Nessie
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Jun 16, 2012
- Messages
- 16,233
No it doesn't work like that. A vote is either won or lost.
Once again, the way the ERG* voted on May's deal made no difference to the outcome. May's deal was repeatedly defeated by the opposition parties working in alliance with the DUP*. The ERG* votes meant May's deal was defeated by a bigger margin, but a defeat is a defeat, whether by one vote or four hundred. If the entirety of the ERG* had voted for May's deal every time, it would still have been defeated on each occasion.
*ERG = European Research Group (Jacob Rees-Mogg and Co.)
*DUP = Democratic Unionist Party (Northern Irish party, normally supporting the government - but not on May's deal)
When I said Tory brexiteers, I did not just mean the ERG*. I mean all the Tories who were for leaving, but who voted against May's deal. The vote on May's deal on the 15th January was the largest defeat ever in UK parliamentary history. The second vote was also a massive defeat.
*I know what that and DUP stands for.
Last edited: