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Britain and the EU. The Background. PM David Cameron’s in/out referendum pledge (23 January 2013) The growth of UKIP – supporters of “Brexit” Referendum announced for June 23 2016 Last year was fortieth anniversary of Britain’s 1975 referendum on EEC membership.
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The Background • PM David Cameron’s in/out referendum pledge (23 January 2013) • The growth of UKIP – supporters of “Brexit” • Referendum announced for June 23 2016 • Last year was fortieth anniversary of Britain’s 1975 referendum on EEC membership
Support for a Brexit Referendum Source: Chatham House/YouGov 2015
Overview of the argument • Debate in 1975 strikingly similar to that of today • Reason why EU membership remains controversial in mainstream parties is combination of British exceptionalism and politicization of immigration • On the radical Left the neoliberal basis of the EU is the problem • “Brexit” would leave huge amount of unfinished EU business • Regardless of the outcome, a referendum won’t magically heal divisions over EU in British politics
The 1975 EEC Referendum Debate • Criticisms of European integration back then sound familiar today • UK pays too much for too few benefits • Europe is too inward-looking • Britain must stay aloof from federal blueprints for monetary integration (EU and EMU already on the agenda!) • In 1970 all 3 major parties (Conservatives, Labour, Liberals) support joining EEC without a referendum • But 1974 Labour party wins election with manifesto pledge to • renegotiate terms of membership • “restore to the British people the right to decide the final issue of British membership of the Common Market” • Cameron’s strategy for 2015 election is identical: renegotiation followed by a referendum (2017)
Why is Cameron offering a referendum? • Logic of party politics • rise of UKIP • internal party dynamics within Conservatives (candidate selection) • Logic of British exceptionalism • “we are in Europe, but not of it” (Churchill) • “in Europe, but not run by it” (William Hague) • exceptionalism sees EU as utilitarian arrangement, “excludes a normative commitment to the European ideal … and evokes British superiority” (Gifford, 2010: 329) • Change in the nature of the EU? • glaring differences between today’s EU and 1975 EEC • but UK pushed for significant changes (e.g. enlargement) and has bespoke policy participation (opt-outs) • nevertheless same concerns about democratic legitimacy and terms of EU membership
Why did the 1975 referendum not settle the Europe question? • The 1975 Verdict • clear result: 67% majority (65% turnout) • Britain today not so different from other EU countries • far-from-unique context of fragmenting party system and decline of trust in elites and political institutions • politically seductive, populist instrumentalization of EU immigration from lower income member states • top of David Cameron’s renegotiation agenda is the idea of restraining the fundamental EU principle of free movement of people
Conservative arguments againstmembership of the European Union • Toomuchregulation • Toomuch money spentsupportingEuropean agriculture • Immigration from EU isseen as a ‘problem’
Leftwing arguments againstmembership of the EU • The Greek crisis has shownthat the EU leadership does not work in the interests of ordinaryworkers • The EU is not democratic • The EU iswedded to a neoliberalpolicy of encouragingprivatization and the centrality of profit in public services.
What are the prospects for renegotiation ? • The 1974/75 precedent • scale of renegotiation ambition and the ability to forge partnerships with foreign capitals are decisive factors • Labour government settles for non-treaty-based changes (budget, food from Commonwealth) • Government is able to recommend to voters “a better deal for Britain” • 2015 and beyond • review of balance of competences did not find “smoking gun” • low UK political capital (veto fiasco, attacks on Juncker) • hardline eurosceptics insist on unilateral action (e.g. British parliamentary veto) • negotiating treaty change with new Greek government at the helm!
The unfinished business Brexit entails • Participation in single market • negotiating outsider access politically fraught and intertwined with key interest groups • e.g. financial sector (ability to offer banking services), British pensioners abroad, access to EU graduate labour • bilateral deals dependent on reciprocity (unilateral moves by UK would lead to retaliation, as in Swiss labour movement case) • A Generous Exit? • UK product market and labour regulations already lowest in EU (OECD) • EEA/bilateral access requires financial contributions • domestic alternative to CAP necessary • costs of joining CSDP (military/civilian missions) on ad hoc basis • Reopening of Scottish independence question • veto for constituent nations?
Conclusion: Catharsis by referendum? • In the event of a Yes to EU membership • terms of membership will not have improved significantly • Eurosceptics will remain a potent force (EP elections, opposition to euro) • split in Conservative party mirroring Labour/SDP divide after 1975? • In the event of Brexit • vote to withdraw won’t really clarify future of the UK • more uncertainty than ever by virtue of the need to craft a hugely politicized and highly complex new settlement • party conflict over European policy will remain • Getting a better deal, cementing democratic legitimacy, and resolving relationship with EU all a mirage • In any case, longer-term demographics are pro-EU • 69% 18-34 want to stay vs only 43% 65+ (IPSOS/Mori)