ChatterBank1 min ago
The French say "non"!
Anyone else feel slightly secretly pleased that they can now put off reading the EU constitution for a little longer? Now that the French have rejected it, we shall not have a referendum on it for the foreseeable future. Moreover, given that this probably means a need for ammendments, there's no point in reading it yet in an attempt to get ahead of the game!
Believe me, when the time comes I will get fully informed so that I can make an educated vote. But for now, I'm just secretly pleased that I can put this off for a while. I find EU stuff terribly dull, but it's important so I make myself take note.
Anyone else quietly pleased we can put off the big read for a little while longer?
Answers
No best answer has yet been selected by acw. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Just to clarify, rather than asking "Who is anti the EU referendum?", my question was pitched at more uninformed users asking "Who's pleased they don't have to bother finding out about it yet?".
We're not going to go to war about it. We could screw each other's economies, but we won't start bombing each other!
This thread is just gonna turn into "Who's in favour of the EU constitution?" isn't it!?!?! There's actually a thread on that precise debate here: http://www.theanswerbank.co.uk/News/Question112985.html Perhaps comments on pro or anti- constitution should be posted there.
I'm talking about pro and anti- READING about the constitution!! I'm asking about having to read up on it/take an active interest in European Politics and research the thing until we know enough to vote. I'm asking who's relieved that we can continue (those of us who already are) to be lazy on the subject for a while longer!!!!
Over here everybody received a copy of the European Constitution. I know a few people who read none of it, many people who read some of it and a handful who courageously read it all.
Nobody said it made fascinating reading but at least they it allowed them to make more of an educated vote. Many people who said it was rebarbative, chock a block of political jargon that couldn't me made head nor tail of
Continued...
Luckily as the referendum drew nearer debates grew more precise and often having a copy of the Constitution in front of one made for somewhat easier understanding of whatever they were blathering on and on and on about...
Anyway the NON came out tops and now everybody is more or less in a state of "What's going to happen next". Chirac made it fairly obvious last night he wasn't going to stand down and then this afternoon it was announced he was replacing Raffarin (at least that's something positive!). Now we wait to hear who he's being replaced by: Sarkozy? Villepin? M-A-M?
So Holland is next, Denmark isn't far behind and Poland feels it is in a dilemma as the Poles wonder what to do... All very, very complicated.