William Hague's European Policy
Dr Martin Holmes
Contents
Ever since Mrs Thatcher delivered her controversial Bruges Speech in
September 1988 it has become a familiar axiom of British politics that the
Conservative party is fundamentally divided over Europe. Changes of leadership
and policy have witnessed only deeper divisions as the party has become more
divided than at any time since the appeasement battles of the 1930s or even
the Corn Laws repeal catharsis of the 1840s. John Major's equivocation and
attempt to compromise was no more able to unite the party than Mrs Thatcher's
"No! No! No!"; and as William Hague has already discovered, his eurosceptical
policy stance has transformed the former Euroenthusiast loyalists into
eloquent rebels who are as deaf to pleas for unity as were the whipless
Westminster Eight in the last Parliament.
However, it may be argued that although Mr Hague has been unable to
contrive a genuine party unity his sceptical policy on Europe commands greater
assent within the party by working with, rather than against, the grain of
opinion both within the parliamentary party and at constituency level. Mr
Hague's approach - to European integration in general and the single currency
in particular - may enhance his leadership in contrast to John Major's
collapse of authority and alienation from the party's Eurosceptical
mainstream. Considerable evidence of events since May 1 1997 points clearly in
this direction.
Before assessing William Hague's policy changes it is necessary to
categorise John Major's overall approach to European integration.1 Mr Major's term in office can be divided into
three distinct parts. Firstly between November1990 when he became party
leader, and the General Election in April 1992, Major pursued a policy of
compromise in order to hold his party together as the question of Europe
threatened to split it apart. The second period was that of Euroenthusiasm,
between the victory in the April 1992 election and September 1993, which was
characterised by Major's support for the ERM and by the passage through the
House of Commons of the Maastricht Treaty.
In the third period, from September 1993 up to and including the 1997
General Election, Major reverted to the policy of compromise. During
compromise Mark II the issue of Europe became a function of party management,
as Major endeavoured to preserve a fragile semblance of party unity.
Ultimately Major's European policy contributed mightily to his election
defeat. Not surprisingly the pursuit of a different policy on Europe was a top
priority for Mr Major's successor as party leader.
Since his election as leader Mr Hague has pledged his opposition to the
Amsterdam Treaty to the point of imposing a three-line-whip against it.
Surprisingly, in view of the dissatisfaction of the eurointegrationists, only
one MP, Edward Heath, defied the party whip by abstaining. Mr Hague even
called for a referendum on Amsterdam and advocated a "No" vote in the
admittedly unlikely event of it being held. Moreover, he stood as the
eurosceptical candidate in the final Conservative leadership ballot against
Kenneth Clarke's celebrated euroenthusiasm; subsequently he has publicly
repudiated Mr Clarke, Michael Heseltine, and others who have criticised his
European policy, pointedly refusing to be swayed by "former cabinet
ministers".
Recalling how Keith Joseph had apologised in opposition for the errors of
the Heath government. Mr Hague apologised for the ERM fiasco in his first
speech as leader to the Conservative Conference. In stark contrast to the
behaviour of his predecessor who viewed the crisis of September 1992 as either
bad luck or mismanagement by the Bundesbank. Mr Hague has appointed known
eurosceptics to his shadow cabinet who were either frozen out under Major
(Iain Duncan Smith) or who resigned in agonised principled opposition to
Major's policy (David Heathcote-Amory). When euroenthusiasts David Curry and
Ian Taylor resigned from the front bench Mr Hague made no serious effort to
dissuade them and used the opportunity to demonstrate the strength of his
leadership. The Tory leader, campaigning in the Paisley by-election, said he
would prefer them to go: "It is better to resign if they have a genuine
disagreement with the party than if we tried to cover it up. I would rather
people resigned so that we have a have a united team and so that we can get a
clear message across to the country".2
Moreover the portfolio distribution within the shadow cabinet initially
rewarded the eurosceptics with Peter Lilley (Shadow Chancellor), John Redwood
(Trade and Industry) and Michael Howard (Shadow Foreign Secretary) holding
influential and senior positions. Mr Redwood having returned to the
backbenches in 1995 prior to challenging Mr Major for the Conservative
leadership, is no stranger to taking a strong eurosceptical line. But Mr
Lilley and Mr Howard, free from the shackles of collective cabinet
responsibility which prevented them from speaking out, spoke of little else
between 1997-99 than their hostility to further European centralisation.
