I’m not one of
those who would argue that referendums are alien to the UK constitution and should
therefore be avoided. Apart from any
other consideration, such arguments are usually based ultimately in the fiction
that sovereignty is the exclusive property of the god-anointed monarch who
graciously agrees to share part of it with parliament; a fiction which those of
us of a more republican bent naturally and instinctively reject. If sovereignty resides with the people rather
than with the monarch, then referendums are one way of allowing the people to
express that sovereignty.
That doesn’t
mean that referendums are problem-free though.
One of the more obvious problems is that they have to reduce everything to a single,
simple question. In the case of the EU,
that simple question was whether we wanted to be in or out. The basis on which people came to a
conclusion about that simple question was then down to each individual, and
there’s no doubt in my mind that different people had very different rationales
for the decisions that they individually took.
Clearly, the whole
question of immigration was a major part of the thinking of many people who
chose to believe that the EU was in some way the cause of immigration and that
exit would mean an end to immigration.
That was always over-simplistic, but it was a belief that was encouraged
by many on the ‘leave’ side. In some
cases, that was because they themselves wanted to stop immigration, but I’m
sure that I’m not alone in suspecting that in some cases, they knew full well
that Brexit in itself wasn’t going to make a huge difference to the levels of
immigration; and maybe didn’t really care that much about the subject anyway. They were simply, and very cynically, playing
the cards that they thought would help them win.
The Prime
Minister’s rejection
of a points-based system for immigration today has caused some consternation
amongst those who mistakenly thought that that is what they were voting
for. Farage has gone so far as to declare
that “The people were clear in wanting a
points-based immigration system which is why so many went out and voted to
leave the European Union”. Perhaps
he really does think that is what people were voting for, but there was no
mention of a points-based immigration system on the ballot paper – or indeed of
immigration at all. He is confusing two
different things here – the first is what people actually voted for, and the
second is the reasons why they voted as they did. The ballot paper only measured the first of
those; in a referendum, the second is irrelevant.
In simple
terms, the ‘leave’ side made all sorts of promises which they were never in a
position to make, because they could never keep them. Election manifestos are bad enough; parties
make all sorts of promises which they never keep – and perhaps sometimes never
intend to. But in a referendum, there is
no manifesto, no package of measures, simply a straight yes or no to one
individual question. That is a major
weakness of a system of decision-making based on referendums.
It’s not
necessarily an argument against holding referendums, or against being bound by
the results – and in the case of the EU referendum, it’s too late to put those
arguments anyway. The best that we can
hope for in the specific case is that, as the truth about the detail comes out,
there will be a sufficiently significant shift of opinion to justify revisiting
the question. It is, though, an argument
for thinking very carefully about what issues should be subject to a referendum
and when such a referendum should be held.
It’s not an easy question to answer – too soon in any process, and the
subject matter is too ill-defined for the campaigns to be able to be adequately
rooted in fact; too late, and people will feel that the deal is already done
and dusted and they’re just being asked to rubber stamp it.
My own
preference is for a two-stage process on issues such as the EU (and I’d argue
the same in the case of independence referendums): an early vote on the
principle, and a final vote on the detail.
It means asking people to consider and vote on the same issue twice, but
if we’re going to use the more direct approach to democracy which referendums
represent, it is surely preferable that the final decision is an informed
one. It wouldn’t stop people from voting
on the basis of irrelevant or peripheral considerations, of course; but it
might make it clearer what they are actually voting on and deter spurious
claims after the event that “that wasn’t
what we voted for”.
5 comments:
The problem is that a two-stage process quickly turns into a three or four stage process, the majority agree on the main principle but fail to agree on the subsequent detail. You can't just leave the matter hanging.
As for referendums in general I suspect we have seen the last of them for a couple of generations. Certainly there isn't a chance another one will be held again in Scotland again throughout my lifetime, Nicola Sturgeon with her constant threats of 'tabling another referendum' has turned a significant proportion of the population of 'em, no matter their respective thoughts on independence.
The BREXIT vote should have led to four hundred or more MP's resigning en masse. Until such, I don't think anyone will be happy.
I test the value of the various democratic techniques in 2 ways.
(1) Is it offered top-down or bottom-up, and (2) does the technique tackle fundamental flaws in the system?
In Britain, parliamentary democracy is based on the theory of sovereignty you describe, so is top-down as you say. In Britain,a referendum has also been a top-down thing, with the result that it is open to simple protest-voting, or voting on irrelevant criteria eg immigration as you also correctly say. A British referendum has not tackled any fundamental flaws, although the sheer lunacy of the 2016 referendum may produce a worthwhile shake-out in the end.
Two thoughts
Referenda: if you want a bottom up remedy for fundamental flaws, do what they have done in California since 1911 with their Initiative system, which is bottom-up, no question. They had to fight to get it, but they did. They tackled eye-watering abuses and corruption, fundamental flaws, back then and since, though they may have taken it too far 100 years on. But my favourite is...
A directly elected Constitutional Convention: the US had 51 of these, State and Federal. Germans are very efficient and they got themselves a beautiful Constitution with no trouble at all after WW2.
Think about it. We could devise our own electoral system, bicameral legislature (a MUST) with wide powers, independent judiciary, directly elected (US style) Governor. No more fundamental flaws in Wales! If Wales were a US State-like the State of Wyoming (pop 600,000)- we would have all these things.
But it must be directly elected, not appointed. It would transform Wales. No wonder the UK has never, ever, had one of these. But we must not take the obvious "No" from the entrenched powers for an answer. If we DEMAND it, we will assuredly get our Convention, and Constitution, in the end.
Anon,
"Certainly there isn't a chance another one will be held again in Scotland again throughout my lifetime, Nicola Sturgeon with her constant threats of 'tabling another referendum' has turned a significant proportion of the population of 'em, no matter their respective thoughts on independence." And the basis for this assertion is what, exactly?
"The BREXIT vote should have led to four hundred or more MP's resigning en masse." Why?
John Dixon 08:08
1. It isn't just me saying it, now the Guardian is saying it too.
http://www.theguardian.com/politics/2016/sep/06/nicola-sturgeon-shelves-quick-second-scottish-independence-referendum-bill
2.Because they were found to be uniquely out of touch with their electorate. Resign, re-apply for selection and stand for election. I think you'll find many agree that this is what should happen.
1. I think you need to be careful about reading too much into simplistic headlines. On my reading, Nicola Sturgeon's position hasn't changed; the option of a second referendum is on the table, preparations for it will be undertaken, but all other options for protecting Scotland's interest will be explored first. That's what she's been saying, in essence, since June 23rd, and the link you provide seems to say that that's what she's saying now.
2. The idea that MPs who disagree with the electorate should be required to resign is a novel one. My betting would be that, if they stood under the same party labels, most would simply be re-elected - because in reality people vote for parties not individuals. In any event, MPs holding different views from a substantial proportion of the electorate is hardly a new phenomenon.
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