Do any Labour MPs support no-deal?Why do the Tories keep Boris Johnson around?The Chequers Plan has been rebuffed by the EU, so why is it still “alive”?Would a Government who lose the confidence of the House really delay an election until after the event over which that confidence was lost transpires?Have own MPs ever voted against the government in a no confidence vote?Does “government” mean something different in British and American English?How did Theresa May remain PM after her Brexit deal was rejected?What are valid criticisms of how Theresa May has approached Brexit?Is there any mechanism to remove a UK Prime Minister on the grounds of 'insanity'?How could May pull off a 4th vote on her Brexit deal?Are British MPs missing the point, with these 'Indicative Votes'?
Patience, young "Padovan"
Why is "Reports" in sentence down without "The"
Theorems that impeded progress
If Manufacturer spice model and Datasheet give different values which should I use?
Motorized valve interfering with button?
Why can't I see bouncing of a switch on an oscilloscope?
Why don't electron-positron collisions release infinite energy?
A newer friend of my brother's gave him a load of baseball cards that are supposedly extremely valuable. Is this a scam?
Example of a relative pronoun
When blogging recipes, how can I support both readers who want the narrative/journey and ones who want the printer-friendly recipe?
How to type dʒ symbol (IPA) on Mac?
How does one intimidate enemies without having the capacity for violence?
Why CLRS example on residual networks does not follows its formula?
Book about a traveler who helps planets in need
Do any Labour MPs support no-deal?
I probably found a bug with the sudo apt install function
GPS Rollover on Android Smartphones
How can I fix this gap between bookcases I made?
Why doesn't Newton's third law mean a person bounces back to where they started when they hit the ground?
How is it possible to have an ability score that is less than 3?
Why did the Germans forbid the possession of pet pigeons in Rostov-on-Don in 1941?
Is there a familial term for apples and pears?
How do I create uniquely male characters?
Do Phineas and Ferb ever actually get busted in real time?
Do any Labour MPs support no-deal?
Why do the Tories keep Boris Johnson around?The Chequers Plan has been rebuffed by the EU, so why is it still “alive”?Would a Government who lose the confidence of the House really delay an election until after the event over which that confidence was lost transpires?Have own MPs ever voted against the government in a no confidence vote?Does “government” mean something different in British and American English?How did Theresa May remain PM after her Brexit deal was rejected?What are valid criticisms of how Theresa May has approached Brexit?Is there any mechanism to remove a UK Prime Minister on the grounds of 'insanity'?How could May pull off a 4th vote on her Brexit deal?Are British MPs missing the point, with these 'Indicative Votes'?
This week Theresa May has reached across one parliamentary divide to ask the Labour Party to work with her to pass a Brexit deal.
This necessity has been reached because the PM is unable to reach across the no-deal divide within her own party.
Is there any equivalent to the ERG and its pro no-deal stance within the Labour Party?
united-kingdom brexit labour-party
add a comment |
This week Theresa May has reached across one parliamentary divide to ask the Labour Party to work with her to pass a Brexit deal.
This necessity has been reached because the PM is unable to reach across the no-deal divide within her own party.
Is there any equivalent to the ERG and its pro no-deal stance within the Labour Party?
united-kingdom brexit labour-party
add a comment |
This week Theresa May has reached across one parliamentary divide to ask the Labour Party to work with her to pass a Brexit deal.
This necessity has been reached because the PM is unable to reach across the no-deal divide within her own party.
Is there any equivalent to the ERG and its pro no-deal stance within the Labour Party?
united-kingdom brexit labour-party
This week Theresa May has reached across one parliamentary divide to ask the Labour Party to work with her to pass a Brexit deal.
This necessity has been reached because the PM is unable to reach across the no-deal divide within her own party.
Is there any equivalent to the ERG and its pro no-deal stance within the Labour Party?
united-kingdom brexit labour-party
united-kingdom brexit labour-party
edited 8 hours ago
JJJ
5,96622454
5,96622454
asked 9 hours ago
JontiaJontia
4,2902034
4,2902034
add a comment |
add a comment |
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
There's no ERG equivalent on Labour's end. But there are a few Labour MPs who are staunch Leavers, either on a personal basis, or because they represent constituencies that voted heavily for Leave during the referendum, or because they're concerned about the damage that not leaving might do to the UK and its institutions.
As a result, a handful Labour MPs rebel at each Brexit vote. But note that the exact number of Labour rebels, and the reasons they rebel, varies from one vote to another.
For instance, 9 Labour MPs voted against Yvette Cooper's amendment on April 3rd. On March 25th's vote on having indicative votes 8 Labour MPs voted against the Letwin amendment.
