Alphen, the Netherlands. 2
July. In an article yesterday in London's Sunday Telegraph, British Prime Minister
David Cameron hinted at a possible in/out referendum on Britain’s membership of
the EU. “Let us start to spell out in
more detail the parts of our European engagement we want and those we want to
end”, Cameron urged. Sadly, this is PR
Meister Cameron at his smoke and mirrors worst.
Cameron has no intention of putting the question that in recent opinion
polls up to 90% of the British people want to answer; should Britain leave the
EU?
There was a time when EU membership
made strategic sense for Britain. Not
any more; the Eurozone crisis is a tipping point. EU membership costs Britain £55 million per
day ($86m) or £20 billion per year ($31bn), which is over half the UK defence budget, making Britain the
second net contributor after Germany for far, far less benefit. Those politicians who want to lock Britain
into an unfavourable relationship with a debt-crushed, economically-sclerotic,
growth-free Eurozone (the only EU that matters) claim that should Britain leave
the EU the country would lose some 40-50% of its global output. This is scaremongering. Britain has an enormous trade deficit with
the Eurozone and some 50-60% of Britain’s trade is with the wider more dynamic
world. One only has to visit the UK to
see there are few of those beguiling EU signs that one finds all over France
and elsewhere celebrating ‘Brussels-funded’ projects; the British are paying
for them.
Like much of Britain’s political
class David Cameron’s strength is that he is a master political tactician at
home, but a hopeless strategist abroad. Indeed,
PR-Meister Cameron’s performance at recent EU summits has been utterly lamentable.
The Sunday
Express article reflects this. It is
negotiating madness to say one is going to wait until the Eurozone has decided
its future before Britain re-negotiates its membership or indeed its exit. At the very least Cameron needs to re-negotiate
the cost of Britain’s EU membership now.
This is something former Defence Minister Liam Fox has today rightly
pointed out.
There are now only two likely
outcomes for this crisis. There will be
either a German-French dominated EU that will use some elements of
political union to lock the current balance of power into European
law, which is not in Britain's favour. Or, a move towards genuine
political union will take place via fiscal and banking union of the sort
favoured by the EU President, Herman van Rompuy. Both options are utterly irreconcilable with
Britain’s political culture.
In his efforts to dance on the
head of a political pin Cameron tries to make the distinction between the
Euro-EU and the single-market EU. That
distinction simply does not exist. Last
week’s Van Rompuy plan for banking union shot Cameron’s one remaining fox. In effect, a two-tier single market in
banking is being created; one for the Eurozone and the other for the
non-Eurozone. For Britain a true single
market in banking and financial services has been the holy grail for many
years. However, even before the current
crisis Germany did everything to block such a market because Berlin and
Frankfurt feared the power of the City of London. Under current plans London would be shut out
in favour of Frankfurt, not least because it is the Germans who are going to
write the rules of banking union.
One can only hope that behind the
scenes there is some method in Cameron's madness. By calling on
the British people to “show tactical and strategic patience” he is maybe hoping to
make the case for exit irresistible or at the very least creating negotiating space. He
claims after all to be a “pragmatic euro-sceptic”. He may also be right. Indeed, as power shifts away from most (not
all) EU member-states to Brussels, and the European people become ever more
subject to distant, technocratic unelected fiat, the dangers of political union
will become obvious.
Sadly, my bet is that Cameron is mortaging Britain’s strategic future for his own political
neck. By calling for “patience”
Cameron’s real concern is to stop votes leaking from his political base to the UK Independence Party and to kick this particular can down the road until after
the next election when he hopes that will not have to co-habit with Lib Dem
leader Nick Clegg, the European Commission’s point man in London. And, by then the referendum over Scottish
independence will have been settled.
There may be a way for sensible
people in London, Berlin and Paris to find a way to make EU membership work
again for Britain but it is now very hard to see. Today the British people pay far too much for
far too little in an unbalanced relationship. That relationship will become set in European political
concrete unless Prime Minister Cameron ups his game and begins to exert demonstrable influence over a
Brussels run by people who are not natural supporters of the British view of Europe.
Stop playing games over Europe,
Mr Cameron. It is far too serious and
your position indefensible.
Julian Lindley-French
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