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A face
10/01/2008, 10:16 PM
How will you be voting on the Lisbon Treaty?
Yes 26 36.62%
No 30 42.25%
Undecided 10 14.08%
Spoil 3 4.23%
Lazy 2 2.82%

How did you vote in the Lisbon Treaty?
Yes 22 43.14%
No 22 43.14%
Couldn't Decide 2 3.92%
Spoiled 0 0%
Lazy useless good for nothing muppet with no right to complain about anything. 5 9.80%http://www.libertas.org/

Anyone know who these guys are? They are going fund information leaflet on treaty for every household in Ireland for free as the government wont do it. Anyone heard of them before?

Lionel Ritchie
10/01/2008, 11:33 PM
http://www.libertas.org/

Anyone know who these guys are? They are going fund information leaflet on treaty for every household in Ireland for free as the government wont do it. Anyone heard of them before?

Hmmm ...set up by a one time Fianna Fail supporting/donating millionaire .... Well, my experience of those guys is they always want whats best for everyone! No need for me to read on...;)

mypost
11/01/2008, 2:11 AM
http://www.libertas.org/

Anyone know who these guys are? Anyone heard of them before?

They've been around since the treaty was signed, and you'll be hearing more from them, before the referendum. The more, the merrier.

mypost
27/01/2008, 10:23 AM
http://www.rte.ie/news/2008/0126/eu.html

GavinZac
27/01/2008, 1:41 PM
Idiocy.

Almost as bad as that chap in the echo who intends on voting no "because the government is closing post offices".

mypost
28/01/2008, 4:22 AM
Unlike in the other 26 EU countries, he has the right to vote "no".

bennocelt
29/01/2008, 6:53 PM
Idiocy.

Almost as bad as that chap in the echo who intends on voting no "because the government is closing post offices".


To be honest i will be voting against it as i always vote against the government

GavinZac
29/01/2008, 11:13 PM
To be honest i will be voting against it as i always vote against the government

Why don't you read the general points of the treaty, come to realise how important they are for us and for europe in general, and vote on what you were asked rather than making some pathetic uneducated "statement". People like you make a mockery of our right to vote tbh.

mypost
30/01/2008, 12:40 AM
This re-hashed constitution (that 2 countries already rejected in referendums) is a shambles, and an affront to democracy. The fact that nobody else is allowed to vote on it, is proof enough of that, before you attempt to read it. So it's up to us to vote the correct way.

GavinZac
30/01/2008, 4:23 AM
This re-hashed constitution (that 2 countries already rejected in referendums) is a shambles, and an affront to democracy. The fact that nobody else is allowed to vote on it, is proof enough of that, before you attempt to read it. So it's up to us to vote the correct way.
Care to give any reason why?

bennocelt
31/01/2008, 6:36 PM
Why don't you read the general points of the treaty, come to realise how important they are for us and for europe in general, and vote on what you were asked rather than making some pathetic uneducated "statement". People like you make a mockery of our right to vote tbh.

God man you honestly think your precious vote means something:eek:

GavinZac
31/01/2008, 8:32 PM
God man you honestly think your precious vote means something:eek:
Why wouldn't it mean something?

mypost
31/01/2008, 8:32 PM
Care to give any reason why?

You haven't read it, have you?

I think if people read it with an open mind, and not merely do what the government tells them to do (:rolleyes: "democracy" :rolleyes:), then they will see the treaty for what it is, and will do what the rest of Europe can't do.

GavinZac
31/01/2008, 8:49 PM
You haven't read it, have you?I havent flicked through the entire text of the treaty but I wouldn't be voting on something without informing myself first. This is my favourite synopsis so far, from The Economist:
http://www.economist.com/world/europe/displaystory.cfm?story_id=10024471


I think if people read it with an open mind, and not merely do what the government tells them to do (:rolleyes: "democracy" : rolleyes:), then they will see the treaty for what it is, and will do what the rest of Europe can't do.You still havent given a single reason yet. Have you read it?

