UK Parliament vote on Brexit
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Former Deputy Tory Chair Lee Anderson was suspended from the Conservative party this weekend after accusing the Mayor of London Sadiq Khan of 'giving the capital city away to his (Islamist) mates.' In Sadiq Khan's first extended interview, he tells the News Agents that Anderson 'practices the politics of hate' and the Tory party has shown a tacit approval for it. We also chat Rochdale and whether the SNP should get a second chance from the Speaker to hold their Meaningful Vote on a ceasefire.Editor: Tom HughesSenior Producer: Gabriel RadusSocial Media Editor: Georgia FoxwellVideo Production: Rory Symon & Shane FennellyClips:Lee Anderson with Chris Hope on GB News on FridayRishi Sunak on BBC Radio York this morningMark Harper on Nick Ferrari on LBC this morningSky News doorstep of Mr. Anderson this afternoonYou can listen to this episode on Alexa - just say "Alexa, ask Global Player to play The News Agents".The News Agents is brought to you by HSBC UK - https://www.hsbc.co.uk/And, The News Agents now have merch! To get yours, head to: https://store.global.com/collections/the-news-agents
Welcome to the biggest week in UK politics... since the last one! It's Miserable Monday down in Westminster as the Prime Minister will ask the chamber to hold a Meaningful Vote... again. Who knows whether anything will actually change but we're joined by ERG member Andrew Bridgen and Lib Dem Chief Whip Alistair Carmichael. Plus barrister Bobby Friedman will explain whether Boris Johnson is in contempt of court or not. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
After ‘Super Saturday' in which Parliament voted to hold on a Brexit vote until legislation had been passed, and thousands marched on Westminster to demand a People's Vote, Boris Johnson has been forced to take something of a detour from his planned roadmap. In today's episode of The Leader, Ayesha Hazarika describes the view from the stage at the People's Vote protest and discusses how the Letwin Amendment will change things for the Prime Minister and the Brexit process. After last week's shocking racism during the England v Bulgaria international, more alleged racist behaviour broke up a match closer to home this weekend. An FA cup qualifier between Haringey and Yeovil Town saw the match abandoned following alleged racist abuse of Haringey players – who left the pitch in protest. Football correspondent Dan Kilpatrick joins the podcast to discuss what this means for English football. Plus a new bridge may be installed in Hammersmith to help make easier commutes across the River Thames – the Evening Standard thinks it's worth considering. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Eleni Giokos is live from the New York Stock Exchange and Max Foster is live from outside the Houses of Parliament, filling in for Julia Chatterley. Here are the top business news stories today! To vote or not to vote? All eyes on U.K. House Speaker John Bercow as he decides whether to put the Prime Minister's bill on the table for a meaningful vote. Getting out in front! Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg has a media blitz ahead of his testimony on Capitol Hill. And, Boeing's share price falls further after instant messages about the 737-Max were revealed. It's Monday...let's make a move.
Running alongside the Government's negotiations with the European Union has been a complex - and at times fraught - discussion in Parliament about how much say MPs should have on the final Brexit deal. Mark Mardell navigates MPs' journey for a meaningful vote on the Brexit Withdrawal Agreement. Email: pm@bbc.co.uk Twitter: @BBCPM
Recorded on the evening of Wednesday 3 April, Steve and Chris discuss the failure of Meaningful Vote 3.0, Indicative Votes 2.0, and Theresa May's Road to Damascus moment (spoiler: it's not). How will the EU27 respond to her plan for a further short extension?
Recorded live during the not quite Meaningful Vote 3 happening in Parliament, James, Sam and Ruth sit down to share their Brexit woes, and chat about the Church's reaction. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
With Brexit literally hours away, we convene Leaver-turned-Article-50-Revoker ROLAND SMITH and law and policy expert DAVID ALLEN GREEN to stare into the abyss. How did we get here? What could happen next? Has May engineered a Hobson’s Choice between her Bad Deal and No Deal? And what happens if nothing happens? PLUS May blames Parliament for her own failings. Why John Bercow’s Eskine Mayhem isn’t a constitutional crisis at all. David discusses the Meaningful Vote in terms of Thanos’s Infinity Stones. The fooling of Arron Banks. Chained to a radiator with Seumas Milne. And whatever happened to old-fashioned, sane “euroscepticism”? This week’s episode was recorded before Donald Tusk’s bombshell intervention this afternoon.“Was our group naive? I have to say yes. Euroscepticism has been taken over.”This week’s REMAINIACS is presented by Ros Taylor with Ian Dunt. Produced by Andrew Harrison. Audio production is by Alex Rees. Remainiacs is a Podmasters production.Get every new episode of Remainiacs a whole day early when you back us on the Patreon crowdfunding platform. You’ll also get our monthly Ask Remainiacs special episode plus smart merchandise, an exclusive weekly column by our panel, and discounts on #RemainiacsLive tickets too. #OwnTheRemoanREMAINIACS.comGet your free download of our theme tune ‘Demon Is A Monster’ by Cornershop. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Squawk Box anchors discuss UK Commons Speaker John Bercow’s ruling out of a third meaningful Brexit vote this week, unless the motion is amended. We have detailed analysis live from our correspondents in Westminster and Brussels. Also, Facebook shares slump to their worst level this year following a downgrade while US crude holds near a four-month high after Opec cancelled its April meeting. Meanwhile, Boeing shares dip on the news that global regulators have discovered similarities between two recent fatal 737 MAX 8 crashes. We also take an in-depth look at recent Chinese market performance.
