Selasa, 03 September 2019

UK former minister Gauke says will vote to block no-deal Brexit:... - Reuters

FILE PHOTO: David Gauke, Lord Chancellor and Secretary of State for Justice, is seen outside Downing Street in London, Britain July 23, 2019. REUTERS/Peter Nicholls

(Reuters) - Britain’s former justice minister David Gauke said in a newspaper column that he intends to vote against his party on Tuesday, when lawmakers opposed to a no-deal Brexit are seeking to take control of parliamentary time to force a delay.

British conservative Members of Parliament have been warned that their party whip would be withdrawn if they attempt to block a no-deal Brexit, effectively meaning that they would be expelled from the party.

“The national interest must come first. Leaving the EU without a deal on October 31 would damage our prosperity, security and risk the integrity of the United Kingdom,” Gauke wrote in The Times.

“Today I will vote against my party’s whip for the first time in over 14 years as a member of parliament,” he wrote.

Reporting by Aishwarya Nair in Bengaluru, Editing by Rosalba O'Brien

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://www.reuters.com/article/us-britain-eu-gauke/uk-former-minister-gauke-says-will-vote-to-block-no-deal-brexit-the-times-idUSKCN1VN266?feedType=RSS&feedName=newsOne

2019-09-02 23:37:00Z
CBMiqQFodHRwczovL3d3dy5yZXV0ZXJzLmNvbS9hcnRpY2xlL3VzLWJyaXRhaW4tZXUtZ2F1a2UvdWstZm9ybWVyLW1pbmlzdGVyLWdhdWtlLXNheXMtd2lsbC12b3RlLXRvLWJsb2NrLW5vLWRlYWwtYnJleGl0LXRoZS10aW1lcy1pZFVTS0NOMVZOMjY2P2ZlZWRUeXBlPVJTUyZmZWVkTmFtZT1uZXdzT25l0gEA

Senin, 02 September 2019

Johnson threatens Brexit rebels with party expulsion - Reuters

LONDON (Reuters) - British Prime Minister Boris Johnson has threatened to purge any lawmaker in his party who votes against the government on Brexit in a dramatic escalation of tensions ahead of a crucial week at Westminster.

FILE PHOTO: Britain's Prime Minister Boris Johnson gestures during a news conference at the end of the G7 summit in Biarritz, France, August 26, 2019. REUTERS/Dylan Martinez/File Photo

A senior source in the whips office, responsible for party enforcement, said any Conservative lawmaker who votes against the government this week would be thrown out of the parliamentary party and banned from standing for the Conservatives in the next election.

“The whips are telling Conservative MPs (members of parliament) today a very simple message - if they fail to vote with the government on Tuesday they will be destroying the government’s negotiating position and handing control of parliament to Jeremy Corbyn,” the source said.

“Any Conservative MP who does this will have the whip withdrawn and will not stand as Conservative candidates in an election.”

The battle for Brexit will enter the endgame this week when opposition lawmakers from all parties seek to either change the law, or the government, in their drive to block what they say would be an economically damaging no-deal Brexit.

Corbyn, leader of the opposition Labour Party, will say on Monday that he is ready to do everything possible to stop a no-deal Brexit, describing it as a final attempt to pull “our country back from the brink”.

That puts him on a collision course with Johnson, figurehead of the 2016 Vote Leave campaign, who has upped the stakes in the battle since coming to power in July by vowing to take Britain out of the European Union with or without a deal on Oct. 31.

He says any attempt to force his hand in parliament through votes this week will hamper his efforts to secure a new deal from Brussels.

But Johnson has a working majority of just one seat in the 650-seat chamber, meaning his threat to eject lawmakers such as the former finance minister Philip Hammond or former justice minister David Gauke could lead to an election.

“I understand calling an election, maybe even this week, is one of the options under consideration,” the BBC’s Political Editor Laura Kuenssberg said.

“It is far from inevitable, but it’s not impossible that, within a matter of days, we could all be asked to go to the polls again.”

Britain’s education minister Gavin Williamson, himself a former chief whip, said Johnson did not want to call an election but it was right to threaten any lawmakers with deselection because they were undermining Britain’s position with Brussels.

Reporting by Elizabeth Piper and Guy Faulconbridge; writing by Kate Holton, editing by Darren Schuettler and Costas Pitas

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://www.reuters.com/article/uk-britain-eu/uk-could-call-an-election-within-days-bbc-political-editor-idUSKCN1VN0BS

2019-09-02 05:39:00Z
CAIiEPhT1_c3UzlVL-zYsF4pppUqFggEKg0IACoGCAowt6AMMLAmMLT5lwM

Minggu, 01 September 2019

WWE United Kingdom Champion WALTER def. Tyler Bate - WWE

The main event of NXT UK TakeOver: Cardiff was more than a contest for the WWE United Kingdom Title; it was a battle for the very heart and soul of NXT UK, pitting the leader of Imperium WALTER against Moustache Mountain’s Tyler Bate.

