Why are there no referendums in the US?How can the federal United States congress conduct a public referendum vote?Do referendums lead to significantly different decisions than when decisions are taken by parliament?Are there examples of when Parliament decided against the results of a Referendum?What are the rules of what goes into referenda in Switzerland?Is there a ballot Initiative at the Federal level?Why do major referendums have a 50% threshold to change the status quo, rather than a higher value?Why were so many referendums about marriage definition initiated in the recent years?For the 2017 Catalan independence referendum, are there any turnout estimates counting only polling stations where voters were actually able to vote?What are the reasons for not having a voter turnout threshold for a nation-wide referendum?Why are there so many Republican governors?Why are referendums held? Are they not inherently anti-democratic?

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Why are there no referendums in the US?

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Why are there no referendums in the US?


How can the federal United States congress conduct a public referendum vote?Do referendums lead to significantly different decisions than when decisions are taken by parliament?Are there examples of when Parliament decided against the results of a Referendum?What are the rules of what goes into referenda in Switzerland?Is there a ballot Initiative at the Federal level?Why do major referendums have a 50% threshold to change the status quo, rather than a higher value?Why were so many referendums about marriage definition initiated in the recent years?For the 2017 Catalan independence referendum, are there any turnout estimates counting only polling stations where voters were actually able to vote?What are the reasons for not having a voter turnout threshold for a nation-wide referendum?Why are there so many Republican governors?Why are referendums held? Are they not inherently anti-democratic?













3















The US has a (self-imposed) reputation of being a supremely democratic and free country.



However, unlike many other democratic countries on the planet, the US has never had any national referendums.



How come? If these are not allowed, what is the logic behind that?



Although referendums can be a dangerous thing (see Brexit), almost every democratic country on the planet agrees that if properly held and if requiring a proper majority (at least a two-third majority), referendums are the perfect way to advance the interests of the public.



Why does the US disagree?










share|improve this question









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  • 14





    almost every democratic country on the planet agrees that if properly held and if requiring a proper majority (at least a two-third majority), referendums are the perfect way to advance the interests of the public Really? Do you have a citation for that, in particular about the "almost every democratic country" part?

    – Abigail
    6 hours ago







  • 3





    @Name Do you have a citation for the assertion that "most countries have referendums" or "more democratic countries have referendums"?

    – owjburnham
    6 hours ago















3















The US has a (self-imposed) reputation of being a supremely democratic and free country.



However, unlike many other democratic countries on the planet, the US has never had any national referendums.



How come? If these are not allowed, what is the logic behind that?



Although referendums can be a dangerous thing (see Brexit), almost every democratic country on the planet agrees that if properly held and if requiring a proper majority (at least a two-third majority), referendums are the perfect way to advance the interests of the public.



Why does the US disagree?










share|improve this question









New contributor




Name is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.















  • 14





    almost every democratic country on the planet agrees that if properly held and if requiring a proper majority (at least a two-third majority), referendums are the perfect way to advance the interests of the public Really? Do you have a citation for that, in particular about the "almost every democratic country" part?

    – Abigail
    6 hours ago







  • 3





    @Name Do you have a citation for the assertion that "most countries have referendums" or "more democratic countries have referendums"?

    – owjburnham
    6 hours ago













3












3








3








The US has a (self-imposed) reputation of being a supremely democratic and free country.



However, unlike many other democratic countries on the planet, the US has never had any national referendums.



How come? If these are not allowed, what is the logic behind that?



Although referendums can be a dangerous thing (see Brexit), almost every democratic country on the planet agrees that if properly held and if requiring a proper majority (at least a two-third majority), referendums are the perfect way to advance the interests of the public.



Why does the US disagree?










share|improve this question









New contributor




Name is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.












The US has a (self-imposed) reputation of being a supremely democratic and free country.



However, unlike many other democratic countries on the planet, the US has never had any national referendums.



How come? If these are not allowed, what is the logic behind that?



Although referendums can be a dangerous thing (see Brexit), almost every democratic country on the planet agrees that if properly held and if requiring a proper majority (at least a two-third majority), referendums are the perfect way to advance the interests of the public.



Why does the US disagree?







united-states referendum






share|improve this question









New contributor




Name is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











share|improve this question









New contributor




Name is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 4 hours ago









Martin Schröder

1,1681933




1,1681933






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asked 6 hours ago









NameName

241




241




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Name is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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Check out our Code of Conduct.






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Check out our Code of Conduct.