Poor Student
31/01/2008, 9:46 PM
Mypost, aside from the issue of how other states are passing the treaty, could you please articulate your concerns with what parts of the treaty you feel merit voting against it?

John83
01/02/2008, 9:43 AM
I havent flicked through the entire text of the treaty but I wouldn't be voting on something without informing myself first. This is my favourite synopsis so far, from The Economist:
http://www.economist.com/world/europe/displaystory.cfm?story_id=10024471
That's pretty good.

I haven't read the treaty yet, but the thing that's struck me most from the summaries I've seen has been in the foreign policy. I don't see why the EU is drawing power to itself there.

mypost
05/02/2008, 7:04 PM
http://home.eircom.net/content/irelandcom/breaking/12140143?view=Eircomnet

BohsPartisan
10/02/2008, 9:52 AM
What I'll be voting no to:
http://www.caeuc.org/index.php?q=node/8

GavinZac
11/02/2008, 2:13 AM
What I'll be voting no to:
http://www.caeuc.org/index.php?q=node/8

"The EU now has about 150 million people living in regions where unemployment and poverty are much worse than the EU average."
"Unemployment in eastern Europe has created a huge pool of cheap labour. Some of these workers are used as cheap labour in the west and others work for foreign investors at home."
So the availability of work in this competitive environment actively fights the unemployment they are complaining about? Someone needs to re-read their arguments.

"Competition leads to unemployment and poverty"
"The legal door is now open for cheap labour to undermine existing pay and conditions."
I'm surprised at you for following this tosh - the "they took our jurrrrrbs" line. Considering what the EU has done for us, is it really such a horror to be subjected to competition from others in the same way as we have provided competition to them? Or is it the case that you, as a socialist, are all for social equality, once it is within national borders? Whereby some people are more deserving of equality than others, depending on their birthplace or their language? Some sort of... national socialism? Besides, of what relevance is this general anti-EU stuff to the treaty at all, given that it is a basic tenet of the purpose of the EU and not a new addition?

"EU surveys show that Irish consumers already pay 42 per cent more than the EU average for housing, water, electricity, gas and other fuels,
25 per cent more for education and 24 per cent more for health. More privatisation will hardly ease this situation."
Right, so we're paying for too much because of the existing monopolies on electricity, gas, water and the over-payment of unskilled labourers in the construction industry... but some how, privitisation/competition will make this worse? Since when does competition lead to higher prices? If competition leads to higher prices, does that negate the "points" made above about poverty/unemployment? Did the person writing this actually think about what they were writing at all?

Macy
11/02/2008, 11:17 AM
http://www.libertas.org/

Anyone know who these guys are? They are going fund information leaflet on treaty for every household in Ireland for free as the government wont do it. Anyone heard of them before?
One of the people involved is Dave Cochran, from politics.ie.

At this stage I'll be voting no. My policy with EU treaties is that it's up to the yes side to convince me to make a change. Being a good european, thinking what the EU has done for us etc are not enough arguements to convince me I'm afraid. As with Nice 1, the No side are coming up with far better arguements to support of a "No" vote.

Also, Dermot Ahern's indications last week in the Dail that they're going to try and get around the McKenna judgement to try and buy a yes vote makes me even more suspicious of what's really in it that they want to hide from us.

BohsPartisan
12/02/2008, 10:58 PM
[I]Since when does competition lead to higher prices?
Example - Privatisation of waste services has led to increased cost for the user. FACT.
Telecommunications is another example.
Plenty of competition in property - didn't stop rising prices there.
In the case of public companies, the insistence on running them on the same basis as a private company - the emphasis being on profit - has led to higher costs for the consumer. - Examples - transport, Electricity, Gas etc.

