My latest in the London Progressive Journal:
"The sovereign integrity
of the nation state, opposition to European federalism and a renewed respect
for true subsidiarity," is the fifth of the 10 principles set out in the
Prague Declaration, the constituent declaration of the European Conservatives
and Reformists. 26 of the 56 MEPs in the ECR are British Conservatives, while a
twenty-seventh is drawn from their Ulster Unionist allies.
Yet 12 ECR MEPs, seven of whom
are British Conservatives, are members of the American Legislative Exchange
Council. There is also a UKIPite who was elected as a Conservative, a Swedish
Moderate who is therefore a member of the European People's Party, and a
Flemish separatist.
ALEC, you see, claims to be
"federalist" but seems to have adopted the European rather than the
American definition of the word. It is a body of State Legislators who
undertake to ensure that their respective states all adopt identical
legislation drafted by that body's corporate backers.
A handful of Democrats does
belong to this thing, raising serious questions about the limits of the
diversity of the Democratic Party, the Republican Party having arrived at the
opposite extreme, with club rights extended only to those who subscribe to each
and all of dozens of shibboleths.
But all except two of the
State Chairmen are Republicans, and those two hold the office jointly with
members of the other party. What was once the GOP provides all of the
"Public Co-Chairs" of ALEC's policy task forces that write the
legislation, on which they enjoy no veto power, since that attaches only to the
"Private Co-Chairs" who not merely come from, but explicitly
represent, their own corporations.
The one for International
Relations, which are constitutionally outside the province of State
Legislatures but on which work is clearly being done, has as its veto-wielding
Private Co-Chair a senior executive of Philip Morris International. To ALEC,
the whole of foreign policy is subordinate to the interests of big tobacco.
ALEC contains one Australian
Senator, as well as one Georgian MP and one Pakistani Assemblywoman, and
possibly also the Alberta Minister of International and Intergovernmental
Relations.
All of its other
"International Delegates" sit in the European Parliament. There to
enact legislation written by giant American corporations, as if the European
Parliament were an American State Legislature, with the United Kingdom having
much the status of an American county.
Eight of those MEPs sit for
the United Kingdom. Seven of them are members of the party led by the Prime
Minister of the United Kingdom, and all eight were elected for that party; the
eighth is now a member of an entity which laughably calls itself "the
United Kingdom Independence Party".
And no fewer than 12, four
fifths of the total, belong to the Group, and include both its Chairman and the
Secretary-General of its Europarty, the creation of which was supposed to have
been David Cameron's triumph in the cause of the sovereign integrity of the
nation state, opposition to European federalism and a renewed respect for true
subsidiarity.
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