Oh Why 50?

Sep. 15th, 2019 05:26 pm
steepholm: (Default)
[personal profile] steepholm
Jo Swinson rubs me up several wrong ways which I won't detail here, but I do want to mention the new Lib Dem policy to revoke Article 50 should they win a majority at the next election. It's a very unlikely contingency, admittedly, but policies shouldn't be adopted on the basis that they'll never have to be carried out.

The justification is that, if they win a majority in Parliament standing on that policy, they will have a mandate to revoke. However, they're comparing chalk and cheese. Typically, Westminster governments get around 42-45% of the popular vote: no party since the War has had more than 50%. The Lib Dems know this better than most, since they have used the fact to campaign for voting reform for decades. The referendum Leave vote, as we know, got 52%.

I think we've learned pretty thoroughly by now that Parliamentary democracy and democracy by direct plebiscite don't mix - but, partly for that very reason, having opened the Brexit worm can in one way, it can only be closed the same way. If I were a Leave voter, already resentful that my voice is ignored, having the referendum result discarded by fiat, by a Government with (as it would likely seem to me) less legitimacy, would make me feel that democracy had died altogether.

And that's a feeling that could very easily be exploited.

(no subject)

Date: 2019-09-18 02:25 am (UTC)
calimac: (Default)
From: [personal profile] calimac
I see from news reports of the LD conference that some of the speakers there made the same point, or at least that the policy isn't designed to reach out to Leave voters who are having second thoughts.

I've not seen enough on Swinson to have any idea why she would rub people the wrong way, but perhaps enlightenment will come eventually.

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