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Showing posts with label voting rights. Show all posts
Showing posts with label voting rights. Show all posts

Tuesday, 28 June 2016

UK EU referendum: how those who could vote voted in your area

The BBC has published an interactive map to help people gauge which way the vote last Thursday panned out in their area.(1)

It gives figures for those who: 

  • voted for Britain to leave the EU, 
  • those who voted to remain in the EU,
  • number of people who voted, and
  • percentage turnout (how many voted who could have voted)

It does not give any indication of how many chose to redesign their ballot papers.

Helpfully, it offers the options of inputting your area by postcode or council name rather than a 'pin point mouse click', and it also gives enlarged detail where you do place your mouse pointer, so that you can navigate closer to home. 

Here are figures for the two factions in the boroughs of Brent and Camden that form the heartland of Kilburn Unemployed Workers Group:
Borough
LB Brent
LB Camden
Leave
40.30%
25.10%
Remain
59.70%
74.90%
Turnout
65.00%
65.40%

Charts on the same web page also reveal the breakdown of the vote according to region. The vote in London was 40.1% for Britain to leave the EU, and 59.9% for Britain to remain. By far the largest preference for 'remain' was in a 'voting region' that many would not have even thought of as a voting region in this referendum; Gibraltar voted 95.9% to remain, 4.1% to leave. Maybe, given their disparity with the overall UK vote, they might reconsider their ties with the UK?

How did it feel to be excluded from an electoral process that 'everyone was talking about' while you were excluded and yet most intimately affected? An EU national who is a member of Kwug explains in a separate post on this blog.(2) Someone commented by email about his great privilege over her in this referendum being grossly unfair and how he was sickened by the divisiveness whipped up by the Brexit lobby over an 'internal Tory squabble'. Those who know our EU national friend consider it a great privilege to know her.

Scotland's vote in favour of remaining in the EU was even greater than that of London; Scottish MEP Alyn Smith got a standing ovation over his country's loyalty to that Union and his plea for the EU to stand in unity and support with Scotland.(3)
UKIP leader Farage's stony response to EU Parliament's standing ovation for Alyn Smith's speech


Link addresses


Friday, 24 June 2016

EU — Can I Stay Or Must I Go? — An EU National's Perspective

The blog publisher has belatedly received/opened the following from 'An EU National' who had no say in the UK's EU referendum. the blog publisher delights in publishing it on an otherwise very sad day, and in knowing Ivy and proclaiming greater allegiance to his 'EU National' commentator, friend and comrade and what she stand for than any allegiance for the British crown.


EU — Can I Stay Or Must I Go?


With lyrics such as:

Should I go there will be trouble
Should I stay it will be double...

I’m not surprised Mick Jones from Clash doesn't want his song associated with EU Referendum.

But then I’m really tired of same “In or Out” rhetoric ignoring our lack of voting rights.

If Scotland prevented its English citizens from voting – there would have been a public outcry. The Scottish Referendum would not have been allowed then.

But when EEA* Nationals lost voting rights in EU Referendum – who cared?

Certainly not LEXIT** or Abstain from Vote brigades, busy rebranding themselves as “not racists” only against the institution of EU. If they poured as much energy into fighting for equal voting rights at EU Referendum – then I would have believed them. Instead they enabled a right-wing narrative on how Britons only should vote. Rather than quit ignoring how EEA Nationals & other migrants have been denied a vote which will determine if we can stay or lose rights to benefits, etc.

Scratch the surface & this exposes a view of people as “us” or “them” instead of just “we”. Migrants are not seen as people living in UK, let alone as people settled in UK. Because migrants are seen as some external workforce which Britons can allow, restrict, send away or deny equal rights to.

So instead of colluding with EU Referendum being all about Britons staying or leaving EU, I ask those of you who are British to examine your privilege. This is similar to when white people are asked to examine our privilege, instead of pretending that people of all races are treated equally.

ü  The privilege of not being forced out of UK when you can’t support yourself.
ü  The right to claim benefits & not losing those right due to nationality.
ü  The privilege of having a UK citizenship & not been denied one
ü  The privilege of not risk getting deported if you’re an activist opposing the regime***
ü  The privilege of not having to pay around £1500 just to apply for a citizenship without getting any (or barely any) money back if you’ve been denied.
ü  The privilege of not having to apply for Permanent Residence Cards, pass English tests, redo complex life in UK tests & pledge allegiance with the Queen just to be British.

And as of today:

ü  The right to vote on whether EEA migrants should be able to stay, get benefits, etc.
ü  The privilege of not having to vote without losing any of your above mentioned rights

This is by no means an exhaustive list. And sure, it is a lot worse for non-EEA migrants, asylum seekers, refugees, paperless immigrants... 

I just wanted to show how people who wonder how & if they should vote today, enjoy rights that other citizens in UK don’t have. And how you will continue to enjoy these rights even if you don’t vote. Same cannot be said about EEA & other migrants whose lives will be dictated by your choices.

Secondly, I’d like you to imagine what it would be like if you didn’t have those rights. And how you would like others to vote in an election which will directly affect your life – right to stay & right to benefits.

-Ivy-

* EEA – European Economic Area  
** LEXIT – left-wing version of leaving the EU (European Union)
*** Operation Nexus – protecting us from terrorism, apparentlyhttp://www.airecentre.org/news.php/226/operation-nexus-the-unlawful-deportation-of-eu-nationals