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Re: Brexit discussion
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https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/201...g-hardest-hit/ You can speculate as to the reasons why, the NHS being run into the ground by the Govt. might just be a factor. |
Re: Brexit discussion
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Bush replied and said that the only poll he cared about was the one in the fall of 04. I thought that his response was slightly crass to be honest and he could have shown some love for the millions of Iraqis who dipped their fingers into purple dye. None the less though, his statement was accurate for his own political system ; Presidents are term tied / limited and he had won re-election. There was no more for him to win so that argument holds water. In your case though, you keep saying that it is the one poll that mattered only it isn't just that, is it? There is still the future relationship etc (existing debt / monies owed and so on) but it is more than that. Every person used their democratic vote under our parliamentary system to vote for a member of parliament, every one of them gets a say to vote on the final deal. If they vote no and the UK does not accept the deal, is that not then the most important vote all of a sudden? If a referendum on the final deal is agreed to, is that not the poll / vote that matters? If a second referendum is held, is that not the vote that matters? If the UK wishes to rejoin the EU is it not the vote to rejoin that becomes the most important? In a binding election with a finite ending and a term limit it is one thing to gloat that you won ; in the US once the electors vote and the House of Representatives affirms that is that. Once a President is sworn in that ends that unless he leaves office (by whatever means) but either way, the term is fixed. With the EU vote it is nothing of the sort - all of it is fluid per the discretion of UK leaders / the EU / judges on either side etc etc. So as much as the official poll won out a couple years ago (to leave) there is nothing to stop more and more official polls, on the terms that we leave / the option to stay in / to rejoin and on and on. Playing the "we won" card becomes rather obsolete in a scenario where there are countless options, to win back. |
Re: Brexit discussion
... all of which is to ignore the elephant in the room, which is that sovereignty rests with the Crown-in-Parliament and everything short of that is, ultimately, only advisory in nature.
Our system doesn’t rest on a written constitution, it has evolved over a millennium and referendums are a very recent and novel imposition on it. It isn’t surprising that nobody quite understands exactly how a referendum result fits into the bigger picture. |
Re: Brexit discussion
Oh sure, I get that.
The problem is that politicians can't on the one hand say "your vote wasn't binding because we have a Westminster system of politics where everything is fluid / malleable, so suck it up we're not leaving" but then on the other hand say to the voter "but it's time for the next election so you know that useless vote of yours, come throw it my way so I can represent you again". As much as nobody really cares about the will of the people, it is an entirely difficult thing to say in public unless you plan on retiring / never seeking their vote again. So then you need to start getting creative, like: "Democracy is so important and we value your vote so very much, along with your opinion, that we are going to give you a vote on the final deal, too!" Brexit means Brexit, right? Then the will of the people / Democracy means just that - they should get a vote on it all in the hope that they scupper it. Democracy is just an excuse. And ultimately it boils down to that: Excuses mean excuses. It was non binding alright - just an advisory poll but ultimately another advisory poll may be the only way out of this fiasco in which politicians can save face / still look to get re-elected. Or they could all retire I suppose. |
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And how many polls do we get until those who don't like the result get what they want? - Democracy does not work that way, I stand by what I said, one poll mattered and we are leaving, as it should be. You cannot have another poll every couple of years. The vote was binary, it was either leave or remain and no where in-between - leave won, so leave we must. That's Democracy and that is not an excuse either. |
Re: Brexit discussion
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https://www.cableforum.uk/board/atta...1&d=1528249847
This Poll image Says it all really... and this is a poll created by a Remainer. But dang, look at how many flips from Remain to leave there are vs. Leave to Remain. :rofl: |
Re: Brexit discussion
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I.e. after the referendum there was a GE and we each had a vote for member of parliament - they each get a deciding vote on the end bill. We get a vote that way I suppose. Though the Lib Dems have been proposing a referendum on the final deal... Would you like that as a possible way for the people to approve / disapprove of the deal? ---------- Post added at 03:29 ---------- Previous post was at 03:18 ---------- Quote:
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Kind of like two men running from a bear - no-one has to run faster than the bear. They just have to run faster than the other man.... In an ideal world, we wouldn't need a poll every other year. Just one until the side that you were backing, won. You are already at that place but I feel like you actually feel like leaving is the correct thing to do, on principle. I just took umbrage at the whole it is "Democracy" at work line - if you back it as a matter of principle then to hell with what the people think! You think that leaving the EU is the right thing to do? If the people voted remain, you would still think that leaving was the right thing to do, right? Even if a majority of people voted to leave or remain, it won't change many opinion of ideologues / those that are polarized either way and that is why I asked what your opinion on a future relationship should be. (Not just Trade, but security / space exploration / travel and migration / law and justice, etc etc etc). Again, I took issue with your calling it a banal question which is why I didn't ask any further. Though I do stand by my original statement of this not going well. You say that it is not a fiasco...fine, how would you describe the progress of the process though. Because the word excruciating comes to mind. |
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A poll can happen at anytime and is just used as a marker to gain an idea of people's thoughts. |
Re: Brexit discussion
Well it's foreign fruit we'll be eating this summer, whilst ours rots in the fields #Brexit
European fruit pickers shun Britain - http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-44230865 |
Re: Brexit discussion
Not often I agree with JC but I think he's nailed it here!
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The Government is certainly giving Northern Rail, Thameslink and TSB a run in the incompetence stakes! :rolleyes: Couple of Brexit developments to note: 1) Theresa May is engaged in a serious row with David Davis, Brexit secretary, over claims that she wants to tie Britain to the EU customs union indefinitely as part of a “backstop” plan on the Irish border. He doesn't like the indefinite nature of the backstop https://www.ft.com/content/bb75ccba-...3-0c230fa67aec 2) UK military secondments to EU to cease after Brexit. https://www.ft.com/content/ab758f42-...b-4acfcfb08c11 3) Government warned British cars 'won't qualify for free trade deals' after Brexit Quote:
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