The March 27th indicative votes and the House Motion (April 3rd)

Overview


It was government a vote on weather the MPs in the House of Commons scrap the PM's Brexit plan after the screw up on the The 'no deal Brexit' vote of 13 March, 2019 and the March 25th statement.. Theresa May wanted to stay as PM, no matter what; Jeremy Corbyn wanted to be PM, no matter what; and the ERG were steadily transmuting the Conservative party into a de facto fascist party.

What is at stake


It was government a vote on weather the MPs in the House of Commons would accept the Prime minister's Brexit deal. The Irish Backstop Agreement had been modified so that the arbitration committee was made more effective and that a proportionate dispensation of the treaty's functions was added.

The Common European Arrest Warrant, Banking and ecanomic passporting rights, liaison and data transfer work between the European Chemicals Agency (EHCA) and the Health and Safety Executive (HSE); along with the role of the Registration, Evaluation, Authorisation and Restriction of Chemicals (REACH) EU laws would be affected by it in any treaty scenario.

If a No-deal Brexit scenario occurs a 'hard Irish border' will occer, the Chunnel will be closed, the Anglo/French Inter-connector. will be cut, trade with the EU will end and the UK would be put under a de facto blockade by France, Spain, Poland and Germany (to the disgust of the Italians, Latvians, Romanians, Bulgarians, Swedes, Portuguese and Dutch). UK expats would be expelled from the EU and Spain would use it as a cause beli for the violent annexation of the Rock of Gibraltar.

Any business and trade disruption caused by Brexit has been slammed by RBS, Ford, Nissan, Airbus, the CBI, the TUC among others.

The run up

 * 1) The PM said she would resign if she lost.
 * 2) The Speaker said he would stand down before the next election as he indicated early last year.
 * 3) Hillary Benn, the head of the Exiting the EU Select Committee called for moderation and clarity by all parties involved in the debate.

The options

 * 1) No deal
 * 2) Noway +
 * 3) EEA+EFTA
 * 4) Customs union
 * 5) Single market and customs union
 * 6) No Brexit
 * 7) Second Brexit Referendum
 * 8) Extension of the Brexit starting time

Amendment (Oliver Letwin MP)
It is a vote for the MPs to choose thire own Brexit plan.

Voting times
15:00.

The result

 * 1) For- 331.
 * 2) Against- 287.
 * 3) Abstaine-

Amendment (a)
Agree to a May 22nd brexit date extension.

Voting times
20:00

The result

 * 1) For- 441
 * 2) Against- 105.
 * 3) Abstaine-

Amendment to chose indicative vote options
 The options- 
 * 1) No deal
 * 2) Noway +
 * 3) EEA+EFTA
 * 4) Customs union
 * 5) Single market and customs union
 * 6) No Brexit
 * 7) Second Brexit Referendum
 * 8) Extension of the Brexit starting time

Voting times
21:00.

The result

 * 1) No deal- y160, n400.
 * 2) Noway +- y188, n283.
 * 3) EEA+EFTA- y65, n377.
 * 4) Customs union- y264, n272.
 * 5) Single market and customs union- y237, n307.
 * 6) No Brexit-y184, n293.
 * 7) Second Brexit Referendum- y268, n295.
 * 8) Extension of the Brexit starting time- y107, n422.

Aftermath


The SNP leader, ian Blackford, called for a general election.

Tory Brexiteers were appalled that other MPs had disagreed with thire opinions on Europe and were traumatised by the PM's threat to quit, since they wanted here to declare a fascist dictatorship.

The run up

 * 1) Chris Bryant, labour MP for the Rhonda, said he would vote no because he feared the government was making a poor settlement and the ERG would covertly take over the Tory party.
 * 2) Anne Main, the Conservative for St. Albans, said she would vote yes to save Brexit from failure.
 * 3) Gareth Johnston, the Conservative MP for Dartford, said he would vote yes to save Brexit from failure.
 * 4) Vernon Coaker, Labour MP for Gelding, said he thought the government had shown a catastrophic failure of leadership on Brexit.

Voting times
14:28

The result

 * 1) For- 286.
 * 2) Against- 344.
 * 3) Abstaine- N\A.

Aftermath
Nigel Farage says he would stand in the Euro-elections to help legally fight for Brexit. Many of the pro-Brexit public, some Brexiteer Tories and some radical fringe figures conflated democracy with them getting what they wanted, hatred of the political system, violently taking over the nation, gaging the media and violence to their opponents. The radicals threatened to illegally, violently seas power and create a totalitarian fascist dictatorship in the near future.

Aran Brown, Nigel Farage and Tommy Robinson lead a central London pro-Brexit rally, but only Nigel was a democrat and not a rabid racist islamophobe, just racist EU nations.

The Confederation of Small Businesses (CSB) accused it of being more confusing and damaging indecision.

There was some public and labour party scorn for the DUP power play and the ERG's bid to take over the Conservative (Tory) party. They also accused the PM of distracting people's attention from other important issues like urban knife crime.

Large parts of the public were appalled by Brexiteers denying pro-remain polls whilst taking pro-Brexit ones as fact, denying the people had turned against Brexit, denning the March 22nd anti-Brexit protest rally had occur, that they reduce interviews to screaming lyre and alike at journalists as answers by rote in intervenes, wanting to set up a racist state, hysterical intolerance of any criticism, hatred of democracy, violent criminal undertones, faking statistics, intimidation of journalists and hatred of all that don't homage to them.

The run up
There was a very heated and liley debate.

Voting time
16:36.

Results

 * Yes- 322.
 * No- 277.
 * Abstain- N\A.

The run up

 * 1) Peter Kyle, the Labour MP for Hove; Ken Clarke, who is both the the Father of the House and Tory MP for Rushcliffe; Dominic Grieve, Tory MP for Beaconsfield Barry Sheerman, the Labour MP for Huddersfield all called for unity and tolerance and clarity.
 * 2) The Speaker condemned the heavy heckling off Peter Kyle MP.
 * 3) Ed Vaizey, the Tory MP for Wantage condemned the hardline Brexiteers in his party of being undemocratic, devisivre and dictatorial.

Voting time
20:00.

Results

 * Yes-.
 * No-.
 * Abstain-.

Also see

 * 1) No-deal Brexit scenario
 * 2) The Independent Group (United Kingdom)
 * 3) The CBI and TUC unite again against Brexit
 * 4) The 'no deal Brexit' vote of 13 March, 2019 and the March 25th statement.