Further re-shuffles in 1999 consolidated the eurosceptic flavour of the
opposition front bench notably with the promotion of Howard Flight and John
Bercow, while the February 2000 reshuffle promoted Michael Portillo to shadow
chancellor and moved Francis Maude to Foreign Affairs replacing the
ineffectual euroenthusiast John Maples. Although John Redwood was also a
reshuffle casualty the overall balance of the shadow cabinet was decidedly
eurosceptic given Mr Portillo's long history of opposition to EU integration;
it was Mr Portillo, after all, who compared John Major to the Colonel played
by Alec Guinness in the film Bridge Over the River Qwai on the basis
that the bridge served Japanese interests while the Maastricht Treaty served
continental interests. One might add that the analogy breaks down because the
Colonel, realising his error, redeemed himself by self-sacrifice while John
Major has never recognised the folly of the Maastricht Treaty.
Aside from shadow cabinet personnel Mr Hague's policy pronouncements on
Europe have all been noticeably sceptical. In May 1998 he told the Insead
business school at Fontainebleau that:
"There is a limit to European political integration. We are
near that limit now. I intend to make three arguments. The first is economic.
The European policies that were a natural response to the problem of post-war
reconstruction are not necessarily appropriate for the future. In place of the
ideas of intervention and regulation we need to create a free and flexible
Europe. My second argument is strategic. The fall of the Berlin Wall has
completely changed the challenge facing European states. Bringing prosperity
and stability to newly freed states is now the most urgent of Europe's tasks.
And the third argument is political. Push political integration too far and
accountability and democracy become impossible to sustain."3
Rejecting the charge that he was anti-European or nationalistic he
criticised the EU from an internationalist perspective reminiscent of Mrs
Thatcher's 1988 Bruges speech. To Mr Hague:
"It is not the critics of the current direction of European
Union who are isolationist, out of date or even anti-European. Rather it is
the EU's direction which is in danger of becoming isolationist. It is its
post-war assumptions that are increasingly out of date. And it is the danger
of integration and the abandonment of our continent's diversity and pluralism
that is anti-European. True internationalism is about the relationship between
states rather than their integration into a single state; the nation state is
not an outmoded concept, but is the best vessel for true democracy. The task
for our generation is to persuade the European Union that it has to stop
addressing the problems of the 1940s with solutions devised in the 1950s, and
start facing up to the challenges of the new century. To the post-war
generation the success of corporatist and interventionist economics was barely
contested. Interventionism was at the heart of Monnet's vision and has led the
drive towards political integration throughout the EU's history. But for some
reason the failure of interventionism in the West and the spectacular collapse
of Communism in the East does not seem to have dented the EU's faith in the
power of the state. There is still great confidence for example in the
efficacy of government intervention and the ability to provide social
protection through labour market regulations. These are old economic solutions
and they are not right for new economic circumstances. For we now live in a
world of opportunities unimaginable even a generation ago."4
A year later, on May 2 1999, he told Conservative candidates in the June10
European Parliamentary elections that "...we believe there should be limits to
European integration and that we are near those limits now".5 Under the omnipresent and all-purpose slogan
Britain in Europe, not run by Europe, Mr Hague's theme was hostile
both to the EU Commission and to the Blair government's ineffective attempts
to reform the EU:
"The British people believe that Britain's place lies firmly
within the European Union, but that we should work to make it the right kind
of European Union. This should be a European Union which does less but does it
better, not an EU run by a 'cling-on Commission' which has defied democracy
and ignored accountability. The lead taken by Conservative MEPs in
highlighting the mismanagement of the Commission was crucial to its
resignation in March. Back then we were promised by Tony Blair that this would
be an opportunity for Brussels to put its house in order. But what has
happened since? Today, these same Commissioners are still at their desks -
including those implicated directly by the independent report into
maladministration.
"They have been allowed to cling onto power in a caretaker
capacity. Worse, they are taking decisions which will have a profound impact
on all of our lives. They have proposed a new Social Chapter law on fixed-term
contracts, they floated plans to end Britain's reduced rate of VAT on art
imports, they have even adopted a draft EU budget for the year 2000. All of
this after Jacques Santer promised the European Parliament that no new policy
initiatives would be taken until a new Commission was appointed. That
Commission should be made up of entirely new faces when it takes office next
year. In the meantime, Romano Prodi should talk less about European
governments and European armies and spend more time making sure his caretaker
commissioners stick to the basics."6
A similar line was apparent in Mr Hague's Budapest speech just a day later.