The votes around March 13th are some of the most interesting for your question, I think. Only 2 Labour MPs rebelled against the amendment that insisted that the UK should not leave the EU without an agreement, at any time.
They were [Reject No Deal; Reject No Deal under any circumstances; Request a delay to Brexit]:
Stephen Hepburn Jarrow (Leave 62%) Aye Aye No
Kate Hoey Vauxhall (Remain 78%) Aye Aye No
During the same week, here's how the others who rejected Yvette Cooper's recent amendment voted:
Sir Kevin Barron Rother Valley (Leave 67%) - - Aye
Ronnie Campbell Blyth Valley (Leave 60%) Aye No -
Rosie Cooper West Lancashire (Leave 55%) No No Aye
Caroline Flint Don Valley (Leave 69%) No No Aye
John Mann Bassetlaw (Leave 68%) Aye - Aye
Dennis Skinner Bolsover (Leave 70%) Aye No No
Graham Stringer Blackley and Broughton (Leave 51%) Aye - No
(To clarify why I singled out the above, voting against the Cooper amendment at this point is a de facto no deal embracement for MPs, unless they make the unlikely bet that the EU will miraculously accept to keep the soap opera going, or the equally unlikely one that MPs will repeal Article 50 or pass May's deal in some form or another. The only reasonable excuse they can put forward to wiggle themselves out of not supporting it is by saying it's better to not tie the government's hands -- which, let's face it, hasn't exactly been Labour policy of late, if ever.)
I suspect these are more interesting that the No Deal motion that MPs voted on as part of a series of indicative votes (see JJJ's answer), because when the latter were occurring there were much more interesting options on the ballot (the MPs were using approval voting rather than their usual Ayes/Noes), and MPs were seeking a way out of the deadlock they were in -- even if they didn't necessarily approve what they voted to back.
Of the above mentioned MPs, I'd raise that Kate Hoey stands out somewhat as a very staunch Leaver IMHO -- it takes pumpkin sized balls to go against the will of your voters. Insofar as I'm aware she's the only Labour MP to put forward that a deal shouldn't be needed to begin with.
There is no "Labor" Party in the UK.
– Michael Harvey
6 hours ago
@MichaelHarvey: thanks for raising the typo. ;-)
– Denis de Bernardy
5 hours ago
add a comment |
Do any Labour MPs support no-deal?
Yes, three labour MPs voted for Mr Baron's motion B (No deal) in the indicative votes on the 27th of March 2019. From the voting records of the House of Commons, those MPs were:
Mr Ronnie Campbell MP (Blyth Valley
)
Kate Hoey MP (Vauxhall)
Mr Dennis Skinner MP (Bolsover)
I thought Skinner had resigned the whip?
– Jontia
8 hours ago
2
@Jontia I think that was another Frank.
– JJJ
8 hours ago
add a comment |
Your Answer
StackExchange.ready(function()
var channelOptions =
tags: "".split(" "),
id: "475"
;
initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);
StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function()
// Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled)
StackExchange.using("snippets", function()
createEditor();
);
else
createEditor();
);
function createEditor()
StackExchange.prepareEditor(
heartbeatType: 'answer',
autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
convertImagesToLinks: false,
noModals: true,
showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
reputationToPostImages: null,
bindNavPrevention: true,
postfix: "",
imageUploader:
brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
allowUrls: true
,
noCode: true, onDemand: true,
discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
);
);
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
StackExchange.ready(
function ()
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fpolitics.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f40322%2fdo-any-labour-mps-support-no-deal%23new-answer', 'question_page');
);
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
There's no ERG equivalent on Labour's end. But there are a few Labour MPs who are staunch Leavers, either on a personal basis, or because they represent constituencies that voted heavily for Leave during the referendum, or because they're concerned about the damage that not leaving might do to the UK and its institutions.
As a result, a handful Labour MPs rebel at each Brexit vote. But note that the exact number of Labour rebels, and the reasons they rebel, varies from one vote to another.
For instance, 9 Labour MPs voted against Yvette Cooper's amendment on April 3rd. On March 25th's vote on having indicative votes 8 Labour MPs voted against the Letwin amendment.
The votes around March 13th are some of the most interesting for your question, I think. Only 2 Labour MPs rebelled against the amendment that insisted that the UK should not leave the EU without an agreement, at any time.
