Jan 15 2007

Why I voted no in 1975 to the EEC

Published by John Redwood at 9:50 am under Blog

The memory of some who now

5 Responses to “Why I voted no in 1975 to the EEC”

  1. Ken Adamson 15 Jan 2007 at 12:24 pm

    I agree we need a vote on our relationship with the EU and that it is so frustrating that this government will not give us the vote we need on either the Euro or the Constitution.

    The problem is that neither would a Conservative government, of course the Conservative party is against the Euro and the Constitution in principal; I assume the argument would be there is no need for a referendum on the either of these issues because we are not going to either, ratify the Constitution, or agree to joining the Euro.

    Unfortunately this argument only holds good for as long as that is Conservative policy, or as long as the Conservatives are in power. If the Conservative win the next election but loose the following one Labour will be able to pick up where they left off, because there would be no recent referendum to give them pause.

    So I would like to see a referendum on both of these issues and perhaps one on our membership of the EU so that the people at last have a chance to give their views on the matter, and that holds good whether it is government policy to ratify the Constitution join the Euro region or not.

  2. Edon 15 Jan 2007 at 1:33 pm

    It also didn’t help our negotiating position in the first place that Heath so desperately wanted in, allowing the French to dictate terms. The CAP is an obvious one.

    The Conservatives now should propose a re-negotiation of the Treaty, with the bargaining position that there will be a referendum on the resulting treaty.

    As it looks likely that the WTO will never result in global free trade I would like to see a free trade area which includes Europe and North America which could negotiate agreements with other countries/regions.

  3. Devil's Kitchenon 15 Jan 2007 at 6:22 pm

    So, John, the Conservatives will give us a referendum on staying in the European Union, will they?

    I examined the costs of the EU to Britain (huge), and weighed them against the costs of leaving (almost nothing), in a journalist-reviewed article at Wanabehuman. You may find it interesting.

    http://wanabehuman.blogspot.com/2006/07/comment-european-union-and-uk-is-it.html

    DK

  4. John Coleson 16 Jan 2007 at 10:56 am

    Now you understand, Mr Redwood, why Tory voters turn to UKIP. Neither this Government nor Mr Cameron’s “Conservative” party will promise “a vote on our relationship with the EU”. I am sure that if ‘Dave’ promised any such vote, the polls would show a leap in support for the Tories.
    I really do not understand how a man of your intellect and principle can continue to live with a mindlessly europhile policy, born of deference toward and fear of Ken Clarke, Douglas Hurd et alia.

  5. Oliver Healeyon 16 Jan 2007 at 12:52 pm

    The withdrawal from the European Union must be exercised at once the Common Market campaign from the No lobby was underfunded extremely and so there must be a referednum on the entire system to settle the matter once and for all.

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