But how do you think you can justify a second people's vote (which is what it would be)? That would undermine the first one that we had back in 2016, and betray all of those 17.4 million people who voted to leave, — S
you can't just keep rerunning the referendum until you get the result that you want. — S
Are you saying the global capitalist system should be democratised? — Evil
Haven’t the EU said that there’s nothing left to negotiate? Unless TM abandons her red lines, e.g an end to freedom of movement, this is the only deal on the table. — Michael
which at the moment find that their interests lie in fomenting division and conflict, which serves to secure their position by dividing the opposition. — unenlightened
There’s been a material change of circumstances: the lies, the overspending, Cambridge Analytica, etc. have been exposed; there’s actual advice on the repercussions of leaving; and now that we know what the Leave deal is we have real information about what we’d be voting for. — Michael
Did the 2017 GE undermine the 2015 GE? — Michael
Yes it would. But that’s a price worth paying to avoid the much worse alternative, especially if May’s deal is voted down and we leave without a deal which will break the Good Friday Agreement. The reality is that the practicalities often require going back on promises, which is why manifesto pledges are rarely, if ever, all fulfilled. — Michael
I don’t. I think Article 50 should just be revoked and Brexit cancelled. — Michael
Don't be a sore loser. You lost fair and square. — S
This isn’t a game. It’s not about winning and losing. There are very real and very serious consequences to leaving that weren’t apparent during the referendum and that certainly couldn’t have been known before the terms of leaving were actually negotiated. — Michael
For some people this really is a life or death issue. There’s talk of staff shortages for the NHS and a negative effect on the medical supply chain, at least in the case of a no deal exit. — Michael
This isn’t a game. It’s not about winning and losing. — Michael
There are very real and very serious consequences to leaving that weren’t apparent during the referendum and that certainly couldn’t have been known before the terms of leaving were actually negotiated.
For some people this really is a life or death issue. There’s talk of staff shortages for the NHS and a negative affect on the medical supply chain, at least in the case of a no deal exit. — Michael
There could be an optional preferential referendum, where people list their choices in order. — andrewk
It's for that reason that I really don't think any of your data points would be very persuasive to someone in favor of leaving. — Hanover
Nobody's going to die. In the US, we don't even have an NHS and everyone, regardless of income, figures out how to get care. You really need to get off the idea that the government is as necessary as it is. That's a very European viewpoint of yours — Hanover
I'm not trying to persuade them. I'm saying that there is justification for holding a second referendum. — Michael
And also that Brexit should just be cancelled without bothering with a second referendum. — Michael
Like I'm saying though, if the justification of those who wanted to leave is that they simply believe in the concept of home rule and autonomy, then your justification holds no weight for them. People who believe in self-rule are not going to be convinced that there will be major failures when they begin to self rule. — Hanover
I agree with S on this one. You can't defy the democracy, as if you know better for them. The loss of public support for the legitimacy of the system is a bigger loss than simply pulling the plug on the latest economic idea. — Hanover
It isn’t about private or public healthcare. It’s about the UK’s supply chain being tied to us being a member of the single market, given that we don’t manufacture all the drugs. It takes significant time to establish new trade agreements and work out the new logistics. — Michael
What a funny name for it. We just call it preferential voting, and it seems as natural as breathing. I can't think of a single reason why anybody that understands how it works would not want it.
Preferential voting is like having a two-round election like they have in many countries, such as the French Presidential election. Except by marking the preferences on a single ballot, you avoid all the cost and wasted time of having to conduct a second ballot, without losing any of its nuance and functionality. The elimination of less supported candidates and narrowing down to a final two happens automatically.
There must have been a lot of misinformation about for it to have been rejected in 2011. I suppose the Tories prefer first past the post because Labour and Lib Dem would direct preferences to one another, and thereby be elected much more often than at present. — andrewk
No it wouldn't. It would be a third people's vote. The first vote was in 1973, and the result was to remain. — unenlightened
I suspect what would be really popular would be to end the Good Friday agreement and give N. Ireland back to the Republic. — unenlightened
I don't live in the UK, but I'm in favor of there eventually being world unification/a one-world government... — Terrapin Station
The world is too big a place, with multiple conflicting interests. — S
The main thing we'd need to get over is people wanting to control others. We'd need people to be comfortable with letter others do their own (consensual) things. — Terrapin Station
Plebiscites aren't won or lost. They choose between options. Since all three options in my proposal above are clear, concrete and possible without agreement from outside parties, it would be political suicide for a government to not implement the result, whatever it was.And what if this second referendum wasn't lost? — S
Plebiscites aren't won or lost. They choose between options. — andrewk
Since all three options in my proposal above are clear, concrete and possible without agreement from outside parties, it would be political suicide for a government to not implement the result, whatever it was. — andrewk
This contrasts strictly with the 2016 plebiscite, which was purely aspirational, with no concrete options on the table, and no knowledge of what the consequences of the 'leave' option would be, since they would require agreement from the EU. It's like having a plebiscite question 'would you like to have lower tax', when there's no specification of what services would be cut, and which ones, or whether the fiscal deficit would be allowed to increase instead. — andrewk
For a plebiscite to be credible it needs to have concrete options that can be implemented without requiring consent from extra-territorial parties.
Look at how bills are turned into acts in parliament. They are not voted or even formally debated until a bill is presented that spells out ALL the details.
BTW I use the term plebiscite here because referendums actually change the law directly, whereas plebiscites are an indication of preference, on which the government is expected to act. In Australia we have both referenda (on things like conscription and banning the communist party - both lost) and plebiscites (recently on marriage equality). My understanding is that the UK has no provision for referenda in its constitution, so only plebiscites are possible. — andrewk
"Although the result was to join, not to remain"
Sorry but that is wrong, we were taken into the EEC in 1973 by the then Conservative govt under the leadership of PM Edward Heath, (without a referendum)
In 1975 the first referendum was whether to remain in the EEC. — TWI
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