Posted on 06/26/2016 5:52:38 AM PDT by Enlightened1
Labour legislator David Lammy says Thursday’s national vote was non-binding and “our sovereign Parliament needs to now vote on whether we should quit the EU.”
David Lammy @DavidLammy 21 hours ago
Wake up. We do not have to do this. We can stop this madness through a vote in Parliament. My statement below
(Excerpt) Read more at breitbart.com ...
Maggie was right as usual:
Globalists once again proving that the people do not count. No more are we or they citizens but serfs. We are to obey not question anything the elitists tell us to do.
The novel is set in Airstrip One (formerly known as Great Britain), a province of the superstate Oceania in a world of perpetual war, omnipresent government surveillance and public manipulation, dictated by a political system euphemistically named English Socialism (or Ingsoc in the government’s invented language, Newspeak) under the control of a privileged elite of the Inner Party, that persecutes individualism and independent thinking as “thoughtcrime.
The anti-White racists are in full panic, as Brexit threatens to save the Historically British Nation from savage invasion.
Votes no longer matter, then.
If votes no longer matter, I follow no laws.
Leftists love democracy, except when they don’t.
Correct - constitutionally the position is quite simple. The will of the people has been expressed and Parliament is obliged by constitutional convention to give effect to the will of the people. It is technically true that the referendum is non-binding because of the issue of Parliamentary sovereignty - no Parliament can be bound to any decision (part of the reason for voting to leave the EU is because that was starting to be at risk of not being the case anymore) but in the British system, constitutional convention is just as important as constitutional law. The Queen, as guardian of the constitution, would be obliged to step in to ensure the conventions are followed.
People seem to think the Queen is nothing but a symbol and rubber stamp - she isn't. She still has all the same powers that Henry VIII had - the difference is that if she used most of them without an extremely good reason, Parliament would dissolve the Monarchy and the people would support Parliament in doing so - the Monarchy remains popular only while it acts within the restraints of convention. But by the same token, if Parliament violates those conventions, or if a constitutional crisis develops, the people would expect the Queen to step in.
The Monarch has used their powers even quite recently. The Queen has only ever had to make use of them once during her reign (in 1963 when she appointed a Prime Minister without a general election or Parliamentary election) but they still exist. Her father used them in more dramatic fashion - Britain was meant to have a General Election in 1940. It didn't because the King decided that an election during war time would be dangerous and distracting. He got the approval of the Prime Minister and Leader of the Opposition for this, but it was his decision. These powers aren't back in the distant past - they still exist to use in an emergency.
If the current British government decided not to go ahead with Brexit, the Queen would intervene. She would first of all warn the Prime Minister and in most cases, the Prime Minister would probably heed that warning and things would be back on track. If he refused, she would first of all look at Parliament to see if another Prime Minister would be able to accomplish the task, and if so would appoint him or her to do so. If that wasn't possible, she would dissolve Parliament so a new general election could be held specifically to elect a government that would give effect to the referendum - and in such a situation, the British people could be expected to vote to deliver that - even many who voted to remain would be so outraged that Parliament was ignoring a referendum - ignoring the will of the people - that they would add their vote to the even more outraged Leave contingent.
This isn't all theoretical - by convention, a good Prime Minister and a good government does not put the Queen in the position of having to use her powers, and in Britain, most of the time, Prime Ministers do do the right thing in this regard (most recently, Gordon Brown in 2010 who resigned as Prime Minister when the Queen intimated to him that it was time to go - she didn't have to intervene because he resigned at that point, knowing that she was constitutionally correct (note - that he had done nothing wrong at all in trying to stay in office to that point - he had every right to do so - arguably the duty to do so, until she called time. He followed the rules and conventions impeccably). But in the Commonwealth Realms (those other nations that retain the Queen as Head of State such as Australia, Canada, New Zealand, etc) governments have not always been as careful to avoid intervention and so Governors and Governors-General as the Queen's representative have had to step in a number of times and use the powers that still exist. Here in Australia, it happened particularly dramatically in 1975 when the Governor-General dismissed the entire government after it became clear it was about to start acting illegally to stay in office, but a much more low key occurrence was in the state of Tasmania in 2010 when they elected a hung Parliament (10 Labor MPs, 10 Liberal MPs, 5 Green MPs) and the Labor Premier immediately tried to hand over control to the Liberals (the Premier took the view that even though they were tied on the number of seats, as the Liberals had received more overall votes they should be given the chance to govern) - the state Governor informed him that as the incumbent, he had a duty to at least try and stay in office, no matter how honourable his intentions.
Yes, actually, it is. It's a core principle of the British constitution - it's actually called 'Parliamentary sovereignty' and is regarded as the single most important part of the British Constitution. Part of the reason for the referendum was that there was a risk that the EU would eventually pass laws that would try and limit it.
It doesn't go against the idea of the Monarchy because the Monarch is actually, constitutionally, part of Parliament - they are the Head of the Parliament. While it is commonplace to refer to the House of Commons and the House of Lords combined as Parliament, constitutionally that isn't the whole story. The Queen's throne sits in the House of Lords and constitutionally she is entitled to take up her seat in it whenever the Parliament is in session. By tradition and convention, she only does so at the State Opening of Parliament, but constitutionally, she's allowed to be there and Acts of Parliament are still phrased in a way that acknowledges she is part of the Parliament.
I’ve tried to think of an analogy to the US system that might help people understand this. I think this one works.
The idea that the Brexit referendum can be ignored by Parliament can be roughly equated to the idea that in the US, the Electoral College could choose to elect somebody as President contrary to the votes at the November general election. Technically and constitutionally it’s true - practically speaking it will never happen because it would be an outrageous violation of accepted practice that the general public simply would not tolerate.
You may get a few MPs who go against the vote, in the same way that the US has occasional faithless electors, but the number will not be enough to change the result.
The parliamentary Labour party didn’t reject the madness od the Corbyn leadership vote.
The Brits need to start building the gallows. This is mutiny.
Lucy pulling the football back from Charlie Brown.
Peter, can you lend any insight?
This is a tough one to call for me as I am an expat from England in Canada since 1955. The only way I can offer any knowledge of the British Socialist is a few little stories.
I remember the Labour Party of the new Coalition Government. The leaders of that party were given mandated high positions in the Conservative Government. This was in WW2. One of the new leaders was a Herbert Morrison (Labour). A valiant speaker for the rights of man.
The Communists detestable as they were, published their newspaper- the Daily Worker. They did not support the war wholeheartedly. The editorial page made one little snide statement about the capitalists.
Down came Morrison. He had the whole newspaper shut down, threatened to lock em' up. They were only able to publish until they came on side when Russia was invaded by Hitler's forces.
Scratch a dyed in the wool Socialist and often find a bit of a tin pot dictator within.
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