  • 14





    almost every democratic country on the planet agrees that if properly held and if requiring a proper majority (at least a two-third majority), referendums are the perfect way to advance the interests of the public Really? Do you have a citation for that, in particular about the "almost every democratic country" part?

    – Abigail
    6 hours ago







  • 3





    @Name Do you have a citation for the assertion that "most countries have referendums" or "more democratic countries have referendums"?

    – owjburnham
    6 hours ago












  • 14





    almost every democratic country on the planet agrees that if properly held and if requiring a proper majority (at least a two-third majority), referendums are the perfect way to advance the interests of the public Really? Do you have a citation for that, in particular about the "almost every democratic country" part?

    – Abigail
    6 hours ago







  • 3





    @Name Do you have a citation for the assertion that "most countries have referendums" or "more democratic countries have referendums"?

    – owjburnham
    6 hours ago







14




14





almost every democratic country on the planet agrees that if properly held and if requiring a proper majority (at least a two-third majority), referendums are the perfect way to advance the interests of the public Really? Do you have a citation for that, in particular about the "almost every democratic country" part?

– Abigail
6 hours ago






almost every democratic country on the planet agrees that if properly held and if requiring a proper majority (at least a two-third majority), referendums are the perfect way to advance the interests of the public Really? Do you have a citation for that, in particular about the "almost every democratic country" part?

– Abigail
6 hours ago





3




3





@Name Do you have a citation for the assertion that "most countries have referendums" or "more democratic countries have referendums"?

– owjburnham
6 hours ago





@Name Do you have a citation for the assertion that "most countries have referendums" or "more democratic countries have referendums"?

– owjburnham
6 hours ago










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















15














The United States does have referendums at the state level and all 50 states have some power of referendum offered to the people (the most common being legislature prescribed referendums to the people of general laws, which all states have. Constitutional Amendments done in such fashion exist in every state but Delaware). Wikipedia lists the United States as an example of a (Semi-) Direct Democracy in it's article on the matter.



The lack of Federal Referendum comes from a number of reasons, but the most commonly cited one was the Founding Father's distrust of direct democracy, seeing the form as a mob rule at best. They wanted a government where no one branch of government had enough power to run rough shot over another branch, and that no majority could over run a minority (You can see this in the design of such elements as the Separate but Equal Branches, the use of the Electoral College, the bicameral nature of Congress) that there was a consorted effort to protect minority (in the sense of party politics... they still had slavery as a legal thing for the better part of 90 years). They didn't fight against the Tyranny of Britain to establish their own Tyranny... and they didn't all agree with each other and wanted to make the fight easier and less bloody than the last one they had.



Another reason why is that, rules as written, the Federal Government wasn't supposed to be dealing with the citizens all that often... that was mostly done at the state level or even smaller community levels. The Federal Government was more supposed to deal with two broad areas of topics: Interactions between the states, and Interactions with other nations. As a Federation, the United States government is pretty much on par with a more strict EU. Each state, upon independence, was originally seen as their own separate nation that collectively agreed to surrender certain duties of a nation (Namely the ability to declare war, the ability to create diplomatic policy, and the ability to regulate commerce leaving their territory), but retained every other ability of a government bound by constitutions. If you didn't need to do business outside of the state... and you didn't need to do business outside the United States... and you didn't need to fight a war with another country, you really didn't have much business with the Federal Government. At best, your interaction with federal agents was getting your mail from the friendly neighborhood post man. In the modern nation, there are a few more interactions, but again, not a terrible many to the ordinary citizen. The phrase "All politics is local" is true, as at most, any given U.S. Citizen will have three national level ballot questions: Who do you want to represent your congressional district in the House, who do you want to represent your state in the Senate, and who do you want your state to give it's Electoral College votes to for President... all three are asking local questions that don't rise beyond the state level.



Finally, there's the issue of size. Switzerland, which has direct democracy, has a population of 8 million people compared to the United States' 320 million people, or roughly 40 times the population of Switzerland. It's a lot of ballots to manage to make a popular national decision and would have been such a daunting task, that it would be nearly impossible to do until relatively recently. And like you said, Brexit is a good argument on why certain questions shouldn't be punted to the people (The Swiss avoid this by imposing neutrality, thus it doesn't seek to have alot of decisions making that deals with international issues. The U.S. tried this two, but the first half of the 20th century had a nasty habit of bringing war to the states (not to mention there was a lot of popular support for joining the wars) and by the end of World War II, they got themselves locked in a game of chicken with the U.S.S.R. that required them to get involved with the world writ large... to varying degrees of success.





share


















  • 3





    +1, But I do disagree with this statement, "Brexit is a good argument on why certain questions shouldn't be punted to the people". There are several states in the U.S. that are larger than the UK and have tens of millions in population, and manage to have referendums all the time. It's not that logistically difficult. If you mean that you just didn't like the result, it could just as easily be argued that maybe it was a good idea that there was a Brexit referendum. To find out what people are thinking Now, before UKIP gets voted into a majority of Parliament. I prefer no-deal Brexit to that.

