Ok, but in terms of the overall question of whether a rerun of the referendum is justified, it doesn't matter where the violation was. They cheated and that undermines the legitimacy of the result. — Baden
And I already linked to one other case of overspending, so don't act like I haven't thrown you a bone. — S
You can fix a result possibly brought about by cheating by rerunning the process in a fair way. — Baden
The fact that this means that Cameron would have turned out retroactively to have told a falsehood is a less important consideration than having a fair referendum. — Baden
And presumably when he made his promise, he didn't expect cheating to occur, so the idea that that was a bigger lie than the deceptions of the Leave campaign doesn't hold up. — Baden
The cheating of overspending has been already been punished, and it's not up to you to come up with your own custom made punishment. You don't have that authority. If you don't how it has been dealt with, then take it to court and see how far you get. — S
But with those qualifications in place, it seems reasonably clear to me what the fairer option is, and not only that but that the British population as a whole would feel more upset by being pushed into an unexpected and damaging no-deal than being offered the chance of a final say to avert it. — Baden
No. The negotiations finished and a deal was signed. There are no negotiations now. There's a deal that May is afraid to put to Parliament and nothing else. — Baden
The electorate understood the option to leave or remain, even if they weren't clear on the finer details or consequences, so I think that these kind of arguments are overstated. — S
There's a strawman to add to the red herrings. The logical consequence of arguing this particular referendum be rerun based on the particular circumstances I've outlined are not that every election should be overturned every time any lie is found. Hard to believe I have to explain that to you. — Baden
You shouldn't believe everything you read or see on TV. — S
Also, it's in the interests of both parties in the negotiations to avoid a no deal scenario, so, with the knowledge that, at present, it's at serious risk of being voted down in parliament, why wouldn't they renegotiate? — S
Given the existence of past cases with sufficiently similar circumstances, if your argument here implies that this particular case should be treated differently to all of those other cases, then, absent justification, that's special pleading. — S
Before I get strawmanned again, here's the combination of circumstances under which I think this referendum (or any other) may justifiably be rerun.
1) One side breaks election law i.e. cheats (not merely lies).
2) The result is close enough so that the cheating may have decisively swayed the result.
3) The unforseen negative implications of the result are very serious.
4) Polls show a significant number of voters feel misled and / or have changed their mind on the basis of new information.
All these are in place in this particular referendum, but most likely apply to very few referenda. — Baden
Obviously, if whatever result you're talking about meets the same four criteria I've just outlined, you can take it I'd support a rerun. — Baden
So the referendum tells us nothing. It's just all a big waste of time. — Benkei
Suppose people voted leave because of immigration then it doesn't follow leave was what they wanted. — Benkei
It only tells you that of the available options presented one provided them a vote to stop immigration. — Benkei
But since the reason for their voting isn't known even that information hasn't been provided as a consequence of the referendum. So the referendum tells us nothing. It's just all a big waste of time. — Benkei
We're arguing here over whether a new referendum, which is a possibility, is justified. It's obviously relevant to take the cheating in the last one into account in determining that. I'm aware I don't personally have the authority to determine British law. — Baden
You mean they didn't sign a deal, that there are negotiations now, or that May is not afraid to put it into Parliament. Those are the three facts I mentioned, and they are facts. — Baden
You don't get it. The EU has far less to lose than the UK by the UK crashing out. It's 28 versus one, a huge crash for the UK and an inconvenient blip for the EU mollified by the severe disincentive the example would send to other potential leaving nations. So, the UK, despite the empty bravado of the Brexiteers, never had any cards to play and never had a hope of anything but managed capitulation, which is what happened. — Baden
There is no better deal to be had. — Baden
It's a Brexiteer fantasy. It's this or something even more objectionable to Tory hardliners, which won't fly unless there's a general election. — Baden
Right. There we were wasting time arguing ethics on the philosophy forum when we should have been speaking directly to Theresa May about all this. — Baden
(Besides I said "if" not "if and only if", but I think you know that and aren't arguing seriously). — Baden
. I mean your assumption that the negotiations are finished, just because that's what has been said, when in fact they've effectively resumed — S
You mean, if they meet your four criteria vs. if and only if they meet your four criteria? What's the relevant difference? — S
One can only reach that conclusion if one limits consideration to immediate consequences, and ignores longer term consequences.That both sides would end up worse off than they would otherwise be with an acceptable deal undermines your point about which of the two would be more worse off. — S
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