secretary of State for International Trade
Just because you're a doctor, doesn't excuse what you did. The north remembers.

lVZdksj.jpg

Jacob Rees-Mogg - Brexiteer
Respected in some quarters because he sounds a bit posh. Doesn't approve of abortion, even in cases of rape and patricidal dwarves.

1oLLl6r.jpg

David Cameron - Remainer and former Prime Minister
His poor judgement caused a load of grief and led to his castration. Politically, at least. The piggies aren't safe yet.

i2lXQTm.jpg

Anna Soubry - Remainer and Conservative MP
Oh my sweet summer child.

pdB3q6C.jpg

Kenneth Clarke - Remainer and Conservative MP
Respected politician who's not afraid to tell it like it is.

ZsISGZZ.jpg

Ruth Davidson - Remainer and Leader of Scottish Conservatives
A formidable opponent who garners respect from both sides.



0281e74e0922330b5ef5e955b77aa91b.png


u1p6hBX.jpg

Jeremy Corbyn - Head of House Labour
House words - (Coalition of) chaos is a ladder
Campaigned for Remain. Just about. Now supports Brexit. Sort of. Allegiances unclear.

f1gik5C.jpg

Diane Abbott - Remainer and Shadow Home Secretary
Fierce and unpredictable. Can be an asset or a liability. Very quotable.

e55zYLA.jpg

Chuka Umunna - Remainer
"A single day of freedom is worth more than a lifetime in chains."

f2GSoUi.jpg

Angela Eagle - Labour Party
Remember her?



2c05e52b50790c529f962ab312174eaf.png


SmNx7s5.jpg

Nicola Sturgeon - Head of House SNP
"We're not clever like you southerners. When we say we'll do something, we do it."
Fights for the rights of the Scottish free folk in the north.

EhnjSB9.jpg

Alex Salmond - SNP
Former First Minister in Scotland.



db90c5357fe40dde676ec60c801a228d.png


fdgfbEy.jpg

Vince Cable - Head of House Liberal Democrats
Principled. Has seen some shit.

4pVGczO.jpg

Tim Farron - Remainer and former leader of the Liberal Democrats
Refused to bend the knee to our Brexit gods or LGBT people.

bFAPpoG.jpg

Nick Clegg - Also a remainer and former leader of the Liberal Democrats
Was broken at the last GE, but became the three-eyed raven, able to use his green-seer ability to predict the Brexit shitstorm with fascinating accuracy.



be43574cce7d794591e0789e5f5eb692.png


iCBCk3S.jpg

Nigel Farage - Brexiteer-in-Chief and occasionally former leader of UKIP
He really was a cunt, wasn't he.

jeFNhwj.jpg

Paul Nuttall - Former leader of UKIP
Ambitious, cowardly little weasel of a man. Will say just about anything to protect his own skin.

w79EpCx.jpg

Arlene Foster - Leader of the DUP
Forged an unholy alliance with House Conservative in a 'confidence and supply' relationship, so that the minority government with enemies on all sides is able to limp on.

g3sSEOG.jpg

Michel Barnier - European Chief Negotiator for Brexit
So far has shown himself to be steely and unflappable in the Brexit negotiations.

ahLG5Ch.jpg

Jean-Claude Juncker - President of the European Commission
Provocateur who ultimately has the best interests at heart of the body he represents.

mpIcZnF.jpg

Mark Carney - Governor of the Iron Bank of England
The guy who's unenviable job it is to un-fuck the situation from a monetary perspective.

VztP2be.jpg

Caroline Lucas - Leader of the Green Party
I'm not sure how they're relevant to the story, to be honest.

Karv2CX.jpg

Immigrants
Foreign savages.

sK5SbYo.jpg

Lord Buckethead



3f6bb17751679407b5dac15818b4e676.png



"Brexit means Brexit." - Theresa May
"Strong and stable leadership." - Theresa May
"I'm interested in all these terms that have been identified – hard Brexit, soft Brexit, black Brexit, white Brexit, grey Brexit – and actually what we should be looking for is a red, white and blue Brexit."
- Theresa May
"Nothing has changed! Nothing has changed!" - Theresa May
"If you believe you're a citizen of the world, you're a citizen of nowhere." - Theresa May
"People in this country have had enough of experts" - Michael Gove
"I am pro having my cake and pro eating it" - Boris Johnson
"Sovereignty is not just at the national level; that's the mistake of Brexit that other people make." - Emmanuel Macron
"Every lord I've ever met's been a cunt. Don't see why the House of Lords should be any different. - A Eurosceptic Tory backbencher, maybe, probably



iP42wHz.gif

tumblr_inline_oqocq3nFkK1rbgili_540.gif
 

Norfolk Enchants

Alt-Account
Banned
Oct 25, 2017
134
I did not like the protectionist speech by tusk the other day, I get it, I do, you don't owe us shit once left, but if that is how it is going to go then my thinking is starting to change to a more UK based position
 

gosublime

Member
Oct 25, 2017
6,428
So glad to see this - I was affleck1981 before. Glad to see the OT but not glad for Brexit. Obviously.
 
Oct 25, 2017
434
It's sad that splintering from GAF was handled with more foresight, communication and direction than Brexit has been, and will be.
 

Cor

Member
Oct 25, 2017
1,463
Mang, i'd never seen that GoT Brexit thing. Inspired. Also grey worm works on *so many levels*
 

Zutroy

Member
Oct 25, 2017
1,588
Was a lurker of this thread on gaf but missed it a lot the last few days. Glad to see it back!
 

Snarfington

Avenger
Oct 25, 2017
2,926
So glad this thread is here with some of my favourite remoaners.
Because this whole mess just gets more depressing by the day.
 

killer_clank

Member
Oct 25, 2017
836
Hi all. Seems like during the downtime there was little Brexit news so we're all back up and running for the continued shitshow.
 

Uzzy

Gabe’s little helper
Member
Oct 25, 2017
26,996
Hull, UK
Greetings fellow saboteurs and enemies of the people.

I second the proposal to have a separate UK Politics thread, as I doubt my griping about the North getting a nice fresh turnip for investment in its infrastructure is all that relevant to the Brexit discussions.
 

Zellia

Banned
Oct 25, 2017
2,769
UK
I wanted to call this place BrexitERA but I don't think that actually describes most of us...

Hello anyways
 

MrMysterio

Member
Oct 25, 2017
701
Glad to see this thread back, kind of.
As an EU citizen in the UK I just wish the riots would finally start with so much democratic backsliding going on.

Are we doing betting pools for what'll happen in December?
 
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