Friday, 7 October 2011

Hague the Deceiver


Quite shameless.
According to Hague a major EU treaty change is "not, at the moment, on the table".
That will be apart from the major EU treaty change which was quietly agreed on March 25th:
and which is now awaiting Parliamentary approval prior to final ratification.
Would anybody care to try to start an e-petition about it? I tried in August, and the Foreign Office blocked it from even being started.

William Hague has warned Tory Eurosceptics hoping to get powers back from the

EU that the opportunity for doing so could be "many years" away.

Many Tory MPs believe that the UK has an opportunity to repatriate some powers if eurozone states seek closer fiscal integration and a treaty change.

But the foreign secretary told the BBC: "We are not at that point."

The UK has passed a law which requires a referendum to be held in the event of any major transfer of powers.

'Not on table'

A group of Conservative MPs have formed a new parliamentary group to consider ways to reshape the UK's relationship with Europe.

Some believe there is the potential for treaty negotiations shortly and want the government to be ready, so it can start to claw powers back for the UK.

But Mr Hague told BBC Radio 4's Today that a major treaty change was "not, at the moment, on the table" and the UK's priorities in Europe were to safeguard British interests and get growth going.

He said: "Don't run away with expectations that there is about to be some major treaty change, these things take years to negotiate and then to ratify in other countries.

"The moment that may come to put right some of the things we want to put right may come over a period of some years, or many years, rather than this week. Our economic priorities are absolutely top of the list this week in Manchester."

In his speech to the Conservative conference in Manchester, Mr Hague reiterated the importance of the new "referendum lock", contained in the European Union Act 2011.

"When we said that no more areas of power should go to the EU we were right," he said.

"We are just as right that the EU has more power in our national life than it should, and I believe as strongly as I ever have that when the right moments come this party should set out to reduce it."

The Conservatives' Lib Dem partners are more pro-European as a party and Mr Hague told the BBC that the desire to claw back powers was "not currently the position of our whole coalition government".

'Fundamental change'

On Tuesday, the Conservative mayor of London Boris Johnson told the BBC a referendum on the UK's relationship with Europe "is not a bad idea" and said he would be "very interested" in the outcome of an "in-out referendum".

But Prime Minister David Cameron told the BBC that he did not believe a referendum on the UK's membership of the European Union was "the choice the country really wants to address", adding the EU was "vital for our trade and economic future".

He predicted there would be "a fundamental change down the track" as the eurozone countries come together to try to resolve the debt crisis but said "we mustn't get ahead of ourselves".

In his interview, Mr Hague also repeated concerns expressed by the prime minister and deputy prime minister that closer fiscal integration between eurozone countries could put the interests of non-eurozone EU states at risk.

But he said the UK was "seeking to win this argument" and was taking "pre-emptive" action on growth ahead of any eurozone changes.