Originally posted by Weebler I
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Not sure why you use the example of a Danish man but couldn’t you turn that on its head and say the Danish have a member party input into the EU – of one member. That’s similar to that one member vote, of another richer bigger nation with millions more people. So you can just as easily argue the Danish man has more influence than some of his counterparts in many ways. In any case he still gets to vote for his local government like every independent democracy in the EU, and I don't credit the extreme view that 'oh you can vote for anyone they are all the same'. As I've demonstrated just with the UK stats, our local, democratically voted for governments do have significant/majority control of their local laws. Perhaps Bat can shed his insight here as a Dane.
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