Iso-Britannian pääministeri Theresa May on ottanut jo kahdesti takkiin ratkaisevassa brexit-äänestyksessä. Kahdesti brexit-sopimus on tyrmätty parlamentin alahuoneessa. Kuinka monta kertaa sama sopimus voidaan tuoda parlamentin äänestykseen ennen kuin se siirretään syrjään parlamentin tahdon vastaisena? Onko kolmas "meaningful vote" brexit-sopimuksesta vielä mahdollinen? Entä millä ehdoilla EU voisi hyväksyä brexit-päivän lykkäyksen? Mikä on Suomen kanta brexit-päivän lykkäämiseen? Vieraina ovat eduskunnan ulkoasiainvaliokunnan puheenjohtaja Matti Vanhanen (kesk.), valiokunnan jäsen Jutta Urpilainen (sd.) ja suuren valiokunnan puheenjohtaja Arto Satonen. Toimittajana on Tapio Pajunen.
The speaker makes a ruling in the House of Commons on whether the Prime Minister could try a third time to get her EU withdrawal deal through Parliament. Also, another country faces experiences a horrific mass shooting, and why Sky News made history by broadcasting from a submarine.
Following on from the series of ‘domino’ votes in the House of Commons over 12-14 March 2019, Prof Roger Awan-Scully, Prof Jo Hunt and Dr Rachel Minto of Cardiff University's Wales Governance Centre discuss where this leaves Brexit in relation to Wales, devolution, the House of Commons and the EU. If you would like to find out more from the Wales Governance Centre’s Research, you can find more on their website: Also, you can find our guests on Twitter: Prof. Roger Awan-Scully: @roger_scully Prof. Jo Hunt: @johunt Dr Rachel Minto: @RA_Minto Wales Governance Centre: @WalesGovernance and, of course, Golau: golau_podcast and if you enjoyed this podcast, please like, review and subscribe in your podcast player of choice.
In a totally nuts week of politics, MPs voted to reject Theresa May's deal, reject no deal and extend Article 50. But Theresa May is back next week again with her deal in a final attempt to get MPs to vote for it before we leave the EU. And if she doesn't manage that... well... we're looking for a long term extension. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
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Investec — Lindsay Williams is joined by Investec Chief Economist Phil Shaw to discuss the fallout of last night's second "meaningful vote". Theresa May's deal was once again voted down, drawing up a number of question marks as to where the UK go from here. Please note: this podcast is provided for information purposes only and should not be construed as an offer, or a solicitation of an offer, to buy or sell financial instruments. This podcast does not constitute a personal recommendation and is not investment advice.
With the European Research Group (ERG) announcing they will vote against the deal, what does this mean for Theresa May? Is the Prime Minister likely to get her Meaningful vote through? And is extension looking more and more likely?
Rob and Tom discuss the Meaningful Vote 2 (Electric Boogaloo) and where does Brexit go from here?N.B: Some occasional audio issues on Tom’s line as he is travelling.TOPICS- Brexit: Meaningful Vote 2- Quick Polls UpdateSUPPORTSupport all TTSS shows on PatreonSHOWNOTES- BBC: MPs reject Theresa May's deal for a second time- Legal Opinion on Joint Instrument and Unilateral Declaration- BrexitCast: See You in Strasbourg- BBC: Border 'no-deal plan' to be published- Twitter: Meaningful Vote 3?- YouTube: Doesn’t She Look Tired?- Britain Elects: Westminster Voting Intention- The last month of polls- Join us on Discord!DISCUSS- Reddit- Twitter- FacebookATTRIBUTION- Recording engineer: Craig- Theme song: Handel's Water Music (Public Domain under CC0 1.0) with Big Ben Chimes (By hyderpotter under CC0 1.0).- Main Image: RP1_0107x by AVAAZ, Public Domain
Podcasts from A Diet of Brussels, talking about the issues around the UK's referendum on membership of the EU. Website: www.adietofbrussels.com
Adam Boulton and guests discuss the political arguments associated with the rise in knife crime as Theresa May insists there is no direct correlation between 'certain crimes and police numbers.' With another Meaningful Vote on Brexit on the horizon, can Mrs May get her deal through the Commons? And what can we expect from the Chancellor's Spring Statement next week? Joining Adam this week are Sky's economics editor Ed Conway, Research Fellow for the Centre for Policy Studies Harriet Sergeant, Sky's political correspondent Tom Rayner and the Head of Sky Data Harry Carr.
