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Luke P

Ireland getting to the "right answer"

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/8106300.stm

A nice insight into how democracy works, EU-style. If at first you don't succeed, well, you bend the rules and try again.

Having rejected the Lisbon treaty by referendum already the Irish are being given a second chance to give the right answer... A whole raft of sweeteners and concessions has been added to the Irish copy of the treaty including autonomy over defence and abortion policy to get them to sign up.

These concessions will not apply to the countries that have already ratified. Any notion of the treaty being equal and fair thus disappear. As we know, the British people were promised a referendum and never got one. If we had been truly freedom-loving people we should have rammed the gates of Downing street over this. It's much much bigger than the poll tax. Perhaps there's something in the water...

The Tories have promised a referendum IF (and only IF) the treaty has still not been ratified by the Irish when they come to power. Hence the kerfuffle and hasty negotiating of Gordon Brown and the other apparatchiks to get the d****d Irish to sign the thing before the Tories get in.

The situation not only reveals once again the democratic deficit of the EU, but also the curious nature of referenda. The matter of who decides when another referendum is appropriate is rather crucial. If one ends up in a Quebec situation where support for independence is a knife-edge away from success, it can lead to quite some uncertainty, as referenda are held every few years on the issue. Plus of course, you don't apply a referendum if you know you are going to lose (just like GB).

Or in the case of Ireland, the authoritarian central state will impose its "democracy" until you give them the "right answer". I doubt very much that, had the Irish voted yes the first time, they would have been urged to reconsider by the Brussels monster a couple of years later.
Dave Coull

Re: Ireland getting to the "right answer"

Luke P wrote:
If we had been truly freedom-loving people we should have rammed the gates of Downing street over this
So, you are saying that the people of England are not truly freedom loving? (The main problem with ramming the gates of Downing Street, so far as most of us in Scotland are concerned, is simply that it's a long way to have to travel. This is the great advantge of having  government in Edinburgh, it's not so far to go to protest against them.)
Luke P wrote:
It's much much bigger than the poll tax.
From  YOUR  point of view. As it happens, I did travel down to London for the big demonstration when the poll tax was introduced in England and Wales. (It had been introduced in Scotland a year earlier.) I think the events of that day showed that a lot of folk didn't share your assessment.
Fidget

Something interesting has happened. Judges in Germany's Constitutional Court have ruled that Germany should not ratify the Lisbon Treaty unless a law is passed that means German law overrules Brussels if and when necessary. Laughing  

For anybody scratching their heads at this, can you scratch mine too please, I'm busy typing.  Laughing
Holebender

If I were Irish and a supporter of the Lisbon Treaty I would vote against it in this referendum, just to teach my government to respect the result of the first (and should be only) referendum on the issue.
Fidget

I would too. And for the same reason. It's incorrigible to be having another vote on the basis of bits being altered to suit whilst the people of other countries don't get any say at all.
Luke P

Agreed and agreed.

There's a very informative piece on the subject at wise up journal:

http://www.wiseupjournal.com/?p=173
Luke P

Fidget wrote:
Something interesting has happened. Judges in Germany's Constitutional Court have ruled that Germany should not ratify the Lisbon Treaty unless a law is passed that means German law overrules Brussels if and when necessary. Laughing  

For anybody scratching their heads at this, can you scratch mine too please, I'm busy typing.  Laughing


That's interesting - since that is what the treaty is about entirely - the supreme sovereignty of the EU. Looks like the appartchiks will be up a while redrafting clauses for the Germans in that case...
Morph

Holebender wrote:
If I were Irish and a supporter of the Lisbon Treaty I would vote against it in this referendum, just to teach my government to respect the result of the first (and should be only) referendum on the issue.



I agree holebender, so know a referendum is not a question to the public it is constant questioning until the government gets the right answer, hmm im glad to be living in a democracy.
Luke P

Now that Ireland has finally given them the right answer you can be sure they won't be getting a chance to change their minds in another 18 months time. Hope the Czechs will give us time to have a referendum.
Fidget

Luke P wrote:
Now that Ireland has finally given them the right answer you can be sure they won't be getting a chance to change their minds in another 18 months time. Hope the Czechs will give us time to have a referendum.


Yes, its now a case of "SOLD!" and that's that. Nobody will be coming behind with another referendum on a best out of 3 basis.
magister ludi

I agree it stinks a bit when referendums become never-endums, but on the other hand, times change, so do circumstances, aren't people allowed to change their minds to reflect this?
Holebender

Oh indeed they are... after a decent interval. We don't hold general elections any more frequently that every four years, so I think that's about the minimum time it would take for minds to change after due consideration and reflection.

The point is, now they have changed their minds, will the Irish have any more opportunities for further changes of opinion?
Shagpile

Holebender wrote:
Oh indeed they are... after a decent interval. We don't hold general elections any more frequently that every four years, so I think that's about the minimum time it would take for minds to change after due consideration and reflection.

The point is, now they have changed their minds, will the Irish have any more opportunities for further changes of opinion?


Tend to agree with that, however..... What was new in the referendum they voted on? Is it as I I alluded to in another thread; in that ROI will remain a neutral State within the EU, Irish troops will not be at the disposal of the EU. And ROI will have a permanent minister in the Council of Ministers?

The reason I ask is I don't know.

If what I suspect is right..... does that mean the other EU States will have to re-ratify the Treaty?
Holebender

I very much doubt if your last question would have anything but a "no" answer. The point of the exercise was to get the thing ratified, not to open it up to a whole new round.
Holebender

Luke P wrote:
Now that Ireland has finally given them the right answer you can be sure they won't be getting a chance to change their minds in another 18 months time. Hope the Czechs will give us time to have a referendum.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/in_depth/8297757.stm

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