Originally Posted by
Burney
No, I'm sorry, but your naked contempt for the 'quality' of the electorate is what's unbecoming here. People don't have to fit your idea of what constitutes a properly informed person for their vote to be valid. Your beloved Labour Party was founded on the back of millions of poorly-educated men and women who fancied a somewhat easier life, were promised one by Labour and so voted for them. Their knowledge of the wider repercussions of such a vote was in most cases zero, but that does not invalidate their vote.
Once you attack the electorate - as you have - you are undermining one of the keystones of the democratic system - the sovereignty of the electorate's decision. The 'let's go back and have another go' approach when you don't get the result you like is an essentially anti-democratic one - as deployed by the EU in several cases. It is simply not acceptable to undermine electoral sovereignty in that way. Plus, of course, the last vote on the matter was in 1975. I didn't hear these same people who now claim there has been a change of heart clamouring for another go on that one. It took 41 years, in fact.
Referenda are simply the only way to make certain decisions. You could never take a decision such as taking Scotland out of the Union or the UK into or out of the EU purely by the mechanics of Parliamentary democracy - it would be unthinkable in this day and age, in fact. The decision to drag the nation unwillingly into the EU of ever-closer union via Maastricht and Lisbon were exactly what caused so much resentment in the first place.
Ultimately, there have been 11 referenda in UK political history. The outcome of every single one has been enacted. The idea that this one - the biggest there has ever been - would not be or would be overturned is absurd.