Alphen, Netherlands. 15 May. The Brexit debate is now fully
underway with lies and complete nonsense already being told on both sides of the argument about the ‘costs’
and ‘benefits’ of a British exit from the EU.
For the record the political and economic costs to both Britain and the
EU of a Brexit would be significant. However, with common political sense both Britain
and the EU could emerge strengthened by a new relationship in which everybody
felt more comfortable about the relationship and indeed the real issue at hand
for most British people – the growing distance between power, principle and
people the EU implies. Therefore, given
the stakes it is also worth reminding ourselves where modern ‘Europe’ really
began.
Speak to the Brussels
elite and they have very clear views on where ‘Europe’ began. ‘Europe’ was the brainchild of an ‘enlightened’,
mainly French elite. Given that French elites really do do elitism very well their
Brussels descendants claim it was the likes of Jean Monnet and Robert Schumann who
inspired ‘Europe’. They clearly established
the ethos of the EU we know and not-so-love today; an enarquiste, top-down, elite-led, ‘we know better’ culture that has
hung around Brussels ever since like a fart trapped in a duvet. Indeed, Brussels elitism and the Euro-federalism
it underpins is the one thing that really worries me and which if not checked
will in time destroy the EU, and possibly force me to vote for a Brexit.
However, ‘Europe’ was
not born of or among elites. ‘Europe’ began
on VE Day seventy years ago in Dulverton, small Somerset town in the lee of
Exmoor, on the south-western peninsula of England. My father hails from Dulverton. On 8 May, 1945, then some twelve years old, he
was attending Tiverton Grammar School.
Just before midday the Headmaster ordered the entire school to gather in
the school hall. A small table was then brought in draped in the Union flag and
placed on the imposing stage and a radio placed upon it. At midday precisely the clipped, dulcet upper-class
tones of BBC presenter John Snagg came on air to announce that the war in
Europe was at an end.
The headmaster then
announced that the school was closed and ordered all the pupils home. Now, you might think this all well and
good. In fact this caused a problem for
my father as his train to Dulverton, the wonderfully-named Exe Valley Rattler,
which ran on a line long-since closed, was not due to depart until 5pm.
Thankfully, a lorry from Dulverton saw mill happened to be driving along the
road which linked Tiverton Grammar School to the station. The driver saw my
father, picked him and some other Dulverton lads up, and drove them back home.
As the lorry crossed
the River Barle into Dulverton my father heard the town band striking up on the
steps of Dulverton Town Hall. My grandfather
had already hung the flag of the Royal Navy outside their house (he had
recently been invalided out of the Navy having been sunk twice during the war).
A crowd was gathering on Dulverton High
Street and people began to dance.
However, and here is where ‘Europe’ was born, it was not just the English
who were dancing. My father recalls how
Italian and German prisoners-of-war, who had been working in the fields around
Dulverton, were allowed to come into the town and join in the festivities. Soon people of many European nationalities
were dancing together in a small English town; enemies one moment, friends the
next. This is where ‘Europe’ began and it
was a Europe of the people.
Pain was still
everywhere and deeply felt. Indeed, my
father also told me how in 1944 my great-uncle Walter left from Dulverton to
rejoin his ship, the destroyer HMS Quail. Four
weeks later the Quail struck a mine in the Mediterranean and my uncle went down
with his ship. Tragically, my
grandmother had seen Walter, her brother, on a train across the platform at
Tiverton Station. However, it pulled out just before she could say hello. She never saw him again. She too danced on those steps with her fellow
Europeans that fateful day.
It is not economics but
governance that is the defining factor for me in the forthcoming Brexit vote. And, it is not 2017 but 2037 that really
concerns me. My bottom-line is this; I am a European but I really do not want
to live in some form of super-elitiste European super-state in which the
European Commission claims (but is not) to be MY government, the European
Parliament claims (but is not) to be MY parliament, and Britain is reduced to
being little more than an aged member of a much-reduced European
Council/Senate; a European version of the pointless and toothless House of
Lords.
Therefore, end Euro-federalism and the threat to my freedom and representation it entails and I will vote for Britain to stay in the EU.
‘Europe’ really began on the steps of Dulverton Town Hall as an act of reconciliation
between ordinary people from different European countries. It is precisely there ‘Europe’ should and
must remain.
Julian Lindley-French
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