“Americans!
Please stop calling us Europeans!” pleads MEP and occasional Tory Dan,
Dan the Oratory Man as he tells readers that Ronald Reagan would never have
called his friend Margaret Thatcher a “European”.
Hannan makes an awful lot of assumptions about Thatcher and Europe, and as Margaret
Thatcher Day (Falklands only, folks) was yesterday, perhaps they could be
examined more closely.
Hannan clearly admires Thatcher unequivocally: he
quotes Henry Kissinger telling that Britain “has sunk to borrowing, begging, stealing until North Sea oil comes in”,
and then manages to miss that this was a significant part of the supposed
Thatcher miracle – along with increasing the country’s stock of debt by selling
off council houses and making mortgages easier to obtain.
He carries on blustering about anyone opposing him having “the rage of Caliban” when
celebrating 30 years after her first General Election victory. The
authority to do so had been vested in him by sitting near her at a dinner party
not long before. He has, moreover, suggested
sincerely that a Nobel Prize for Thatcher would be A Very Good Thing. So
what she says is clearly OK.
Sadly, what Margaret Thatcher said does not always match the
favoured line of Daniel Hannan. For him, the EU is all about mythical “elites”
(which of course somehow do not include him) and staying in is not a credible
option. His great friendship is with the USA, except when Barack Obama is
concerned, because, well, you don’t get on Fox News Channel (fair and balanced my arse) liking him.
So what did Mrs T say about the EU? Well, her most quoted
speech – and, one has to say, the most selectively quoted – is that made in
September 1988 to the College of Europe in Bruges. Most of the anti-EU
brigade lap up her warning of the possibility of “A European super-state exercising a new dominance from Brussels”,
while missing that part of the speech which does not suit their agenda.
She also said this: “let
me be quite clear. Britain does not dream of some cosy, isolated existence on the
fringes of the European Community. Our destiny is in Europe, as part of the Community”.
And she also said “We Europeans cannot
afford to waste our energies on internal disputes or arcane institutional
debates”. Yes, Daniel Hannan, Margaret Thatcher identified herself as a
European.
Moreover, Margaret Thatcher, unlike her latest successor,
always stayed in the room: she played hardball, but she never ran away. Perhaps,
if Daniel Hannan is so sure that she was such a damn fine politician, he could
figure out at the outset just where she stood on the issues of the day, and
that her constructive stance on the EU does not match his shrill, defeatist
cowardice.
So, Dan, exactly how
was Margaret Thatcher wrong on staying in the EU?
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