Relishing the theme of enlargement to assist the new democracies of central
Europe, which Mrs Thatcher had also conspicuously championed, the Conservative
leader suggested that a new Treaty provision could allow countries not to
participate in fresh legislative action at an EU level which they preferred to
handle at national level. The Amsterdam Treaty was a particular target.
"At the beginning of this month, the Amsterdam Treaty came
into force. It was meant to be the treaty for enlargement. Faced with the need
to make practical changes to their institution and structures, Europe's
leaders balked at it. What emerged from Amsterdam is a blueprint for a deeper
not wider Europe. None of the necessary reforms has been tackled: neither the
liberalisation of agricultural policy, nor the decentralisation of power, nor
even the practical., precise institutional changes needed for enlargement to
happen. Far from preparing for expansion, the EU is going down precisely the
opposite path, taking yet more powers from nation states to the
centre."7
As far as practical policies were concerned Mr Hague cited the EU pleas for
tax harmonisation as eroding the basis of national democratic decision
making:
"Tax harmonisation is another example of Europe heading in
the wrong direction. Commissioner de Silguy says that "for integrated
financial markets to work we must harmonise taxes." I reject the whole idea of
tax harmonisation. After eighteen years of Conservative government, taxes in
Britain became the lowest of any major European country. Tim Congdon's
excellent study published this month by the think-tank Politeia shows that in
Britain taxes could have to rise by as much as a fifth to bring them into line
with the rest of the EU. The current head of the German Bundesbank has said
that "a European currency will lead to member nations transferring their
sovereignty over financial and wage policy as well as in monetary affairs. It
is an illusion to think that states can hold on to their autonomy". Lose the
power to tax and spend, and I believe you lose one of the most important
things that makes you an independent nation."8
Following the Conservatives' success in the European parliamentary
elections - albeit on a 23% record low turnout - Mr Hague regarded his
European policy as having been vindicated.9 Thus he confidently told the Congress of
Democracy conference, hosted by MP Michael Spicer, that the most significant
change over the past year had been the election result:
"Thanks to the Conservative Party the British people have
had their first chance to express their opinion at the ballot box. I say
'thanks to the Conservative Party' because if Labour and Liberal politicians
had their way then the European elections would have had nothing to do with
European issues or the single currency. Labour's tactic was to pretend the
European elections were not actually taking place, but the only person they
managed to fool was their own campaign coordinator, Margaret Beckett, who
directed operations from her battle-caravan in France. The Liberals tried
another tactic and talked about anything and everything that had nothing to do
with Europe. They were so successful that they lost every one of their English
Westminster seats. We made sure that the European elections were about Europe.
And the British people made sure that they sent a clear message to the
government that they want to be in Europe but not run by Europe and that they
want to keep the pound."10
At the 1999 Conservative party conference Mr Hague again reiterated his
support for EU membership while promising that a Conservative administration
would ensure that any EU treaty "...must contain a flexibility clause or else
I tell you there will be no treaty."11
Elaborating on this theme a week later in The Times he stated that
"...to create that flexible and enlarged EU, we propose a new European treaty
provision which would allow countries not to participate in new European
legislation which they wanted to handle at national level, excluding the ...
single market and an open free-trading competitive Europe."12 But such a legal innovation was not, according
to the then shadow foreign secretary, John Maples, a mandate to renegotiate
existing treaties,13 which is exactly
what many Conservative eurosceptics have most recently urged.
Moreover Mr Hague's policy certainly appeared to provide an appropriate
response to the federalist push of the new EU commission president, Romano
Prodi, who since April 1999, has advocated political union to counter-balance
monetary union, envisaged integration on a level not seen since the Roman
Empire, and suggested enlargement to the East as a pretext for greater
qualified majority voting and an end to the national veto.
