Britain 'sold
down the river' what life under the EU treaty could be
UK Daily Mail | August 12, 2007
By
ANDREW ROBERTS
Gordon
Brown is facing increasing pressure to honour Labour's election
manifesto pledge to hold a referendum on the 'new' EU Treaty - which
bears an overwhelming resemblance to the old, rejected EU
constitution.
The Treaty, which
is largely unintelligible, would transfer many of Britain's powers
over migration, energy and transport to Brussels.
So, what would
happen if the Treaty were brought in through the back door?
Will the inroads
into British sovereignty stop there?
A leading historian
transports himself forward to 2020 to discover what life in this
country might be like under the EU Treaty ...
As they sat on the
concrete benches in the forbidding "special" unit of Paddington
Green police station, the five Englishmen considered the charges
against them and how they had got there.
They were being
treated little better than terrorists - but perhaps that's how they
were genuinely perceived by the Belgian and Greek police who had
arrested them.
Certainly, the
European arrest warrant had all been in perfect legal order.
Signed by the
European Public Prosecutor in Brussels and correctly dated August
12, 2020, it named the five citizens of the EU's English region and
accused them of contravening the 2012 Weights and Measures Directive
No. 531/85.
It was, perhaps,
unnecessary for the armed response unit of Europol's Special Branch
to have smashed down their doors at 3am to arrest them, but that was
pretty much standard practice with anyone who was suspected of
committing crimes "likely to be prejudicial to the good-standing of
the Union".
The leader of the
band of men, Neil Herron, sat alongside Hackney trader John Dove,
Cornish greengrocer Julian Harman and Camelford fishmonger Colin
Hunt.
They had been
dubbed the 'Metric Martyrs' - but that was before Euro Press
Directive No. 732/96 come into force.
They had all, of
course, already fallen foul of Euro-law ever since they and their
late friend, the Sunderland greengrocer Steve Thoburn, had tried to
sell produce in pounds and ounces as well as in metric measures.
They were also
propagandists for those old imperial measurements, the yard, foot,
mile and pint, and had long been a thorn in the flesh of the
Brussels bureaucracy.
As they sat in
their fearsome cell in Paddington, the five talked about the way the
world had changed over the past 13 years since 2007, especially the
way that political, legal and economic powers once thought to reside
in Britain had somehow tended to accrete towards institutions in
Brussels; inexorably, irrevocably, almost by osmosis.
Neil Herron noted
how until the infamous 2007 "Reform Treaty" - which was really the
2005 proposed European Constitution in all but name - Britain had
control over her own criminal justice system.
But all that had
changed.
New powers had been
given to the European Commission, European Parliament and especially
the European Court of Justice (ECJ), including the setting up of a
European 'FBI', European Public Prosecutor and the institution of
European arrest warrants.
There had been some
opposition, of course, such as in 2013 when the ECJ ordered the
release of the Moors murderer Ian Brady from Ashworth Hospital, on
the grounds of 'compassion'.
The English
regional interior minister had protested, but found that his rights
over sentencing and parole policy had been superseded by the ECJ.
After that,
whenever Czech, Maltese or Hungarian judges insisted on the
extradition of British subjects to their regions to stand trial, it
merited only a paragraph or two in some of the more subversive
British papers.
Any more serious
expression of discontent would easily have been put down by the
European Army, which had come into being under the 2001 Treaty of
Nice and, by 2015, had taken over from the British, French, German
and other national forces in the control of EU security policy.
The Slovakian
militia regiments standing guard for King Charles III outside
Buckingham Palace were, perhaps, the most visible manifestation of
the EU's policy of divide and rule.
The demise of Nato,
which had protected Europe for 65 years before its abolition in
2014, was mourned by some, but not those who looked forward to a
brave new European future.
The EU's insistence
that, as a European citizen, King Charles could not also wear the
"foreign" crowns of Australia, Canada and New Zealand, was accepted
with reluctance by a Palace that was keen to fit in with Britain's
"exciting" new European identity.
The refusal of the
European Army's high command to agree to go to war to defeat the
2016 re-invasion of the Falklands by Argentina was perhaps
predictable.
Although the
English regional parliament - still based in the Westminster
Heritage Site - had protested, and begged for the Royal Coastal
Defence Force to be sent to liberate the islands, it was pointed out
that the four billion euros the operation would cost far exceeded
what Strasbourg had earmarked for London's security budget for the
fiscal year 2016/17, so the request was refused.
With the former
Royal Navy fully integrated into the European Navy all around the
continent, it would have been near impossible to disentangle it
anyhow, and there was no political will in Brussels to go to war for
what were described as "irrelevant imperialist relics" anyhow.
It was, after all,
for that very reason that Gibraltar had been "reunited" with the
South Spanish Region only the previous year.
Westminster might
have had a stronger financial case had the "pan-European resource"
of North Sea Oil not been handed over to Strasbourg in 2012, under
the European Energy Directive 412/98, but that was all in the past.
Once again, Herron
noted to his friends, it all went back to the 2007 Intergovernmental
Conference (IGC) and the deeply dishonest White Paper the British
Government put out about what it euphemistically called "The Reform
Treaty".
Once the Treaty was
enforced in 2008, there were no significant powers left solely with
member governments and outside the EU's remit.
And there were no
more such Treaties after 2007, since there was no need for them.
Although the 2007
Treaty only created a "High Representative of the Union for Foreign
Affairs and Security Policy", by 2009 Lord Kinnock was referred to -
in all but official EU documents - as "the EU foreign minister", and
he took on that role with gusto.
