I vape, makes Eliquid more expensive, means I have to use ineffective system.
So just to check (as I have no idea, neither smoking nor vaping) when the The Tobacco and Related Products Regulations 2016 came into force last Friday you had to pay more for your fix than you had, for example last Monday. It may well be true, but I'm just checking. And even if true this why is this necessarily a bad thing or necessarily the fault of the EU (given that the regulations have the approval of the UK government at every stage). Year after year my glass of wine goes up because of changes to the duty applied by the UK government, why is that any different?
Not sure even if I could find out the system is so bureaucratic I have zero confidence anything I do will make the slightest difference.
The regulations (see here):
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/uksi/2016/507/pdfs/uksi_20160507_en.pdfwere drafted by the UK government and laid before the UK parliament who approved them. The early EU regulations were approved both by the Council of ministers (including the UK government) and the European parliament (including UK MEPs).
Where exactly is there a problem from a freedom/democracy point of view - there isn't. Overall seems eminently sensible legislation as it regulates an are (e-cigarettes) which have appeared pretty recently and which were pretty unregulated despite many containing significant levels of nicotine. Also seems eminently sensible to broadly harmonise regulation across the EU, which helps consumers and producers alike.
No I just want to feel that my vote actually matters so that politicians have to listen to my point of view if they want my vote.
Not unreasonable - but why is this somehow a problem in the EU but not in the UK parliament - I have a say in a greater proportion of MEPs than UK MPs and I now live in a pretty safe Tory seat in the UK - my MP doesn't need to give a damn what I think as my vote is pretty irrelevant to her in our first past the post system.
Don't forget that in the UK most people live in safe seats where their vote is unlikely to make a difference. Plus few MPs win the support of a majority of their electorate, and we currently have a government which received the support of under 24% of the electorate, just 36% of those that voted, yet gained 51% of the seats and 100% of the power.
So I agree that democratic deficit is an issue, but if you are actually concerned about democratic deficit I suggest you start by looking rather closer to home than the EU.