They were [Reject No Deal; Reject No Deal under any circumstances; Request a delay to Brexit]:
Stephen Hepburn Jarrow (Leave 62%) Aye Aye No
Kate Hoey Vauxhall (Remain 78%) Aye Aye No
During the same week, here's how the others who rejected Yvette Cooper's recent amendment voted:
Sir Kevin Barron Rother Valley (Leave 67%) - - Aye
Ronnie Campbell Blyth Valley (Leave 60%) Aye No -
Rosie Cooper West Lancashire (Leave 55%) No No Aye
Caroline Flint Don Valley (Leave 69%) No No Aye
John Mann Bassetlaw (Leave 68%) Aye - Aye
Dennis Skinner Bolsover (Leave 70%) Aye No No
Graham Stringer Blackley and Broughton (Leave 51%) Aye - No
(To clarify why I singled out the above, voting against the Cooper amendment at this point is a de facto no deal embracement for MPs, unless they make the unlikely bet that the EU will miraculously accept to keep the soap opera going, or the equally unlikely one that MPs will repeal Article 50 or pass May's deal in some form or another. The only reasonable excuse they can put forward to wiggle themselves out of not supporting it is by saying it's better to not tie the government's hands -- which, let's face it, hasn't exactly been Labour policy of late, if ever.)
I suspect these are more interesting that the No Deal motion that MPs voted on as part of a series of indicative votes (see JJJ's answer), because when the latter were occurring there were much more interesting options on the ballot (the MPs were using approval voting rather than their usual Ayes/Noes), and MPs were seeking a way out of the deadlock they were in -- even if they didn't necessarily approve what they voted to back.
Of the above mentioned MPs, I'd raise that Kate Hoey stands out somewhat as a very staunch Leaver IMHO -- it takes pumpkin sized balls to go against the will of your voters. Insofar as I'm aware she's the only Labour MP to put forward that a deal shouldn't be needed to begin with.
There is no "Labor" Party in the UK.
– Michael Harvey
6 hours ago
@MichaelHarvey: thanks for raising the typo. ;-)
– Denis de Bernardy
5 hours ago
add a comment |
There's no ERG equivalent on Labour's end. But there are a few Labour MPs who are staunch Leavers, either on a personal basis, or because they represent constituencies that voted heavily for Leave during the referendum, or because they're concerned about the damage that not leaving might do to the UK and its institutions.
As a result, a handful Labour MPs rebel at each Brexit vote. But note that the exact number of Labour rebels, and the reasons they rebel, varies from one vote to another.
For instance, 9 Labour MPs voted against Yvette Cooper's amendment on April 3rd. On March 25th's vote on having indicative votes 8 Labour MPs voted against the Letwin amendment.
The votes around March 13th are some of the most interesting for your question, I think. Only 2 Labour MPs rebelled against the amendment that insisted that the UK should not leave the EU without an agreement, at any time.
They were [Reject No Deal; Reject No Deal under any circumstances; Request a delay to Brexit]:
Stephen Hepburn Jarrow (Leave 62%) Aye Aye No
Kate Hoey Vauxhall (Remain 78%) Aye Aye No
During the same week, here's how the others who rejected Yvette Cooper's recent amendment voted:
Sir Kevin Barron Rother Valley (Leave 67%) - - Aye
Ronnie Campbell Blyth Valley (Leave 60%) Aye No -
Rosie Cooper West Lancashire (Leave 55%) No No Aye
Caroline Flint Don Valley (Leave 69%) No No Aye
John Mann Bassetlaw (Leave 68%) Aye - Aye
Dennis Skinner Bolsover (Leave 70%) Aye No No
Graham Stringer Blackley and Broughton (Leave 51%) Aye - No
(To clarify why I singled out the above, voting against the Cooper amendment at this point is a de facto no deal embracement for MPs, unless they make the unlikely bet that the EU will miraculously accept to keep the soap opera going, or the equally unlikely one that MPs will repeal Article 50 or pass May's deal in some form or another. The only reasonable excuse they can put forward to wiggle themselves out of not supporting it is by saying it's better to not tie the government's hands -- which, let's face it, hasn't exactly been Labour policy of late, if ever.)
I suspect these are more interesting that the No Deal motion that MPs voted on as part of a series of indicative votes (see JJJ's answer), because when the latter were occurring there were much more interesting options on the ballot (the MPs were using approval voting rather than their usual Ayes/Noes), and MPs were seeking a way out of the deadlock they were in -- even if they didn't necessarily approve what they voted to back.
Of the above mentioned MPs, I'd raise that Kate Hoey stands out somewhat as a very staunch Leaver IMHO -- it takes pumpkin sized balls to go against the will of your voters. Insofar as I'm aware she's the only Labour MP to put forward that a deal shouldn't be needed to begin with.
There is no "Labor" Party in the UK.