The match was a true battle of intestinal fortitude and pure guts as both competitors kept the pedal to the metal from start to finish and gave every bit of themselves for 40 minutes of pure mayhem.

At the start, Bate stayed with the physically imposing titleholder with maneuvers like the big slam -- the first of many incredible feats of strength by the challenger -- and an electric hurricanrana. When he dove at the massive Ring General through the ropes, however, WALTER caught him, hurled his prey onto the ring apron with a massive powerbomb and began decimating Bate inside and outside the ring.

Tyler Bate sends WALTER crashing to the arena floor: NXT UK TakeOver: Cardiff

After a series of quick countermoves, Tyler Bate sends WALTER flying from the ring in a battle for The Ring General’s WWE United Kingdom Championship: Courtesy of WWE Network.

No matter what was thrown at him, the relentless Bate fought back with incomparable desire. The leader of Imperium continued to punish his challenger with an arsenal that included countless vicious chops and submissions like the Boston crab, a crossface and a three-quarter nelson from the back.

The remorseless champion continued to punish his foe with a series of excruciating sleepers and a sleeper suplex that served as a precursor to WALTER dropping down on his prey from the top rope, the same sequence that nearly destroyed Pete Dunne. Still, Bate refused to quit, firing back with efforts like an exploder suplex off the apron that sent WALTER crashing down to the ringside floor, a superhuman suplex, the airplane spin, the Burning Hammer, another exploder suplex off the off the top rope and the Tyler Driver, all of which nearly allowed him to become the first two-time United Kingdom Champion.

Finally, after both competitors left every bit of themselves on the canvas, a thunderous clothesline from WALTER finally brought down Bate for the three-count in a struggle that will go down as a match for the ages.

Now that WALTER has conquered Bate, who will oppose the dominant champion and the rest of Imperium, who have taken full control of NXT UK?

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://www.wwe.com/shows/nxtuk/nxt-uk-takeover-cardiff-2019/article/walter-vs-tyler-bate-results

2019-08-31 21:43:04Z
CBMiYWh0dHBzOi8vd3d3Lnd3ZS5jb20vc2hvd3Mvbnh0dWsvbnh0LXVrLXRha2VvdmVyLWNhcmRpZmYtMjAxOS9hcnRpY2xlL3dhbHRlci12cy10eWxlci1iYXRlLXJlc3VsdHPSAWVodHRwczovL3d3dy53d2UuY29tL2FtcC9zaG93cy9ueHR1ay9ueHQtdWstdGFrZW92ZXItY2FyZGlmZi0yMDE5L2FydGljbGUvd2FsdGVyLXZzLXR5bGVyLWJhdGUtcmVzdWx0cw

Sabtu, 31 Agustus 2019

These Are the Geekiest UK Cities According to an Infographic - GeekTyrant

Are you a geek in the United Kingdom? Well, you may want to hang out with some other geeks and thanks to the finance blog Onward, you can now know the best places in the UK to meet geeks of similar interests. The blog looked at 20 of the biggest cities in the UK and looked at how friendly they were to different kinds of geeks. The categories of geeks were comic book, video game, board game, convention, book, movie, and music/record geek. They looked at how many hotspots for each category (such as a comic book store, game store, convention, theater, etc.) and put that per 100,000 people. You can check out the infographics below, but the gist is the following list of which cities reign supreme for each category:

  • Comic Book Stores: Londonberry (2.22)

  • Video Game Stores: Lisburn (2.82)

  • Board Game Stores: Aberdeen (1.43)

  • Comic Conventions: Swansea (0.67)

  • Book Stores: Edinburgh (4.76)

  • Cinemas: Londonberry (3.33)

  • Record Stores: Bristol (2.24)

Of course, the data will be a little flawed as I’m sure there are other hotspots such as board game cafes that could’ve been taken into account as well. However, this is still pretty cool to look at. What do UK citizens think?

