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How does the UK government determine the size of a mandate?


Is the European Union perceived as privileging certain countries?Why is the EU wishing to punish the UK instead of listening their detractors and seeking dialogue?Brexit: leaving Customs Union and/or Single Market — what do these things really mean?Was Brexit always going to include a withdrawal from the European Atomic Energy CommunityDoes the pre-election UK government have the authority to start Brexit talks before a new government is formed?Are there precedents for the EU fining the UK for undervalued Chinese imports?What's the point in holding a second Brexit referendum?Did the EU Referendum Act 2015 mandate “the leaflet”?Why do UK citizens feel “that only the British (and perhaps the Swiss) are properly democratic”?How does a minority motion in the House of Commons take priority over Government business?













11















The Department for Exiting the EU has said in response to the petition to revoke Article 50 that :




“17.4 million people then voted to leave the European Union, providing
the biggest democratic mandate for any course of action ever directed
at UK government,”




How was the size of the mandate determined?










share|improve this question

















  • 4





    That was the number of people who voted Leave in the EU referendum. Is that what you were asking?

    – Alex
    Mar 27 at 13:29






  • 19





    If you win, your mandate is overwhelming. If you lose, the opposition has a marginal mandate.

    – Jontia
    Mar 27 at 13:43






  • 2





    I'm voting to close this question as off-topic because it is about language not politics.

    – gerrit
    Mar 27 at 14:57






  • 8





    @gerrit - I think the way governments use language is very much about politics, and there are some great questions on SE Politics about what politicians might have meant - including your Reagan question of Oct 25 '17.

    – ItWasLikeThatWhenIGotHere
    Mar 27 at 16:06






  • 2





    @Jontia Or more precisely: if you win x votes to y, your mandate is x; if you lose that way, the opposition has mandate x-y.

    – J.G.
    Mar 27 at 18:34
















11















The Department for Exiting the EU has said in response to the petition to revoke Article 50 that :




“17.4 million people then voted to leave the European Union, providing
the biggest democratic mandate for any course of action ever directed
at UK government,”




How was the size of the mandate determined?










share|improve this question

















  • 4





    That was the number of people who voted Leave in the EU referendum. Is that what you were asking?

    – Alex
    Mar 27 at 13:29






  • 19





    If you win, your mandate is overwhelming. If you lose, the opposition has a marginal mandate.

    – Jontia
    Mar 27 at 13:43






  • 2





    I'm voting to close this question as off-topic because it is about language not politics.

    – gerrit
    Mar 27 at 14:57






  • 8





    @gerrit - I think the way governments use language is very much about politics, and there are some great questions on SE Politics about what politicians might have meant - including your Reagan question of Oct 25 '17.

    – ItWasLikeThatWhenIGotHere
    Mar 27 at 16:06






  • 2





    @Jontia Or more precisely: if you win x votes to y, your mandate is x; if you lose that way, the opposition has mandate x-y.

    – J.G.
    Mar 27 at 18:34














11












11








11


2






The Department for Exiting the EU has said in response to the petition to revoke Article 50 that :




“17.4 million people then voted to leave the European Union, providing
the biggest democratic mandate for any course of action ever directed
at UK government,”




How was the size of the mandate determined?










share|improve this question














The Department for Exiting the EU has said in response to the petition to revoke Article 50 that :




“17.4 million people then voted to leave the European Union, providing
the biggest democratic mandate for any course of action ever directed
at UK government,”




How was the size of the mandate determined?







united-kingdom brexit






share|improve this question













share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked Mar 27 at 13:19









ItWasLikeThatWhenIGotHereItWasLikeThatWhenIGotHere

4039




4039







  • 4





    That was the number of people who voted Leave in the EU referendum. Is that what you were asking?

    – Alex
    Mar 27 at 13:29






  • 19





    If you win, your mandate is overwhelming. If you lose, the opposition has a marginal mandate.

    – Jontia
    Mar 27 at 13:43






  • 2





    I'm voting to close this question as off-topic because it is about language not politics.

    – gerrit
    Mar 27 at 14:57






  • 8





    @gerrit - I think the way governments use language is very much about politics, and there are some great questions on SE Politics about what politicians might have meant - including your Reagan question of Oct 25 '17.

    – ItWasLikeThatWhenIGotHere
    Mar 27 at 16:06






  • 2





    @Jontia Or more precisely: if you win x votes to y, your mandate is x; if you lose that way, the opposition has mandate x-y.

    – J.G.
    Mar 27 at 18:34













  • 4





    That was the number of people who voted Leave in the EU referendum. Is that what you were asking?

    – Alex
    Mar 27 at 13:29






  • 19





    If you win, your mandate is overwhelming. If you lose, the opposition has a marginal mandate.

    – Jontia
    Mar 27 at 13:43






  • 2





    I'm voting to close this question as off-topic because it is about language not politics.

    – gerrit
    Mar 27 at 14:57






  • 8





    @gerrit - I think the way governments use language is very much about politics, and there are some great questions on SE Politics about what politicians might have meant - including your Reagan question of Oct 25 '17.

