So you're telling me that the amorphous sense of 'winning' an individual might have as a result of his or her opinion being confirmed by a slight majority of others who cared to express an opinion two years ago, is more important than the actual consequences of the policy now we know what it is? — karl stone
Parliament votes to have one. Or it votes to just revoke Article 50 without a referendum. — Michael
I think a majority oppose the Withdrawal Agreement but also a majority oppose No Deal (although not the same majority, of course).
If the Withdrawal Agreement is voted down then what will the majority who oppose No Deal do? I doubt they will just let it happen. They'll vote for a second referendum as a last ditch attempt to avoid a hard Brexit. — Michael
Yet, for example, in today's news, it has been reported that the Foreign Secretary, Jeremy Hunt, has said that it would be possible to get "a version" of the prime minister's Brexit deal approved by MPs.
It will depend on what May brings back. Although I'm hardly optimistic about her chances, it's too soon to write it off. — S
The EU have rejected a renegotiation of the current deal. — Michael
Why couldn't the UK have worked from within the EU to make the changes it wanted? — frank
But the people who voted to remain are ok with that lack of self determination? Or are they unhappy about it, but leaving is just worse? — frank
I don't quite understand. Is it that the EU needs a culture change to keep its members? Do the member states not trust one another? Would greater centralization of authority help or hurt? — frank
Some never bought the idea that being a progressive meant being positive about Europe. They saw nothing especially progressive about mass unemployment, the impact of the common agricultural policy on the developing world, the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership, or the bias towards austerity ingrained in the stability and growth pact. Rather, they saw neoliberalism being hardwired into the European project. As indeed it was. — Larry Elliott, The Guardian
If the UK had another referendum and voted to stay, is there an underlying problem that will just pop up again down the line? — frank
This isn't kindergarten where I have to spell everything out for you. — Benkei
What was misplaced is thinking a will of the people can be distilled from the leave result, which you used as an argument to respect the vote. — Benkei
It's inane because if you'd actually be interested in the subject you'd know referenda are terrible instruments for it as they are currently used, which is an established fact in political sciences. That was what my comment pertained to. Your latest post misses the mark yet again. — Benkei
So you favor totalitarianism? — frank
Another folly of a referendum is that it asks an isolated question, when policies are interdependent. If you have a separate vote on, say...
1. lower taxes - yes/ no.
2. better services yes/no
3. economic stability yes/no
...You are very likely going to get three yeses. But they constitute a trilemma of which only two can be had. — unenlightened
Now in this case, we have a single referendum, but with people voting for incompatible reasons, and voting without having considered the ramifications of the decision. — unenlightened
But it can be, in accordance with my use of the phrase, logic, and established facts. The will of the people is expressed by the majority of voters, and the majority of voters voted to leave, so the will of the people at that time was to leave. — S
The problem is, that same criticism can be levelled against our representatives in parliament. Boris Johnson, speaking as Foreign Secretary, said that his policy on cake is pro having it and pro eating it, and David Davis, speaking as Brexit secretary, said that we could strike a deal whereby we enjoy the exact same benefits that we currently do. — S
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