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://geektyrant.com/news/these-are-the-geekiest-uk-cities-according-to-an-infographic

2019-08-31 13:00:00Z
CBMiWGh0dHBzOi8vZ2Vla3R5cmFudC5jb20vbmV3cy90aGVzZS1hcmUtdGhlLWdlZWtpZXN0LXVrLWNpdGllcy1hY2NvcmRpbmctdG8tYW4taW5mb2dyYXBoaWPSAQA

10 of the UK's best railway cycle paths - The Guardian

[unable to retrieve full-text content]

10 of the UK's best railway cycle paths  The Guardian

Former railway lines up and down the country now offer great, family-friendly off-road cycle trails – and some even go up and down a bit.


https://www.theguardian.com/travel/2019/aug/31/top-10-former-railway-cycle-tracks-uk

2019-08-31 06:00:00Z
CAIiENj6zYW1xysu-mAjeom2A6kqFggEKg4IACoGCAowl6p7MN-zCTCw3Gc

Kamis, 29 Agustus 2019

Trump may regret meddling in UK Brexit negotiations | TheHill - The Hill

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson threw cat among the pigeons Wednesday by asking the queen to prorogue parliament until October 14.

Proroguing (suspending) parliament until October 14 will leave barely three days for a parliamentary Brexit debate before the all-important European Summit on October 17. That summit will be the last chance for the UK to secure a Brexit deal before Johnson’s self-imposed October 31 deadline for the United Kingdom to leave Europe with or without a deal.

Judging by the opposition’s hostile reaction to his bold political move, Johnson’s initiative is likely to usher in a prolonged period of political uncertainty. That will not be good for a weakened UK economy. It also comes at a bad time for the European economy, which already is having to cope with a German economy that is now in recession and an Italy which is in the throes of yet another political crisis.

ADVERTISEMENT

While UK politics is now in the greatest degree of flux, Johnson’s move would seem to have narrowed the its path forward to two seemingly unattractive options.

The first is that the UK will indeed crash out of Europe without a deal on October 31. Heightening that possibility is the unlikelihood that the European Commission will now offer Johnson any substantive changes to the Brexit deal that it negotiated with Johnson's predecessor, Theresa MayTheresa Mary MayBoris Johnson: Brexit chances 'touch and go' Trump promises 'very big trade deal' with Britain post-Brexit Here are the US allies that have been caught in Trump's crosshairs MORE. In particular, it is unlikely to drop its insistence on the Irish backstop, which is one of Johnson’s redlines. Fearing the precedent that it might set for other European Union members, the commission will not want to be seen to be caving in to Johnson’s Brexit brinksmanship.

The second possibility is that next week parliament will either succeed in passing legislation to force Johnson to ask the Europeans for an extension of the October 31 deadline or succeed in bringing down Johnson’s government by a no-confidence vote. It would seem that under either of these two scenarios Johnson would be forced to have early elections.

The Bank of England and the IMF have indicated that if the UK were to crash out of Europe without a deal, within a year or two UK output could be as much as 5 percent below where it otherwise would have been. This view is echoed by most mainstream economic forecasters. It is also basically shared by the UK business community, which is imploring Johnson not to risk a no-deal Brexit.

While forcing Johnson to seek an extension of the October 31 deadline or else by successfully passing a no-confidence vote, parliament might spare the country from the worst-case economic scenario. But it would not be without considerable risks.

ADVERTISEMENT

Early elections might usher in a far-left Jeremy Corbyn government that would take the country back to the failed policies of the 1970s. Alternatively it might see Boris Johnson winning that election on a hard-Brexit platform. That in turn only will have delayed by a few months the UK’s crashing out of Europe with all of its negative consequences.

To its great discredit, the Trump administration has been egging Johnson on to leave Europe without a deal. It has done so by making him the illusory promise of a speedy U.S.-UK free trade deal on the most favorable of terms for the UK.

Sadly, the chances are now high that the Trump administration will get the hard-Brexit that it has been wanting. But the chances are also very high that the Trump administration will come to regret its role in engineering that outcome. It will do so when it sees the immediate damage that a hard-Brexit will do to the UK and the negative spillover effects that a hard UK economic landing will have on a global economy that is already slowing down markedly.

Desmond Lachman is a resident fellow at the American Enterprise Institute. He was formerly a deputy director in the International Monetary Fund's Policy Development and Review Department and the chief emerging market economic strategist at Salomon Smith Barney.

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://thehill.com/opinion/international/459189-trump-may-regret-meddling-in-uk-brexit-negotiations

2019-08-29 11:30:12Z
52780365331487

Brexit Is The Latest Blow To The British Pound, Once A Symbol Of Economic Might - NPR

The pound was long the symbol of Britain's economic might. The chaos surrounding the country's 2016 decision to leave the European Union has sent the currency falling sharply. WPA Pool/Getty Images hide caption

toggle caption
WPA Pool/Getty Images

The British pound sterling is the oldest currency still in use in the world, dating to the time when Britain was little more than a collection of warring fiefdoms regularly plundered by Vikings.

Since its first use in the eighth century, the pound has survived revolutions and world wars, the industrial age and Thatcherism, and today it remains a powerful reminder of the glory days of the British empire.