Thus by the end of 1999 Mr Hague had established the most eurosceptical
policy since 1990, ironically aligning the Conservative party with the
profound distrust of further European integration which precipitated Mrs
Thatcher's downfall two years after the 1988 Bruges Speech. In so doing Mr
Hague has broken with the policy of the Major years especially in his
willingness to reject outright the Amsterdam Treaty. Mr Hague has thus
overturned the precedent of previous Conservative approval for the Treaty of
Rome, the Single European Act, and the Maastricht Treaty of European
Union.
In short, the style, substance and personnel of European policy have been
radically altered by Mr Hague although without a reduction in the intensity of
dispute within the party. Indeed the emergence of the Mainstream organisation
of pro-integrationists in November 1997 indicates the continuing
susceptibility of "party-within-a-party" political factions. Thus William
Hague's overall policy of euroscepticism has formed a recognisable framework
in which to assess the more specific issue of Economic and Monetary Union.
Although Mr Hague's policy on the future of the pound has endured its own
periods of uncertainty and lack of clarity, there is no doubt that the new
leader has unequivocally ditched Mr Major's 'wait and see' (or 'negotiate and
decide') approach. To argue that Mr Major's policy caused confusion is an
understatement. The prime minister obstinately refused to consider the
question of the single European currency in the constitutional terms which the
eurosceptics urged. He refused to consider it as an issue with profound
political as well as economic implications. He stuck to the view that there
would be circumstances in which the single European currency would be
beneficial to Britain if the convergence criteria were met. And it was with
begrudged reluctance that he conceded that in the event of his government
recommending that course of action there would have to be a referendum of the
British people.
It is to Mr Hague's credit that he moved swiftly to jettison such a legacy.
Instead of wait and see Mr Hague has ruled out the single currency for this
parliament and the next, equivalent to ten years. Although this appproach was
first suggested during the party leadership campaign, he somewhat diluted it
before the 1997 Conservative party conference to a policy of ruling out EMU
"for the forseeable future". This change of tactic was only temporary and the
original hardline policy was reinstated as a result of strong pressure from
the backbenches and from within the shadow cabinet. The resulting resignations
of two front bench spokesmen, and the withdrawal of the whip from Peter
Temple-Morris, strengthened Mr Hague's leadership position. It is unlikely
that the policy will be changed again, except possibly in an even more
eurosceptical direction. Thus Mr Hague's 1997 post-Conservative conference
policy was trenchantly expressed as follows:
"I say no to a single currency in the lifetime of this
Parliament. And what's more I intend to say no to a single currency at the
next election, subject to the democratic approval of members of my party. The
economic dangers are just too great. If we adopt the same currency as France
or Italy or Spain, where unemployment is much higher, and competitiveness is
much lower, then we risk an economic catastrophe. Remember Black Wednesday,
when we crashed out of the ERM? At least then we could leave the system. With
a single currency there are no exits. And there are fundamental constitutional
questions to be asked too. For example, would a single currency require
decisions on tax levels and government spending to be decided in Brussels and
lead to a United States of Europe, as many people think? These questions have
to be answered."14
Similarly, Mr Hague told the November 1997 CBI Conference that "... unlike
the ERM, the single currency exists for all time. British business could find
itself trapped in a burning building with no exits", and adding that "...if
the nightmare of our experience in the ERM teaches us anything it is not to
steer by the siren voices of a supposed consensus, but to exercise the
independent judgement of a cool head". The prolonged ovation he received from
CBI members may indicate that the pro-EMU views of the CBI leadership are not
as representative of British industry as is often claimed. Mr Hague can also
take heart from the more sceptical stance on EMU of the Institute of
Directors, the British Management Data Foundation, the Federation of Small
Businesses, and individual branches of the Institute of Export.
After the overwhelming ballot of Conservative party members to support his
policy Mr Hague has reiterated his backing for the pound. In his May 1998
Fontainebleau speech he attacked the harmonisation of taxes implicit in
monetary union, returning to the same threat during the 1999 European
parliamentary election campaign:
"Conservatives recognise joining the single currency would
involve huge risks for Britain. We believe that the sixth largest economy in
the world can make a success of its own currency if it wishes to do so. That
is why we oppose the Labour and Liberal Democrat policy of trying to bounce
Britain into scrapping the pound by stealth, regardless of the economic and
political consequences.
