Morrow County Sentinel.com

As Europe plots closer ties, Britain mulls split

BRUSSELS (AP) — Good­bye Britain?

For the Euro­pean Union, a once-unthinkable ques­tion is look­ing more like a real pos­si­bil­ity with each new grind­ing week of eco­nomic cri­sis. The rea­son is that bad times are forc­ing the 17 EU nations that use the euro cur­rency to move ever closer toward some kind of United States of Europe — one that could make deci­sions about how much mem­ber coun­tries spend and how much tax they collect.

If ever Britain had a night­mare, that’s it.

The British pub­lic shows no inter­est in mov­ing closer to the rest of Europe, and most can’t even seem to stom­ach the sta­tus quo. The real ques­tion these days appears to be whether to drift away or break away abruptly.

After a 2015 elec­tion, Britain — among 10 of the 27 EU nations that don’t use the euro — is likely to hold a ref­er­en­dum on whether to leave the EU. Even if it doesn’t hold a vote, the coun­try is already unpick­ing its ties with Europe, a move­ment that has unset­tled Ger­many, which is eager to retain the U.K. as an impor­tant eco­nomic dri­ver of the bloc.

I will ask the inhab­i­tants of the won­der­ful island to reflect that they will not be happy if they are alone in this world,” Ger­man Chan­cel­lor Angela Merkel said in a speech before vis­it­ing British Prime Min­is­ter David Cameron last week in London.

Her out­reach, how­ever, has lit­tle impact here. British For­eign Sec­re­tary William Hague, who once toured the U.K. on a “Save The Pound” cam­paign that opposed the euro, believes the British pub­lic has never been more skep­ti­cal of Euro­pean unity.

Pub­lic dis­il­lu­sion­ment with the EU in Britain is the deep­est it has ever been,” he said last month. “Peo­ple feel that in too many ways the EU is some­thing that is done to them, not some­thing over which they have a say.”

Such dis­trust is tan­gled with wor­ries over the fall­out from the Euro­pean debt cri­sis and anger at the Euro­pean Court of Human Rights — cas­ti­gated by British politi­cians for order­ing Britain to give pris­on­ers a vote in national elec­tions, and pre­vent­ing the U.K. from deport­ing ter­ror­ism sus­pects to coun­tries with patchy human rights records.

Even more alarm­ing for many in Britain, Merkel called last week for turn­ing the Euro­pean Com­mis­sion, which cur­rently drafts leg­is­la­tion and reg­u­lates com­pe­ti­tion, into “some­thing like a Euro­pean gov­ern­ment.” The phrase alone rat­tles the teeth of many British politi­cians, who have warned for decades of the specter of a Euro­pean superstate.

With­draw­ing from the EU can no longer be dis­missed as unthink­able. It is no longer a mar­ginal view con­fined to mav­er­icks, but a legit­i­mate point that is start­ing to go main­stream,” Dou­glas Car­swell, a leg­is­la­tor with Cameron’s Con­ser­v­a­tive Party, told Par­lia­ment as it debated the idea of leav­ing the EU.

Last month, Cameron faced a huge rebel­lion within his own party as 81 of the 303 Con­ser­v­a­tive law­mak­ers defied his orders and voted to hold an urgent ref­er­en­dum on EU mem­ber­ship in 2015.

Under pres­sure from his own party and watch­ing ner­vously as his tra­di­tional sup­port­ers are wooed by UKIP, a minor­ity polit­i­cal party that advo­cates EU with­drawal, Cameron is expected to even­tu­ally offer Britain its first ref­er­en­dum about stay­ing in the EU since 1973. The oppo­si­tion Labour Party says it too would back hold­ing a vote — but only when the euro­zone cri­sis has come to an end.

Even with­out a deci­sive split, there are signs already of the diverg­ing paths of Britain and the EU:

- Because Britain does not use the euro, it has no voice in the deci­sions that affect the 17-member euro­zone. It is worth remem­ber­ing that all but three EU coun­tries — the UK, Den­mark and Swe­den — are com­mit­ted to using the euro even­tu­ally. So the euro­zone meet­ings could one day be meet­ings of almost the entire Euro­pean Union, with only three mem­ber states excluded.