The British and
French seats on the United Nations Security Council were replaced by
two EU seats, one of which (for an initial period at least) the
English, Scots, Ulster and Welsh, and Northern, Central and Southern
French regions were allowed to occupy in rotation.
All diplomatic
services and embassies of EU member states were rolled up into a
giant Brussels-based corps diplomatique, with the former British
Foreign and Commonwealth Office performing sterling work ruling over
the EU colonies of the Turks and Caicos and Tristan da Cunha.
With a new single
legal personality instituted by the 2007 Reform Treaty, the EU was
able to sign treaties with foreign powers, which it sent Lord
Kinnock to do on a large number of occasions.
Some were
controversial, such as the anti-American Treaty of Cooperation with
China.
This particular
treaty made no mention of human rights abuses, the nuclear agreement
with Iran and the trade agreement that had effectively kept Robert
Mugabe in power until 2015, but the national vetoes signed away in
2007 made all that immaterial.
Of course, Labour's
2005 manifesto had promised that any new European Constitution would
be put to the British people - but it didn't say that a
near-identical 'Reform Treaty' would be.
Nor did Labour's
2008 manifesto, nor its 2012, 2016 or 2020 manifestos.
Referenda had been
held no fewer than 34 times in Britain after New Labour came to
power in 1997, deciding everything from the setting up of the
Scottish and Welsh Assemblies down to whether Hartlepool should have
a mayor, yet one could not be held on the most important issue
facing the country.
The 2012 Olympics
were the last in which the Union Jack was held aloft in front of the
British athletes as they proudly paraded in the stadium.
After that, the
Union Jack was relegated to the top left-hand area of the EU flag,
the better, Brussels insisted, to emphasise the sporting prowess of
the Union "in a corporate sense".
For Darfur 2016,
the EU flag fluttered over each of the 28 national teams, but by the
Kabul Olympics of 2020, there was only one - admittedly enormous -
'European' team permitted to compete.
It was still
comprehensively beaten by the People's Empire of China.
After the EU had
created its own foreign minister, it was only natural that it should
also create its own finance minister, which duly happened in 2013,
although for a time the official title was "High Representative of
the Union for Financial and Economic Policy."
His demand that all
the states of the Union adopt the euro as a single currency was
welcomed by the Scottish and Welsh regional governments but it was
refused by the English regional government under Gordon Brown and
the Ulster regional government under Ian Paisley - at least until
both men retired from politics in 2014.
After that, their
successors, Hilary Benn and Gerry Adams, embraced the euro as part
of their modernisation programme.
The decision to
impose tax "harmonisation" (i.e. total uniformity) in 2011 had
already led, as leading think-tanks such as Global Vision had
repeatedly warned it would, to reduced flexibility in the way that
member state economies could react to the increasing risks and
opportunities posed by globalisation.
Changing economic
conditions required diversity of tax policy rather than uniformity,
but a policy of stealth tax harmonisation meant that the European
Commission imposed tax rates even when there was no mandate for
them.
Moreover, because
Britain had generally lower taxes than most of the rest of the EU,
taxation only ever seemed to go in one direction. The rise of VAT to
22.5 per cent in 2011 was only the beginning.
The ill-thought-out
EU Financial Services Action Plan (FSAP) was not deliberately
designed to wreck the City of London's chances of taking over from
New York as the world's leading financial powerhouse, but by the
time it was put into operation, in 2009, it certainly had that
effect.
Competitiveness was
ruined by the kind of unnecessary and onerous rigid regulations at
which the EU was so expert, and financial services business simply
relocated to less burdened areas of the world.
Instead of bidding
fair to be the world leader, by 2020 London was eighth in the league
table in the increasingly globalised economy.
Coming mainly from
the Midlands, the Metric Martyrs had seen the effect of the EU's
asylum and immigration policies which, by accident or design, had
permanently shifted the ethnic nature of the countries that had once
made up the United Kingdom.
Huge Serbian
enclaves in Sussex, vast Bulgarian communities in Leicestershire,
entire towns full of Romanian gipsies in Yorkshire and Lancashire -
the 600,000 Eastern Europeans who had flooded in under New Labour in
2005/6 were as nothing to the mass immigration that had taken place
under the EU's Free Movement of Peoples Directive 856/88 of 2019.
It all seemed so
hopeless to the Metric Martyrs, as they sat in their police cell
contemplating the future. Growing up in an independent, sovereign
United Kingdom, they had seen that precious birthright slowly,
gradually and often deceitfully stolen by unelected bureaucrats
working in Belgium.
Under soothing
phrases such as "harmonisation", "optimisation", "ever-closer
coordination", "subsidiarity", "economic cohesion", and "regional
development", the right of Britons to determine their own future had
been confiscated.
Looking back, they
each acknowledged that the key turning point had been the 'Reform'
Treaty of 2007.
To their credit,
the Martyrs recalled, some European politicians had been perfectly
honest about its true nature.
"The wrapping has
been changed, but not the content," Miguel Angel Moratinos, the
Spanish foreign minister, had admitted.
Bertie Ahern, the
Irish Taoiseach, agreed, saying: "Thankfully, they haven't changed
the substance - 90 per cent is still there."
Peering into the
future, the group of small businessmen could only perceive one tiny
glimmer of hope on the horizon.
In the European
elections due in the following October, the Conservative Party
leader was standing for the Europresidency on an unashamedly
patriotic ticket.
Might the
long-awaited fightback, if it wasn't too late, begin?
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