    – ouflak
    4 hours ago






  • 1





    @ouflak: My statement is more that the foreign alliances/entanglements of a country should not be left to the masses to decide, more than anything. I'm not a citizen of the UK, so I mostly criticize Brexit because my country did Brexit better... but it's more for humor than anything. If I'm being fully serious about the matter, I don't have a horse in the race and don't really care how they resolve it.

    – hszmv
    1 hour ago










Your Answer








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1 Answer
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1 Answer
1






active

oldest

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active

oldest

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active

oldest

votes









15














The United States does have referendums at the state level and all 50 states have some power of referendum offered to the people (the most common being legislature prescribed referendums to the people of general laws, which all states have. Constitutional Amendments done in such fashion exist in every state but Delaware). Wikipedia lists the United States as an example of a (Semi-) Direct Democracy in it's article on the matter.



The lack of Federal Referendum comes from a number of reasons, but the most commonly cited one was the Founding Father's distrust of direct democracy, seeing the form as a mob rule at best. They wanted a government where no one branch of government had enough power to run rough shot over another branch, and that no majority could over run a minority (You can see this in the design of such elements as the Separate but Equal Branches, the use of the Electoral College, the bicameral nature of Congress) that there was a consorted effort to protect minority (in the sense of party politics... they still had slavery as a legal thing for the better part of 90 years). They didn't fight against the Tyranny of Britain to establish their own Tyranny... and they didn't all agree with each other and wanted to make the fight easier and less bloody than the last one they had.



Another reason why is that, rules as written, the Federal Government wasn't supposed to be dealing with the citizens all that often... that was mostly done at the state level or even smaller community levels. The Federal Government was more supposed to deal with two broad areas of topics: Interactions between the states, and Interactions with other nations. As a Federation, the United States government is pretty much on par with a more strict EU. Each state, upon independence, was originally seen as their own separate nation that collectively agreed to surrender certain duties of a nation (Namely the ability to declare war, the ability to create diplomatic policy, and the ability to regulate commerce leaving their territory), but retained every other ability of a government bound by constitutions. If you didn't need to do business outside of the state... and you didn't need to do business outside the United States... and you didn't need to fight a war with another country, you really didn't have much business with the Federal Government. At best, your interaction with federal agents was getting your mail from the friendly neighborhood post man. In the modern nation, there are a few more interactions, but again, not a terrible many to the ordinary citizen. The phrase "All politics is local" is true, as at most, any given U.S. Citizen will have three national level ballot questions: Who do you want to represent your congressional district in the House, who do you want to represent your state in the Senate, and who do you want your state to give it's Electoral College votes to for President... all three are asking local questions that don't rise beyond the state level.



Finally, there's the issue of size. Switzerland, which has direct democracy, has a population of 8 million people compared to the United States' 320 million people, or roughly 40 times the population of Switzerland. It's a lot of ballots to manage to make a popular national decision and would have been such a daunting task, that it would be nearly impossible to do until relatively recently. And like you said, Brexit is a good argument on why certain questions shouldn't be punted to the people (The Swiss avoid this by imposing neutrality, thus it doesn't seek to have alot of decisions making that deals with international issues. The U.S. tried this two, but the first half of the 20th century had a nasty habit of bringing war to the states (not to mention there was a lot of popular support for joining the wars) and by the end of World War II, they got themselves locked in a game of chicken with the U.S.S.R. that required them to get involved with the world writ large... to varying degrees of success.





share


















  • 3





    +1, But I do disagree with this statement, "Brexit is a good argument on why certain questions shouldn't be punted to the people". There are several states in the U.S. that are larger than the UK and have tens of millions in population, and manage to have referendums all the time. It's not that logistically difficult. If you mean that you just didn't like the result, it could just as easily be argued that maybe it was a good idea that there was a Brexit referendum. To find out what people are thinking Now, before UKIP gets voted into a majority of Parliament. I prefer no-deal Brexit to that.

