Nigel Lawson’s supposedly
authoritative intervention in the debate over the UK’s membership of the EU
was not, despite some of the hype, in the bombshell category. But that has not
stopped a number of right-leaning politicians and pundits from treating it as
one: just as they have for the past quarter of a century, the Tories are
tearing themselves apart over Europe.
It is excellent spectator sport, but it is ultimately not
good for our Parliamentary system. If the Tory Party breaks apart, whatever the
issue, there is no credible right-wing presence in place to keep everyone else
honest. The lessons from Margaret Thatcher’s departure, through “Shagger” Major and his not
inconsiderable bastards, to William ‘Ague’s pointless “Save the Pound”, remain unlearnt.
Instead, there has been a lemming-like rush from MPs like
Douglas “Kamikaze” Carswell and
Bernard Jenkin, along (predictably) with MEP Dan, Dan The Oratory Man, to
proclaim imminent defections to UKIP (Hannan has also decried
the clichéd reporting on the issue, but then sprays his credibility up the
wall once more by indulging in, er, clichéd reporting on the issue).
There has been loud echoing of Nigel Lawson’s call to leave
the EU, despite the former Chancellor of the Exchequer only “suspecting strongly” that the UK would
do better on its own, from the likes of James “saviour of Western civilisation” Delingpole, who
has asserted that climate change denial (a Lawson speciality) and Europhobia
go together because such people are cleverer than everyone else.
This level of serial cluelessness has
been exceeded by Charles Moore (Eton and Trinity College, Cambridge), who
has trowelled on his acquaintance with Margaret Thatcher in telling the world
that, although she had the opportunity but never said so, she had in later life
decided that the UK should leave the EU. This is weapons grade bullshit. She
would have said so, or got someone else to do it for her.
While Moore and the rest of the punditerati retell history
to their own perverse specification, it
should be remembered that it was Thatcher who said “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, while the Tories and their cheerleaders throw
themselves headlong over the credibility cliff edge, remember another party
leader, the much underestimated Joe Grimond, speaking back in 1960: “The sad feature is that fifteen years ago,
Britain was at the peak of her power and influence, and the leadership of
Europe was hers for the asking. We have thrown it away on grounds that have
largely proved wrong”.
As you see grown men take it in turn to advocate the plainly
daft idea that Britain would be better off out of the EU, read those words and weep.
Quite right, Tim, but he was Jo Grimond, not Joe.
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