    – ItWasLikeThatWhenIGotHere
    Mar 27 at 16:06






  • 2





    @Jontia Or more precisely: if you win x votes to y, your mandate is x; if you lose that way, the opposition has mandate x-y.

    – J.G.
    Mar 27 at 18:34








4




4





That was the number of people who voted Leave in the EU referendum. Is that what you were asking?

– Alex
Mar 27 at 13:29





That was the number of people who voted Leave in the EU referendum. Is that what you were asking?

– Alex
Mar 27 at 13:29




19




19





If you win, your mandate is overwhelming. If you lose, the opposition has a marginal mandate.

– Jontia
Mar 27 at 13:43





If you win, your mandate is overwhelming. If you lose, the opposition has a marginal mandate.

– Jontia
Mar 27 at 13:43




2




2





I'm voting to close this question as off-topic because it is about language not politics.

– gerrit
Mar 27 at 14:57





I'm voting to close this question as off-topic because it is about language not politics.

– gerrit
Mar 27 at 14:57




8




8





@gerrit - I think the way governments use language is very much about politics, and there are some great questions on SE Politics about what politicians might have meant - including your Reagan question of Oct 25 '17.

– ItWasLikeThatWhenIGotHere
Mar 27 at 16:06





@gerrit - I think the way governments use language is very much about politics, and there are some great questions on SE Politics about what politicians might have meant - including your Reagan question of Oct 25 '17.

– ItWasLikeThatWhenIGotHere
Mar 27 at 16:06




2




2





@Jontia Or more precisely: if you win x votes to y, your mandate is x; if you lose that way, the opposition has mandate x-y.

– J.G.
Mar 27 at 18:34






@Jontia Or more precisely: if you win x votes to y, your mandate is x; if you lose that way, the opposition has mandate x-y.

– J.G.
Mar 27 at 18:34











2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















34














This sentence simply means that of all the three referenda ever held in the United Kingdom, the one about Brexit was the one with the most votes for a single option. Note that the 1975 referendum to join the EU had 17,378,581 people who voted 'Yes'/'Join', only about 30,000 less than the 17,410,742 who voted to 'Leave' in the last referendum. If you look at the relative results (compared to 40 million registered voters in 1975 vs. 51 million in 2016), it's arguably a smaller mandate; in 1975, 43% of the people who could vote voted 'Yes', while the Brexit mandate is only 34%.






share|improve this answer






























    1














    By the number of people who voted for it (17.4 million).



    This referendum had one of the biggest ever turnouts of the electorate (72.2% of the eligible voters voted) and the Leave campaign won. As the turnout was so high, the winning side can be said to have a clear direction or mandate provided by the vote as to what action should be taken.






    share|improve this answer


















    • 26





      The mandate being clear would not only need a high turnout, but also a clear majority for something. As is blatantly obvious, while there was barely no majority for status quo, the rest is too splintered and gave far too many, sometimes impossible, and frequently clashing promises.

      – Deduplicator
      Mar 27 at 13:38












    • @Deduplicator Surely the people's mandate is the leave vote is it not? There is no possibility for the winning side to not consist of a clear majority either way: it was a yes/no question. The splintering came later when people had to figure out how to do what was mandated of them.

      – slebetman
      Mar 28 at 9:03











    Your Answer








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    2 Answers
    2






    active

    oldest

    votes








    2 Answers
    2






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes









    34














    This sentence simply means that of all the three referenda ever held in the United Kingdom, the one about Brexit was the one with the most votes for a single option. Note that the 1975 referendum to join the EU had 17,378,581 people who voted 'Yes'/'Join', only about 30,000 less than the 17,410,742 who voted to 'Leave' in the last referendum. If you look at the relative results (compared to 40 million registered voters in 1975 vs. 51 million in 2016), it's arguably a smaller mandate; in 1975, 43% of the people who could vote voted 'Yes', while the Brexit mandate is only 34%.






    share|improve this answer



























      34














      This sentence simply means that of all the three referenda ever held in the United Kingdom, the one about Brexit was the one with the most votes for a single option. Note that the 1975 referendum to join the EU had 17,378,581 people who voted 'Yes'/'Join', only about 30,000 less than the 17,410,742 who voted to 'Leave' in the last referendum. If you look at the relative results (compared to 40 million registered voters in 1975 vs. 51 million in 2016), it's arguably a smaller mandate; in 1975, 43% of the people who could vote voted 'Yes', while the Brexit mandate is only 34%.






      share|improve this answer

























        34












        34








        34







        This sentence simply means that of all the three referenda ever held in the United Kingdom, the one about Brexit was the one with the most votes for a single option. Note that the 1975 referendum to join the EU had 17,378,581 people who voted 'Yes'/'Join', only about 30,000 less than the 17,410,742 who voted to 'Leave' in the last referendum. If you look at the relative results (compared to 40 million registered voters in 1975 vs. 51 million in 2016), it's arguably a smaller mandate; in 1975, 43% of the people who could vote voted 'Yes', while the Brexit mandate is only 34%.






        share|improve this answer













        This sentence simply means that of all the three referenda ever held in the United Kingdom, the one about Brexit was the one with the most votes for a single option. Note that the 1975 referendum to join the EU had 17,378,581 people who voted 'Yes'/'Join', only about 30,000 less than the 17,410,742 who voted to 'Leave' in the last referendum. If you look at the relative results (compared to 40 million registered voters in 1975 vs. 51 million in 2016), it's arguably a smaller mandate; in 1975, 43% of the people who could vote voted 'Yes', while the Brexit mandate is only 34%.







