Dear Jack, Jakswan, Sass and T8, ( there may be others lurking in the undergrowth )
given the decision of the high court do you think this is a good decision, is Brexit a small decision or a massive decision, should parliament debate every step/negotiating strategy we make before we trigger article 50.
Should it be left to the government to make every decision on how we leave the EU.
Given that the people who voted for Brexit came from all different walks of political life should it not be in their interests that all parties debate our exit from Europe.
Gonnagle.
What is there to debate? The nation has voted (albeit in an advisory fashion) to leave the EU. Things could have been organised better in the wording of the 'order' that established the referendum - should it be merely advisory or binding; what majority would be needed to count as a telling one - is 5%+1 sufficient on a constitutional issue as important as this?; ... . However, for better or worse, the political parties have decided to treat the result as binding.
Why should Parliament debate something and hold a vote that could potentially overturn the will of the people? Is the will of Parliament paramount, or is the will of the people.
I would argue, as a staunch Remainer, that requiring Parliament to have a debate about the timing of the triggering of Article 50 is pointless and could even be seen as undemocratic. Get Parliament to debate the various processes and fruits of negotiation, by all means, but should Parliament get a say in when a trigger is pulled, NO.
OK, if the Government of th day had chosen to delay and delay and delay any such triggering, such that we had reached 2018 or '19 without any sign of its being executed, perhaps a vote would be appropriate, simply because such a scenario could be seen as denying the will of the people.