Arakhor said:
... this obsession with Germany ... I'd be happy if people stopping blaming X for every conceivable ill.
For the record, I am not anti-Germany and I am not anti-EU. My only position in this entire debate is that I want to see democratically accountable decision making (the emphasis).
What a bunch of nonsense. Britain already had more exemptions and special arrangements than any other EU-nation. Their attempt to negotiate amounted to throwing a tantrum and demanding to get even more of that. And no, it wasn't Germany that refused that, it was the entire EU.
Please calm down and please consider:
In their general election, UK voters elected their Conservative government on the basis that PM Cameron would try to renegotiate specific issues with the EU plus hold a referendum on the changes. That is pure and simple democratic action.
Immediately before those EU renegotiations began, Merkel announced to the press that she would flatly refuse to tamper with the freedom of movement. That is undemocratic simply because no German voter had elected Merkel on the basis that she would block renegotiations at the EU.
Once Merkel made her announcement, all the other EU member states were under undue pressure to take sides before negotiating, and that highlights a structural failure of the EU.
What I would have liked to have seen is Germany (and others) negotiate sincerely and quietly with the UK on the topics that were important to the UK. Then talk to the press, and then let all EU peoples decide if the negotiated changes are acceptable at their national levels. If such a process had been followed, and if the changes had been rejected by other EU voters, I am confident that
most British voters would have been satisfied.
Clearly such democratic processes are
too democratic for Merkel, and possibly some other EU heads of state.
The EU knew that Cameron (and hence UK voters) did not get what sought from the renegotiation. It doesn't matter if the UK would ultimately succeed or not, what matters is that the UK democratic voice fell on deaf ears at the EU, and other EU peoples were not given a voice. There cannot be unified democratic Europe if its peoples cannot hear one another.
What happened in the referendum that follows is simply the upholding of democratic principles in the UK. The EU didn't just dismiss the UK, it dismissed fundamental democratic principles.
The British always wanted to have their cake and eat it too.
What is your point? It is their democratic right to ask you if they can eat your cake. I'm not saying if they are right or wrong, but if they leave because you said no then everyone should be happy. The UK has voted to leave the EU so what are you complaining about?
For clarity: Other exemptions are irrelevant, and it does not matter if anyone in the EU agrees with what the UK tried to negotiate. The only problem is the process followed by the EU (and specifically Merkel).