Rabu, 02 Oktober 2019

Boris Johnson presses U.K. elections as Brexit endgame nears - NBC News

LONDON — When Boris Johnson takes the stage Wednesday at the Conservative Party Conference, an annual get-together at which activists and lawmakers debate policy, chitchat and buy memorabilia, he will stand in front of banners proclaiming a three-word policy: “Get Brexit Done.”

He may wish it was that simple.

With the Brexit deadline set for Oct. 31, it’s still unclear whether the United Kingdom will leave the European Union on time, or at all. The seemingly never-ending divorce has become mired in furious debate and legal battles.

Oct. 2, 201900:35

All of which means the U.K. is highly likely to face an election, and soon.

U.K. elections are supposed to happen every five years but Johnson can call for one at any point — as long as two-thirds of lawmakers in the House of Commons vote in favor.

Johnson has already failed to trigger an election several times, but one could also take place if the prime minister loses a vote of confidence, which has long been threatened by opposition members of Parliament.

It’s set to be a turbulent and fractious occasion in which the prime minister pitches himself against Parliament and lawmakers who would “surrender” to the E.U. as U.K. politics continues to borrow tactics and tone from President Donald Trump.

The Brexit debate illustrates how U.K. politics continues to ape the partisan nature of U.S. politics and the aggressive sloganeering of President Donald Trump, according to Simon Usherwood, a politics professor at the University of Surrey.

Sept. 25, 201901:54

“It’s not just Trump, it feels a very American style, the way the debate has been over the past decade or more, with echoes of culture wars and people being entrenched deep in their bubbles and speaking to their base rather than reaching out,” he said.

“Trump’s willingness to shout down opponents and question their motives and accuracy and everything else about them — I don’t think we’ve quite got to that stage, but the happiness of No. 10 to just keep on arguing [with their rivals] I think is quite striking,” he said, using shorthand to describe the prime minister’s official residence.

At the moment, Johnson’s government is achieving very little.

The prime minister attempted to suspend Parliament for five weeks, only for the U.K.’s highest court to rule he had done so illegally, misleading the Queen in the process.

And he may not be able to make Brexit happen at all, at least not this year: Parliament has already passed a law forcing Johnson to ask the E.U. for a third extension to the Brexit process, keeping the U.K. inside the bloc until at least Jan. 31.

To the dismay of lawmakers who accuse him of using inflammatory language, Johnson calls the law a “surrender bill” as it removes the threat of a “no-deal” Brexit in which the country leaves without a divorce deal, something Brexiteers see as key to forcing concessions from the E.U.

In a fiery debate last week in the House of Commons, Johnson was condemned by lawmakers for his incendiary language, such as repeatedly accusing lawmakers of “sabotaging” the U.K.’s exit from the E.U.

A visibly upset Labour lawmaker, Paula Sherriff, told Johnson: "We're subject to death threats and abuse every single day. And let me tell the prime minister that they often quote his words: 'surrender act,' 'betrayal,' 'traitor.'"

Johnson dismissed her out of hand.

"I've never heard such humbug in all my life," he said, essentially accusing Sherriff of being deceptive.

Johnson also brushed away reminders that lawmaker Jo Cox was stabbed and shot to death a week before the 2016 Brexit referendum by a far-right attacker shouting "Death to traitors!"

“The people outside this house understand what is happening,” he said. “The leader of the opposition and his party don’t trust the people.”

The Scottish National Party legislator Joanna Cherry, whose legal challenge in the Supreme Court ended Johson’s suspension of Parliament, said the House of Commons had been “treated to the sort of populist rant one expects to hear from a tin-pot dictatorship.”

John Bercow, the Commons speaker, who will step down later this year, said the atmosphere during the debate was “worse than any I've known in my 22 years in the House.”

None of these admonitions appear to have had an effect on Johnson, who is intent on delivering Brexit to his Conservative Party base.

But as he has no majority in the House of Commons, meaning he can’t force through any new laws or change old ones — that also means he can’t currently get a Brexit bill through Parliament, a necessary step before the U.K. leaves.

A second Brexit referendum at this point seems unlikely, so the road ahead leads to an election. But it’s laden with risk.

“The danger in the Conservatives choosing that option [a people versus Parliament election] is it’s been flagged well in advance so it gives opponents more time to think of ways to counteract it or take the edge off,” Usherwood said.

“There’s this assumption there’s this big master plan, a big diagram somewhere in No. 10, but it doesn’t really have the feel of this is how it was supposed to be. That doesn’t look like a master plan. It looks a bit more improvised and panicky.”