GavinZac
12/02/2008, 11:25 PM
Example - Privatisation of waste services has led to increased cost for the user. FACT.
Telecommunications is another example.
Plenty of competition in property - didn't stop rising prices there.
In the case of public companies, the insistence on running them on the same basis as a private company - the emphasis being on profit - has led to higher costs for the consumer. - Examples - transport, Electricity, Gas etc.

You need to understand the difference between correlation and causality. Waste disposal prices didn't increase because of increased competition or privitisation; waste disposal prices increased because landfills are filling and closing, and regulations are becoming stricter and stricter. In fact, one could argue that such regulation is making the industry less competitive! Which isnt necessarily a bad thing but certainly different from naively implying competition by itself can raise prices. Competition is defined as greater supply to help satisfy demand: demand for telecommunications and housing has never been so high, and the increase in demand outstrips/ed the increase in supply. Prices rise because of this, not because of a correlation with increased privatisation.

GavinZac
12/02/2008, 11:32 PM
One of the people involved is Dave Cochran, from politics.ie.

At this stage I'll be voting no. My policy with EU treaties is that it's up to the yes side to convince me to make a change. Being a good european, thinking what the EU has done for us etc are not enough arguements to convince me I'm afraid. As with Nice 1, the No side are coming up with far better arguements to support of a "No" vote.

Also, Dermot Ahern's indications last week in the Dail that they're going to try and get around the McKenna judgement to try and buy a yes vote makes me even more suspicious of what's really in it that they want to hide from us.
The reality is that opponents of the treaty do not want to amend the current situation where we as citizens of Ireland have more power with our vote than citizens of Poland or any of the recently admitted nations. Pure selfish begrudgery which would spit in the face of the idea of a peaceful, unified and self-sacrificing EU we signed up to, benefited from, then turned against when we weren't the biggest benefiters in town. The idea that a little sacrifice in the short term on our behalf will lead to a brighter, peaceful future for everyone is lost on war-mad proto-fascists like Sinn Fein.

A face
13/02/2008, 12:45 AM
Still voting no on this one. The government are doing absolutely nothing to convince me to do otherwise. None of what i'm hearing has me saying "yup, this could actually be good for us" and everything else has a resounding "this is definitely going to be really bad for us".

After the present government scaring the nation into voting them back in this time round i'd be very slow to whole hearted believe anything they say now. Its the way they are going about this one as well that has me spooked. Why are they not coming straight out with it and letting us know what its all about.

We are only left with the option of researching it for ourselves and disseminating the info we find, and that is all bad from what i can see so far.

Definitely a NO right now.

Macy
13/02/2008, 7:19 AM
demand for telecommunications and housing has never been so high, and the increase in demand outstrips/ed the increase in supply. Prices rise because of this, not because of a correlation with increased privatisation.
And quality of our telecommunications infrastructure has never been as relatively low. It's clear that the privatisation of the telecoms was a major major mistake, that has only benefitted a few already rich individuals who have cashed in on the subsequent sales. I don't think even the most hardened capitalist could argue it has been a success for the consumer?

Electricity and Gas prices have been artificially increased over the last few years to try and make it attractive to private companies and allow them to make abnormal profits. The regulators even admit it. How is that to the benefit of the consumer?

Health Insurance is another market that is being manipulated to suit the private companies - making VHI increase it's reserves has effectively meant price increases for their customers. VIVAS and Quinn simply move with the VHI prices, just slightly undercut them. And the Government really tied down BUPA to stop them cutting and running once their super profits had come to an end.


The reality is that opponents of the treaty do not want to amend the current situation where we as citizens of Ireland have more power with our vote than citizens of Poland or any of the recently admitted nations. Pure selfish begrudgery which would spit in the face of the idea of a peaceful, unified and self-sacrificing EU we signed up to, benefited from, then turned against when we weren't the biggest benefiters in town. The idea that a little sacrifice in the short term on our behalf will lead to a brighter, peaceful future for everyone is lost on war-mad proto-fascists like Sinn Fein.
This is the classic "be a good european" and "remember what they did for us" argument I talked about in my post. People need more than this nonsense.