    – ouflak
    4 hours ago






  • 1





    @ouflak: My statement is more that the foreign alliances/entanglements of a country should not be left to the masses to decide, more than anything. I'm not a citizen of the UK, so I mostly criticize Brexit because my country did Brexit better... but it's more for humor than anything. If I'm being fully serious about the matter, I don't have a horse in the race and don't really care how they resolve it.

    – hszmv
    1 hour ago















15














The United States does have referendums at the state level and all 50 states have some power of referendum offered to the people (the most common being legislature prescribed referendums to the people of general laws, which all states have. Constitutional Amendments done in such fashion exist in every state but Delaware). Wikipedia lists the United States as an example of a (Semi-) Direct Democracy in it's article on the matter.



The lack of Federal Referendum comes from a number of reasons, but the most commonly cited one was the Founding Father's distrust of direct democracy, seeing the form as a mob rule at best. They wanted a government where no one branch of government had enough power to run rough shot over another branch, and that no majority could over run a minority (You can see this in the design of such elements as the Separate but Equal Branches, the use of the Electoral College, the bicameral nature of Congress) that there was a consorted effort to protect minority (in the sense of party politics... they still had slavery as a legal thing for the better part of 90 years). They didn't fight against the Tyranny of Britain to establish their own Tyranny... and they didn't all agree with each other and wanted to make the fight easier and less bloody than the last one they had.



Another reason why is that, rules as written, the Federal Government wasn't supposed to be dealing with the citizens all that often... that was mostly done at the state level or even smaller community levels. The Federal Government was more supposed to deal with two broad areas of topics: Interactions between the states, and Interactions with other nations. As a Federation, the United States government is pretty much on par with a more strict EU. Each state, upon independence, was originally seen as their own separate nation that collectively agreed to surrender certain duties of a nation (Namely the ability to declare war, the ability to create diplomatic policy, and the ability to regulate commerce leaving their territory), but retained every other ability of a government bound by constitutions. If you didn't need to do business outside of the state... and you didn't need to do business outside the United States... and you didn't need to fight a war with another country, you really didn't have much business with the Federal Government. At best, your interaction with federal agents was getting your mail from the friendly neighborhood post man. In the modern nation, there are a few more interactions, but again, not a terrible many to the ordinary citizen. The phrase "All politics is local" is true, as at most, any given U.S. Citizen will have three national level ballot questions: Who do you want to represent your congressional district in the House, who do you want to represent your state in the Senate, and who do you want your state to give it's Electoral College votes to for President... all three are asking local questions that don't rise beyond the state level.



Finally, there's the issue of size. Switzerland, which has direct democracy, has a population of 8 million people compared to the United States' 320 million people, or roughly 40 times the population of Switzerland. It's a lot of ballots to manage to make a popular national decision and would have been such a daunting task, that it would be nearly impossible to do until relatively recently. And like you said, Brexit is a good argument on why certain questions shouldn't be punted to the people (The Swiss avoid this by imposing neutrality, thus it doesn't seek to have alot of decisions making that deals with international issues. The U.S. tried this two, but the first half of the 20th century had a nasty habit of bringing war to the states (not to mention there was a lot of popular support for joining the wars) and by the end of World War II, they got themselves locked in a game of chicken with the U.S.S.R. that required them to get involved with the world writ large... to varying degrees of success.





share


















  • 3





    +1, But I do disagree with this statement, "Brexit is a good argument on why certain questions shouldn't be punted to the people". There are several states in the U.S. that are larger than the UK and have tens of millions in population, and manage to have referendums all the time. It's not that logistically difficult. If you mean that you just didn't like the result, it could just as easily be argued that maybe it was a good idea that there was a Brexit referendum. To find out what people are thinking Now, before UKIP gets voted into a majority of Parliament. I prefer no-deal Brexit to that.

    – ouflak
    4 hours ago






  • 1





    @ouflak: My statement is more that the foreign alliances/entanglements of a country should not be left to the masses to decide, more than anything. I'm not a citizen of the UK, so I mostly criticize Brexit because my country did Brexit better... but it's more for humor than anything. If I'm being fully serious about the matter, I don't have a horse in the race and don't really care how they resolve it.

    – hszmv
    1 hour ago













15












15








15







The United States does have referendums at the state level and all 50 states have some power of referendum offered to the people (the most common being legislature prescribed referendums to the people of general laws, which all states have. Constitutional Amendments done in such fashion exist in every state but Delaware). Wikipedia lists the United States as an example of a (Semi-) Direct Democracy in it's article on the matter.



