Whichever, the
issue raised two rather different questions in my mind.
The first is
the approach of the UK Government to promises and agreements which it
makes. The famous ‘Vow’ given to
Scotland isn’t the only example it seems – in the case of the EU, the
government signed up to a set of rules and is now rejecting the outcome of
their application. His word appears not
to be his bond.
The second is what it says about Cameron’s attitude towards redistribution. The whole issue is presented as though the
£1.7bn is simply going to be shovelled into a black hole in Brussels and used
to pay fat cats and bureaucrats. But the
purpose of this particular budgetary adjustment is to ensure that payments in
more closely match countries’ ability to pay.
That is, in essence, a redistributive approach – it’s not about
penalising economic success as some have tried to present it.
There’s a
parallel of sorts with the infamous Barnett formula, and with the recent
referendum. I seem to remember Cameron
and others repeating ad nauseam that one of the great advantages of ‘the’ union
is its ability to pool and share resources.
He didn’t really mean it then; and he certainly doesn’t mean it when it
comes to the EU.
1 comment:
You are absolutely right, David Cameron has proved a big disappointment. So too Gordon Blair and Tony Blair before him.
Surely this lends credence to my view that we need less politicians, good or bad, important or unimportant. Less politicians, less taxation, less public sector involvement, more personal responsibility and greater representation (meaning the opportunity to oust any existing incumbent according to majority voting procedure).
I knew we'd agree on something. We can all find common ground, it's just a question of time.
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