– Michael Harvey
6 hours ago
@MichaelHarvey: thanks for raising the typo. ;-)
– Denis de Bernardy
5 hours ago
add a comment |
There's no ERG equivalent on Labour's end. But there are a few Labour MPs who are staunch Leavers, either on a personal basis, or because they represent constituencies that voted heavily for Leave during the referendum, or because they're concerned about the damage that not leaving might do to the UK and its institutions.
As a result, a handful Labour MPs rebel at each Brexit vote. But note that the exact number of Labour rebels, and the reasons they rebel, varies from one vote to another.
For instance, 9 Labour MPs voted against Yvette Cooper's amendment on April 3rd. On March 25th's vote on having indicative votes 8 Labour MPs voted against the Letwin amendment.
The votes around March 13th are some of the most interesting for your question, I think. Only 2 Labour MPs rebelled against the amendment that insisted that the UK should not leave the EU without an agreement, at any time.
They were [Reject No Deal; Reject No Deal under any circumstances; Request a delay to Brexit]:
Stephen Hepburn Jarrow (Leave 62%) Aye Aye No
Kate Hoey Vauxhall (Remain 78%) Aye Aye No
During the same week, here's how the others who rejected Yvette Cooper's recent amendment voted:
Sir Kevin Barron Rother Valley (Leave 67%) - - Aye
Ronnie Campbell Blyth Valley (Leave 60%) Aye No -
Rosie Cooper West Lancashire (Leave 55%) No No Aye
Caroline Flint Don Valley (Leave 69%) No No Aye
John Mann Bassetlaw (Leave 68%) Aye - Aye
Dennis Skinner Bolsover (Leave 70%) Aye No No
Graham Stringer Blackley and Broughton (Leave 51%) Aye - No
(To clarify why I singled out the above, voting against the Cooper amendment at this point is a de facto no deal embracement for MPs, unless they make the unlikely bet that the EU will miraculously accept to keep the soap opera going, or the equally unlikely one that MPs will repeal Article 50 or pass May's deal in some form or another. The only reasonable excuse they can put forward to wiggle themselves out of not supporting it is by saying it's better to not tie the government's hands -- which, let's face it, hasn't exactly been Labour policy of late, if ever.)
I suspect these are more interesting that the No Deal motion that MPs voted on as part of a series of indicative votes (see JJJ's answer), because when the latter were occurring there were much more interesting options on the ballot (the MPs were using approval voting rather than their usual Ayes/Noes), and MPs were seeking a way out of the deadlock they were in -- even if they didn't necessarily approve what they voted to back.
Of the above mentioned MPs, I'd raise that Kate Hoey stands out somewhat as a very staunch Leaver IMHO -- it takes pumpkin sized balls to go against the will of your voters. Insofar as I'm aware she's the only Labour MP to put forward that a deal shouldn't be needed to begin with.
There's no ERG equivalent on Labour's end. But there are a few Labour MPs who are staunch Leavers, either on a personal basis, or because they represent constituencies that voted heavily for Leave during the referendum, or because they're concerned about the damage that not leaving might do to the UK and its institutions.
As a result, a handful Labour MPs rebel at each Brexit vote. But note that the exact number of Labour rebels, and the reasons they rebel, varies from one vote to another.
For instance, 9 Labour MPs voted against Yvette Cooper's amendment on April 3rd. On March 25th's vote on having indicative votes 8 Labour MPs voted against the Letwin amendment.
The votes around March 13th are some of the most interesting for your question, I think. Only 2 Labour MPs rebelled against the amendment that insisted that the UK should not leave the EU without an agreement, at any time.
They were [Reject No Deal; Reject No Deal under any circumstances; Request a delay to Brexit]:
Stephen Hepburn Jarrow (Leave 62%) Aye Aye No
Kate Hoey Vauxhall (Remain 78%) Aye Aye No
During the same week, here's how the others who rejected Yvette Cooper's recent amendment voted:
Sir Kevin Barron Rother Valley (Leave 67%) - - Aye
Ronnie Campbell Blyth Valley (Leave 60%) Aye No -
Rosie Cooper West Lancashire (Leave 55%) No No Aye
Caroline Flint Don Valley (Leave 69%) No No Aye
John Mann Bassetlaw (Leave 68%) Aye - Aye
Dennis Skinner Bolsover (Leave 70%) Aye No No
Graham Stringer Blackley and Broughton (Leave 51%) Aye - No
(To clarify why I singled out the above, voting against the Cooper amendment at this point is a de facto no deal embracement for MPs, unless they make the unlikely bet that the EU will miraculously accept to keep the soap opera going, or the equally unlikely one that MPs will repeal Article 50 or pass May's deal in some form or another. The only reasonable excuse they can put forward to wiggle themselves out of not supporting it is by saying it's better to not tie the government's hands -- which, let's face it, hasn't exactly been Labour policy of late, if ever.)