"Conservatives believe that high taxes destroy enterprise,
that red tape destroys jobs, that high spending and state intervention
undermine freedom. That is why we oppose the direction which Europe is now
heading in, with high taxes and high spending, and more red tape and
intervention. The left is taking us in that direction because for the first
time in Europe, both the Council of Ministers and the European Parliament are
in the hands of left wing politicians."15
Similarly he told his Budapest audience that "... I believe it is common
sense to see the euro working in good times and in bad before we even consider
abolishing the pound. That is why the Conservative party will oppose joining
the euro at the next election".16 In July
1999 Mr Hague identified no fewer than eight reasons to keep the pound,
prominent among them being:
"...keeping the pound means we can run the British economy
in the interests of British business and British jobs. Monetary sovereignty,
like any other sovereignty, is not the ability to do whatever you want; but it
is the ability to make your own choices. With our own currency, interest rates
can be set specifically for our own economic conditions, to reflect the supply
and demand for credit in this country. That is a huge advantage for any
country, but particularly in Britain where the large number of home owners
with mortgages makes our economy particularly sensitive to changes in interest
rates. Having the freedom to adjust Britain's interest rates relative to the
rest of the world can help us offset temporary economic imbalances in a
reasonably benign way. Depriving ourselves of that policy tool would force us
to rely on drastic and destabilising adjustments to budgetary policy. The
alternatives are inflation or unemployment."17
In November 1999 he told the CBI annual conference that the euro was one
the EU's "daft ideas", adding with much justification that "... in the age of
the multinational company and the increasingly borderless trading across the
world, particularly in electronic commerce, nation states must develop
competitive advantage. The last thing you want to do is to harmonise taxes
with other countries and adopt the rules and regulations of other
countries".18
Mr Hague's approach has been given added validity by the decision of
Chancellor Gordon Brown, on behalf of Her Majesty's government, to rule out
British membership of the single currency for the duration of this parliament.
Thus both government and opposition ruled out the Stage III membership in1999,
a decision which eluded John Major. The difficulty for Mr Hague is that the
Blair government has expressed its willingness to join EMU eventually in the
belief that there are no insuperable constitutional barriers. To be sure Mr
Brown appears to have cooled towards the euro in the light of its economic
under-performance and the unattainability of the celebrated five economic
tests. Meanwhile Robin Cook has warmed towards the euro citing its initial
acceptance as a proof of its credibility.19 But neither Blair, Brown nor Cook have any
political objection to the principle of embracing a single currency with its
one-size-fits-all interest rate.
Of course many Conservatives would like a commitment to exclude the single
currency permanently on constitutional grounds of parliamentary sovereignty.
So far Mr Hague has not given this undertaking preferring to construct a party
coalition of principled eurosceptic opponents with those opposed pragmatically
to membership within ten years. Events may force a rethink of this aspect of
policy before the next election especially as divisions over Europe within the
party are as much about politics as economics. The Conservatives are also
vulnerable to labour accusations of avoiding the questions of principle which
Gordon Brown favourably addressed. Peter Mandelson had thus taunted that:
"Many in the Tory party clearly subscribe to the view that a
single currency would mean - as Michael Portillo once put it - "giving up the
government of the UK" and thus cannot be contemplated. William Hague himself
was once in this camp, saying at his leadership campaign launch "I am against
a single currency in principle. We should not be part of a single currency".
Peter Lilley, the shadow chancellor, clearly shares those views, since he told
the Commons that "we cannot accept that it is right to sign up in principle to
a single currency". The logical conclusion of this view is clearly to rule out
membership of the single currency for ever, since any economic advantage
Britain might gain is not relevant. It is, I believe, the wrong view to take,
but it is perfectly intellectually coherent.
"... The shadow cabinet, however, by refusing to resolve the issue of
principle will not even be able to engage. It has chosen a policy that
reflects the views of none of them but tries to reconcile the views of them
all. That was a recipe for disaster for the Conservatives in government. It
will be no different for them in opposition as events show."20
If such a line of argument becomes more common-place from Labour (and
Liberal Democrat) spokesmen it is likely to provoke fresh ideological division
within the Conservative party unless the leadership sharpens up its assessment
of the constitutional effects of the abolition of the pound.
