daveinprague
New member
It was a joke because they don't have hardly any immigration at all. Good for them.
Despite the EU? How can that happen? Do they have sovereignty?
It was a joke because they don't have hardly any immigration at all. Good for them.
Despite the EU? How can that happen? Do they have sovereignty?
Juncker/Tusk etc are not elected by the people of the EU. They have enormous power. The commission are the ones who draft legislation which the MEPs vote on. The MEPs don’t draft legislation.
There is a huge difference between that and the UK, so to say that the EU is more democratic shows a complete lack of understanding of how the structure works.
The EU has a goal to be a superstate, a United States of Europe. No nations per se, just a single entity where national governments become irrelevant to all intents and purposes. This is why so many leavers voted out - yet remainers just want to say it’s down to racism. It’s incredible how little so many people know about the whole set-up/project.
With the EU the Project is everything. Irrespective of the harm done to citizens, nothing can stand in the way of the project.
Now, you may not agree with that, but when remainers go on about racism, thick, old white people making dumb decisions, that is so far from the truth. Yes, some people will have voted for racist reasons. Some will have voted remain because of Project Fear.
The temporary impact of leaving even with No Deal is a price many feel is worth paying. We may not like our politicians, but we get the chance every 5 years to choose again. We’ve gone from Labour, to Tory/LibDem coalition and now Tory governments. That is democracy. The EU suffers from a severe demoratic deficit.
Whereas in our system, if a seat is won by Labour say, with a massive majority, and five other seats are won narrowly by the Tories, Tories get 5 seats even if across the six seats Labour were the most popular choice. At least the representation in the EU that we have is a fair representation of the parties that gained significant vote numbers. It is a different democratic system, it is democratic, we can argue about which of the two is most democratic, but given that Democracy means rule by the people, the one that reflects closest the choices of the people, as a whole, and can not swung by gerrymandering would seem to have an advantage to me.
As I no longer live in Kent I have no idea.They have had ample time to plan for any eventuality,what KCC are actually paid to do.Even when we lived there thirty years ago,the various French unions,fishing,farming and transport,frequently caused problems,so it's hardly a new scenario.There are plenty of lorry parks around Calais for the backed up traffic which would mainly be on their side of the Channel.Remainers have taken great delight in telling us how much the EU export to us,so it's not just our problem.
In general, our system usually has the most popular party in power. The boundary commission are doing work to standardise the seat sizes I believe as, in recent times, the seat sizes have favoured Labour. Less votes required per MP.
In regards the EU, we vote for MEPs. The commission and Presidents are not elected by the voters. That's the main area of contention when people complain about the lack of democracy and bearing in mind the power of Juncker/Tusk (for example being at the G7), then these positions should be elected.
Oh yeah, and insisting on re-runs of referendum when the votes go the wrong way.
And also, not being open about the ultimate goal of the EU, which is the destruction of the nation state and the imposition of a superstate with parliaments eventually being little more than rubber-stamping town-halls.
But apart from that, yeah, they're really democratic.
I understand what you are saying but disagree with some of your conclusions. The integrity of the UK cannot be undermined by Brexit. I’m not saying that NI cannot choose to leave and join a united Ireland if it chooses to in the future, but there is no way that a portion of the UK can be ring-fenced during the Brexit negotiations. Also, just because this is what the EU/ROI want, we don’t know if that is what NI would choose.
Yes, the UK are leaving the EU. I accept that it is something which we have caused but you have not answered my original point as to trade between the UK and EU will be subject to WTO rules if there is no deal. If that is the case, then do you accept that, if we have to police our border in NI, then the same MUST apply to the EU for the ROI?
This is the point I am trying to make, yet no one on the remain side seems to want to reply. I assume because the remain side can see clearly that it is the EU who must police their border, and if they say they won’t erect physical infrastructure (as Watford Zero keeps on saying we have to), then they would also be in breach of WTO rules.
That is the point - any breach would be by the UK and the EU.
In general, our system usually has the most popular party in power. The boundary commission are doing work to standardise the seat sizes I believe as, in recent times, the seat sizes have favoured Labour. Less votes required per MP.
In regards the EU, we vote for MEPs. The commission and Presidents are not elected by the voters. That's the main area of contention when people complain about the lack of democracy and bearing in mind the power of Juncker/Tusk (for example being at the G7), then these positions should be elected.
Oh yeah, and insisting on re-runs of referendum when the votes go the wrong way.
