Sie sehen gerade die Germany Version der Website.
Möchten Sie zu Ihrer lokalen Seite wechseln?
70 MIN LESEZEIT

It’s not over until it’s over

ANATOLE KALETSKY

If there is one fixed point in the hurricane of politics in post-referendum Britain it is the dogma that referendums are sacrosanct. The people, it is claimed, have made an irreversible decision to take Britain out of the European Union—and however dire the consequences of this decision, democracy requires “the people’s will” to be obeyed. This dogma is a travesty of true democracy. Insisting that a referendum vote can never be reversed or even challenged conflicts with history, with law and, most importantly, with democratic principles. In genuine democracy nothing is ever irreversible, since every decision, regardless of the majority that supports it, is always open to debate.

This principle of continuous challenge must be restored—and quickly—if Britain is to avoid an economic and political catastrophe: a deep recession that will cause greatest hardship among the very groups that have been most aroused by the campaign for Brexit, and thereby magnify the public anger and political chaos already unleashed by the referendum.

To avoid the crisis three conditions will be need to be fulfilled. First and foremost, politicians, media commentators and business leaders will have to stop parroting empty slogans such as “Brexit means Brexit” or “the voice people has spoken” and instead begin a serious debate about the appropriate balance between direct and representative democracy in Britain’s constitution. Second, the new government will have to devise a detailed programme on how to preserve the most important benefits of EU membership, while keeping faith with democracy, and then present this to the voters. Third, political leaders from the rest of Europe will have to show greater flexibility and a stronger instinct for the EU’s self-preservation than they have so far.

Lesen Sie den vollständigen Artikel und viele weitere in dieser Ausgabe von Prospect Magazine
Kaufoptionen unten
Wenn Sie die Ausgabe besitzen, Anmelden um den vollständigen Artikel jetzt zu lesen.
Digitale Einzelausgabe August 2016
 
€6,99 / issue
Diese Ausgabe und andere ältere Ausgaben sind nicht in einer neuen Abonnement. Das Abonnement enthält die letzte reguläre Ausgabe und die während des Abonnements erscheinenden neuen Ausgaben. Prospect Magazine
PRINT-ABONNEMENT? Erhältlich auf magazine.co.uk, den besten Zeitschriftenabonnement-Angeboten online.
 

Dieser Artikel stammt aus...


View Issues
Prospect Magazine
August 2016
ANSICHT IM LAGER

Andere Artikel in dieser Ausgabe


Editor’s Letter
A result, but no conclusion
The European Union referendum delivered a startling result—but not a
This month
If I ruled the world
If I ruled the world my first edict would be
Prospect recommends
In 2009, Nicky and Robert Wilson launched Jupiter Artland just
Prospect events
The Prospect Book Club meets every third Monday evening of
Letters
Rachel Sylvester is right to ask if the Tories face
In fact
Per capita, the United States employs many more prison guards
Opinions
The next generation will suffer most
My dad, post-war Atlanticist and Empire nostalgic as he was,
Does China care about Brexit?
Here in China, state television followed the European Union referendum
Never say never
The Leave campaign won the referendum battle—the question is now
The Republicans’ unloved leader
Can Donald Trump be stopped—not in November, but sooner, by
The end of Hinkley Point C?
Hinkley Point C is vulnerable to the effects of Brexit
Information overload
In a world where a ceaseless barrage of information, opinion,
Analysis
Chilcot’s tough lesson
There was a time in 10 Downing Street when it
The Prospect Duel
Should we stop subsidising opera?
Each year the UK’s major opera companies receive around £65m
Features
Welcome to New Britain
The EU referendum has caused the biggest upheaval in British
Europe’s biggest threat
Britain’s referendum laid bare the extent to which society—across Europe—is
Who are we?
The result of the referendum on the European Union was
Arguing with the EU
Breaking up is hard to do. The British people voted
A vote against the mass immigration society
The Brexit vote was evidently not just about immigration. But
A national trauma
The European Union referendum was the most politically traumatic event
Alone at the top
On the evening of 28th October 1971, the day on
The trapped country
When President Dilma Rousseff lit the Olympic torch in May
The science of the inconceivable
Late last year, an experiment carried out by scientists at
13 ways of looking at Steven Spielberg
To explore your medium, to revisit childhood, to have paying
Arts & books
Flights of the dream bird
by Walter Benjamin, translated by Sam Dolbear, Esther Leslie and
Race to the bottom
British Airways (BA) used to forbid its cabin staff from
The long road to victory
In August 1941, Winston Churchill and Franklin D Roosevelt met
Visions of the faraway
In January 1923, a 35-year-old painter named Georgia O’Keeffe mounted
Books in brief
The Myth of Meritocracy: Why Working-Class Kids Still Get Working-Class
Life
Leith on life
Call it a reaction-formation. Having spent much of the last
Life of the mind
I was having coffee with a friend the other day
Matters of taste
This spring I was in Beirut for several weeks and
Wine
How can you sample some of the world’s greatest wines
DIY investor
Paul Lewis, the presenter of BBC Radio 4’s MoneyBox, published
Endgames
The way we were
On 18th January, 1963. Tony Benn, Labour MP, writes in