The lack of Federal Referendum comes from a number of reasons, but the most commonly cited one was the Founding Father's distrust of direct democracy, seeing the form as a mob rule at best. They wanted a government where no one branch of government had enough power to run rough shot over another branch, and that no majority could over run a minority (You can see this in the design of such elements as the Separate but Equal Branches, the use of the Electoral College, the bicameral nature of Congress) that there was a consorted effort to protect minority (in the sense of party politics... they still had slavery as a legal thing for the better part of 90 years). They didn't fight against the Tyranny of Britain to establish their own Tyranny... and they didn't all agree with each other and wanted to make the fight easier and less bloody than the last one they had.



Another reason why is that, rules as written, the Federal Government wasn't supposed to be dealing with the citizens all that often... that was mostly done at the state level or even smaller community levels. The Federal Government was more supposed to deal with two broad areas of topics: Interactions between the states, and Interactions with other nations. As a Federation, the United States government is pretty much on par with a more strict EU. Each state, upon independence, was originally seen as their own separate nation that collectively agreed to surrender certain duties of a nation (Namely the ability to declare war, the ability to create diplomatic policy, and the ability to regulate commerce leaving their territory), but retained every other ability of a government bound by constitutions. If you didn't need to do business outside of the state... and you didn't need to do business outside the United States... and you didn't need to fight a war with another country, you really didn't have much business with the Federal Government. At best, your interaction with federal agents was getting your mail from the friendly neighborhood post man. In the modern nation, there are a few more interactions, but again, not a terrible many to the ordinary citizen. The phrase "All politics is local" is true, as at most, any given U.S. Citizen will have three national level ballot questions: Who do you want to represent your congressional district in the House, who do you want to represent your state in the Senate, and who do you want your state to give it's Electoral College votes to for President... all three are asking local questions that don't rise beyond the state level.



Finally, there's the issue of size. Switzerland, which has direct democracy, has a population of 8 million people compared to the United States' 320 million people, or roughly 40 times the population of Switzerland. It's a lot of ballots to manage to make a popular national decision and would have been such a daunting task, that it would be nearly impossible to do until relatively recently. And like you said, Brexit is a good argument on why certain questions shouldn't be punted to the people (The Swiss avoid this by imposing neutrality, thus it doesn't seek to have alot of decisions making that deals with international issues. The U.S. tried this two, but the first half of the 20th century had a nasty habit of bringing war to the states (not to mention there was a lot of popular support for joining the wars) and by the end of World War II, they got themselves locked in a game of chicken with the U.S.S.R. that required them to get involved with the world writ large... to varying degrees of success.





share













The United States does have referendums at the state level and all 50 states have some power of referendum offered to the people (the most common being legislature prescribed referendums to the people of general laws, which all states have. Constitutional Amendments done in such fashion exist in every state but Delaware). Wikipedia lists the United States as an example of a (Semi-) Direct Democracy in it's article on the matter.



The lack of Federal Referendum comes from a number of reasons, but the most commonly cited one was the Founding Father's distrust of direct democracy, seeing the form as a mob rule at best. They wanted a government where no one branch of government had enough power to run rough shot over another branch, and that no majority could over run a minority (You can see this in the design of such elements as the Separate but Equal Branches, the use of the Electoral College, the bicameral nature of Congress) that there was a consorted effort to protect minority (in the sense of party politics... they still had slavery as a legal thing for the better part of 90 years). They didn't fight against the Tyranny of Britain to establish their own Tyranny... and they didn't all agree with each other and wanted to make the fight easier and less bloody than the last one they had.



Another reason why is that, rules as written, the Federal Government wasn't supposed to be dealing with the citizens all that often... that was mostly done at the state level or even smaller community levels. The Federal Government was more supposed to deal with two broad areas of topics: Interactions between the states, and Interactions with other nations. As a Federation, the United States government is pretty much on par with a more strict EU. Each state, upon independence, was originally seen as their own separate nation that collectively agreed to surrender certain duties of a nation (Namely the ability to declare war, the ability to create diplomatic policy, and the ability to regulate commerce leaving their territory), but retained every other ability of a government bound by constitutions. If you didn't need to do business outside of the state... and you didn't need to do business outside the United States... and you didn't need to fight a war with another country, you really didn't have much business with the Federal Government. At best, your interaction with federal agents was getting your mail from the friendly neighborhood post man. In the modern nation, there are a few more interactions, but again, not a terrible many to the ordinary citizen. The phrase "All politics is local" is true, as at most, any given U.S. Citizen will have three national level ballot questions: Who do you want to represent your congressional district in the House, who do you want to represent your state in the Senate, and who do you want your state to give it's Electoral College votes to for President... all three are asking local questions that don't rise beyond the state level.



