Absolutely this!Our system is much imitated and has bought freedom with it. I suspect you would appreciate our system more if it were lost and a generation had to fight and die for it once again.
Absolutely this!Our system is much imitated and has bought freedom with it. I suspect you would appreciate our system more if it were lost and a generation had to fight and die for it once again.
This thread has dealt with the EU's democratic legitimacy before, it's an area that even ardent Euro federalists accept is a weakness. To argue there is not marks you out as some kind of zealot.
Any debate on the matter should be about what the pro EU supporters would do to resolve it. For example the Robert Schuman institute has its view (Robert Schuman was a founding father of the EEC and a sponsor of its progress to the EU).
http://www.robert-schuman.eu/en/eur...w-do-we-solve-the-european-democratic-problem
You're fighting out a battle that has been lost long ago, so dry those baby blues and share your vision on how you would make the EU more democratic, accountable and relevant to EU citizens.
It's down to perception I guess. I have lived in different places around the world and have many times been told of the esteem with which British democracy is held. Our system is much imitated and has bought freedom with it. I suspect you would appreciate our system more if it were lost and a generation had to fight and die for it once again.
It's down to perception I guess. I have lived in different places around the world and have many times been told of the esteem with which British democracy is held. Our system is much imitated and has bought freedom with it. I suspect you would appreciate our system more if it were lost and a generation had to fight and die for it once again.
Maybe in the latter stages of the thread,many of the original Remain in the early threads have accepted the result or in part,or stopped contributing altogether...leaving us with the dregs or was that the cream,i'd say the cream to be fair.
Where is [MENTION=25549]5ways[/MENTION] [MENTION=225]Hamilton[/MENTION] or [MENTION=17963]Hampster Gull[/MENTION] ALL Remain big guns-appologies if i have not mentioned others
Not a chance. We just get legislation after legislation forced upon us whether we want/like it or not. EU democracy.Well said that man. We the people also had the chance to change the FPTP system .. but decided no to, by a large majority, in a referendum. Not so sure we would ever get a vote in how the electoral system in the EU works though.
HA HA, YOU COULDN'T MAKE THIS SHIT UP unlike the EU BEUROCRATS THAT ARE UNELECTEDThere's a reason that Westminster is called the Mother of Parliaments and I greatly admire aspects of the British parliamentary system but have serious doubts about the arrangements for electing people to serve in it. It is difficult to defend an arrangement which means it takes many times more people to elect, say, a UKIP MP than a Conservative or Labour one. People who do so defend it seem either to have an aura of expediency about them (the system favours the party they happen to support) or they have fallen into the trap of thinking that everything about the UK is better than everything about everywhere else. It does us no favours.
Regarding imitation, our FPTP voting system - which is what we are talking about - is not so heavily imitated these days. Some big-population countries - the USA and India - have it but most that do are much smaller than the UK. And a number have abandoned it. I wish we would.
...It is difficult to defend an arrangement which means it takes many times more people to elect, say, a UKIP MP than a Conservative or Labour one.
Look, it has equal status as the other two branches.
this simply isn't true, you're making on a view that counts the national voting for a party, when our system is based on constituencies. at a constituency level, you simply need more votes than any other candidate, the same for any party in a given seat. the problem for UKIP as it was before for Greens and others, is they are a fringe protest party without a core vote anywhere. most of their issues are accepted in reduced form by the major parties, and the bulk of voters aren't interested in candidates/party that see their single issue as the answer to everything.
can we have a pie /flow chart as well
Look, it has equal status as the other two branches. Is it perfect? No, probably not. But you are the one that pissed their pants and ran off crying to their safe space with a referendum instead of being a grown up and facing the issue and campaigning and changing the inadequacies of the system.
A possibility more likely in a divided Europe.
Geez! With a clusterf**k of an organisational chart like that, I'm even happier we voted to leave than I was yesterday!
Yes, I seem to remember we were told that before the referendum too. Project Fear, I think it was called. Hands up all those who've already installed their Anderson shelter..........
Semantics I’m afraid. General elections are national events and as you know I was making a national point by drawing attention to the fact that the number of votes cast nationally are not reflected in the representation in the national parliament.
Look, it has equal status as the other two branches. Is it perfect? No, probably not. But you are the one that pissed their pants and ran off crying to their safe space with a referendum instead of being a grown up and facing the issue and campaigning and changing the inadequacies of the system.
Oh no we aren't going to war are we
its not semantics, you're deliberately miscasting and mis-analysing the voting results. the system we have holds elections for each constituency, not a a single national poll. the fact they all happen on the same day doesnt alter that basic mechanics of our elections. your looking at national results then complaining that you need more vote to gain a seat, when any candidate, Green, Labour, Liberal, Independent, Tory or UKIP, can win for about 20k votes or ~30% the electorate in a single seat (there abouts due to turnout, less in some seats).
the point about "core" is that most parties dont have a core support nationally, they are spread out a few thousand in each seat. the Liberals best show this, they used to have core votes in Scotland and the west, and grew out of there into the rest of the country, only to retreat when there vote slipped away, back to Labour and Conservatives. Labour's core is in the cities, Conservatives in the shires, they know they'll get 160-200 seats and fight over the rest. this is an outcome of peoples support for the parties and the whole balance of their policies, not the electoral system. if UKIP (or Greens) offered a broad based platform of policies that addressed problems, rather than applying the same solution to everything, or focused on issue in particular areas, they might have more success (like the SNP have). UKIP are a bunch of Tory rejects trying to appeal to working class voters on immigration, dont blame the electoral system for their failure to get more seats.
I am not deliberately mis-analysing anything; I'm just having a different view to yours.
I'd say that FPTP would be appropriate if we had a political system in this country that remained really true to its constituency-based roots but I'd argue that the local role of a member has largely been subsumed by the colossal growth in the power of the national parties.
Indeed and it should be looked at and optimised. But that is no reason for all the Brexit snowflakes to piss themselves and go running home crying as it is not as fair as they like.
I thought we were supposed to be a nation that stood up for itself and fights for what is right? Not one that surrenders and runs off if things are not to its liking. Oh well, times change.