A 1950 poster for the Ulster Unionist Party.The Conservative Party Archive / Getty Images file

In previous elections, Britain has seen the Conservative Party going head-to-head with the opposition Labour Party — a classic left-versus-right battle pitching a strong privately-owned economy against state intervention and higher spending.

Voters may next head to the polls with Johnson’s strident anti-establishment messaging about Brexit ringing loudest in their ears.

This isn’t the first time an election has been focused on the popular will versus elected officials.

“The language of the people against the government has quite a long history in our politics,” James Freeman, an expert in British political history, said.

“It’s not just the Labour Party attacking the government, or Johnson attacking Labour, it’s more about Parliament as an institution blocking Brexit,” he said.

“This idea that it’s a ‘Remainer Parliament,’ that’s new,” he added, referring to those who wanted to remain in the European Union.

As for the influence of Trump, Freeman pointed out that the phrase “Make Britain Great Again” was used by the Conservative Party as an election slogan more than once in the 20th century.

“Some of the people around [Johnson] are very familiar with why they think Trump has been successful, and probably there’s some crossover because Brexit happened before Trump got elected,” he said.

“National revival is a consistent theme in our politics, particularly on the Conservative side.”

It remains to be seen whether Johnson will find a way to make Brexit happen — but the effect of Brexit on any forthcoming election, and British politics and society at large, is inescapable.

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https://www.nbcnews.com/news/world/boris-johnson-presses-u-k-elections-brexit-endgame-nears-n1061076

2019-10-02 08:07:00Z
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Selasa, 01 Oktober 2019

In Blow to Hopes for a Brexit Deal, a Leaked British Plan Is Rejected - The New York Times

MANCHESTER, England — With time running out for a deal on Brexit, the Irish government and European Union officials have rejected the latest British thinking on how to resolve an impasse over the Irish border, a serious setback to prospects for a breakthrough.

Progress on the border issue is urgent if Britain is to agree with the European Union on the terms of its withdrawal, which is scheduled to take effect at the end of the month. Leaving without an agreement, experts warn, would mean a disorderly, possibly chaotic and damaging rupture.

The latest British plan, a set of informal proposals given to European negotiators, would create customs sites or zones to check goods on both sides of the border, and place tracking devices on trucks to monitor their movements. Parts of the plan were leaked, and made public Monday night by the Irish broadcaster RTE.

The idea of custom check zones was described in a post on Twitter as a “nonstarter” by Ireland’s deputy prime minister, Simon Coveney.

European officials have said that they have not yet received any formal proposals from the British government, but they have been making it clear that the leaked plan would be unacceptable. The reactions suggested that the two sides were nowhere near an agreement on the thorny issue with the deadline looming large.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson of Britain confirmed on Tuesday that he would present a formal plan “fairly shortly.” A summit meeting of European Union leaders is scheduled for Oct. 17-18 — a gathering that many see as the last chance of striking a deal.

Image
CreditPaulo Nunes dos Santos for The New York Times

Speaking to the BBC, Mr. Johnson said that some of the reporting about his plan was “not quite right,” but he did not dispute the overall strategy: Northern Ireland, a part of the United Kingdom; and the Republic of Ireland, a part of the European Union, would be in separate trading and customs systems, requiring checks on many goods that cross the border.

The prime minister dismissed as unacceptable the alternative of having most of the United Kingdom operate under one system, while Northern Ireland remains tied to a different set of rules.

“In the end, a sovereign, united country must have a single customs territory,” he said. “When the U.K. withdraws from the E.U., that must be the state of affairs that we have,” he added, noting that Britain and the European Union were approaching “the critical moment of choice about how we proceed.”

Some progress has been made. In discussions with the European Union, Mr. Johnson has already accepted that Northern Ireland could remain within the European Union’s trade umbrella for agricultural and some food products, but he has refused to make the same concession for other goods.

Currently, Ireland and the United Kingdom are both members of the European Union, operating under the same tariff rules and product standards, so there is no need to check goods crossing the border.

Mr. Johnson’s comments suggested that the checking sites he proposes would not need to be near the border. But the idea of physical checks on goods, even at locations away from the frontier, is likely to breach one of the European Union’s negotiating red lines.

For Ireland, the imposition of any form of border checks is sensitive because removing the physical infrastructure separating the two countries was a central element of the peace process that unfolded in the 1990s. And without the support of Ireland’s prime minister, Leo Varadkar, the European Union is unlikely to agree to any new deal.