Finally, there's the issue of size. Switzerland, which has direct democracy, has a population of 8 million people compared to the United States' 320 million people, or roughly 40 times the population of Switzerland. It's a lot of ballots to manage to make a popular national decision and would have been such a daunting task, that it would be nearly impossible to do until relatively recently. And like you said, Brexit is a good argument on why certain questions shouldn't be punted to the people (The Swiss avoid this by imposing neutrality, thus it doesn't seek to have alot of decisions making that deals with international issues. The U.S. tried this two, but the first half of the 20th century had a nasty habit of bringing war to the states (not to mention there was a lot of popular support for joining the wars) and by the end of World War II, they got themselves locked in a game of chicken with the U.S.S.R. that required them to get involved with the world writ large... to varying degrees of success.






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share


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answered 5 hours ago









hszmvhszmv

5,7681826




5,7681826







  • 3





    +1, But I do disagree with this statement, "Brexit is a good argument on why certain questions shouldn't be punted to the people". There are several states in the U.S. that are larger than the UK and have tens of millions in population, and manage to have referendums all the time. It's not that logistically difficult. If you mean that you just didn't like the result, it could just as easily be argued that maybe it was a good idea that there was a Brexit referendum. To find out what people are thinking Now, before UKIP gets voted into a majority of Parliament. I prefer no-deal Brexit to that.

    – ouflak
    4 hours ago






  • 1





    @ouflak: My statement is more that the foreign alliances/entanglements of a country should not be left to the masses to decide, more than anything. I'm not a citizen of the UK, so I mostly criticize Brexit because my country did Brexit better... but it's more for humor than anything. If I'm being fully serious about the matter, I don't have a horse in the race and don't really care how they resolve it.

    – hszmv
    1 hour ago












  • 3





    +1, But I do disagree with this statement, "Brexit is a good argument on why certain questions shouldn't be punted to the people". There are several states in the U.S. that are larger than the UK and have tens of millions in population, and manage to have referendums all the time. It's not that logistically difficult. If you mean that you just didn't like the result, it could just as easily be argued that maybe it was a good idea that there was a Brexit referendum. To find out what people are thinking Now, before UKIP gets voted into a majority of Parliament. I prefer no-deal Brexit to that.

    – ouflak
    4 hours ago






  • 1





    @ouflak: My statement is more that the foreign alliances/entanglements of a country should not be left to the masses to decide, more than anything. I'm not a citizen of the UK, so I mostly criticize Brexit because my country did Brexit better... but it's more for humor than anything. If I'm being fully serious about the matter, I don't have a horse in the race and don't really care how they resolve it.

    – hszmv
    1 hour ago







3




3





+1, But I do disagree with this statement, "Brexit is a good argument on why certain questions shouldn't be punted to the people". There are several states in the U.S. that are larger than the UK and have tens of millions in population, and manage to have referendums all the time. It's not that logistically difficult. If you mean that you just didn't like the result, it could just as easily be argued that maybe it was a good idea that there was a Brexit referendum. To find out what people are thinking Now, before UKIP gets voted into a majority of Parliament. I prefer no-deal Brexit to that.

– ouflak
4 hours ago





+1, But I do disagree with this statement, "Brexit is a good argument on why certain questions shouldn't be punted to the people". There are several states in the U.S. that are larger than the UK and have tens of millions in population, and manage to have referendums all the time. It's not that logistically difficult. If you mean that you just didn't like the result, it could just as easily be argued that maybe it was a good idea that there was a Brexit referendum. To find out what people are thinking Now, before UKIP gets voted into a majority of Parliament. I prefer no-deal Brexit to that.

– ouflak
4 hours ago




1




1





@ouflak: My statement is more that the foreign alliances/entanglements of a country should not be left to the masses to decide, more than anything. I'm not a citizen of the UK, so I mostly criticize Brexit because my country did Brexit better... but it's more for humor than anything. If I'm being fully serious about the matter, I don't have a horse in the race and don't really care how they resolve it.

– hszmv
1 hour ago





@ouflak: My statement is more that the foreign alliances/entanglements of a country should not be left to the masses to decide, more than anything. I'm not a citizen of the UK, so I mostly criticize Brexit because my country did Brexit better... but it's more for humor than anything. If I'm being fully serious about the matter, I don't have a horse in the race and don't really care how they resolve it.

– hszmv
1 hour ago










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