Ian Osborne
JREF Kid
- Joined
- Aug 4, 2001
- Messages
- 8,957
There's an unanswerable case for a second referendum.
* The result of the first one was extremely close. Arch-leaver Nigel Farage said he wouldn't accept a vote this narrow as the end of the matter, so there's no reason why the other side should have to.
* Leavers tended to be older, remainers younger. This means as older voters have died and younger ones come of age in the last two years, the result of the 2016 referendum might well have flipped without anyone even changing their mind.
* Opinion polls suggest the 2016 result has indeed flipped, with a majority now wanting remain.
* The winning side resorted to some very dirty tricks, if not outright fraud. The promise to free up an extra £350m on the NHS was an outright lie, and they broke spending limits too. This alone should justify a new vote, doubly so when paired with the narrow result of the first.
* Back in 2016, no one quite knew what they were voting for. They do now (or at least have a better idea). To borrow a member of the Upper Chamber's analogy, what if I conducted a vote in a rest home for the old about what to do this weekend. The vote was a win for the cinema, so I checked what was on. The only movies available were Halloween, The Texas Chainsaw Massacre and The Exorcist, any of which would lead to fatal heart attacks among the pensioners. What do we do? Go anyway because democracy, or have another vote based on this new information?
* The new referendum would also contain a 'leave' option, so if the Leave campaign won again, we'd be out due to the two-year expiry on Clause 50. The idea that a new referendum would be the first step in asking over and over again until we got the answer we wanted is a nonsense.
* The result of the first one was extremely close. Arch-leaver Nigel Farage said he wouldn't accept a vote this narrow as the end of the matter, so there's no reason why the other side should have to.
* Leavers tended to be older, remainers younger. This means as older voters have died and younger ones come of age in the last two years, the result of the 2016 referendum might well have flipped without anyone even changing their mind.
* Opinion polls suggest the 2016 result has indeed flipped, with a majority now wanting remain.
* The winning side resorted to some very dirty tricks, if not outright fraud. The promise to free up an extra £350m on the NHS was an outright lie, and they broke spending limits too. This alone should justify a new vote, doubly so when paired with the narrow result of the first.
* Back in 2016, no one quite knew what they were voting for. They do now (or at least have a better idea). To borrow a member of the Upper Chamber's analogy, what if I conducted a vote in a rest home for the old about what to do this weekend. The vote was a win for the cinema, so I checked what was on. The only movies available were Halloween, The Texas Chainsaw Massacre and The Exorcist, any of which would lead to fatal heart attacks among the pensioners. What do we do? Go anyway because democracy, or have another vote based on this new information?
* The new referendum would also contain a 'leave' option, so if the Leave campaign won again, we'd be out due to the two-year expiry on Clause 50. The idea that a new referendum would be the first step in asking over and over again until we got the answer we wanted is a nonsense.
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