William Hague has not been able to heal the Conservative wounds on Europe
nor to construct a policy which would genuinely unite the party. Given the
legacy of 1990-7 nor could anyone else, at least among the 1997 election
candidates. But Mr Hague has not allowed the impossibility of providing unity
to paralyse policy. He has boldly pushed policy in the eurosceptical direction
which has become predominant in the wake of Maastricht, and in doing so has
more closely aligned the leader, the shadow cabinet, the parliamentary party
and the party activists.21 On Europe, as
Prime Minister, John Major had power but no authority; in opposition William
Hague has growing authority but no power. But with the single currency ruled
out until at least after 2002 time is on Mr Hague's side to improve and
clarify still further his European policy, especially where ambiguities and
political pitfalls remain.
Firstly, Mr Hague must listen to, and engage in, the debate within the
Conservative party. In particular In Europe, not run by Europe cannot
become an alternative to further policy evolution. The diversity of the debate
within the Conservative party since1997 is too complex to be reduced to sound
bite slogans. Ken Clarke and Michael Heseltine have aligned with the Prime
Minister's Britain in Europe campaign designed to convert public
opinion to the cause of the euro. Douglas Hurd has advocated a new EU Treaty
to spell out clearly the exact relationship between national and supranational
responsibilities. In June 1998 Lord Hurd suggested that, "... the concept of a
defining treaty would dismay alike the enthusiasts for a United States of
Europe and those fundamentally hostile to European integration and anxious to
repatriate powers to the nation. But it might appeal to those, both
enthusiasts and sceptics, in order to find a workable way of sustaining and
enlarging European Union.22 Peter Lilley,
before his dismissal from the shadow cabinet, raised profound questions about
the euro which went beyond the purely monetary:
"Our economy has a different cycle from that on the
continent. The structural differences are easy to identify. We conduct more of
our trade outside the EU than any other member. We are Europe's only oil
exporter. We have a much larger equity market than France or Germany.
Chancellor Kohl has said "we want the political unification of Europe. If
there is no monetary union, there cannot be political union, and vice versa".
The simple fact is that there has never been a currency without a government
to run it. It is easy to see why this is so. If countries face problems ...
they will press for fiscal discipline from their partners.
"Already the EU leaders, including our own Chancellor, are
talking of 'eliminating harmful tax competition'. The Austrian Presidency has
put it at the top of their agenda for the next six months. Already the
Commission says there is a need for 'greater fiscal disbursements at EU
level'. Already there is talk of the need for much greater funds to be spent
centrally inside any monetary union. It is equally absurd to suggest that
Britain will inevitably have to abandon the pound when a large euro zone is
established next door. The dollar is a successful single currency covering the
50 states of the USA. Yet next door, Canada, a medium-sized economy , has its
own currency. I asked a group of Canadian and American business people if they
thought Canada was being left behind because she has not joined in a currency
union with the US dollar. They thought I was barking mad."23
In similar vein the then shadow chancellor Francis Maude has argued that
Britain's economy will remain cyclically and structurally incompatible with
that of the euro area and that any convergence would pull, squeeze and distort
the UK economy "... like a woman in the Victorian era submitting herself to be
forced into an agonisingly tight corset in order to make her figure conform to
the dictates of fashion".24 To Michael
Portillo, who remains scrupulously loyal to Mr Hague's position after his
by-election victory and elevation to the shadow cabinet, the euro is an
instrument of political integration which is ultimately undemocratic. Going
beyond Mr Hague's cautious considerations of the politics of monetary union,
Mr Portillo has warned that:
"The European Union is entirely made up of member states
that are democracies. But the European Union itself is not democratic. Neither
the Commission, nor the Council of Ministers nor the European Central Bank is
democratically accountable, and neither can they be made so because Europe is
not a nation. It follows that the more we transfer decision-making away from
the democratic member states to the undemocratic European Union, the less
shall we enjoy democratic accountability.
Moving away from democratic control is retrograde in itself,
but it is also highly dangerous, because disillusion and grievance provide a
breeding ground for nationalism and extremism. In the interests of security,
of tolerance and harmony between nations, in the interests of preserving the
most valued gain of the post-war period which is democracy, we should turn
from the headlong rush towards European political integration, in which the
single currency is a decisive step."25
This argument has been made by the Conservative peer Lord Beloff in an
article published after his death in March 1999:
"The Government's decision to bring about the entry of
Britain into the single curency seems to ignore the fact that continental
statesmen have a different set of objectives from those hitherto asserted by
British governments, of whatever political complexion.