- In March, 25 EU mem­bers signed a Fis­cal Com­pact to pro­vide for stronger over­sight of national bud­gets. The two that didn’t sign? The Czech Repub­lic and Britain.

- In Octo­ber, 11 EU coun­tries decided to go ahead with a tax on finan­cial trans­ac­tions. EU offi­cials pre­dict the num­ber of par­tic­i­pants will swell to more than 20. Britain will not be among them.

- Next year, EU offi­cials will be work­ing to set up a sin­gle bank­ing super­vi­sor for banks in coun­tries that use the euro. Britain has said it is con­cerned about the prospect of deci­sions being made over which it has no say.

- Britain is plan­ning to opt out of 130 Euro­pean agree­ments on crime and jus­tice — hop­ing to instead pick and choose how and when it coop­er­ates with its neigh­bors on law enforce­ment. The deci­sion would risk under­min­ing the Euro­pean Arrest War­rant sys­tem, which allows police to reach across Euro­pean bor­ders to eas­ily arrests fugi­tive suspects.

The trend has polit­i­cal lead­ers in other coun­tries worried.

If the euro­zone is much more inte­grated and those out­side are far away, the dis­tance can become too wide and too large,” Andreas Mavroyian­nis, Cyprus’ deputy min­is­ter for Euro­pean Affairs, told The Asso­ci­ated Press. And that, he said, would be dan­ger­ous for the EU as a whole.

Offi­cials in Brus­sels are deeply con­cerned, as well.

Prob­a­bly rightly, I’ve been called an Anglophile,” Jose Manuel Bar­roso, pres­i­dent of the Euro­pean Com­mis­sion, said in a mag­a­zine inter­view this sum­mer. “I believe that Europe with­out Britain at the heart will be less reform-driven, less open, less an inter­na­tional Europe. That is why some­times when I look at the debate in the U.K., I ask myself: ‘How is it that this coun­try is so open to the world, and appar­ently so closed to Europe?’ It seems a contradiction.”

The prospect of a British exit from the EU alarms some British busi­ness lead­ers, who see the bloc’s free mar­kets as vital to their nation’s prosperity.

What­ever the pop­u­lar appeal may be of with­drawal, busi­ness­men and politi­cians must keep a bridge firmly in place,” said Roger Carr, the pres­i­dent of the Con­fed­er­a­tion of British Indus­try, the nation’s biggest busi­ness lobby.

As coun­tries of Europe bind together in pur­suit of sal­va­tion, we in the U.K. must work harder to avoid the risks of isolation.”

For­mer British Prime Min­is­ter Tony Blair, who left office in 2007 before the debt cri­sis struck, is another lonely advo­cate for British lead­er­ship in Europe.

The 21st cen­tury case for Europe is based not on war or peace but on power or irrel­e­vance,” Blair said last month. “Europe car­ries weight, mul­ti­plies oppor­tu­nity and makes sense for its indi­vid­ual nations.”

He has urged Britain’s gov­ern­ment not to walk away, but to help build a new struc­ture to help Europe bal­ance the com­pet­ing demands of the 17 euro­zone nations and the remain­der of the Euro­pean Union.

It is a very tricky task. But it is an essen­tial one if the U.K. is not to be side­lined,” Blair said.

Peter Man­del­son, a for­mer mem­ber of Blair’s Cab­i­net and ex-European Union trade com­mis­sioner, warns that going it alone would mean wan­ing influ­ence for Britain on the global stage.

Britain, he said, soon could be a “Hong Kong to Europe’s China, or a Canada to Europe’s United States.”

Randa Wagner Posted by on Nov 20 2012. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS Feed. Both comments and pings are currently closed.

Comments are closed

Search Archive

Search by Date
Search by Category
Search with Google

Open M-F 8am to 5pm | 419-946-3010 | 46 S. Main Street, Mt. Gilead, Ohio 43338

We use third-party advertising companies to serve ads when you visit our Web site. For more information click here.
Click on the following for legal information: Privacy Policy | Terms & Conditions
Copyright © 2010 - 2012, Ohio Community Media