Luke
James writes:
Labour MPs are
preparing to launch a campaign calling on Britain to exit left from the
European Union, the Morning Star can reveal.
A
group called Labour for Britain could be launched as soon as next week to start
making a distinctive socialist case for quitting the pro-business Brussels body.
Former Home Office
minister Kate Hoey is likely to lead the group. It will also include
veteran Luton North MP Kelvin Hopkins, who recently penned the “European Union
— a View From the Left” pamphlet.
Writing
in the Star recently, Mr Hopkins said there “should be no doubt that the EU is
anti-working class, anti-socialist and anti-democratic.”
His pamphlet was held up
by Ms Hoey in the Commons during this week’s EU referendum debate as proof that
“there are many in the labour movement” opposed to the EU.
Former cabinet secretary
Graham Skinner and Birmingham Hall Green MP Roger Godsiff, one of just five
Labour MPs to vote against the Tories’ “austerity charter,” have also signed up
to the group.
Labour
for Britain can expect to receive vocal support and funding from entrepreneur
and Labour donor John Mills.
Mr
Mills was the national agent for the No campaign in the 1975 EEC referendum. He has welcomed Labour’s
U-turn on its outright opposition to a referendum.
But he told the Star that
there was an “evident danger” the party could lose even more core voters to
Ukip by fighting alongside the Tories to keep Britain in the EU
The EU referendum Bill
progressed to committee stage this week and the poll could take place as soon
as next May.
Ms Hoey
was among MPs who warned on Tuesday that it would not be a “free and fair” vote
if the government allowed taxpayers’ money to be spent on pro-EU propaganda.
For those of us who have for many years been demanding a
referendum on the UK’s relationship with the European Union, last Tuesday’s
Commons vote in favour was an historic moment.
Along with some of my Labour colleagues, I warmly welcomed
my party’s decision to execute a U-turn and support a referendum.
I just wish Ed Miliband had listened to our warning that
this pledge should be in our Election manifesto. If it had, maybe we would have
won a few more seats.
The truth is that Labour has become such an emphatically
pro-EU party that it is almost impossible to be taken seriously if you dissent
from this mantra.
A generation ago, it was all so different – the 1983 Labour
manifesto included the pledge to withdraw from the European Community. Tony
Blair was one of the MPs elected on that ticket.
Fast forward three decades and it is almost an article of
faith for Labour MPs to have to sing the praises of ever-closer union.
It is now time to stop this love-in and recognise that for
millions of our members and supporters, the EU is hated, distrusted and seen as
an antiquated idea.
The world has moved on and Labour must do likewise.
The Election revealed we have lost the trust of voters in
our heartlands – many of them to Ukip – by letting the EU dictate immigration levels.
For too long those who made Ukip-supporting remarks were
branded as racists. In my own constituency, the Ukip candidate was an educated,
articulate lawyer who happened to be black.
In a hustings we did in the local
mosque, he dealt with the immigration question in a calm, reasoned manner,
impressing the audience in the process.
Yet none of the candidates to replace Ed Miliband has shown
any real understanding of why people voted Ukip – and, more worryingly, why a
few words about reforming the EU are not enough to satisfy those of us who know
that without fundamental change we will be voting to leave.
Labour needs to be demanding change from the EU rather than
just criticising David Cameron for his negotiations.
I am not anti-Europe per se – I am anti the unelected,
absolute dictatorship that we have from the EU. I object in particular to the
undemocratic Commission spending our money in whichever way it decides best.
However critical I am of the paucity of demands being asked
for by the Prime Minister, at least publicly he has stated the need for radical
reform and has refused to say he would vote to stay in whatever the outcome.
But all the Labour leadership candidates talk of not ever
envisaging leaving – so giving the game away. They are happy with what we have.
The entrenched Brussels establishment will never let go of
power willingly so we have to be prepared to walk away if there is no real
change.
My colleagues in what will be the Labour For Britain (UK)
campaign have some red lines.
We want out of the Common Fisheries and Agricultural
policies.
We also cannot accept the freedom of movement of labour at the
expense of often much better qualified people from the Commonwealth.
Why should
my Afro-Caribbean constituents – most of whom who are third or fourth
generation immigrants – find it so difficult to have their relatives visit?
These and many other loyal subjects of the Queen have a
genuine affinity with the UK, unlike the thousands coming here from East
Europe.
The public know the immigration system is unfair, and the EU has made
it so.
How can any elected MP allow EU law to reign supreme over
UK law on ever wider matters? Our Parliament must have restored to it the right
to decide how our country is run.
Many of us warned the euro would create unemployment,
undermine democratic government and spark extremism.
Sadly, this is exactly
what has happened in southern Europe. Labour should be speaking out against
such damaging policies.
I want this referendum campaign to be as galvanising as the
one in Scotland and reach out to the grass roots. It will not be about
politicians.
It is about the British people, who have seen the EU change
radically since they last had the vote in 1975.
Those pondering the future of Labour should consider why it
is that powerful corporate interests such as the CBI – which supported the
exchange rate mechanism and the euro, which turned out so badly – are desperate
to keep us in a failing and undemocratic EU.
If Labour rethinks its blanket support for the EU, millions
of voters may consider us worth supporting again.
I want to see us co-operating with other European
countries, but not being run by the EU. Trading relations, Yes. Political
locks, No.
Labour has to return to its roots as a party that speaks up
for this country – not one that wants to give it away.
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