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ScepticTone wrote:
60% of the British electorate voted for parties soundly committed to the EU in the 2010 general election....
ScepticTone wrote:One only gets to be a 'Right Honorable Gentleman' if one is actually elected to the House of Commons as an MP, in a general election BJ, via a popularly-supported political party. A prospect I suspect even Mr. Weston couldn't envisage in even his wildest dreams......
ScepticTone wrote:
60% of the British electorate voted for parties soundly committed to the EU in the 2010 general election. However, our first-past-the-post electoral system mysteriously gave the conservatives a handful more seats than Labour. Plus 57 Liberals.
Bulldog wrote:ScepticTone wrote:
60% of the British electorate voted for parties soundly committed to the EU in the 2010 general election....
UKIP got 40% of the vote did they?
Bestbear wrote:Do you take this to mean that only 3% of the electorate would vote to get out of the EU, given the chance? I suppose you do ......
ScepticTone wrote:I wonder, if this were an issue in the USA, how many voters in a nationwide referendum, State by State, would vote for their State to withdraw from the Federation & go it alone?
ScepticTone wrote:Perhaps a crude analogy, given the completely different political & geographical system pertaining over there, but my point is roughly analogous.
ScepticTone wrote:You're talking referenda again, BB. When you're not driving your car the wong way along motorways or trying to remember where your passport is, you have little else to think about. Unlike most people, who are far too busy & cogent, to bother going out to vote in a referendum which doesn't really interest them.
I wonder, if this were an issue in the USA, how many voters in a nationwide referendum, State by State, would vote for their State to withdraw from the Federation & go it alone?
Perhaps a crude analogy, given the completely different political & geographical system pertaining over there, but my point is roughly analogous.
Bestbear wrote:There is no agitation, as far as I am aware, for any of the present States to withdraw from the Union, and really no equivalence between the US and the EU, much though you Eurofans might wish that it were so.
Bestbear wrote:But, given the chance, the people would vote to get out. As every poll demonstrates.
Big Jake wrote:Having said all of that, I assume Great Britain retains sovereignty in most matters (foreign and domestic), that conditions of membership in the EU are explicit as to the scope of membership and that any substantial changes in that scope (in whole or in part) are contingent solely upon approval of each member state.
Big Jake wrote:Since the issue of state secession has reared it head I'll just add that this was a common debate among many Americans after the 2000 Presidential election. As good an explanation as I've read on the matter is here:I'm not aware of an "EU army" that would invade Great Britain is she elected to leave the union save for the one Uncle Tone might try to form. [/color]
ScepticTone wrote:
FYI, from a personal point of view, I am definitely not in favour of an 'EU Army'.....
ScepticTone wrote:No, I don't think so.
ScepticTone wrote:Me. It's a reductio ad absurdum.
Bulldog wrote:ScepticTone wrote:Me. It's a reductio ad absurdum.
Ain't it all.
ScepticTone wrote:, but it was worth the gamble, I think. Hindsight.
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