When David Cameron
returned from the European Parliament clutching his ‘new deal for Britain’ it
seemed to me that the concessions that had been granted were minor and didn’t
address any of the real problems that the British people wanted resolving in the
first place. The whole renegotiation process seemed to be a pre-arranged
charade agreed by EU leaders which aimed to fool the UK public into rejecting
Brexit and stay in a virtually unreformed European Union.
Mr. Cameron knows that
anti-EU feeling in the country is growing so he has called for a referendum in
just 4 months’ time on the 23rd June 2016. It’s times like these
where we will be seeing the establishment whip out any tactic to sway ordinary
people in their favour. “EU exit could threaten jobs” and “sterling could lose
another 20% of its value” are just two of the many headlines that will
effectively scare Britons into voting ‘remain’ and not thoroughly thinking
through the consequences of living under a superstate which is, in the words of
the late Tony Benn, on board a ‘federal escalator, moving as we talk,
going towards a federal objective we do not wish to reach.’.
The British people are
faced with a once-in-a-lifetime decision – are we to be a self-governing nation
or not? The so-called trading bloc has grown into much more than just an
economic community, we are now dealing with a union which is inherently
undemocratic and starves its member states of the power they once had. A
fundamental principle of the UK’s constitution is the fact that parliament is
sovereign. However, as a member of the EU, Britain must take all EU law over
the statutory law passed in Westminster or the common law ruled by judges and it
all, in effect, comes to nothing if the European Parliament passes a law that
is conflicting.
No doubt, over the
next few months we will be hearing endless claim and counterclaim from both
sides of the argument, but in reality, no-one can know exactly what will happen
if we leave the EU. Brexit will offer Britain a key to the rest of the world as
we are relinquished from the harnesses of a powerful few at the top of the
European food chain. I only hope that the British public will realise soon
enough that we are a strong country, ready to break the status quo and once
again trade with the whole world on our own terms, especially with the
Commonwealth countries who we so shamefully abandoned when we joined the Common
Market.
The issue of ‘in or
out’ rises above party politics and isn’t a question of whether you’re on the
right or the left, it’s whether or not you believe in Britain and its people to
govern themselves. If we do leave, whatever happens afterwards will be down to
us to tackle as a sovereign state once more.
JW
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