Image
CreditPhil Noble/Reuters

Mr. Johnson’s predecessor, Theresa May, negotiated an agreement with Brussels that would have kept the whole of the United Kingdom under Europe’s trade rules until a technological solution could be found to check trucks without stopping them. That arrangement, known as the Irish backstop, was reviled by hard-line Brexit supporters — one of the reasons Parliament rejected Mrs. May’s plan three times.

In a statement, Keir Starmer, Brexit spokesman for the opposition Labour Party, dismissed the latest British plans as “utterly unworkable.”

“They would place an enormous administrative burden on businesses and rely on technology that does not yet exist,” he added.

At the Conservative Party conference in Manchester, in northwestern England, there had been some optimism that if Mr. Johnson could strike a deal in Brussels, it might be approved in Parliament. Speaking on Monday, one of the most hard-line supporters of Brexit, Mark Francois, said he would consider any plan Mr. Johnson returned with and vote for it if it delivered a satisfactory withdrawal.

But Mr. Johnson’s critics, both in the British opposition and in Brussels, contend that he is not negotiating in good faith and is happy to contemplate the prospects of a “no deal” Brexit despite the potential disruption that would cause.

Parliament has already passed legislation intended to prevent Britain from leaving the European Union without an agreement. But Mr. Johnson has insisted that Brexit will happen at the end of the month, with or without an agreement.

Lawmakers have refused to allow Mr. Johnson to call a general election until he has requested another Brexit extension, something he has promised not to do.

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https://www.nytimes.com/2019/10/01/world/europe/brexit-irish-border.html

2019-10-01 10:51:00Z
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Man outside UK Parliament is 'rugby tackled' after dousing himself in 'flammable liquid,' police say - Fox News

A man was detained outside Britain’s Houses of Parliament on Tuesday morning after dousing himself in what police say appeared to be a “flammable liquid.”

The individual, who has not been identified, is currently being treated by first responders. No injuries have been reported.

“Man next to me at Parliament’s carriage gates appears to have poured (what smells like) petrol on himself,” tweeted Parliament member Huw Merriman. “Incredibly brave response from police, who are now helping him.”

BRITISH MAN CAN'T REMEMBER WHERE HE PARKED HIS CAR MORE THAN A WEEK AGO

Police in London have detained a man near the Houses of Parliament after he doused himself in what appeared to be flammable liquid.

Police in London have detained a man near the Houses of Parliament after he doused himself in what appeared to be flammable liquid. (AP)

The man apparently was “unhappy about a parking ticket in Essex,” a police officer at the scene told The Telegraph newspaper.

"He poured petrol on himself,” the officer added. “One of the lads rugby tackled him."

CLICK HERE FOR THE ALL-NEW FOXBUISINESS.COM

Additional information was not immediately available.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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https://www.foxnews.com/world/man-uk-parliament-flammable-liquid-police

2019-10-01 11:46:05Z
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Hurricane Lorenzo path latest: NOAA map shows direct track to UK and Europe - Express.co.uk

Lorenzo is a large and powerful hurricane tracking towards the UK across the central Atlantic. A series of hurricane and tropical-storm watches are in effect across the Azores as the storm tracks closer to the region. Lorenzo is currently packing winds of 105mph, making it a Category 2 storm according to the Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Wind Scale. But what is the latest of this barreling storm which is heading straight for the UK?

Hurricane watches are in effect for western and central Azores, including Flores, Corvo, Faial, Pico, São Jorge, Graciosa and Terceira.

While a tropical storm watch is in effect in the eastern Azores for São Miguel and Santa Maria.

According to the National Hurricane Center’s latest advisory, issued at 5am AST (10am BST), the storm was located near latitude 28.7 north, longitude 43.1 west, roughly 690 miles west southwest of Flores in the western Azores.

The storm had maximum sustained winds at 105mph and was moving north northeast at 22mph.

Hurricane Lorenzo’s track is expected to continue its track in the same general direction but at a faster forward speed over the coming days..

On its forecast track, the centre of the storm is predicted to pass near the western Azores early on Wednesday.

Only slight weakening of the storm is expected before Lorenzo hits the Azores, with faster weakening expected on Thursday.

Hurricane-force winds extend outward up to 105 miles (165km) and tropical-storm-force winds extend outward up to 345 miles (555km).

These winds are not the only hazard posed by this dangerous storm.

