We should get rid of referendum as a way of changing our constitution.
Britain has a long tradition of democracy, without a written constitution. It would be nice to hear an articulate debate, from politicians that we pay a fortune to make decisions for us, rather than having the usual suspects ( from both sides of the debate) hijacking every possible referendum for personal face time in the media.
If the politicians make the wrong decision, let the voters hammer them in the polls. It would be nice to see them take a stance on issues, rather than sit on their hands and squirm at tough decisions.
Britain has a long tradition of democracy, without a written constitution.
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I believe this to be inaccurate. Indeed, when the Irish Daily Mail ran an article, during the referendum campaign, entitled 'Radio Lisbon', which accused RTE of bias in favour of the Yes side, RTE replied by letter confirming and justifying said bias.All but 6 of our elected TDs were for Yes. IBEC, most trade unions, the farmers etc. were for Yes. I think that entitled the Yes side to more air time than No. Imagine that Ganly was the only person in the whole country for No. RTE would still work on the principle that he should get as much air time as all the rest put together.
Pat is correct that there is no obligation on the media to provide balanced coverage - this was abundantly evident during the campaign - however any suggestion that RTE did provide 50/50 coverage, which by their own admission they did not, is either misinformed or disingenuous. It seems that Pat had an epiphany over the weekend as, in his article in the Sunday Independent, he says that "it's sobering to reflect that the people of Ireland, indeed the people of Europe, may not adhere to the EU."Pat Rabbitte stated emphatically on Friday's Today with Pat Kenny show that the RTE "50/50 stopwatch coverage" was NOT based on any statutory obligation. He said also that no other broadcaster operated this policy.
the public should always have the final say in maters that consern the public.
That's a useful clarification. It is interesting that other No supporters, like TV, accepted my simplistic thesis and sought to justify it. Clearly it is unjustifiable to give "50/50 stopwatch coverage" when the overwhelming view was for a Yes.I believe this to be inaccurate. Indeed, when the Irish Daily Mail ran an article, during the referendum campaign, entitled 'Radio Lisbon', which accused RTE of bias in favour of the Yes side, RTE replied by letter confirming and justifying said bias.
The surrender of sovereignty is not comparable with the framing of a budget. There is talk on AAM in relation to 'Representative Democracy' to the effect that our representatives can, and should, do what they will. We elect representatives, based on a given manifesto, to run OUR country and to make both operational and strategic decisions; they work for us. Although we invest in them the power to make decisions on our behalf that does not license them to surrender that power to, or pool that power with, others, without consulting us, the people, directly for sanction.
Very well put. And in theory is the way it should be.
In practice, though, we end up with 'us, the people' being represented by half-of-half the electorate, (not just in this referendum).
Making major constitutional changes is actually left to the largest minority of the electorate, with the majority not voting at all, which essentially defaults to 'I don't know or care about this vote'. A case of who shouts loudest wins out.
Sunny, I understand your emotional response but I interpreted this completely the opposite. This is exactly why I voted Yes. It was so damned obvious that Europe's political elite would react very negatively against us. All goodwill has been blown. Talk about cutting off our nose to spite our face.I voted yes for the treaty but having examined the various reactions around Europe I am beginning to think that I was wrong and that the right decision was reached. The undemocratic soundings coming out of Germany and France about practically ignoring the Irish vote run the real risk of damaging the EU's future more than the Irish 'No' Vote.
Here is where I would go from here. The Lisbon treaty is dead so time to forget about it. The French and Dutch rejection of the Constitution and our rejection of this Treaty shows that there are many people in Europe with concerns about the way the EU is going. If I was a politician I would accept this and leave aside all areas of increased co-operation and integration for the moment and concentrate on reforming the workings of the EU itself i.e. the commission and parliment. After all apparently this is what the Treaty's main purpose was. Only when I found a solution to this would I even begin to look at areas like having foreign ministers and presidents, increased military co-operation etc.
Making major constitutional changes is actually left to the largest minority of the electorate, with the majority not voting at all, which essentially defaults to 'I don't know or care about this vote'. A case of who shouts loudest wins out.
Change the law to make it compulsory to vote would solve that.
Sunny, I understand your emotional response but I interpreted this completely the opposite. This is exactly why I voted Yes. It was so damned obvious that Europe's political elite would react very negatively against us. All goodwill has been blown. Talk about cutting off our nose to spite our face.
Your faith in the state of our electoral register is touching
Very well put. And in theory is the way it should be.
This is mainly why I would prefer to leave such decisions to the elected Govts who 'work for us', and can be kicked-out, rather than unelected, well-organised groups with specific agendas who can manipulate the issues and play on peoples fears.
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