The
Pope is not the only one out of his depth on the EU/Christopher Booker, an English journalist and author.
The
Telegraph | 30–11–14
As
the issue of “Europe” continued to swirl daily through the headlines, two
remarkable speeches last week illustrated one of the crucial problems with this
“debate”. This is that the labyrinthine workings of the EU are so complicated
that few people can really begin to understand them.
The
Pope’s address to the European Parliament seemed devastatingly critical. He
spoke of how “the great ideas which once inspired Europe seem to have lost
their attraction, only to be replaced by the bureaucratic technicalities of its
institutions”. He described it as looking “elderly and haggard” in “a world
which frequently regards it with aloofness, mistrust and even, at times,
suspicion”. He observed how it had lost the trust of its citizens, who see it
too often as “downright harmful”.
Reading
the Pope’s speech in full, however, he doesn’t seem to have grasped the EU’s
real nature at all: in particular, why the core principles on which it was set
up were inevitably destined to bring it to its present dismal pass. Some
passages might have been written by the Commission itself, as when he
proclaimed “the readiness of the Holy See” to “engage in meaningful, open and
transparent dialogue with the institutions of the EU”.
Even
less understanding was shown in the generally dismissive media response to that
other speech last week, in which Owen Paterson MP became our first serious politician
to explain the only practical strategy whereby we could achieve what most
British people, including David Cameron, say they want. That is, a wholly new
relationship with the EU, allowing us to continue trading freely in the single
market – but without being sucked ever deeper into the toils of its
increasingly oppressive and unworkable political superstructure.
The
ideas Mr Paterson put forward, whereby Britain could be liberated to become
again a more independent and self-respecting nation (see his article on the
facing page), would have been familiar to readers of this column. Above all, he
has grasped the nature of the revolution whereby ever more of the laws passed
down to us by Brussels now originate from those higher global bodies on which we
could join Norway, which sits on them in its own right as an independent
country, and have far more influence in shaping the rules than we do now.
What
was so obvious in the media response to Paterson’s speech was how out of their
depth were almost all those interviewers who tried to make light of it.
Particularly noticeable was how, as soon as he tried to talk about this
dramatic change in the way international rules are made, Radio 4’s Martha
Kearney and Newsnight’s Evan Davis at once tried impatiently to talk over him.
It was clearly something they couldn’t get their little heads round at all.
Davis in particular, looking ever more like Gollum, twice brushed it aside as
“very interesting”, as he tried quickly to move on to sexier questions, such as
whether Paterson was criticising Cameron and why didn’t he join Ukip?
The
truth is that, if ever we are to have a grown-up, informed debate on these
issues, Paterson’s position can be the only realistic starting point. But both
journalists and his fellow politicians have got an awful lot of catching up to
do.
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