All the talk about substituting "influence" for sovereignty
denotes either a misunderstanding of the European project and its founding
treaties, or a hope that the country can be persuaded to abandon centuries of
self-government for a minority voice among foreigners. The issues involved in
joining the single currency are all too clear - the end of the United Kingdom
as an independent country."26
And Lady Thatcher herself reputedly told a private gathering that she
favoured a withdrawal from the EU although she publicly endorsed William
Hague's policy stance.27 Notwithstanding
the euroenthusiasts led by Ken Clarke, such views all point in one direction:
that membership of an increasingly federal EU is incompatible with British
interests. The debate among Conservatives has already crossed the Rubicon of
considering fundamental renegotiation, or outright withdrawal from the
EU.28 This is the problem with Mr Hague's
In Europe not run by Europe mantra. EU membership already involves
being run by Europe as the Single European Act, Maastricht, and Amsterdam all
too easily attest. The Maastricht Treaty alone involved over 111 extra
instances of qualified majority voting; the Amsterdam Treaty added a further
16. The irony of Mr Hague's slogan is that it originated with the 1997
Conservative election manifesto which promised "...we want to be in Europe but
not run by Europe"29 and is one aspect of
John Major's legacy which Mr Hague has not abandoned.
Although the 1999 European Parliamentary election appeared superficially to
vindicate Mr Hague's slogan, its outcome can also justify a toughening of the
Conservative stance. Whilst the pro-Euro Conservative Party led by former MEP
John Stevens made no electoral impact, the United Kingdom Independence Party
(UKIP) won an impressive 7% of the national vote and obtained, under the
party-list system, three seats. If UKIP voters, who are mainly former
Conservatives, fail to back Mr Hague at the next general election the
Conservative cause - and that of preserving the pound - could be severely
damaged. Moving Conservative policy to a position of renegotiation of
Britain's relationship with the EU would not exactly steal UKIP's clothes but
would be a significant step in that direction. But Mr Hague, in the wake of
the European elections, reasserted on BBC's Newsnight that leaving the EU
would be disastrous, thus missing an heroic pretext to move on from In
Europe not run by Europe to a more intellectually coherent policy.
Similarly he suggested in January 2000 that Britain could not contemplate
leaving the EU as Poland and Hungary are about to join, thus appearing
oblivious to the fact that, should he gain office, it is British not central
European interests which he will have to defend. Not so long ago Poland and
Hungary were members of the Warsaw Pact but that was never advanced as a
reason for Britain to join as well. Current Polish and Hungarian interests may
legitimately diverge from British interests and should not hold back the
remaking of British foreign and European policy.
Perhaps William Hague has been hitherto intimidated by Labour and Liberal
Democrat politicians who claim that renegotiation is merely a codeword for
withdrawal. Of course there are circumstances where this would indeed be so;
but equally renegotiation could be approached on the same basis as the 1974-5
Labour government to whom withdrawal was an option only if the renegotiation
failed. It may also be argued that subsequent treaty revisions, especially
Maastricht, entailed a level of innovation and change amounting to
renegotiation. Additionally any renegotiation which extended over the first
half of a parliament would give sufficient time to assess whether the EU was
likely to reform on the basis of free market Anglo-Saxon economics, to abandon
its anti-Americanism, and to promote inter-governmentalism over
supranationalism as Conrad Black has optimistically speculated.30 If EU reform on such a basis became a reality
- rather than empty rhetoric - then renegotiation would prove even easier and
smoother than in1974-5.
But in the absence of such a transformation of the EU to reflect British
interests and values, renegotiation offers sufficient alternative outcomes -
including withdrawal - to permit a cool reassessment of UK interests. Thus far
EU membership is an experiment which has only vindicated De Gaulle's veto in
1963 based on irreconcilable differences between Britain and the continent. It
may also be argued that Mr Hague's aversion to meaningful renegotiation
appears to contradict his Budapest speech in May 1999 in which he called for a
less legalistic, enlarged Europe with multiple opt-outs to suit individual
country preferences. To be sure withdrawal has to remain an option if
renegotiation fails, but the Conservative party could still favour a policy of
renegotiation in the expectation that it might succeed as a result of skilful
patient diplomacy plus the continental wish to supply British markets. After
all it is the UK which has the large trade deficit with the EU since 1973.
