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Brusselswatch believes:
- that the Lisbon Treaty is practically identical to the supposedly abandoned European Constitution (as many European politicians have confirmed) and that its return under another name is an appalling breach of promise
- that the Lisbon Treaty will mean a far greater (and more permanent) change to Britain than any change of government – yet if any change of government took place without a popular vote, there would (quite rightly) be rioting in the streets
- that the European Union is a fundamentally undemocratic organisation as its only democratically elected element, the European Parliament, is no more than window dressing without real power to hold the numerous unelected EU bodies to account
- that all transfers of power from elected national governments to the EU therefore involve a loss of democracy, as power passes from elected representatives to unelected fonctionnaires, and that this, rather than international cooperation, is the real raison d'être of the EU
- that democracy is self-correcting in that you can vote out whatever government you voted in, whereas the power structures of the EU have been deliberately placed beyond the reach of the electorate
- that there is no inherent benefit in forcing 27 vastly different countries to adopt identical solutions to every problem
- that the benefit of free trade between the nations of Europe could be achieved without the EU , that non-EU countries can trade freely with the rest of the world without falling foul of the EU's external tariff barrier, and that even on the European Commission's own figures the EU costs businesses four times as much as the single market saves them
- that the Common Agricultural Policy is major factor in Third World poverty
- that it is undemocratic to treat "yes" votes in referenda as binding for all time but "no" votes as a temporary inconvenience, to be overcome by making the people vote again
- that when the EU has an unelected President, as the Lisbon Treaty mandates, it will have absolutely no credibility when criticising other countries for being undemocratic
- that the trend in every EU body is towards Qualified Majority Voting in areas that formerly required unanimity, meaning that member states could be forced to accept measures that harm their interests, and that the notorious "passerelle" clauses in the Lisbon Treaty allow for yet more policy areas to adopt QMV without the need for another treaty
- that EU standards of accounting would be considered unacceptable (and probably criminal) even in a small family-run business, with auditors now having refused to sign off on the EU's accounts for 13 years running
- that the nations of Europe will always, without the need for compulsion, adopt policies that have been shown to work elsewhere, and that the EU forcing member states to harmonise their laws often leads not to the spread of best practice but to the replication of disastrous mistakes
- that the exchange of power between member states and the EU should be two-way, allowing national governments to repatriate powers if they choose to do so
- that Britain pays far more into the EU budget than it gets back, and in any case EU money is spent in Britain to suit the EU's priorities (especially for self-publicity) rather than Britain's
- that the EU (and national governments acting at its behest) should not be allowed to spend taxpayers' money on pro-EU propaganda, especially that directed at children
- that the EU is the most pressing issue of domestic politics, as it dictates 84% of all new laws in its member states
- that the EU would be far more unpopular if the true extent of its interference in national politics were widely known (instead of which the EU plasters its flag over anything that might be popular, while leaving national governments to carry the can for legislation they have been forced by the EU to introduce)
- that the misguided tactic of sacrificing Britain's interests in order to "influence the EU from within" has failed as the EU continues to get worse in every measurable way – waste, fraud, the expenses regime, the CAP, the over-regulation of Europe's businesses, the persecution of whistleblowers etc.
May 26, 2008 at 05:42 am by mortysmith, 497 views, 6 comments
Rhonda J Mangus
North Tonawanda, New York, United States
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Comments (6)
at 05:46 on May 26th, 2008
mortysmith, I like this story. It's good stuff.
at 09:09 on May 26th, 2008
mortysmith, I like this story. It's good stuff.
at 11:15 on May 26th, 2008
mortysmith, a very interesting read! Thanks for posting!
at 03:46 on May 27th, 2008
Not good stuff... This is not news, this is propaganda quoted from an activist group's site. Editors, flag this, please.
at 03:54 on May 27th, 2008
Bergius - is it possible that the information provided can help people make an Informed Decision/Choice?
at 04:10 on May 27th, 2008
mortysmith, I like this story. It's good stuff.