The rainfall also poses a risk, with an expected two to four inches of rain expected to batter the western Azores and could potentially cause life-threatening flash flooding.

Lorenzo is also generating swells which are spreading across much of the North Atlantic basin and which are likely to cause life-threatening surf and rip current conditions.

Met Office forecaster Steven Keates said: “Lorenzo is a real beast of a storm.

“It will be one of Europe’s strongest-ever tropical storms, as the Azores are part of Europe.

“Lorenzo is expected to move to the UK by Thursday - bringing a couple of days with potentially worse conditions than this weekend.

“There are scenarios from gales to storm-force 70mph-plus gusts, but there’s uncertainty. Big waves and heavy rain are likely, with the west most likely to be affected.

“Before then, five or six inches’ rain will fall between Saturday and Tuesday in the wettest places. It’s clearly enough for flooding concerns.

“People should keep up-to-date with warnings and consider their travel options.”

Over the weekend, it was reported that Hurricane Lorenzo hit a wind speed of around 160mph, making it a Category 5 hurricane.

The storm has weakened since that time but it will still pose a risk.

It is likely that tropical storm winds will hit the UK through Wednesday night, as the storm continues to pass over the north of Great Britain.

Met Office meteorologist Alex Burkill added “Our attention then turns to Hurricane Lorenzo, this is tracking northeastwards across the Atlantic, it could head towards the UK.

“It won’t be a hurricane by the time it does so, but there is the potential that it will bring something more unsettled by the end of the week.”

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https://www.express.co.uk/news/world/1184433/hurricane-lorenzo-path-latest-noaa-map-hurricane-lorenzo-tracker-uk-europe-news

2019-10-01 07:18:00Z
52780395420287

Hurricane Lorenzo path latest: NOAA map shows direct track to UK and Europe - Express.co.uk

Lorenzo is a large and powerful hurricane tracking towards the UK across the central Atlantic. A series of hurricane and tropical-storm watches are in effect across the Azores as the storm tracks closer to the region. Lorenzo is currently packing winds of 105mph, making it a Category 2 storm according to the Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Wind Scale. But what is the latest of this barreling storm which is heading straight for the UK?

Hurricane watches are in effect for western and central Azores, including Flores, Corvo, Faial, Pico, São Jorge, Graciosa and Terceira.

While a tropical storm watch is in effect in the eastern Azores for São Miguel and Santa Maria.

According to the National Hurricane Center’s latest advisory, issued at 5am AST (10am BST), the storm was located near latitude 28.7 north, longitude 43.1 west, roughly 690 miles west southwest of Flores in the western Azores.

The storm had maximum sustained winds at 105mph and was moving north northeast at 22mph.

Hurricane Lorenzo’s track is expected to continue its track in the same general direction but at a faster forward speed over the coming days..

On its forecast track, the centre of the storm is predicted to pass near the western Azores early on Wednesday.

Only slight weakening of the storm is expected before Lorenzo hits the Azores, with faster weakening expected on Thursday.

Hurricane-force winds extend outward up to 105 miles (165km) and tropical-storm-force winds extend outward up to 345 miles (555km).

These winds are not the only hazard posed by this dangerous storm.

The rainfall also poses a risk, with an expected two to four inches of rain expected to batter the western Azores and could potentially cause life-threatening flash flooding.

Lorenzo is also generating swells which are spreading across much of the North Atlantic basin and which are likely to cause life-threatening surf and rip current conditions.

Met Office forecaster Steven Keates said: “Lorenzo is a real beast of a storm.

“It will be one of Europe’s strongest-ever tropical storms, as the Azores are part of Europe.

“Lorenzo is expected to move to the UK by Thursday - bringing a couple of days with potentially worse conditions than this weekend.

“There are scenarios from gales to storm-force 70mph-plus gusts, but there’s uncertainty. Big waves and heavy rain are likely, with the west most likely to be affected.

“Before then, five or six inches’ rain will fall between Saturday and Tuesday in the wettest places. It’s clearly enough for flooding concerns.

“People should keep up-to-date with warnings and consider their travel options.”

Over the weekend, it was reported that Hurricane Lorenzo hit a wind speed of around 160mph, making it a Category 5 hurricane.

The storm has weakened since that time but it will still pose a risk.

It is likely that tropical storm winds will hit the UK through Wednesday night, as the storm continues to pass over the north of Great Britain.

