See this reasoning a lot but for several reasons I don't find it persuasive. We should not accept at face value the idea that the UK is a 'multinational union' alone. It is also the British national state - a 'nation of unions'. So, as @yuanyi_z points out, are other states. (1)https://twitter.com/redhistorian/status/1382357258902892545 …
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and to borrow a phrase, a supermajority have not changed their mind since last time. Polling has shown that those wanting Yes or No have barely moved. Why force a supermajority of at least 80% to vote again for the sake of maybe 5-10% who have changed their view either way?
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I think this is one of the strongest arguments. The Brexit referendum was based strongly on the view of many people having voted Remain and changing their minds 40 years later.
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