how many EU member states elect national Govs using FPTP then nominate a commissioner? if the answer is more than half then it might resemble (v,slightly) a FPTP gov.
aye, one has the power to enforce human rights, and a gazillion other beneficial policies, the other, well.....
whats the cut off point when you can say enough is enough of this controlling attitude from dem foreigners? 2-3% of policy going against a country's Govs position? a Gov that's elected by about only 30-40% of that country's population?.
i suppose in comparison to the tired old conspiracy pish thats being offered up from you and yours it might seem that way. *shrugs*.
Are we truly arguing that the answer to being "ruled" by people only 30-40% of the electorate voted for, is a government that a relatively minuscule number of politicians voted for? Is that what we are arguing?
but we aint ruled by them loz. we are ruled by foreigners remember? and lets not forget the handful of Squamata controlling them...
Uk election turnout. Looks higher than 30-40% to me. https://researchbriefings.parliament.uk/ResearchBriefing/Summary/CBP-8060#fullreport Edit. Or is that not what you meant
That's a very strange way of looking at it. A deal doesn't mean we are still tied, it means we have agreements in place, so that everything continues to run smoothly, so that flight you have booked to the Canaries in April can actually take off and land. Extricating ourselves from the EU isn't so much a divorce, it's more like separating conjoined twins in terms of complexity. No deal is rather like taking a butchers saw and just sawing down the middle.