This week we talk through the split in both the Labour and Conservative Parties - what that means for parliamentary arithmetic and what that means for Brexit. We also talk about the crucial 5th vote and the big Cooper amendment). See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Rob and Tom discuss the end of the government shutdown and how Trump has fared so far.TOPICS- Headlines- Brexit Amendments- Trump & Government Shutdown- Trump’s Achievements- Quick Polls UpdateSUPPORTSupport all TTSS shows on PatreonSHOWNOTES- Tomorrow’s Newspapers Today- Positive News- The Queen and Government- BBC: Brady Amendment- Twitter: Plan B Cartoon- Planet Money: The First Shutdown- 538: Trump Approval Ratings- Wikipedia: Federal Judges Appointed by Trump- New York Times: The Myth of the Criminal Immigrant- Wikipedia: Rhyme as Reason Effect- Facebook: Amy Patrick on the Wall- Britain Elects: Westminster Voting Intention- Labour vs Conservative Voting Intention- Join us on Discord!DISCUSS- Reddit- Twitter- FacebookATTRIBUTION- Recording engineer: Craig- Theme song: Handel's Water Music (Public Domain under CC0 1.0) with Big Ben Chimes (By hyderpotter under CC0 1.0).- Main Image: Security Strategy by Joyce N. Boghosian (Public Domain).Rob and Tom discuss the Meaningful Vote mere moments after the result, skipping the headlines this week. Then the conversation circles round to Mr. Speaker and the Government Shutdown.
What a week it's been in Westminster as the Brexit crisis started to bite harder. A thumping defeat for Theresa May's Brexit plan prompted Jeremy Corbyn to table a motion of no confidence in the government....which was rejected by MPs. So where now? What is plan B? How can Parliament honour the referendum of 2016? Plenty to talk about this week and joining Adam Boulton to go over it all are the Labour MP Stella Creasy, Conservative MP George Freeman, Sky's political reporter Rob Powell and the Head of Sky Data Harry Carr.
Parliament is finally about to have its say on Brexit. The way MPs choose to vote on the deal will have major repercussions for how, when and possibly even if the UK leaves the European Union this year. The Institute for Government brought together leading parliamentarians and political figures to ask what the result of the historic vote means for Brexit. Our panel included: Rt Hon Stephen Crabb MP Joanna Cherry QC MP Iain Dale, Broadcaster and political commentator Allie Renison, Institute of Directors The conversation was chaired by Jill Rutter, Programme Director at the Institute for Government and there will be opportunity for audience Q&A.
Rob and Tom discuss the Meaningful Vote mere moments after the result, skipping the headlines this week. Then the conversation circles round to Mr. Speaker and the Government Shutdown.TOPICS- Theresa May’s Meaningful Vote- Bercow impropriety?- Trump & Government ShutdownSUPPORTSupport all TTSS shows on PatreonSHOWNOTES- Huffington Post: Brexit Traffic Jam- Twitter: Summary of PM’s position- Guardian: Bercow Correct- Guardian: Bercow Wrong- Trump Steamed Hams- Bonus: Rob and his microphone- Join us on Discord!- YouTubeDISCUSS- Reddit- Twitter- FacebookATTRIBUTION- Recording engineer: Craig- Theme song: Handel's Water Music (Public Domain under CC0 1.0) with Big Ben Chimes (By hyderpotter under CC0 1.0).
Podcasts from A Diet of Brussels, talking about the issues around the UK's referendum on membership of the EU. Website: www.adietofbrussels.com
The result and the reaction from Westminster on the Brexit Meaningful Vote. We assess what happens next.
As Parliament prepares for the meaningful vote on Theresa May's Brexit deal this evening, we're keeping a close eye on what's going on from the talkRADIO tent in College Green. To the soundtrack of a loud bell and some drums, today's podcast features Sir Vince Cable, Katie Perrior, David Wooding, Sir Edward Leigh, Stanley Johnson, Bob Seely, and Damian Collins. See you on the other side! See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
The Scoop team react to May's historic loss, predicting what will happen next and how it will affect both the EU, and Northern Ireland.
