I think that if a minority government ignores the referendum in a parliamentary system, that's fine.Tribble wrote:And they won't need a majority of the votes to do it either, all they'd need to do is get enough seats with/without another Remain party as a coalition partner to prevent parliament from invoking article 50. It wouldn't be hard for them to do that either, especially as the Tories may split over this issue and UKIP will further split the right wing vote. You could easily have a situation where with just 35% of the vote the Liberal Democrats manage to win enough seats to undo the referendum.Crazedwraith wrote:Why is general election now considered inevetible?Dartzap wrote:The Lib Dem leader claims that if they win the now-inevitable-election, they intend to ignore the result of the referendum. Which sounds like a suicide note from Tim Farrons career.
Bevause the new PM will be considered 'unelected'?
For those in the Remain camp who want the referendum undone simply because you do not like the results, would you be comfortable with a minority government with a minority of the votes ignoring a referendum where the majority voted to leave? Do you think that "for the greater good" is a valid excuse for ignoring the will of the electorate when the rules on the referendum were clear? If that happens, do you think it will be a one-off, or will the government start using that as a an excuse for all sorts of things even more than they do now?
In a parliamentary system, I think it is acceptable for governments to resign rather do things they personally loathe, and frankly I think that's a great feature of a government. There are many circumstances where "we're disbanding this government and handing the job of moving forward to a successor" is exactly what the nation should say. American-style systems where all elections are held on a strict timetable don't permit this, which means it is effectively impossible to cause meaningful change in government except by waiting for an election cycle.
When it comes to momentous decisions like Leave/Remain, that's a handicap, because it leaves the consequences of the decision entirely in the hands of a government that was selected for reasons which have nothing to do with the decision.
For instance, the government the US would have selected to deal with the aftermath of 9/11 might not the government it actually had. If we'd gone into the election cycle expecting a major terrorist attack that would force us to fight a war, McCain (a military veteran) might have won the Republican primary over Bush (a draft dodger whose main credentials were in bidness). Or Gore (with experience in the White House that included knowledge of national security issues) might have won out over Bush (who lacked these things). Or not, I suppose. But the point is, we do not and can not know- because there was no option after 9/11 to go "wait, shit, this isn't the situation we picked this government for."
[Yes, I am aware that there was a mass rally of popular support behind Bush after 9/11; my point is that nearly anyone could have benefitted from that boost just by sitting in the Oval Office and making a few resolute-sounding speeches. It wasn't anything about Bush personally, it was simply that he was the guy in charge at the time people wanted to be protected by the guy in charge.]
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In this case, if a government is formed after an election with a mandate from that election to ignore the referendum, I don't think that's subverting British democracy.