But over the years, the pound has lost a lot of its luster, and in the wake of the Brexit turmoil, some economists believe it will only keep losing value.

For Britain, the pound is a rich cultural symbol. Pound notes have been adorned with pictures of the most illustrious figures in British history, including William Shakespeare, Jane Austen, Winston Churchill and Charles Darwin.

The pound's place in British culture became apparent during the debate over the euro in the late 1990s. The nations of Europe were about to give up their francs, deutsche marks and lire in favor of a new currency they hoped would unite the continent in peace and prosperity and solidify its political and economic power.

Tourists would no longer have to exchange money each time they visited a new country. Businesses could trade freely across borders, without worrying about currency fluctuations.

Only Britain balked at the change.

"We will not seek membership of the single currency on 1st January 1999," then-Chancellor of the Exchequer Gordon Brown told Parliament.

Today, the U.K.'s decision to stick with the pound — also known as sterling or, more colloquially, the quid — is seen by many economists as a prudent move, one that helped Britain recover faster after the Great Recession.

But Britain's decision was driven as much by culture as economics.

"We're a very proud nation. Used to rule the waves," says British businessman Cliff Franklin, who lives in New York. "And the pound is dear to British people's hearts. And I'm sure it would have been a cultural nightmare to try to get rid of it and go into the euro."

Throughout its history, as Britain's power grew, so too did the importance of its currency.

During the reign of Queen Victoria, Britain became a major commercial and industrial center. British capital financed railroads in India and Australia, shipping ports in Asia and cotton plantations in the United States. The pound itself could be used to buy and sell anywhere on Earth.

"If you go back to the 19th century, the British pound occupied the place in the global economy that the U.S. dollar does today," says Niall Ferguson, a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution and the author of The Ascent of Money.

But the 20th century, with its two world wars, saw a slow, gradual decline in Britain's power and a commensurate drop in the value of the pound.

"It's difficult to maintain a dominant currency if you put yourself through a world war as costly and destructive as World War I was for Britain," Ferguson says.

"The empire is no more," says economist Rex McKenzie of Kingston University in London. "The influence of the country has declined, and that is being reflected in the ... exchange rate."

One of the most dramatic chapters in the pound's long decline was known as Black Wednesday.

On Sept. 16, 1992, deep-pocketed investors led by George Soros made huge bets against the pound, ultimately driving down its value. Soros is said to have made more than $1 billion that day.

Before then, the pound was pegged to a basket of European currencies; afterward, the government was forced to let the pound float freely in currency markets.

Having an independent currency was a big advantage after the financial collapse of 2008, giving the Bank of England more flexibility to respond to a fast-moving crisis.

"The problem with the euro was that the policies that helped Germany weren't necessarily the ones that were right for Greece or Spain or Italy or other places," says Dartmouth College economist David Blanchflower.

Having an independent central bank "turned out to be a smart thing, and having a currency that you could depreciate was a really big deal," says Blanchflower, who sat on Britain's equivalent of the Federal Reserve committee that sets interest rates.

Britain has tried often over the years to prop up the pound, with diminishing success.

"My childhood was in some ways scarred by periodic sterling crises," Ferguson says. "I think they were my introduction to economics as a boy growing up in Britain."

Loading...

Don't see the graphic above? Click here.

More recently, the government's chronic inability to come up with a Brexit plan has sent the pound tumbling to a record low against the dollar, notes Simon Johnson, former chief economist at the International Monetary Fund.

When Britain voted to leave the European Union in 2016, the pound was worth nearly $1.50. Since then it has steadily lost value and trades today at just above $1.20. Many economists think it could soon reach parity with the dollar, something that would be unprecedented.

A drop in value is something of a mixed bag for the pound. It makes imported products more expensive inside the country, buy it also helps British companies compete by driving down the price of the goods they sell abroad.

Still, the pound's steady decline underscores the shifting fortunes of Britain itself and its diminished place in a global economy dominated by the United States and, increasingly, China.

How much further can it fall? Johnson doesn't want to hazard a guess. While the British economy is "running at a fairly decent clip right now," he says, confidence in Britain's ability to manage its departure from the European Union is waning.

"It depends, really, on how disruptive the Brexit developments are and precisely how that affects British trade," Johnson says.

Dartmouth's Blanchflower says the ongoing Brexit fiasco could send the pound's value falling below that of the euro or the U.S. dollar, something that's never happened before.

"The chaos that sits around a possible no-deal Brexit is scaring the markets," he says. "And so the pound is falling steadily."

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://www.npr.org/2019/08/29/755014398/like-the-empire-itself-the-british-pound-is-not-what-it-used-to-be

2019-08-29 11:07:00Z
52780367493224