If that is the best argument there is from the Yes side, then it's going to be a no vote. An admission that we will be worse off than we are now isn't going to convince the electorate. That's even totally ignoring the possibilities of a different methods/structures which could give all countries equal status, rather than Lisbon that will give more power to Germany, France and the UK. It's not Ireland v Poland. It's Ireland & Poland v Germany, France, UK.

Also I am not convinced that this isn't a self amending treaty which will allow it's contents to be changed without referendum. When the Government publish the advice of the attorney general and everyone goes on the record with their names attached I won't believe any utterance from Dick Roche's mouth on this issue (not like you can ever take him at face value anyway). Political career's should live or die based on whether they'll put their name to it.

GavinZac
13/02/2008, 8:06 AM
If that is the best argument there is from the Yes side, then it's going to be a no vote. An admission that we will be worse off than we are now isn't going to convince the electorate. That's even totally ignoring the possibilities of a different methods/structures which could give all countries equal status, rather than Lisbon that will give more power to Germany, France and the UK. It's not Ireland v Poland. It's Ireland & Poland v Germany, France, UK. :confused: where did you get this idea? We already have less power than Germany, France and the UK; mostly because they are multitudes the size of us. I think the Shinners website says it best:

9 The Lisbon Treaty alters the way decisions are taken at the European Council. The already complex qualified majority voting procedure will be changed. The result is that Ireland’s weighted voting strength will be reduced by more than 50 per cent.
At the same time, the threshold determining a qualified majority will be significantly reduced. Taken together, these changes will reduce the power of smaller states and increasingly replace consensus decision-making at Council with majoritarianismYes, ladies and gentlemen, that is Ógra Shinn Féin's new term to demonise that most horrid of EU tenets, democracy.

Between 1995 and 2007, the EU's population has increased by 25%, and will continue to rise as affluence reaches the east and more states are added. The current system, designed with 45% of the current population in mind, is simply unworkable at these population levels and future population levels. Currently, there needs to be a clear majority of 80 MILLION people for ratification of most types of decisions. 20 times our own population! How insignificant are we? The idea that something could be unsuccessful in ratification because "only" 329,000,000 million people make a decision is ludicrous, and will, unchecked, be the death of the EU


Also I am not convinced that this isn't a self amending treaty which will allow it's contents to be changed without referendum. When the Government publish the advice of the attorney general and everyone goes on the record with their names attached I won't believe any utterance from Dick Roche's mouth on this issue (not like you can ever take him at face value anyway). Political career's should live or die based on whether they'll put their name to it.You know this is a treaty that is amending several others, without referendum beyond the election of pro-treaty politicians to the positions, in all but our own country? I guess our government thought it would be a good idea to give Sinn Fein an opportunity to show just how bitter they can be.

Macy
13/02/2008, 9:43 AM
Not sure why the obsession with the Shinners? I certainly don't have anything to do with them, and wouldn't have known the position they're taking in such detail until you posted it.

As for the self amending treaty, I know very well that other countries are not putting it to a referendum. In this form anyway, after it was defeated before. When I talk of self amendment I refer only to this country and clause 48 in this specific treaty which makes this treaty able to be amended by the European Council without having to go back before the people of this country if it is adopted. The pro side dispute this, but no one will publish any legal advice that this is wrong or put their own neck on the line.

GavinZac
13/02/2008, 12:06 PM
Not sure why the obsession with the Shinners? I certainly don't have anything to do with them, and wouldn't have known the position they're taking in such detail until you posted it.They seem to be the only public opposition, bar a few disenfranchised anyone-but-bertie heads.


As for the self amending treaty, I know very well that other countries are not putting it to a referendum. In this form anyway, after it was defeated before. When I talk of self amendment I refer only to this country and clause 48 in this specific treaty which makes this treaty able to be amended by the European Council without having to go back before the people of this country if it is adopted. The pro side dispute this, but no one will publish any legal advice that this is wrong or put their own neck on the line.My point was, that this mechanism already exists and is being exercised by this series of amendments in the majority of countries. It is nothing new and this appears to be just a shock reaction by certain people that if they dont get representatives elected to represent them in europe, they don't have any say in it.

Macy
13/02/2008, 2:22 PM
Previous treaty's haven't been so wide ranging as this one. If the pro Lisbon politicians say this one won't be any different and will still need a referendum for what could be significant amendments, then let them put the head on the blocks. None have so far, and until they do I won't be believing them.

Block G Raptor
14/02/2008, 9:55 AM
Not very up on the subject TBH. I did however hear on the radio that in ratifying the treaty Ireland would be giving up 63 separate veto's. if this is true I'll be voting no, as veto's are not all about having the power to block stuff but more a bargaining chip to get the best for your side in order not to block stuff. Losing so many veto's will leave us at a significantly compromised position than we are now!

mypost
14/02/2008, 8:04 PM
I havent flicked through the entire text of the treaty. Have you read it?

:o

This joke of a document is the EU Constitution in another guise. In reality, it's about centralising power to France, Germany, England, Spain and Italy. It has a proviso for a 30-month "permanent" EU President, and abandons the current 6-month rotation.

France and the Dutch have already rejected this nonsense in free and fair referendums. It's up to us to uphold their voice. It's a big responsibility for our electorate to be entrusted with.

NeilMcD
14/02/2008, 8:26 PM
You need to understand the difference between correlation and causality. Waste disposal prices didn't increase because of increased competition or privitisation; waste disposal prices increased because landfills are filling and closing, and regulations are becoming stricter and stricter. In fact, one could argue that such regulation is making the industry less competitive! Which isnt necessarily a bad thing but certainly different from naively implying competition by itself can raise prices. Competition is defined as greater supply to help satisfy demand: demand for telecommunications and housing has never been so high, and the increase in demand outstrips/ed the increase in supply. Prices rise because of this, not because of a correlation with increased privatisation.

Seperate to this debate but in the case of Electricity in this country, our Electricity bill has gone up in as the Government have ordered the ESB to increase the bill as the likes of Denis O Brien (yeah him) will not enter the market as the electricity prices are actually too low and it is not worth his while entering the market as he would not make money from it at the moment. Despite what many people think the ESB would have the prices lower if they could but they are not allowed by the regulator. So in this case the ideology of privatisation is driving the prices up.

GavinZac
15/02/2008, 9:36 AM
Not very up on the subject TBH. I did however hear on the radio that in ratifying the treaty Ireland would be giving up 63 separate veto's. if this is true I'll be voting no, as veto's are not all about having the power to block stuff but more a bargaining chip to get the best for your side in order not to block stuff. Losing so many veto's will leave us at a significantly compromised position than we are now!

Yes.

So you'd prefer your vote to have more power than other people's in the Union?

Block G Raptor
15/02/2008, 9:40 AM
Yes.

So you'd prefer your vote to have more power than other people's in the Union?

If it's to the betterment of this country then Yes I do, and I don't see any reason to be ashamed of it. I'm Irish I live in Ireland so naturally I want the best deal for me, It's a dog eat dog world out there Gavin

GavinZac
15/02/2008, 9:49 AM
If it's to the betterment of this country then Yes I do, and I don't see any reason to be ashamed of it. I'm Irish I live in Ireland so naturally I want the best deal for me, It's a dog eat dog world out there Gavin

I'm guessing you wont be driving on those EU funded roads or using the EU funded broadband or allowing yourself to be treated by an EU funded nurse, as a protest? Because as far as I know, they were given to us for participating in an EU where the goal is to benefit the entirety of the Union rather than just to keep pouring money into one of the richest counties in the Europe, despite having already dragged us out of the third world - That must be a disgusting idea to someone who would in all scenarios favour Irish interests.

I feel a little ill that I defended you as not being xenophobic in the "Romanians" thread.

osarusan
15/02/2008, 10:36 AM
I feel a little ill......

Let's hope it's nothing serious. ;)

Macy
15/02/2008, 10:42 AM
Won't someone think of the (Polish) children....

I said it earlier, but if GavinZac is representative of the yes side, all they do have is "look at the roads" etc...


Being a good european, thinking what the EU has done for us etc are not enough arguements to convince me I'm afraid.

Block G Raptor
15/02/2008, 2:24 PM
I feel a little ill that I defended you as not being xenophobic in the "Romanians" thread.

That's a bit harsh, no? I know that the EU has done a lot for this country and I know that the new member states deserve a fair slice of the Pie, I'm not disputing this. but as I said earlier in this thread I'm not exactly fluent on the topic of the treaty, but from what I heard on the radio I was under the impression that the bigger European countries would be retaining their veto's at the expense of countries like Ireland if this is not the case then I apologise.

A face
15/02/2008, 4:27 PM
Without a shadow of a doubt i will be voting no ... the YES argument falls flat on its face.

But we are the government back this? Being serious here, it all seems bad for us and surely they must see this too so why are the government not fighting our corner? Why are they trying to keep people in the dark but insist on us voting yes? They are in power with the mandate of the people but they appear to be on the wrong side of the fence on this one?

Why ..... whats in it for them?

GavinZac
15/02/2008, 5:01 PM
That's a bit harsh, no? I know that the EU has done a lot for this country and I know that the new member states deserve a fair slice of the Pie, I'm not disputing this. but as I said earlier in this thread I'm not exactly fluent on the topic of the treaty, but from what I heard on the radio I was under the impression that the bigger European countries would be retaining their veto's at the expense of countries like Ireland if this is not the case then I apologise.The "vetos" and voting power are being recalculated to give a fairer balance to the system. Yes, this will mean us having relatively less power than France than we previously did. However, people saying things like "Im voting no for the poor unrepresented lads in France!" is the most transparent load of claptrap since Fine Gael's entirely unfeasable strategy before the last election. The lads in France will not be pleased at a nation scraping in with 4 million trying to have as much voting power as their 64 million people! Theres no point in hiding it, the only political opponents to this are Sinn Fein with their typical "Im very Irish, me!" tactics.

There is a certain amount of "facing up to reality" in this series of amendments for a our country. As a relatively small nation, we "got away" with a certain amount up to this point in the smaller Union and it has made us one of the richest countries on earth. The Constitution previously drawn up has been scrapped and replaced with a series of amendments to former treaties. These changes are absolutely neccessary if the European Union is to provide its constituent states with the platform to prosper in the face of the ever-quickening shift of global power and market out of Europe toward Asia and the USA. Its all very well being in favour of looking after ourselves but obstructing this because of some over-inflated sense of self-importance is to a short term benefit at best.


Won't someone think of the (Polish) children...
I said it earlier, but if GavinZac is representative of the yes side, all they do have is "look at the roads" etc...Er, that was my response to his "I dont care about the rest of them, I care about Ireland" rubbish. If you think "thats all we have" then you havent read any of my other posts and you certainly havent read anything about the treaty itself beyond the early mudslinging to teh uneducated by opposition parties while, unfortunately as usual, the government will leave as late as possible before publicising the benefits.

GavinZac
15/02/2008, 5:05 PM
Without a shadow of a doubt i will be voting no ... the YES argument falls flat on its face.

But we are the government back this? Being serious here, it all seems bad for us and surely they must see this too so why are the government not fighting our corner? Why are they trying to keep people in the dark but insist on us voting yes? They are in power with the mandate of the people but they appear to be on the wrong side of the fence on this one?

Why ..... whats in it for them?

