dingodan
New member
- Feb 16, 2011
- 10,080
thanks for your response. what examples of EU law do you have that have been bad for the UK?
The other thing about our law is surely most of that is past by Parliament , the same institution (well probably 75% of MPs) which originally felt the EU was ok as they were remainers. It is also the same institution which is now be vilified as being undemocratic and is being ignored/overridden by Boris & crew. So how does the future pan out, should Parliament have any role in the future if it can't be trusted not to work in the best interests of the population?
The vote opened a can of worms and unfortunately all that has happened in the last 3 years is we keep moving to a larger can of worms. Some people are & will profit from this situation but I don't see that as the 17.4 million who voted to leave just a small select group.
I can vote for members of parliament, if we don't like the things they propose when they want to get elected then we don't vote for them. Some MP's will get elected even if I don't like their policies, but that is democracy and I accept that. My job would be to argue in favor of what I believe in. The best argument, the most convincing case, wins.
The EU Commission are the only body which can propose legislation in the EU. EU Citizens can't vote them in, nor can they vote them out.
I don't need examples of bad EU law. The EU could pass fluffy bunny laws of love and wonder. Makes no difference. It's not the substance of the laws they pass, it's the process by which they are passed. Even if every EU law ever passed was good for everyone, they may not be tomorrow. If I was in charge of your bank account and cheque book, the fact that I only ever make purchases which benefit you and which you agree with, wouldn't make it Ok.