Met Office meteorologist Alex Burkill added “Our attention then turns to Hurricane Lorenzo, this is tracking northeastwards across the Atlantic, it could head towards the UK.

“It won’t be a hurricane by the time it does so, but there is the potential that it will bring something more unsettled by the end of the week.”

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https://www.express.co.uk/news/world/1184433/hurricane-lorenzo-path-latest-noaa-map-hurricane-lorenzo-tracker-uk-europe-news

2019-10-01 06:27:52Z
52780395420287

Senin, 30 September 2019

On Brexit, Boris Johnson and the U.K. Attorney General Refuse to Surrender - National Review

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson outside Downing Street in London, England, September 25, 2019. (Henry Nicholls/Reuters)
Johnson doesn’t regret ‘using the word surrender to describe the surrender act.’

On the afternoon of this past Wednesday — following the U.K. supreme court’s ruling that the prorogation of Parliament by Her Majesty’s Government was unlawful, null, and void, had never happened at all legally, and would have to be reversed — the U.K’s chief legal officer, Attorney General Geoffrey Cox, rose to speak to a largely hostile House of Commons. In addition to feeling the government’s general travails, Cox seemed to be in a sticky position personally because it was he who had advised the cabinet that prorogation was indisputably legal — to the point that anyone who denied it could have only political motives for so doing.

Cox was therefore defending himself as much as the government.

When he sat down a short time later, the Tory benches were buoyant, cheering for the first time in weeks. Cox had knocked Labour MPs, ex-Tory dissidents, Liberal Democrat scolds, and the entire anti-Brexit Coalition of Incompatibles around the Commons chamber with the kind of robust theatrical performance that only a top Queen’s counsel (a kind of super-lawyer) can put across with easy conviction.

While respecting the supreme court’s judgment, he said he did not agree with it. He refused to apologize for the legal advice he had given the cabinet, which reflected what the law was before the supreme court’s judgment. He responded forcefully and even dismissively to successive critics on the Opposition benches, telling one Labour MP that he ought to beg the forgiveness of his voters for betraying them over Brexit. And overall, he denounced the opposition parties for cowardice and obstructionism:

Let me tell them the truth, they can vote no confidence at any time, but they are too cowardly. They could agree to a motion to allow this House to dissolve, but they are too cowardly. This parliament should have the courage to face the electorate, but it won’t, because so many of them are really all about preventing us leaving the European Union — but the time is coming, the time is coming, Mr. Speaker, when even these turkeys won’t be able to prevent Christmas.

Twice he delivered a line that had the Opposition benches screeching like the demonically possessed from an Exorcist movie: “This parliament is a dead parliament. It should no longer sit. It has no moral right to sit on these green benches.”

It was a great barnstorming performance. It gave fresh heart to the Tories by making clear that the government would not roll over in response to its recent constitutional reverse but would stick to its policy of leaving the EU by October 31. It was interpreted as proof that the government was preparing to fight — indeed to provoke, if possible — an election on a People versus Parliament ticket. And it turned out to be trailer for a performance by Prime Minister Boris Johnson on the following day when, with similar boldness, he denounced the Opposition’s bill to prevent Brexit, calling it a “surrender” to the EU.

On both occasions, the Opposition benches exploded in anger and indignation. Not unmixed with calculation, however.

What their reaction revealed was that the anti-Tory coalition was extremely nervous that this populist appeal could well be seriously popular and that the Opposition already testing ways to hinder and obstruct it. The first such test was launched against the attorney general. When he was asked at what point he became aware that his legal advice on prorogation was “not true,” he replied, “When did you stop beating your wife?”

Labour MP Emma Hardy was at once on her feet, warning that Cox should “moderate his language” and not make a “joke” of domestic violence. He apologized amiably (and needlessly) that it was an old legal joke showing he had been asked an accusation rather than a question. But the tut-tutting from the Opposition would probably be continuing still if Guido Fawkes (a leading conservative blogger) had not unearthed footage of Hardy using exactly the same phrase in an earlier debate.

That was too late, however; the meme was out of the gate. John Bercow, the first openly non-impartial speaker, had already intoned sententiously:

It is a matter of extreme sensitivity and it is incredibly important that we are sensitive to the wider implications and interpretation of what we say. Society’s mores change, and sometimes one can find that things that one has freely said in the past without causing offence can no longer be said without causing offence.

Mr. Pecksniff could not have said it better. Partisans posing as referees had the broad outlines of the script handed to them.

