Almost 18 months
ago, we were asked a question about who we were and who should govern us. At the end of June, a similar question will
be asked of us if framed differently.
Though the question is different, scratch beneath the surface and you
will see the same issues. A country,
part of a larger union of countries, wishes to leave that union due to various
issues. Except this time the SNP wish
for us to remain within that union even though there are serious issues within
that union.
Tusk with Cameron (in the foreground) with Hollande & Schultz (in focus in the background) at last weeks EU summit |
Most of the
arguments relating to staying within the European Union relate to the economic
benefits as well as the benefits of being part of the largest trade bloc on the
planet. The pooling and sharing of
resources, alongside the harmonisation of regulations and laws. Hmmm, ‘pooling and sharing’ – heard that
somewhere before. An example of this
being the argument being put forward that a lot of employment law and employee
rights would not have happened were it not for the EU. There is merit to this argument, given the
Major Government’s policy of not adopting the ‘Social Chapter’ element of the
Maastricht Treaty.
The big problem
with this argument though is that this version of the EU in so much that it
ever existed is no longer a true likeness.
The Social Chapter was essentially an add on to Maastricht therefore
always had an air of being something of an afterthought to the main business of
a pan-European currency. The other
pro-worker directives (like Working Time) came in an age where the European
body politic was still influenced by Social Democratic values.
Essentially the
post war left-wing consensus did not die in mainland Europe like it did here in
1979. It is certainly dead now as we have seen the EU undertake a more
Thatcherite tone in its policymaking.
The argument that the EU is a protector from the big bad Tories is
therefore a false argument and the Left in this country should grow up and stop
relying on something that isn’t there.
We on the left have become lazy and complacent in our arguments and will
now need to dramatically up our game to influence something that is infinitely
more democratic than the EU – Westminster.
The biggest
manifestation of the lazy thinking on the left has been the insidious
infestation within the Labour Party of what is now Progress but used to be
Blairism. The acceptance that ideas
should be shaped around ‘the centre ground’ rather than ideas & policy being
produced to bring voters to a party has stunted the Left since… well Thacher really.
The other
argument that is being floated by those on the left is that we should stay in
to help shape a better EU. This argument
is nothing but a display of the breathtaking naivety of people who should know
better. The fact that the current TTIP negotiations
are being conducted in private and with zero transparency is ample evidence
that really, the EU is currently not interested in being reformed. If you need further evidence, look at the
veiled threats that the Cameron agreement could be subject to legal challenges
or ultimately change (after the referendum, of course).
This more
Thatcherite European Union cannot be attributed to the ascension to the throne
of Jean Claude Junker as EU President, merely his appointment confirming
something that had been happening for some time. No, the moment where it was apparent that the
EU had become the preeminent source for pro-Thatcherite policies, more so than
the current Conservative and Unionist Party, was the Lisbon Treaty happily
signed by that well known ‘socialist’…
er… Gordon Brown.
Alongside being a
reforming treaty for the existing institutions, like the European Parliament
receiving more powers but being made smaller, the Lisbon Treaty was also a land
grab for powers – more in terms of setting limits on the powers of the nation
state. Cameron’s manifesto pledge for a
UK Bill of Rights, already on the rocks thanks to the devolved settlements and
the terms of the Good Friday Agreement, would well and truly be toast under
Lisbon. The European Union was already
the closest thing that there is to a dictatorship in the ‘West’. Lisbon does nothing but concentrates and
consolidates that power within the EU.
It’s a good job there have been no huge financial scandals engulfing the
EU…
Except that we
wouldn’t know if there was any corruption within the EU, such is the lack of
transparency. We know that their audits
have not been ‘signed off’ and that this has been the case since the days when
Neil Kinnock was a commissioner.
The big game changer
for the EU though has been the pro-Privatisation agenda at the heart of the
Lisbon Treaty. An agenda which, truth be
told, the current Scottish Government have been in resoundingly not ‘Standing
up for Scotland’ mode. How else do you
describe their policy regarding the tendering process for our Ferry
routes. True, Scottish Labour are right
to be outraged with their pathetic “Save Caledonian McBrayne” twibbons, but
their ire really should be directed at the EU, and the last Labour government,
for signing the Lisbon Treaty that enabled this to happen.
The Thatcherite
tool of ‘compulsory tendering’ for public services is at the heart of Lisbon,
and will be a key tool for the next step of the dismantlement of our public
services – the afore mentioned TTIP.