Moreover as Michael Gove has argued,31
even in the circumstances of withdrawal the continentals would be highly
unwilling to erect tariff barriers when they enjoy the benefits of a healthy
trade surplus. But even if they did, this would be a price worth paying to
escape the CAP, CFP, the £8 billion annual budgetary contribution, the threat
of "social model" legislation, and the imposition of the euro. Renegotiation
is the logical next step to the diverse à la carte Europe which Mr
Hague advocated in Budapest.
Perhaps the greatest irony of the present situation is that it is Mr
Hague's success in defending the pound on the grounds of the viability and
vibrancy of the UK economy which has inadvertently stimulated the demands for
renegotiation (and withdrawal). The arguments for retaining the pound -
especially the ranking of the UK economy as the world's 4th largest - are the
same arguments for breaking free from the EU strait-jacket to embrace the
challenges of globalisation to which the UK economy is so well suited.32 It is not necessary to be a signed-up
supporter of European integration to agree with Hugo Young that it is
inconsistent and dishonest to seek a middle way of favouring the EU but
rejecting the euro.33 The plain fact is
that the euro project exemplifies the EU and cannot be disentangled from
it.34 The euro stems from the Maastricht
Treaty which combined the twin objectives of monetary union and political
union. Approving of - or rejecting - one of these objectives is to take the
same view of the other. William Hague's European policy has yet to grasp this
nettle. He hopes that this middle way will keep on board both Ken Clarke and
his allies as well as the much more numerous Eurosceptics.
The peril of this approach is that Mr Hague will repeat - albeit on
different political grounds - John Major's equivocation in the run-up to the
1997 general election. Far from weakening his position, the renegotiation
option would strengthen Mr Hague by removing the taunt that In Europe not
run by Europe is a meaningless piety which has been overtaken by events.
After 27 years of EU membership, which have been characterised by acrimony
rather than harmony , Britain needs a government to renegotiate a satisfactory
relationship with the continent based on free trade not political union. Mrs
Thatcher was unable to reach such a destination because of her removal from
office; Mr Major was unwilling to undertake such a renegotiation in the wake
of the Maastricht Treaty which he tragically prized. Mr Hague now has a golden
opportunity to embrace the policy of fundamental renegotiation - with
withdrawal an acknowledged option should diplomacy fail. William Hague should
seize the opportunity or else his successor as Conservative leader surely
will.
- For contrasting views of Major's European policy see
M. Holmes, John Major and Europe: The Failure of a Policy, Bruges
Group, 1997, and A. Seldon, John Major: A Political Life, Weidenfeld
& Nicolson, 1997.
- Quoted in, The Times, 04.11.97
- Speech at INSEAD, Fontainebleau, 19.05.98
- Ibid.
- Conservative Central Office Press Statement,
12.05.99
- Ibid.
- Speech in Budapest, 13.05.99
- Ibid.
- For an analysis of the voting see The Times,
15.06.99
- Congress for Democracy Speech, 09.07.99
- Speech to Conservative conference, 07.10.99
- The Times, 14.10.99
- Letter to The Times, 12.10.99
- News of the World article,
26.10.97
- Op. Cit., 12.05.99
- Op. Cit., 13.05.99
- Op. Cit., 09.07.99
- Financial Times, 01.11.99
- See Hugo Young, The Guardian,
07.09.99
- Article in The Daily Telegraph,
30.10.97
- For further discussion of this theme see M. Holmes
(ed.), The Eurosceptical Reader, Macmillan, 1996, ch.8
- Reported in The Evening Standard,
17.06.98
- Speech in London, 03.07.98
- Nick Ridley Memorial Lecture, 03.02.99. However, Mr
Maude, in a speech on 25.1.00, went out of his way to leave open the future
possibility of embracing the euro.
- Speech in London, 14.01.98
- Article in The Times, 03.06.99
- See The Times, 16.08.99
- Notably the contributions of John Redwood and Norman
Lamont before the 1997 General Election.
- General Election Manifesto, Conservative
Party, 1997.
- The Daily Telegraph, 02.08 99
- The Times, 31.08.99
- For further discussion of this theme see Bill
Jamieson, Britain: Free to Choose, Global Britain, 1998
- The Guardian, 07.01.99
- See M. Holmes, Franco-German Friendship and the
Destination of Federalism, Bruges Group, 1999.
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