Next day, therefore, the same tactic was deployed in a more thorough and ruthless way. When the prime minister attacked a bill amending the Brexit legislation — the so-called Benn bill after its main proposer, Hilary Benn — as a “surrender” bill because, among other things, it allows the EU to select the date for the U.K.’s departure, a Labour MP, Paula Sherriff exploded with indignation. She was angered that Johnson was using “offensive, dangerous, and inflammatory language” that in addition to being bad in itself, was likely to provoke physical attacks on MPs and others like herself. In this context, she referred obliquely to the murder of an MP, Jo Cox, during the referendum campaign by a deranged extremist. And she alleged that people were telephoning her with death threats and using words such as “surrender” and “treason” — or as she put it, “quoting the prime minister.”

“I’ve never heard such humbug in all my life,” responded Boris Johnson.

As if to prove him correct, there then followed an outburst of hysteria and indignation on the Labour side.

Another female MP, who had been elected for the constituency previously held by Jo Cox, now rose and, again referring to the murdered MP, appealed almost tearfully to Johnson not to use wounding words to describe the opinions of people who merely disagreed with him. Johnson replied that it was perfectly fair to describe a piece of legislation as “a surrender bill, a capitulation bill” if it greatly reduced the ability of the government to negotiate the terms of Britain’s departure from the EU. This did not mollify Johnson’s critics.

He then made a small mistake of taste. Up to this point, Labour female MPs were the only speakers who had referred to the murder of Jo Cox in relation to words that wound. In replying to Jo Cox’s successor, however, Boris said that the best way to pay tribute to Cox would be to get Brexit passed and out of the way. It was seemingly intended as a pacifying sentiment that might damp down the reigning hysteria on the opposite benches. Instead, the prime minister was accused of exploiting her death to advance his political agenda.

If you doubt my account — and I would sympathize with you for doing so — see this parliamentary footage courtesy of the Guardian:

In principle, of course, half the people denouncing Johnson for advancing Brexit claim that they too want to see Brexit passed; in reality, they are trying to delay it until the Greek calends, which a classical scholar like Boris Johnson would know means “until the day of never.” And because most of reporters and commentators share this hope, much of their coverage reduced the incident to the capsule message “Boris exploits death of Labour MP in defense of his Wounding Words.”

Thus, the prime minister having enjoyed something like a first-night triumph at Westminster, with Tory MPs giving him an ovation like that enjoyed by Geoffrey Cox the day before, woke up the next morning to decidedly mixed reviews (which I think Noel Coward defined as “one or two kind and the rest insulting.”) Over the next few days, Boris was doused in a cascade of moralistic sermonizing from other politicians, some of them former or marginal Tories, all anxious to keep the language of British politics clean, inoffensive, and extraordinarily dull in the great cause of handicapping his pursuit of Brexit.

Not that everyone was restrained — or intended to be restrained. Former Tory prime minister John Major, an old Europhile, denounced Boris’s robust rhetoric in, er, extremely robust terms: “Words such as ‘saboteur,’ ‘traitor,’ ‘enemy,’ ‘surrender,’ ‘betrayal’ have no place in our party, our politics, nor in our society.” He also thought they were un-Conservative.

Of course, as now often happens in the age of the Internet and Google, anyone who strikes a noble pose of opposition to lies and obscenity is almost immediately presented with evidence of his own wicked words or bad behavior on tape or film. Major was soon reminded that he had described his former cabinet colleagues who defied him over the Maastricht treaty in the 1990s as “bastards.” Nor did it help that the Sunday Telegraph serialization of the final volume of Charles Moore’s Margaret Thatcher biography, just out, depicts him as scheming to replace her while affecting to support her. A particularly nice touch was that he signed Mrs. Thatcher’s nomination papers for the second leadership ballot on condition that they be given to her campaign team only if she decided not to run. They would then be useless except as evidence of his loyalty.

I would call that low cunning of a high order, but perhaps such words have no place in our elevated and sanitized political life.