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered Mar 27 at 13:32









        GlorfindelGlorfindel

        1,3061723




        1,3061723





















            1














            By the number of people who voted for it (17.4 million).



            This referendum had one of the biggest ever turnouts of the electorate (72.2% of the eligible voters voted) and the Leave campaign won. As the turnout was so high, the winning side can be said to have a clear direction or mandate provided by the vote as to what action should be taken.






            share|improve this answer


















            • 26





              The mandate being clear would not only need a high turnout, but also a clear majority for something. As is blatantly obvious, while there was barely no majority for status quo, the rest is too splintered and gave far too many, sometimes impossible, and frequently clashing promises.

              – Deduplicator
              Mar 27 at 13:38












            • @Deduplicator Surely the people's mandate is the leave vote is it not? There is no possibility for the winning side to not consist of a clear majority either way: it was a yes/no question. The splintering came later when people had to figure out how to do what was mandated of them.

              – slebetman
              Mar 28 at 9:03















            1














            By the number of people who voted for it (17.4 million).



            This referendum had one of the biggest ever turnouts of the electorate (72.2% of the eligible voters voted) and the Leave campaign won. As the turnout was so high, the winning side can be said to have a clear direction or mandate provided by the vote as to what action should be taken.






            share|improve this answer


















            • 26





              The mandate being clear would not only need a high turnout, but also a clear majority for something. As is blatantly obvious, while there was barely no majority for status quo, the rest is too splintered and gave far too many, sometimes impossible, and frequently clashing promises.

              – Deduplicator
              Mar 27 at 13:38












            • @Deduplicator Surely the people's mandate is the leave vote is it not? There is no possibility for the winning side to not consist of a clear majority either way: it was a yes/no question. The splintering came later when people had to figure out how to do what was mandated of them.

              – slebetman
              Mar 28 at 9:03













            1












            1








            1







            By the number of people who voted for it (17.4 million).



            This referendum had one of the biggest ever turnouts of the electorate (72.2% of the eligible voters voted) and the Leave campaign won. As the turnout was so high, the winning side can be said to have a clear direction or mandate provided by the vote as to what action should be taken.






            share|improve this answer













            By the number of people who voted for it (17.4 million).



            This referendum had one of the biggest ever turnouts of the electorate (72.2% of the eligible voters voted) and the Leave campaign won. As the turnout was so high, the winning side can be said to have a clear direction or mandate provided by the vote as to what action should be taken.







            share|improve this answer












            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer










            answered Mar 27 at 13:28









            DaveDave

            1314




            1314







            • 26





              The mandate being clear would not only need a high turnout, but also a clear majority for something. As is blatantly obvious, while there was barely no majority for status quo, the rest is too splintered and gave far too many, sometimes impossible, and frequently clashing promises.

              – Deduplicator
              Mar 27 at 13:38












            • @Deduplicator Surely the people's mandate is the leave vote is it not? There is no possibility for the winning side to not consist of a clear majority either way: it was a yes/no question. The splintering came later when people had to figure out how to do what was mandated of them.

              – slebetman
              Mar 28 at 9:03












            • 26





              The mandate being clear would not only need a high turnout, but also a clear majority for something. As is blatantly obvious, while there was barely no majority for status quo, the rest is too splintered and gave far too many, sometimes impossible, and frequently clashing promises.

              – Deduplicator
              Mar 27 at 13:38












            • @Deduplicator Surely the people's mandate is the leave vote is it not? There is no possibility for the winning side to not consist of a clear majority either way: it was a yes/no question. The splintering came later when people had to figure out how to do what was mandated of them.

              – slebetman
              Mar 28 at 9:03







            26




            26





            The mandate being clear would not only need a high turnout, but also a clear majority for something. As is blatantly obvious, while there was barely no majority for status quo, the rest is too splintered and gave far too many, sometimes impossible, and frequently clashing promises.

            – Deduplicator
            Mar 27 at 13:38






            The mandate being clear would not only need a high turnout, but also a clear majority for something. As is blatantly obvious, while there was barely no majority for status quo, the rest is too splintered and gave far too many, sometimes impossible, and frequently clashing promises.

            – Deduplicator
            Mar 27 at 13:38














            @Deduplicator Surely the people's mandate is the leave vote is it not? There is no possibility for the winning side to not consist of a clear majority either way: it was a yes/no question. The splintering came later when people had to figure out how to do what was mandated of them.

            – slebetman
            Mar 28 at 9:03





            @Deduplicator Surely the people's mandate is the leave vote is it not? There is no possibility for the winning side to not consist of a clear majority either way: it was a yes/no question. The splintering came later when people had to figure out how to do what was mandated of them.

            – slebetman
            Mar 28 at 9:03

















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