And also, not being open about the ultimate goal of the EU, which is the destruction of the nation state and the imposition of a superstate with parliaments eventually being little more than rubber-stamping town-halls.
But apart from that, yeah, they're really democratic.
So we seem to be in some sort of agreement. There won’t be a hard border even in the event of No Deal.
The EU have already said to ROI that there won’t have to be a hard border.
If we fall out on WTO terms, then there is provision for “no infrastructure” on 2 grounds (from what I’ve read and I accept that you say this is open to debate/challenge).
First, if there are political reasons.
Second, if there are negotiations to agree a FTA.
I think there will be some form of agreement to allow one of these 2 options to be adopted.
One other point. Even if EU/UK are in breach of WTO rules, a case needs to be brought to the WTO and these take years to get resolved. By the time it gets to being resolved, there will be some trade agreement. We need to be realistic here. The UK/EU are currently aligned and so much of what is going on is posturing. This may result in a No Deal initial outcome, but that doesn’t mean discussions stop. This will only focus minds in the UK and also in the member states who will be losing out from the lack of a trade deal with the UK.
Too much is read into the public statements coming from both sides and I’m sure lots more is going on behind the scene than is made public. But I honestly don’t fear No Deal - yes, there will be disruption, but companies/governments adapt fast when necessary. We are still the worlds 5th largest economy, so if the EU wanted a trade deal with Canda, then they will want one with us.
No, you have this wrong. We have said we will ensure one won't be necessary, we had to, to move forward with negotiations, if we go back on that and make it necessary, there will be one. If we leave without a deal N.I. stays in the customs union, if we stick to our word, and the DUP will have a fit because N.I. will have a border with the rest of the UK that needs to be marshalled.
He said he wants to manufacture in the UK, that's all that matters doesn't it?.
And the problem with that system is the unrepresentative way that Parliament is made up following an election. PR is considerably more democratic than first past the post. However, two main protagonists in the country don't want it as it would dilute their perceived power. We lurch from one political ideology to another.
I must have missed it.When did the EU Parliament and all the member states approve the trade agreement with Japan coming in to force?
So we seem to be in some sort of agreement. There won’t be a hard border even in the event of No Deal.
The EU have already said to ROI that there won’t have to be a hard border.
If we fall out on WTO terms, then there is provision for “no infrastructure” on 2 grounds (from what I’ve read and I accept that you say this is open to debate/challenge).
First, if there are political reasons.
Second, if there are negotiations to agree a FTA.
I think there will be some form of agreement to allow one of these 2 options to be adopted.
One other point. Even if EU/UK are in breach of WTO rules, a case needs to be brought to the WTO and these take years to get resolved. By the time it gets to being resolved, there will be some trade agreement. We need to be realistic here. The UK/EU are currently aligned and so much of what is going on is posturing. This may result in a No Deal initial outcome, but that doesn’t mean discussions stop. This will only focus minds in the UK and also in the member states who will be losing out from the lack of a trade deal with the UK.
Too much is read into the public statements coming from both sides and I’m sure lots more is going on behind the scene than is made public. But I honestly don’t fear No Deal - yes, there will be disruption, but companies/governments adapt fast when necessary. We are still the worlds 5th largest economy, so if the EU wanted a trade deal with Canda, then they will want one with us.
In the UK, the leaders of the Parties are not selected by the voters, they are selected by their parties. Therefore the PM, is not directly selected by the people, certainly not in how Theresa May first got the role
You know the answer: not yet. But it's you boys who keep talking about the longer term benefits of Brexit and this (Japan) might well be a case where it looks worse in the long term than it does in the short term.
That's not quite true: May was selected by her party but that's only because other candidates dropped out. If someone had stood against her, it would have gone to a vote of the members.
And it's certainly not true of Labour, that's decided by a vote of the members ... and Corbyn polled more than 70%
However, in his original post, Larus was also wrong when he said that Tusk and Juncker are unelected. The former was elected by MEPs in July 2014, by quite a healthy majority. Tusk is also elected, but it's a small electorate as the President of the European Council is chosen by heads of government of the EU countries. However, that's a larger electorate than the leader of the Liberal Party has. Do you want to say that Vince Cable is unelected?
Juncker was elected by the Parliament. Larus didn't say they were unelected, he said they were not elected by the people, which is true, but is also true of various parts in UK Government that hold significant power.