Under Lisbon, EU rules mean that all services will be subject to
“economic and financial conditions” and the EU would be able to enforce the
rule of the free market on those services – public or private – and ensure that
competition is not distorted. The treaty
itself stipulated that postal services must be liberalised by 2010 – hence the
privatisation of the Royal Mail simultaneously appearing as a policy in the
manifestos of the Conservatives, Labour and Liberal Democratic parties.
As I’d
hypothesised during the Independence Referendum, the Scottish NHS will be as
much under threat from the EU and the ongoing TTIP negotiations as it will be
under a Tory led Westminster government.
The threat identified by Dr Philippa Whitford was that the Scottish NHS
would be under threat because the English NHS would already be “TTIP
compliant”. My point would be that the
Scottish NHS would be forced under EU law to become TTIP compliant in any case
and that argument was always a false prospectus. It already seems as if some council services
are already “TTIP compliant” in no small thanks to Stephen Purcell’s wheeze of
‘spinning off’ council services into ‘arms length’ companies. Noticeably, Scottish Labour led Renfrewshire
Council has also done this with their Health & Leisure services. Privatisation in the offing chaps?
We have already
seen what happens to those who do not follow the will of the EU, Ireland have
been forced to submit their budgets for approval by the EU and the ECB before
they are enacted as a condition of their bailout. The fact that Ireland flouted the terms of
the Eurozone fiscal pact with their policy of aggressively slashing Corporation
Tax (in an attempt to be attractive to large corporations like Dell &
Google) is entirely coincidental. More
recently, we have seen Greece become a testing ground for TTIP with their
public services being forced to be sold off, Pensions slashed and reduced
living standards forced on the Greeks as the terms of surrender… sorry the terms of their bailout from the
Troika.
Of course there
are other, regrettably more high profile, arguments in favour of leaving the
EU. These points mostly being propagated
by right wing Tories and UKIP. I’ve
always been perplexed at UKIP’s consistent conflation of immigration and
freedom of movement, though clearly this is spin which plays within certain
blue collar constituencies, hence UKIP attracting 4 million voters at last
years Westminster election. Indeed it is
somewhat distasteful that Cameron has used concern over ‘immigration’ as the
basis for his negotiations, as the issues he has chosen to negotiate are not
the big issues with the EU. Of an
equally distasteful manner is the emerging smugness from pro-EU supporters,
principally that well educated people are more likely to be pro-EU. This is not because they are well educated,
but because they are better placed to take advantage of freedom of movement. This is also an issue, but not with the EU.
That’s not to say
that there are issues with freedom of movement within the EU area, but that
issue should have been dealt with by identifying weak borders and ensuring that
those borders are strengthened, pooling and sharing is showing to have not
worked then. When Farage says that potentially
500 million people could come to our country, he misses the point that this is
the case for every country. That the UK
is attractive to EU residents should be celebrated. Essentially by peddling this myth and by
constantly making this case, both UKIP and the Tories are undermining the very
real case against the EU. Farage himself only gets around to the EU’s lack of
accountability after he satisfactorily completes his Enoch Powell impersonation.
Again this is a symptom of the poor EU decision making process rather than an
issue with a key plank of EU policy (and one of the few good policies the EU
have enacted since possibly the Amsterdam treaty of 1997.
The case for
leaving the EU is one that revolves around a union that has become less
transparent and less accountable the more it has chosen to change and damage
the things that we hold dear. It is a
case that has nothing to do with migrants or freedom of movement but has everything
to do with power, corruption and lies.
The Credit Crunch, the Banking crisis, the Eurozone crisis and the
reaction to the rise of Daesh has shown that the EU has become a League of
Nations for the 21st Century and is not fit for purpose. We should leave the European Union not to
destroy it but to save it.
2 comments:
Enjoy your life in a Tory hegemony, Toryboy. What you really want is to be ruled by English Tories, and so it's No to an independent Scotland, Yes to leaving the EU. You oppose anything that might stand in the way of a 1000 year Tory Reich. You are fooling nobody.
I understand that this concept might be a wee bit difficult for you Neepheid, so I'll make this as simple for you as possible.
Read the post, because, you know, the Thatcherite hegemony doesn't stop at Dover.
Where do you think Osborne got his ideas about turning the UK into a tax haven within the UK? Why, it'll be your party's chum (might be wrong here but I assume you're an SNP voter) Jean Claude Junker.
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