The Tory Party
under Cameron seems to be determined to get itself into the same sort of mess
over Europe as it managed to do under
Major. Cameron himself looks
increasingly like the prisoner of his party rather than its leader; forced into
a position of conceding that there will be a referendum, even if to date he
doesn’t really know when or why.
It’s an issue with
which Glyn Davies seems to be having some difficulty, although his problem
seems not to be with the question of holding a referendum or even of leaving
the EU, but with the consequences of holding a vote and getting the ‘wrong’
answer. I suspect that there are a lot
of Tories who really want to leave the EU, but are, like Glyn, afraid that a vote
might go the wrong way from their perspective.
I agree with Glyn’s
analysis that a ‘yes’ vote would probably strengthen the hand of
integrationists, but I’m less certain than he is that the answer would indeed
be a ‘yes’. It’s a golden rule of referendums
that people don’t call for them unless they think they have a good chance of
winning them.
A lot has changed
since the 1975 referendum; at that time, the entire UK political establishment was
lined up in favour of entering the then Common Market, backed up by the entire
mainstream media. It would be different
in any new referendum; I have a sense that isolationism is in the ascendancy
within the Tory Party as well as in sections of the media. The full extent of that ascendancy within the
Tory Party in particular is probably being hidden at present; but it would become
more obvious once any referendum was called.
I was opposed to
entry in 1975, and spent the campaign period delivering leaflets and talking to
people on doorsteps; and there is much about the EU about which I am not
exactly enthusiastic. I’m convinced,
however, that the best place for Wales – and the UK – to be is in, rather than
out, and the separatist views being expressed by many Tories seem to be more
about harking back to an imagined glorious past rather than about looking to
the future.
The UK has long looked like a reluctant – even
recalcitrant – member of the EU, and that hasn’t always maximised the UK’s influence
at the negotiating table. Why would
anyone listen to the member who looks like he doesn’t really want to be
there? In that sense, I hope that Glyn’s
view is right. No issue like this can
ever be settled ‘for ever’, but a more specific and enthusiastic commitment
would be a step forward, for a while at least.
2 comments:
If it ever comes to a referendum on Europe, wouldn't it be sweet to use all the Tory 'Better Together' arguments back against them?
I would have thought Wales would have said no thanks we would not want a referendum, or is it that we still cannot stand up to the English.
We have an Assembly which is basically toothless.
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