This is hilarious - for those familiar with Gollum and LOTR.
Gollum star Andy Serkis releases hilarious Brexit deal parody of Theresa May
If you are not familar with Gollum/Smeagol...
Gollum star Andy Serkis releases hilarious Brexit deal parody of Theresa May
If you are not familar with Gollum/Smeagol...
European
Court of Justice
rules Britain free to revoke Brexit unilaterally
10
December, 2018
The
UK is free to unilaterally revoke a notification to depart from the
EU, the European Court has ruled. The judicial body said this could
be done without changing the terms of London’s membership in the
bloc.
The
European Court of Justice (ECJ) opined in a document issued on Monday
that Britain can reverse Article 50, which stipulates the way a
member state leaves the bloc. The potentially important ruling comes
only one day before the House of Commons votes on Prime Minister
Theresa May’s Brexit deal with the EU.
“When
a Member State has notified the European Council of its intention to
withdraw from the European Union, as the UK has done, that Member
State is free to revoke unilaterally that notification,” the
court’s decision reads.
By
doing so, the respective state “reflects a sovereign decision to
retain its status as a Member State of the European Union.”
That
said, this possibility remains in place “as long as a withdrawal
agreement concluded between the EU and that Member State has not
entered into force.” Another condition is: “If no such agreement
has been concluded, for as long as the two-year period from the date
of the notification of the intention to withdraw from the EU.”
The
case was opened when a cross-party group of British politicians asked
the court whether an EU member such as the UK can decide on its own
to revoke the withdrawal process. It included Labour MEPs Catherine
Stihler and David Martin, Scottish MPs Joanna Cherry Alyn Smith,
along with Green MSPs Andy Wightman and Ross Greer.
They
argued that unilateral revocation is possible and believe it could
provide an opening to an alternative to Brexit, namely holding
another popular vote to allow the UK to remain in the EU.
“If
the UK chooses to change their minds on Brexit, then revoking Article
50 is an option and the European side should make every effort to
welcome the UK back with open arms,” Smith, the SNP member, was
quoted by Reuters.
However,
May’s environment minister, Michael Gove, a staunch Brexit
supporter, denounced the ECJ ruling, insisting the cabinet will not
reverse its decision to leave. “We will leave on March 29, [2019]”
he said, referring to the date set out in the UK-EU Brexit deal.
In
the wake of the landmark vote on the Brexit deal, a group of senior
ministers threatened to step down en masse if May does not try to
negotiate a better deal in Brussels, according to the Telegraph. The
ministers demanded that an alternative deal does not leave the UK
trapped within the EU customs union indefinitely.
On
Sunday, Will Quince resigned as parliamentary private secretary in
the Ministry of Defense, saying in a Telegraph editorial that “I do
not want to be explaining to my constituents why Brexit is still not
over and we are still obeying EU rules in the early 2020s or beyond.”
It seems a false flag attack might be coming in Britain.
It seems a false flag attack might be coming in Britain.
Jihadis
are plotting a devastating CHEMICAL WEAPONS attack in Britain and
could launch a chlorine bomb on London Underground, security chiefs
warn
- Terror chiefs warned that a chemical weapons attack is 'more likely than not'
- The assessment follows 'chatter' between IS senior figures was intercepted
- Islamic State has been inspired by the poisoning of Sergei and Yulia Skripal
9
December, 2018
Terror
chiefs believe a devastating chemical weapons attack in Britain is
now ‘more likely than not’, The Mail on Sunday can reveal.
The
chilling assessment follows the interception of ‘chatter’ between
senior figures in Islamic State (IS). The terror group has been
inspired by the poisoning of former KGB agent Sergei Skripal and his
daughter, Yulia, by Russian agents in March.
Before
the novichok attack in Salisbury, the Government’s Joint Terrorism
Analysis Centre (JTAC) put the risk of a chemical weapons strike by
jihadis at 25 per cent.
Security
sources say that has now surged to more than 50 per cent. There are
particular fears over the potential for a chlorine bomb to be
detonated on the London Underground. The threat is considered so
severe that terror chiefs secretly met with emergency services bosses
a fortnight ago to ‘war game’ their response to such an atrocity.
Read
the article HERE
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