Britain is debating on whether to bomb ISIS in Syria right now
- The debate in the House of Commons starts at 11.30 a.m. GMT and lasts until 10 p.m.
- Politicians will vote on whether to bomb ISIS in Syria around 10 p.m. this evening
- The latest YouGov poll shows that 48% of Britons approve air strikes, 31% disapprove, while the rest remained undecided as of December 1.
The live feed from the House of Commons debate is here:
The PM says DAESH should be used to refer to so-called IS. Why it has different names: https://t.co/dm6OoQkXlJ pic.twitter.com/6rXvdQQobm
— BBC Newsbeat (@BBCNewsbeat) December 2, 2015
- 157 to speak today
- There will be 5 minute limit on back bench speeches
Labour kicks off with criticising the government for only holding a one day debate, instead of two.
Debate: ISIL in Syria (United Nations Security Council Resolution 2249) (Motion) - kicks off with David Cameron:
"Today it is about how we keep the British people safe from the threat of ISIL. It is not whether to fight terrorism but it is how to fight terrorism. I respect people to come to a different view and vote accoridngly and a reassurance to members to those across the house."
"I am not pretending that the answer is simple. Neither am I pretending military action is more than one part of the answer. We should pursue a comprehensive strategy."
The level of abuse over the last four months is on a totally, totally different scale from anything ever before. It is directly linked to people purporting to support Jeremy. He should remove this intolerant minority. They have no place in a progressive left-wing party. None of them have been disciplined yet, never mind expelled and he should start doing so.
It is deliberate bullying. I have received tweets and emails, some are random but some seem to be orchestrated by groups both inside and outside the party. Threats of deselection are at the mild end of it. There is every kind of name-calling you can think of. There is no place in the Labour Party for people who are going to abuse others in the run-up to an important debate and vote.
Labour source suggests Cameron's 'crass' comment on terrorist sympathisers is hardening Labour SUPPORT for airstrikes up to 40 MPs
— Matt Chorley (@MattChorley) December 2, 2015
- 360 MPs, including 50 from the Labour benches, are in favour of a bombing while 170 are against.
- Most of the public support a bombing on Syria — but approval is slipping: 48% approve, 31% disapprove, while the rest are undecided.
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Those who voted Labour in May have now changed their minds — moving from majority support: On November 17, 52% approved of RAF air strikes on ISIS in Syria while 26% opposed it. As of December 1, 35% now approve while 42% disapprove.
- Jeremy Corbyn, leader of the Labour party, is bleeding in approval ratings: Only 24% say he is doing well as a leader and 65% say he is doing badly.
- Approval ratings for Prime Minister David Cameron, and leader of the Conservative party, is neutral but diminishing Labour support is boosting support for the Tories: Recent voting intention figures put Conservatives at 41% to Labour's 30%. This lead of 11 is a four point improvement on the general election result.
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