Originally Posted by Website
The Background
In May 2014, attempting to steal a little UKIP limelight, David Cameron promised that if The Conservatives won the next General Election, if they had a majority, if he was still leader ...he'd try to reform the EU and then hold an EU referendum before the end of 2017. Very few took him seriously.
Later in 2014 one resignation and two defections to UKIP saw the Conservatives contesting three unexpected by-elections that had Cameron's leadership teetering on a ledge.
Right up to the day when the General Election votes rolled in, Cameron's EU promise was widely accepted as the impossible dream.
Perhaps it was.
The Reason
It's all about Legitimacy. The Conservatives won the 2015 General Election returning 331 MPs which gave them a 12 seat majority.
If just 6 winning MPs independently broke the law to win their seats this would reduce the number of Conservatives in Westminster to the magic 325 and they'd no longer have a majority.
However the very real possibility of a Party wide conspiracy, systematically cheating to win, has attracted the Electoral Commission's eye - resulting in them requesting the involvement of various Police Authorities and the Crown (CPS) Prosecution Service - and, if proven, signals the end of Westminster as we know it.
Just imagine if everything the Conservative Gov't has enacted since 2015 turns out to have no democratic legitimacy.