Yet you are trying to reinvent our democratic process.
Since when have we had a vote and immediately said to the losing side right how do you want us to implement our policies?
Yes wins does the SNP turn to NO and say right, lets work with you here on this?
Im not shouting, im telling you how our system has worked for ever and a day.
Brexit has seemingly rewritten the rules and i cant wait for the next GE and as the winner is announced the opposition refuse to accept the result or the calls for it to be ignored and everyone sharing power because many didn't vote for the government so who represents them etc.
If YES wins by one single vote then independence should happen.
If the Greens win Brighton by election by one single vote they take the seat and everyone else takes it on the chin.
If Labour win a GE by one single vote then they should take power.
There is no lucky or plucky loser badge in our politics and never has been.
(Bear with me on the typos please, i wont double check before posting)
Right, so in this winner takes all world, if brexit is overturned by a single vote, that too will be absolutely fine, as it is only the result that matters, and not the process in the slightest.
Look i don't want to be facetious, im pointing out the extremity of your logic.
I get your view is entrenched, but it is just as undemocratic to isolate all other views and stick with the preferential one. I do fully get what you mean, re the vote should be respected, but you can hardly argue no effort is being made. Even the ones in parliament piggybacking it for their own political gain (and they are on both sides i'm sure you agree) have put time into it.
You say a vote not being respected has never happened before, actually, it has. Scotland 'won' an independence referendum in 1979, by 52% (the irony, i know). But this was reduced proportionally relative to the turnout which was 64% (actually average in UK politics) and counted as 33% of the electorate. After protests, votes of no confidence, SNP withdrawal from government, guess what, democracy survived, it has largely been forgotton about, does anyone feel wronged by it? i don't, i doubt you do.
Lets exclude the example, and say you are right. The reason there is no precedent for a referendum vote being re-examined, is because it is unprecedented, an issue this complex, this contentious, and this divisive, with such fine margins. Past referendums have been convincingly decisice, by large margins. So surely we are not so absolute as a society to distil such significant sociological issues to basic integers!
I'll tell you why i believe it is democratic to ask again.
1. Lies were told, sure, they always are yoj say. But these are big big ones, that had a big sway. Leave campaigns promised anything and everything to swing every single voter specificly by what pushed their buttons. Ones that are and always were, completely undeliverable.
2. And thats just the legal ones, that we know about. The underground campaign, illegaly and disproportionately funded, we will never truly know what people were targeted with. it was by no means a fair campaign or referendum
3. The constituent nations were not fairly represented. The UK voted as a whole, aye right. 4m voters are never going to have any meaningful representation proportionally against the english electorate. And, absolutely, it isnt England's fault for having a larger population. But neither is it Scotland's for having a vastly lesser one.
The democratically elected First Minister of a nation, specifically insisted that each nation have an equal say bu a majority needed in each country. This was overruled, so sovereignty was not respected. I'm sorry, i might not advocate a reversal, and i do respect the result, but no way can i possibly consider it democratic. in fact i could argue (which im not) that carrying out brexit is undemocratic.
So, The resultant outcome, either one of the only likely two is sooo vastly different to what was sold. Whether deliberately or through misguided illusion, or incompetence. Again, surely, we must be mature enough as a society to be able to recognise and address that.
What is your arguement against a referendum, erm, we've already had one, and this could overturn it? The brexit referendum itself is to overturn the result of a 1975 referendum!
Being asked again, is not undemocratic. It is just transparent on the now known consequences and outcomes. And it puts both arguements to bed. Both my 'people had no clue what they were getting, whether lies or not' and the other extrene of 'brexit in name only, this isnt what we voted for', both which will continue to pull the country apart long after brexit is concluded, if it is just blindlly implemented to crash through some arbitrary self decided deadline.
And yes, should Scotland get independence, the SNP SHOULD absolutely work with the other 40% thereafter, if they want to have a country and society left worth being independent, or worth anything at all.
I can't be more honest with you than that.