Monday, 1 June 2009


"But  Tony Blair and his advisors had one anxiety: the EU constitution. 

They feared that if this became an election issue the Tories could  
gain momentum. 

So they neutralised it, by promising a referendum, as  did the Liberals."

This makes a lot more sense than clobbering up Britain's EU 
representation with a bunch of nutters or nasties.

xxxxxxxxx cs
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INDEPENDENT 1.6.09
Bruce Anderson: You can't reform the European constitution without a  
ballot

And anyone who does believe in democracy should demand an end to  
party list elections

Minor misdemeanours should not distract us from great crimes. Many 
voters believe that the political system has betrayed them. So it 
has. But this is not a matter of bath-plugs or Remembrance Day 
wreaths, or even of embezzled mortgage payments. It is a breach of 
trust, arising from a broken promise. Those who broke their word have 
tried to justify their actions by as cynical a lie as has ever been 
told in the history of British politics.

It never seemed likely that Labour would lose the 2005 election. 

But  Tony Blair and his advisors had one anxiety: the EU constitution. 

They feared that if this became an election issue the Tories could  
gain momentum. 

So they neutralised it, by promising a referendum, as  did the Liberals.

This caused alarm and despondency among the euro-fanatics. They have 
always relied on moving towards federalism by stealth: deceiving the 
British people about the centralising consequences of proposed euro-
measures, and then insisting that it was too late to alter them. That 
was how dishonest salesmen used to dupe housewives into buying 
expensive encyclopaedias, until laws were introduced to prevent them. 
But euro-dishonesty has never been criminalised.

The late Hugo Young, himself a committed europhile, wrote a 
surprisingly honest book called The Blessed Plot, which describes the 
plots, matured over many decades by federastic politicians and 
diplomats, to ensnare Britain into a federal Europe without ever 
risking a confrontation with the electorate. These conspiracies were 
undertaken for the best of motives. Self-constituted Platonic 
guardians, the plotters thought that they knew best. They set out to 
treat the mass of voters, with their obstinate addiction to British 
sovereignty and British freedoms, like fractious, feverish children 
who refuse to take the medicine that will do them good. Some 
distracting legerdemain: a swift spoon into the gullet, then a 
consoling sweet and soothing noises. "There, there - what was the 
fuss about?"

Then Tony Blair broke the rules. He announced that the voters would 
decide. Hence the europhiles' dismay, but alas, it was premature. 
Whether or not Mr Blair always intended to break his word, the euro-
fanatics were able to rely on his successor, the son of the manse who 
never stops boasting about his values. Perhaps there were weasels in 
the manse's garden. If so, Mr Brown did absorb his values at home.

Labour had promised a referendum on the constitution. So there was an 
escape route: rechristen it a Treaty and claim that the referendum 
was unnecessary. To their eternal shame, the Liberals acquiesced. Yet 
no one outside the Labour and Liberal parties doubts that we are 
dealing with the same book in different covers. To argue otherwise 
would be as convincing as a burglar claiming to be wrongly indicted 
because the police were alleging that he had broken in through the 
kitchen, when it had in fact been the dining room.

Just like the constitution, the Lisbon Treaty takes major steps 
towards establishing a European super-state. The EU would have a 
president and a foreign minister. The EU's courts would be given 
substantially enhanced powers, including the right to intervene in 
criminal justice. The Charter of Fundamental Rights would create 
enormous scope for intervention. Much of the Treaty is fuzzily 
written; that will offer no protection. Over the years, we have 
learned that the EU courts always put a federalist gloss on any wording.

The EU already possesses a national anthem, a flag, a parliament, a 
judiciary, a currency and a civil service. With the additional powers 
in this Treaty, there would be a further acceleration towards 
statehood. That is not an illegitimate aspiration. But in Britain at 
least, it would become illegitimate if it were implemented by lies 
and broken promises. Far more than MPs' expenses, that would strike 
at the integrity of our political system and violate the compact 
between government and people.

Because Parliament has been discredited, there is a lot of talk about 
procedural and constitutional changes. Nick Clegg is blowing the dust 
off every daft proposal for electoral reform that has been mouldering 
in his party's archives for the past half-century. He claims that he 
wants to reconnect Parliament and people. As he too broke his word, 
promising a referendum and then failing to vote for it, he does not 
deserve a hearing. Nor does any other soi-disant reformer who fails 
to denounce the Labour fraud.

There is a further test which should be applied to anyone who claims 
to be in favour of reform. This Thursday, those of us who do vote - 
the turn-out will deserve to lose its deposit - will have to plump 
for a party list. You might decide that although you like Boodle, you 
are not so keen on Coodle and would prefer Duffy. No good: you will 
have to opt for all the Boodles or all the Duffys: one reason why so 
many voters will invoke a plague on the lot of them and stay at home.

It would be hard for a British government to change the system, for 
it was ordained by Europe. Given the disagreeable necessity of 
holding elections, it is natural that the EU should devise as 
restrictive a procedure as possible. But anyone who does believe in 
democracy should demand an end to the tyranny of the party list. 
Anyone who refuses to do so has thereby trashed his reforming 
credentials.

Apropos changes to the system, David Cameron has two difficulties. 
The first is minor. He intends to withdraw his party from the EPP-ED, 
the vaguely right-of-centre federalist grouping in the European 
Parliament. This has upset Angela Merkel. Sixty-four years on, some 
Germans still cannot accept that other nations are entitled to make 
free choices. It has also upset Chris Patten, Leon Brittan [Those two 
as ex-EU Commissioners have , as part of their pension and severance 
agreements, agreed that they will ALWAYS support EU decisions - so 
forget them -cs]  and sundry other federasts, blessedly plotting as 
ever. But Mr Cameron has enjoyed his talks with Eastern European anti-
federalists and looks forward to further cooperation in a new group.

The Treaty is a bigger problem. What does he do if it is ratified by 
the time he reaches No 10? The federasts hope what some Tories fear: 
that he would accept his defeat. But there is an alternative. Hold 
the referendum which Labour promised and, assuming a "no" vote, 
insist on a renegotiation. That would not be easy. Stuart Wheeler, 
the Tory donor and all-round bon oeuf who has temporarily defected to 
UKIP, has offered to bet Mr Cameron £100,000 that there would be no 
referendum.

It would be insider trading for David Cameron to take the bet - which 
is just as well for Stuart, as he would lose. Whatever his surface 
charm, Mr Cameron has a stubborn core and a powerful Anglo-Saxon 
sense of fairness. He will not knuckle under to a Treaty imposed by 
fraud.

As for the renegotiation, Frau Merkel should look up the history of 
Margaret Thatcher's rebate in the early Eighties. Without ever 
threatening to leave Europe, she reduced a succession of summits to 
rubble. If the other member states insisted that Britain is bound by 
a Treaty which was lied into being, there would have to be a lot more 
rubble. But it would help if the sovereign people paid less attention 
to Douglas Hogg's moat and rather more to the moat of laws and 
sovereignty which has defended our freedoms over the centuries.