Originally posted by Dave2002
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Is there a reason ?
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Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostI hear this often
SO can you give me a real example where the UK has handed too much control to the EU (always bearing in mind that WE are part of the EU so it's not like giving your stuff to someone else) ?
Sorry - I really am right on the fence on some of these points. I would have preferred to stay in the EU and reform it, but that might (have been) be impossible if too much power has already been passed over, and there is insufficient willingness to change.
I have very little control or input now into the processes which are now going on, so all I can do is to hope that it won't be as bad as some fear.
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Originally posted by Dave2002 View PostI really don't know, though I did write to Donald Tusk and Jean Claude Juncker for clarification. Some people might not like the European Arrest Warrant, and Theresa May was obviously somewhat annoyed with the EU Court of Human Rights when she was Home Secretary. Some of the cases are/were contentious. However, just because on the whole I actually preferred the EU's interpretation and implementation of rules doesn't mean that the UK should have handed all of those matters to an outside body.
Sorry - I really am right on the fence on some of these points. I would have preferred to stay in the EU and reform it, but that might (have been) be impossible if too much power has already been passed over, and there is insufficient willingness to change.
I have very little control or input now into the processes which are now going on, so all I can do is to hope that it won't be as bad as some fear.
Which is what I would have expected
When i've asked folks about EXACTLY what they think about this it always comes down to vague things
So the "EU court of human rights" ?
hummm I'm not sure that even exists
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The European Court of Justice is the court of final resort for EU member states. It has been responsible for many decisions that have clarified the implementation into domestic law of many EU directives. This is especially relevant where a member state has sought, quasi lawfully, to minimise the domestic effect of a directive. That does represent the ceding of ‘control’, but I would argue certainly in employment law that it has led to greater protection for U.K. citizens than would otherwise have been the case had the U.K. government been left to its own devices.
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Originally posted by muzzer View PostThe European Court of Justice is the court of final resort for EU member states. It has been responsible for many decisions that have clarified the implementation into domestic law of many EU directives. This is especially relevant where a member state has sought, quasi lawfully, to minimise the domestic effect of a directive. That does represent the ceding of ‘control’, but I would argue certainly in employment law that it has led to greater protection for U.K. citizens than would otherwise have been the case had the U.K. government been left to its own devices.
So why do folks get so agitated about the European Court of Human Rights which isn't part of the EU ?
Maybe this could be in one of the tests applied before we allow people to vote ?
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostBrexit supporting right wing politicians are making hay with rhetoric with the sovereignty issue while they can; they know in their heart of hearts, and have known at least since "expert" commentators for the Kinnock generation of right Labour reformists were telling the public that national governments no longer had any real control over domestic policies, because of the power of the dominating industrial giants to break an economy not operated according to their interests. This, incidentally, was the backing to Trotsky's formulation of "permanent revolution", which pointed out that any "developing" country achieving national self-determination would be forced to expropriate sectors of their economies under first world companies' ownership and nationalise if they were to survive, let along claim self-determination - so the myth of sovereignty in the age of monopoly capitalism has been debunkable at least since the 1930s, when America sneezed. That all appeared to change with the 2007 banking crash, when big capital was forced to go begging to the various national treasuries to prevent total financial collapse - the effects of which, given the tight interconnectedness of the world (capitalist) monetary system, would have threatened their continued existence as much as the monetary value of everything - creating the illusion that elected politicians did, in the end, actually still have power to determine the fate of nations. The need post WW2 for competitive trading arrangements led the US to support the establishment of the EEC, whose long-term objective of turning itself into the trading bloc capable of standing up to, in the first instance, the superiority of the US military-banking-industrial bloc, would prioritise political self-integration over national self-interest. It is this that the rhetoric of sovereignty had long pedalled as escapism into a mythologised past from the realities of modern-day capitalism - one in reality built on empires, slavery and wars they would either rather not mention or present as trips down nostalgia lane.
National sovereignty is the ideological back stop pending America and China's re-carving up the global market.
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I’m retreating for a while, to read books such as this one - https://www.amazon.co.uk/Tyranny-Twe...s%2C161&sr=8-1
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Originally posted by Dave2002 View PostI’m retreating for a while, to read books such as this one - https://www.amazon.co.uk/Tyranny-Twe...s%2C161&sr=8-1
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Originally posted by Dave2002 View PostI really don't know...... Theresa May was obviously somewhat annoyed with the EU Court of Human Rights when she was Home Secretary. Some of the cases are/were contentious.
This fact explains the difference between the European Convention on Human Rights, the European Court of Human Rights and the European Court of Justice.
But I'm not surprised (and not being critical of you, D2002). Decades of campaigning by the Mail and others have embedded this confusion to their obvious advantage** - not being confused by the facts has been an important element of success for the Brexit campaign.
** Straight Bananas (if IIRC origin a US document) and one quote to a journalist about the EU " I mean, they're closing our libraries and things, aren't they...."
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Originally posted by Cockney Sparrow View PostThis is confused - the Court in question is not an EU body - it relates to many more states than those in the EU:
This fact explains the difference between the European Convention on Human Rights, the European Court of Human Rights and the European Court of Justice.
But I'm not surprised (and not being critical of you, D2002). Decades of campaigning by the Mail and others have embedded this confusion to their obvious advantage** - not being confused by the facts has been an important element of success for the Brexit campaign.
** Straight Bananas (if IIRC origin a US document) and one quote to a journalist about the EU " I mean, they're closing our libraries and things, aren't they...."
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