I suspect these are more interesting that the No Deal motion that MPs voted on as part of a series of indicative votes (see JJJ's answer), because when the latter were occurring there were much more interesting options on the ballot (the MPs were using approval voting rather than their usual Ayes/Noes), and MPs were seeking a way out of the deadlock they were in -- even if they didn't necessarily approve what they voted to back.
Of the above mentioned MPs, I'd raise that Kate Hoey stands out somewhat as a very staunch Leaver IMHO -- it takes pumpkin sized balls to go against the will of your voters. Insofar as I'm aware she's the only Labour MP to put forward that a deal shouldn't be needed to begin with.
edited 2 hours ago
answered 8 hours ago
Denis de BernardyDenis de Bernardy
14.7k33967
14.7k33967
There is no "Labor" Party in the UK.
– Michael Harvey
6 hours ago
@MichaelHarvey: thanks for raising the typo. ;-)
– Denis de Bernardy
5 hours ago
add a comment |
There is no "Labor" Party in the UK.
– Michael Harvey
6 hours ago
@MichaelHarvey: thanks for raising the typo. ;-)
– Denis de Bernardy
5 hours ago
There is no "Labor" Party in the UK.
– Michael Harvey
6 hours ago
There is no "Labor" Party in the UK.
– Michael Harvey
6 hours ago
@MichaelHarvey: thanks for raising the typo. ;-)
– Denis de Bernardy
5 hours ago
@MichaelHarvey: thanks for raising the typo. ;-)
– Denis de Bernardy
5 hours ago
add a comment |
Do any Labour MPs support no-deal?
Yes, three labour MPs voted for Mr Baron's motion B (No deal) in the indicative votes on the 27th of March 2019. From the voting records of the House of Commons, those MPs were:
Mr Ronnie Campbell MP (Blyth Valley
)
Kate Hoey MP (Vauxhall)
Mr Dennis Skinner MP (Bolsover)
I thought Skinner had resigned the whip?
– Jontia
8 hours ago
2
@Jontia I think that was another Frank.
– JJJ
8 hours ago
add a comment |
Do any Labour MPs support no-deal?
Yes, three labour MPs voted for Mr Baron's motion B (No deal) in the indicative votes on the 27th of March 2019. From the voting records of the House of Commons, those MPs were:
Mr Ronnie Campbell MP (Blyth Valley
)
Kate Hoey MP (Vauxhall)
Mr Dennis Skinner MP (Bolsover)
I thought Skinner had resigned the whip?
– Jontia
8 hours ago
2
@Jontia I think that was another Frank.
– JJJ
8 hours ago
add a comment |
Do any Labour MPs support no-deal?
Yes, three labour MPs voted for Mr Baron's motion B (No deal) in the indicative votes on the 27th of March 2019. From the voting records of the House of Commons, those MPs were:
Mr Ronnie Campbell MP (Blyth Valley
)
Kate Hoey MP (Vauxhall)
Mr Dennis Skinner MP (Bolsover)
Do any Labour MPs support no-deal?
Yes, three labour MPs voted for Mr Baron's motion B (No deal) in the indicative votes on the 27th of March 2019. From the voting records of the House of Commons, those MPs were:
Mr Ronnie Campbell MP (Blyth Valley
)
Kate Hoey MP (Vauxhall)
Mr Dennis Skinner MP (Bolsover)
edited 8 hours ago
answered 8 hours ago
JJJJJJ
5,96622454
5,96622454
I thought Skinner had resigned the whip?
– Jontia
8 hours ago
2
@Jontia I think that was another Frank.
– JJJ
8 hours ago
add a comment |
I thought Skinner had resigned the whip?
– Jontia
8 hours ago
2
@Jontia I think that was another Frank.
– JJJ
8 hours ago
I thought Skinner had resigned the whip?
– Jontia
8 hours ago
I thought Skinner had resigned the whip?
– Jontia
8 hours ago
2
2
@Jontia I think that was another Frank.
– JJJ
8 hours ago
@Jontia I think that was another Frank.
– JJJ
8 hours ago
add a comment |
Thanks for contributing an answer to Politics Stack Exchange!
- Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!
But avoid …
- Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.
- Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.
To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
StackExchange.ready(
function ()
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fpolitics.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f40322%2fdo-any-labour-mps-support-no-deal%23new-answer', 'question_page');
);
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown