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ID153288
Title ProperDemocratic duty to oppose Brexit
LanguageENG
AuthorWeale, Albert
Summary / Abstract (Note)What should be the position of democrats in response to the Brexit referendum? Many urge a duty to accept the result. This article argues the contrary. If someone is a UK citizen, has a belief that leaving the European Union will be damaging to the common good of the UK and is a convinced democrat, then that person has a duty to oppose Brexit. Neither of the two principal reasons for accepting the result—a claim of popular sovereignty or of parliamentary sovereignty—imply a duty not to continue to oppose. Arguments from political equality for simple majority rule do not apply when the alternatives are ill defined. More generally, popular sovereignty presupposes and does not replace constitutional democracy, and in a parliamentary democracy there is always a continuing right to oppose.
`In' analytical NotePolitical Quarterly Vol. 88, No.2; Apr-Jun 2017: p.170–181
Journal SourcePolitical Quarterly 2017-06 88, 2
Key WordsPolitical Obligation ;  Referendum ;  Popular Sovereignty ;  Brexit ;  Constitutional Government ;  Duty to Oppose