No , since reply 91 the subject that Albs has been discussing has been democracy .
I've just revisited this thread and quite simply no salad of words will ever suggest that democracy is anything other than ,
" control of an organization or group by the majority of its members." ( see , I can search google and copy and paste too ...)
Now you can introduce all sorts of whitabootery but in every democratic system , whatever it's guise , in the free world where a decision has to be made ultimately it comes down to a count , and the largest number within that count carries the motion .
So no matter the many ways that you believe that Parliament can bump it's head on heavens ceiling it's the actual voting populace that ultimately decide what direction it travels and no better example of this can be cited than the debacle that was witnessed from June 2016 to Dec 2019.
Democracy and therefore the direction of a Country ,lies with the people .
You've picked one of 4/5 definitions of the word Democracy from the OED. The full definition is :
Democracy
1 A system of government by the whole population or all the eligible members of a state, typically through elected representatives.
1.1 A state governed under a system of democracy.
1.2 Control of an organization or group by the majority of its members.
1.3 The practice or principles of social equality.
Other definitions are no doubt available. Lets examine those.
1.1 Doesn't help much because it's a circular definition.
1.3 Doesn't help much either.
1.2 is what you're relying on. Firstly I'd argue that a country/state is neither an organisation nor a group. It's referring to things like Mutual Building societies, Clubs with AGM's, Public Limited companies etc. Secondly, even if you can argue that a state is an organisation, what constitutes it's 'members'? All the people, some of the people, some selected sub group of the people?
1 can be split into two possible sections by vitue of the 'or' in the middle - so I'll call them 1a and 1b.
1a : A system of government by the whole population, typically through elected representatives.
This self evidently doesn't apply to the UK (or any other country I can think of) - several groups are excluded from voting, under 18's and prisoners at least. Therefore not the whole population.
1b : A system of government by all the eligible members of a state, typically through elected representatives..
IMV this is as close as we're going to get wrt UK democracy, but still leaves the question of who/what constitutes an "eligible member of a state". In the UK, parliament decides who is eligible to vote in an election. It allows most UK citizens aged 18 and above who aren't in jail to vote for MP's. Parliament then allows MP's & Peers to vote on everything else.