“I’ve had nothing pointed out. Give me some specifics.”
I think we’ve done this once or twice already. There’s paint stripper, creosote, vacuum cleaners and my own particular favourite – light bulbs. How many more do you want?
//"The EU doesn’t override national laws: this is one of the hopeless myths of Brexit. And if they did it would be done by elected representatives "//
Really?.
//And how does that manifest itself?//
As above. And even if it didn’t manifest itself at all the fact that it could is reason enough to prevent it. No sovereign country should have its legislation determined by a foreign power. Here’s a little passage (not my own work) which explains the situation for those in doubt:
“When the six founding European states created the European Economic Community in 1957 they did so in the form of an international treaty (known as the Treaty of Rome) that was binding between them. That treaty also created the European Court of Justice. In an important ruling in 1964, the Court said that the states had agreed to limit their sovereign rights in the areas covered by the treaty and could not adopt national laws that were incompatible with European law. This principle of ‘primacy’ or supremacy of EU law has been accepted and applied by national courts including the UK courts.”
And here’s a snippet from the EU’s own sources, explaining how the EU has obtained “full legal personality” in the matter of international treaties.
//The Lisbon Treaty gives the EU full legal personality. Therefore, the Union obtains the ability to sign international treaties in the areas of its attributed powers or to join an international organisation. Member States may only sign international agreements that are compatible with EU law.//
So, EU law determines the maximum power for vacuum cleaners. If the UK introduced a law that contradicted that it would be called to the ECJ, it would lose and the UK law would have to be struck out. There would be no “elected representatives” involved. Anyone doubting that, where conflict arises, EU law takes precedence over UK law needs their bumps felt and the matter is not worth a discussion, let alone an argument.