As with most
cunning schemes dreamed up by politicians and their advisors, it was never
really thought through. The aims of the
renegotiation which was the excuse for not having an immediate vote were never
defined. I can understand that, up to a
point – if you tell the other parties in advance exactly what you are trying to
achieve, it can make the negotiations harder.
But in the absence of definition, the aims are being defined for him,
partly by the media and partly by the very fox he was trying to shoot. And the objective is rapidly being boiled
down to one single issue – immigration.
By not spelling
out in any detail what he was trying to achieve (probably because his only real
aim was always electoral rather than having much to do with the treaties) he
has allowed himself to be trapped into a position where if he fails to achieve
anything significant on that one issue, any negotiations will look like a
failure. The more he tries to find
another way around the question, the more friends he loses within the EU – this week, he seems to have managed to lose all his friends in Scandinavia.
Rarely can a
political party which was until just a few weeks ago without any representation
in the Westminster parliament have achieved so much in terms of shifting the
centre of debate. The window within
which debate on immigration now takes place is such that the question parties
have to answer is not whether immigration is good, bad or indifferent, but
simply ‘what are you going to do about
it?’ It’s an Overton window which
effectively precludes any wider debate about the issue in mainstream politics. That’s quite an achievement.
Not all ‘achievements’
are beneficial, though. This particular
one not only flies in the face of any economic evidence about the benefits and
costs, it also leads us inexorably towards the door marked ‘exit’ - and
insularity. The language used by Cameron
and friends is in itself less than helpful – talking as though Europe is
something ‘other’, with which we have a ‘relationship’ rather than being a part
of. I can think of few things which,
from the perspective of those who see themselves as ‘members’ (i.e. all the other
states!), could be more calculated to provoke a negative attitude from the
outset to any attempt at changing the rules.
Whilst it looks
likely that Scotland would vote to remain in the UK in the event of a
referendum, I do not share the confidence of others that the result in Wales
would be much different from the result in England, however much I might wish
that it be so. And at the moment, I'm not confident that EnglandandWales wouldn't vote for exit. Cameron could, of course,
lose the election next year, although with the polling gap closing, the
possibility of Cameron clinging to power can’t be ruled out as easily as
appeared to be the case some months ago.
Even if he loses, it’s by no means certain that there won’t be a
referendum under a Labour-led government; that party has clearly said that it
will call one “if there is any proposal
in the next parliament for a transfer of powers to Brussels”. And given that Miliband and his party have
allowed themselves to become trapped in the same narrow window of debate around
the key issue which is driving much of the opposition to the EU, I’m not
convinced that would be much better.
And that brings
us back to the real issue here. No
matter how much the politicians try to pretend that the issue is about sovereignty
or regulation or finance, deep down they know that the driving issue for many of
those who would vote in such a referendum is immigration. From my own experience in canvassing electors
over many years, I am well aware that that issue has a real potency, and
whatever they say, the politicians are trying to harness it for political
purposes.
The problem we
face is two-fold. In the first place, politicians
have become afraid even to attempt to lead opinion; instead they allow
themselves to fall in with public opinion – the window is largely one of their own creation. And secondly, they have allowed the issues of
immigration and the EU to become conflated in people’s minds – and have even
encouraged that conflation.
The Romans had
a saying, “Auribus teneo lupum” which
sort of fits the situation. Cameron and
friends have nurtured and encouraged the wolf; the danger is that it’s the rest
of us who end up getting savaged.
2 comments:
Excellent post. Cameron and his bosses will fight tooth and nail, however surreptitiously, to remain within the EU. Should be fun watching them try and still maintain their anti-foreigner front.
John
Cameron personalised the 1.7bn debt but it beggars belief that this debt came out of the blue Herein lies his problem it is not him or the Conservatives debt it is ours the taxpayers
Payment 1 and payment 2 albeit covered by rebate are to occur in the next Parliament and who runs the country if that is the right phrase after May 2014 is in the gift of the Gods.
. Whatever happens it remains our debt
is in the lap of the Gods
Post a Comment