A detailed preview of tonight's meaningful vote on Theresa May's Brexit deal with expert analysis and a summary of the day's other news, including the opening of the Hillsborough trial
Jacqui and Iain preview what could be one of the most momentous weeks in British politics, analyse the abuse experienced by Anna Soubry & Owen Jones, as well as cast their eye over Fiona Bruce’s debut on Question Time. They debate the merits of the Speaker’s decision to overturn parliamentary convention and apologise for the lack of innuendo in this week’s podcast.
Are you lost over the meaningful vote again? What is it all about? Will it pass? What will happen if it doesn't pass?All your questions answered in this first episode of the year! See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Meaningful Vote, treaty approval, European Parliament approval... the road to Brexit is long and winding, but a lot less enjoyable than The Beatles song. In this episode, we tried to work out what the main stops are on that road - i.e. what has to be done, by when, by whom, for Brexit to happen on time.
We discuss the delay in the Meaningful Vote and the implications for Brexit. We also discuss the hosts' decisions to leave UKIP.Further afield we discuss Mike's recent trip to California.Back on Croydon matters we talk about our New Year's Message for Croydon Council and Review 2018 in Croydon politics.Get in touch:Twitter: @CroydonConst Email: croydonconstitutionalists@gmail.comFacebook: facebook/CroydonConstitutionalistshttp://croydonconstitutionalists.uk/
The Meaningful Vote that never was; the no-confidence vote that answered one question, but raised many more; the European summit and 'that' row over "nebulous" - RTÉ Europe Editor Tony Connelly and Deputy Foreign Editor Colm Ó Mongáin look at a bumper Brexit week.
Adam Boulton and guests discuss another dramatic week in politics which started with the deferral of the Meaningful Vote on Theresa May's Withdrawal Agreement with the EU, progressed into a confidence vote among Conservative MPs on Mrs May's leadership and culminates in further discussions with the EU about the Irish backstop. So, with accusations of kicking the can down the road ringing in he ears, the Prime Minister looks likely to be politically live and kicking for some time to come (or at least until Christmas). Adam hosts in Brussels alongside Sky's diplomatic editor Dominic Waghorn and they're joined in Westminster by Sky's political corespondent Kate McCann and the Head of Sky Data, Harry Carr. #Brexit #MeaningfulVote #May #AllOutPolitics #skynews #politics
The big day is upon us and we are ready! (We're not ready). This week we chat about all the possible options IF Theresa May's deal gets voted down. Buckle in, it's going to get messy. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
It's another Brexit special as we count down to next week's Meaningful Vote on the deal agreed between the UK and the EU. In the lead up, the Government's been found in contempt of Parliament for the first time over its failure to publish its full legal advice on the deal and MPs backed a call for the Commons to have a direct say in what happens if - as expected - the Prime Minister's proposal is rejected. Joining Adam Boulton to discuss the political and legal implications of this week's events are Sky's Home editor Jason Farrell, the contributing editor of the FT and solicitor at Preiskel & Co LLP David Allen Green and the Head of Sky Data Harry Carr. #Brexit #AllOutPolitics #MakeebatesHappen #SkyNews
On this week’s podcast, Guardian columnist and former Russia correspondent RAFAEL BEHR joins us to explain the mind-crushing complexity of Withdrawal Bill day. What happened, who won (if anyone) and where do we go from here? Did Theresa May play Dominic Grieve like a sucker? And if she did, can the Rebels come back at her in any meaningful way? (We recorded on Wednesday 13 before May “allegedly” went back on her word to Grieve regarding the Meaningful Vote. Update minicast coming soon). Plus: Inside the sleazy world of Arron Banks, Isabel Oakeshott and Andy Wigmore, a story featuring ACTUAL Moscow Gold! The looming clash between Imaginary Brexit and Real Brexit. And why the Tommy Robinson Gammon Riots in Whitehall are really, truly worrying. “Tory rebels need to stop acting like time is on their side. It’s not. It’s on the Brexiters’ side.”This week’s REMAINIACS is presented by Dorian Lynskey with Ros Taylor and Ian Dunt. Audio production: Jack Claramunt. Remainiacs is a Podmasters production.Help us to #OwnTheRemoan! Back the show in its battle to get some sense back into the Brexit debate and get smart Remainiacs merchandise too, at our Patreon page.www.REMAINIACS.comTheme music ‘Demon Is A Monster’ used by kind permission of Cornershop. Buy it here. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.