The attacks on Boris Johnson’s rhetoric — in particular those that traced the murder of Jo Cox forward to his use of “surrender” and “sabotage” — were meant to make it impossible for the Tories to wage a vigorous and effective campaign against MPs who had promised to support Brexit but had since done all they could to obstruct and prevent it. (A secondary bonus is that Labour MPs will be positioned to blame the Tories if any physical attacks do occur.) Naturally, if you’re secretly aiming to obstruct something, you will loudly condemn the pejorative use of the word “obstruction” as offensive, dangerous, or inflammatory. The solution is to back off from deceptive obstruction, however, rather than to police language

Speaker John Bercow has reached the opposite conclusion — inevitably, I suppose, since he’s seeking to obstruct Brexit, though not very secretly — and is calling the party leaders together to discuss some new code of linguistic conduct. Some insulting words such as “liar” are already prohibited as “un-parliamentary terms.” If the list of such terms goes further to include words such as “capitulation” and “surrender” as descriptions of a rival policy or as metaphors for appeasing policies, that would be a ludicrous restraint on truth as well as on clear and honest language. It’s not clear to me that Westminster’s famously combative politics could even be carried on under such puritan verbal restraints. Would Bercow’s list of forbidden terms reduce two politicians across the dispatch box to an embarrassed silence, in P. G. Wodehouse’s words, “as between two Trappist monks who have met unexpectedly at the dog races”?

Fortunately for political life, this latest Bercow exercise in vanity seems unlikely to progress far. Boris Johnson told the BBC Sunday, at the start of the Tory party’s annual conference, that while he deplored physical threats, he did not regret “using the word ‘surrender’ to describe the surrender act.” He also suggested that everyone should keep calm and carry on, and when asked whether that included him, he said: “I think I’ve been the model of restraint.”

It’s not an unreasonable claim. Plainly, however, Boris does not intend to adopt the policy of unilateral rhetorical disarmament that his enemies were trying to impose on him. That makes him a more formidable opponent to Remainers and a bigger threat to their hopes of blocking Brexit. They are starting to realize that and to worry that Boris might be too wily and determined an operator to leave in possession of the formidable powers of a PM. Though he seems to have no face cards in his hand, he might produce four aces from his sleeve or, worse, a razor. Their minds are turning to evicting him from Downing Street sooner rather than later. At the beginning of a week in which the Tory party is holding its annual bean-feast in Manchester, the other parties at Westminster will be trying to put together a coalition to oust him from Downing Street and to replace him with a Remain Unity prime minister. . . . But as yet they can’t agree on who that might be.

Postscript: In the course of his barnstorming address, Attorney General Cox also let slip a remark that few people noticed. The constitutional consequences of actions such as the supreme court’s decision, he said, and their importance, usually take time to become apparent. They are now becoming apparent, and they point to a burgeoning crisis even more significant to democracy than Brexit. More on that in due course.

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https://www.nationalreview.com/2019/09/brexit-boris-johnson-geoffrey-cox-refuse-to-surrender/

2019-09-30 10:30:00Z
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UK weather forecast – ‘Danger to life’ warning in place with ‘BEAST’ Hurricane Lorenzo set to bring more miser - The Sun

TORRENTIAL downpours over the last three days have left much of Britain mired in floodwater - and more deluges are on the way with Hurricane Lorenzo set to bring more misery towards the end of this week.

The Met Office has issued warnings of a "danger to life" weather warning as "persistent" rain shows no signs of stopping soon.

 The route of the Road World Championships in North Yorkshire was altered so riders could battle on through the rain

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The route of the Road World Championships in North Yorkshire was altered so riders could battle on through the rainCredit: Getty - Contributor
 Walkers on the promenade in Dover, Kent, got a thorough soaking

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Walkers on the promenade in Dover, Kent, got a thorough soakingCredit: PA:Press Association
 Intense downpours in Horwich, Greater Manchester yesterday, with drivers battling inches of floodwater

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Intense downpours in Horwich, Greater Manchester yesterday, with drivers battling inches of floodwaterCredit: Mercury Press
 Beach huts being washed away in a storm at St Leonards-on-Sea on Sunday

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Beach huts being washed away in a storm at St Leonards-on-Sea on Sunday
 River Calder in West Yorkshire burst its banks on Sunday, forcing this driver to collect his belongings from his car.

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River Calder in West Yorkshire burst its banks on Sunday, forcing this driver to collect his belongings from his car.

Organisers changed the route of the Road World Championships in North Yorkshire on Sunday due to concerns for rider safety.

Flood warnings remain in place nationwide today with roads closed and trains disrupted.

A man, 23, died when a car hit a tree in a downpour near Fontwell, West Sussex, late on Saturday.

And waves whipped up by strong winds crashed over the promenade in Dover, Kent.

Yellow weather warnings have been put in place for the next two days, with more than 200 flood warnings and alerts enforced around the country.

Two campers and their dog had to be rescued from torrential rain from Laughter Hole, Dartmoor.