Ask yourself... if this was a genuine stick to beat the government with, do you not think the opposition parties would be doing so? Why is it, if its apparantly "all bad", Mr Kenny is more worried about one man's finance than our status in our economic bloc?

mypost
15/02/2008, 5:44 PM
Ask yourself... if this was a genuine stick to beat the government with, do you not think the opposition parties would be doing so? Why is it, if its apparantly "all bad", Mr Kenny is more worried about one man's finance than our status in our economic bloc?

Because he also supports it. :rolleyes:

micls
15/02/2008, 5:47 PM
I don't get this 'the yes/no side haven't convinced me' attitude.
Why is it they're job to convince you?

This is something that will affect you, and your life, surely it's your own responsibility to inform yourself and make a decision based on the treaty itself?

After all if you(and people in general) make the wrong decision it's you that will suffer

GavinZac
15/02/2008, 5:49 PM
Because he also supports it. :rolleyes:

And the only party leader/party that doesnt support it is Sinn Fein. Would you vote for them, yeah?

mypost
16/02/2008, 9:48 AM
And the only party leader/party that doesnt support it is Sinn Fein. Would you vote for them, yeah?

:confused:

You're voting on a referendum, not an election. :rolleyes:

GavinZac
16/02/2008, 9:52 AM
:confused:

You're voting on a referendum, not an election. :rolleyes:

I know that. However, you seemed annoyed at the opposition parties for going along with the government. The only party not supporting it is Sinn Fein, so I'm asking are you a Sinn Fein voter? Not because "its an election" but because political parties tend to reflect their voter's opinions.

Have you read about the treaty yet?

mypost
16/02/2008, 10:10 AM
I know that. However, you seemed annoyed at the opposition parties for going along with the government. The only party not supporting it is Sinn Fein, so I'm asking are you a Sinn Fein voter? Not because "its an election" but because political parties tend to reflect their voter's opinions.

Have you read about the treaty yet?

The opposition parties always support EU referendums. Even the Greens are supporting this one. The fact that SF have recognised what it is and are opposing it, makes no difference to my vote.

Poor Student
16/02/2008, 4:32 PM
Not very up on the subject TBH. I did however hear on the radio that in ratifying the treaty Ireland would be giving up 63 separate veto's. if this is true I'll be voting no, as veto's are not all about having the power to block stuff but more a bargaining chip to get the best for your side in order not to block stuff. Losing so many veto's will leave us at a significantly compromised position than we are now!

As more countries join it makes the Union impossible to run if everyone retains vetoes. Vetoes need to be given up to enable a more efficient decision making process.

GavinZac
16/02/2008, 4:46 PM
The opposition parties always support EU referendums. No they don't. I remember the opposition raising the point of the Rapid Response Force in the original Nice referendum. The Irish people made it known they agreed with them and voted against it. The treaty was re-written to provide assurances for Ireland's position, and both sides were then happy to endorse the revised treaty. It then passed under its new form.

What way did you vote in those, by the way? Would you generally consider yourself cynical towards the EU? I ask because I havent actually seen all that much of an argument coming from you, beyond a seemingly set dislike of the manner this is being processed.

mypost
17/02/2008, 2:35 AM
No they don't. I remember the opposition raising the point of the Rapid Response Force in the original Nice referendum. The Irish people made it known they agreed with them and voted against it. The treaty was re-written to provide assurances for Ireland's position, and both sides were then happy to endorse the revised treaty. It then passed under its new form.

What way did you vote in those, by the way? Would you generally consider yourself cynical towards the EU?

FF, FG, Labour, and the PD's all supported the original Nice Treaty, as I did. This is a different kettle of fish entirely, an undemocratic jokeshop, which involves handing up aspects of our sovereignty to Brussels. The yes side say it's just a few cosmetic changes involved, yet only one country is permitted to hold a referendum :confused:, and that's only on a constitutional requirement, and it's one of the areas we'll have to give up, if it passes. The surrender of our sovereignty to me is a red line area, as we've been ruled by foreign states for long enough, and so the referendum cannot be supported in any form.