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Inland there were floods in the Conwy Valley and the Dyfi bridge which links Machynlleth in mid Wales to the north became impassable.

And forecasters have said Hurricane Lorenzo will bring more misery towards the end of this week.

Gusts from around 50mph to over 70mph are expected in the west of the UK, with 16ft waves forecast on South-West coasts, according to magicseaweed.com.

Some parts of the country could even see as much as 70mm of rain.

Winter's first snow is due on Wednesday, with a covering on Scotland's higher mountains, amid an Arctic plunge bringing -2C nights, frost and a chilly Wednesday with 13C highs in the South.

'REAL BEAST'

Hurricane Lorenzo, a maximum Category 5 storm, is the most powerful hurricane ever recorded so close to Europe.

Only one hurricane or tropical storm has ever made landfall on Europe's mainland at tropical storm strength – Vince in Spain in 2005.

Met Office forecaster Steven Keates said: “Lorenzo is a real beast of a storm.

"It will be one of Europe's strongest ever tropical storms, as the Azores are part of Europe.

“After reaching the Azores on Tuesday, Lorenzo is expected to move to the UK by Thursday - bringing a couple of days with potentially worse conditions than this weekend.

“There are scenarios from gales to storm-force 70mph-plus gusts, but there's uncertainty."

RAIL CHAOS

Railways were also plunged into chaos with trains between Blackpool North and Preston suspended due to flooding and stretches of track in Cheshire also hit.

Speed restrictions were put in place between Wigan and Southport, and Leeds and Harrogate.

There was no service from Sheffield to Manchester due to water on the tracks, and there were speed restrictions in the opposite direction.

The rail operator warned it had imposed speed restrictions on many parts of its network due to safety concerns.

The Environment Agency has 61 localised flood warnings across England and Wales, plus 169 alerts for possible flooding.

Ex-BBC and Met Office forecaster John Hammond of weathertrending said: “Another bout of stormy weather follows into Tuesday.

“And could a wintry start to October be cold enough for snow on Scottish mountains?

“Then Hurricane Lorenzo and tropical disturbances may see further stormy weather.”

 Dorset was battered by heavy rain and strong winds on Sunday, leaving Weymouth Harbour surrounded by inches of floodwater

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Dorset was battered by heavy rain and strong winds on Sunday, leaving Weymouth Harbour surrounded by inches of floodwaterCredit: Bournemouth News
 Floodwater surges around this car in Crovie, north east Scotland

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Floodwater surges around this car in Crovie, north east ScotlandCredit: Adventure Girl
 Dorset was battered by heavy rain and strong winds on Sunday, with roads completely flooded surrounding Weymouth Harbour

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Dorset was battered by heavy rain and strong winds on Sunday, with roads completely flooded surrounding Weymouth HarbourCredit: Bournemouth News
 Biblical floods have hit Britain after three days of heavy downpours

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Biblical floods have hit Britain after three days of heavy downpours
 A woman wraps up against the elements on the promenade in Dover, Kent

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A woman wraps up against the elements on the promenade in Dover, KentCredit: PA:Press Association
 Flood water covers the fairways and greens of the Mond Valley golf course in Clydach near Swansea

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Flood water covers the fairways and greens of the Mond Valley golf course in Clydach near SwanseaCredit: Alamy Live News
 Heavy rain and wind brought a high amount of floodwater to the South Wales area

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Heavy rain and wind brought a high amount of floodwater to the South Wales areaCredit: Alamy Live News
 A family runs through sea spray on the South Coast as strong winds batter Brighton

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A family runs through sea spray on the South Coast as strong winds batter BrightonCredit: © Southern News & Pictures Ltd.
 Bournemouth beach, where the wind produced masses of spume

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Bournemouth beach, where the wind produced masses of spumeCredit: Alamy Live News
 After heavy rain on Saturday and Sunday, the river Wye bursts its banks in the small Welsh market town of Builth Wells

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After heavy rain on Saturday and Sunday, the river Wye bursts its banks in the small Welsh market town of Builth WellsCredit: London News Pictures
 Heavy and 'persistent' rain is expected to batter Britain for another two days, with this weather map showing heavy showers for Monday

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Heavy and 'persistent' rain is expected to batter Britain for another two days, with this weather map showing heavy showers for Monday
Weather forcast for Monday September 30 2019 - Wet and windy


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https://www.thesun.co.uk/news/10029056/uk-weather-forecast-hurricane-lorenzo-latest/

2019-09-30 09:09:00Z
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